Historical United States Census totals for Litchfield County, Connecticut

This article shows U.S. Census totals for Litchfield County, Connecticut, broken down by municipality, from 1900 to 2000.

Like most areas of New England, Litchfield County is (and has been at all times since well before the 20th century) entirely divided into incorporated municipalities. There is no unincorporated territory.

There are three types of municipalities in Connecticut: towns, boroughs and cities. As in the other New England states, towns are the basic unit of municipal government.

Boroughs overlay towns and assume responsibility for some municipal services within their boundaries. Boroughs are not found in any of the other New England states, and are not very common in Connecticut today, although they were somewhat more numerous in the past. A number of boroughs have disincorporated over the years, choosing to revert to full town control.

Cities also overlay towns. This is different from the other New England states, where cities are a different type of municipality equivalent to a town (this difference is related to cities having originally developed in Connecticut from the borough model). Most current cities are coextensive with their parent town, however, such that the entire municipality functions as a city. In practice, these cities are really no different from cities in the other New England states.

It is also possible for a city in Connecticut to overlay part, but not all, of a town. There are currently only one or two examples, but it was a more common arrangement in the past. Many of today’s coextensive cities were non-coextensive at one time. As with boroughs, a number of non-coextensive cities have also disincorporated over the years, choosing to revert to full town control.

The main tables below show municipalities at the town level. For any census, adding up the totals for each town should yield the county total. In cases where a community encompassed a coextensive city, the tables in the New England Historical U.S. Census Totals series mark the community as a city. In cases where a town included a non-coextensive city, the total shown below represents the entire town, including but not limited to the city. A separate section follows with population totals for boroughs and non-coextensive cities.

For more information on the New England municipal system, see New England town.

Corporate changes since 1900

1900

County Total: 63,672

1910

County Total: 70,260

1920

County Total: 76,262

1930

County Total: 82,556

1940

County Total: 87,041

1950

County Total: 98,872

1960

County Total: 119,856

1970

County Total: 144,091

1980

County Total: 156,769

1990

County Total: 174,092

2000

County Total: 182,212

Boroughs and Non-coextensive Cities

As of 1900, Litchfield County contained three boroughs:

A fourth borough, Bantam (within the town of Litchfield), was incorporated in 1915. The following changes have occurred since then:

1900

1910

1920

1930

1940

1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

Notes

2000 Census

The Census Bureau made a number of revisions to 2000 census totals subsequent to their initial release. The 2000 total for the Litchfield County was originally reported as 182,193; for the town of New Milford, 27,121; for the town of Woodbury, 9,198; for the town of Washington, 3,596; and for the town of Roxbury, 2,136. The totals were later revised to those shown in the list above.

See also

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