Stateside Virgin Islands Americans

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Virgin Islands Americans
Total population
  • U.S. Virgin Islands origin: 15,014[1]
Regions with significant populations
South Florida, Orlando, Atlanta, New York City, Houston
Languages
English, Virgin Islands Creole
Religion
Predominantly Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Caribbean Americans

Stateside Virgin Islands Americans are West Indian Americans who hold US citizenship and who have migrated from the U.S. Virgin Islands to the continental United States and Hawaii, and their descendants.

Persons born in the U.S. Virgin Islands are United States citizens, and as a result do not go through the legal immigration procedures a typical West Indies immigrant would. Virgin Islanders in the U.S. are considered part of the Caribbean American community.

It is difficult to determine how many Virgin Islanders reside in the United States proper. According to the 2000 U.S. Census, there are 15,014 people of U.S. Virgin Islands ancestry residing in the continental United States and Hawaii. However, a count of American residents with "U.S. Virgin Islands ancestry" excludes most U.S. Virgin Islands-born migrants in the United States proper. Because of a high incidence of inter-Caribbean migration throughout the 1960s and 1970s, most native-born Virgin Islanders today are one or two generations removed from other Caribbean islands and would not necessarily define themselves as having "U.S. Virgin Islands ancestry." For example, Tim Duncan is a St. Croix native with Anguillian ancestry.

Demographics[edit]

Virgin Island Americans includes Americans with ancestry from both the US Virgin Islands and British Virgin Islands, together numbering about 25,000. A majority of Virgin Islands Americans are of black Afro-Caribbean descent, many of whom descend from enslaved Africans brought to the islands by Europeans in the colonial era. A large portion descends from black or mixed race migrants who came from other parts of the Caribbean including Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Trinidad and Tobago, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and many smaller countries in the Lesser Antilles.

Many Virgin Islands Americans concentrate in areas with a large overall Caribbean population, including areas like New York, Florida, Georgia, New Jersey, and Connecticut.

Population by state[edit]

Relative to the population of each state[edit]

State/Territory (USVI) 2020 census[2] % (2020) State/Territory (BVI) 2020 census[2] % (2020)
 Alabama 76  Alabama 2
 Alaska 13  Alaska 0 0.0%
 Arizona 76  Arizona 0 0.0%
 Arkansas 11  Arkansas 0 0.0%
 California 323  California 28
 Colorado 107  Colorado 3
 Connecticut 216  Connecticut 10
 Delaware 46  Delaware 4
 District of Columbia 39  District of Columbia 1
 Florida 3,639  Florida 155
Georgia (U.S. state) Georgia 1,365 Georgia (U.S. state) Georgia 49
 Hawaii 13  Hawaii 0 0.0%
 Idaho 2  Idaho 0 0.0%
 Illinois 94  Illinois 2
 Indiana 41  Indiana 3
 Iowa 15  Iowa 2
 Kansas 11  Kansas 0 0.0%
 Kentucky 40  Kentucky 3
 Louisiana 83  Louisiana 0 0.0%
 Maine 13  Maine 0 0.0%
 Maryland 455  Maryland 25
 Massachusetts 297  Massachusetts
 Michigan 79  Michigan 3
 Minnesota 39  Minnesota 3
 Mississippi 8  Mississippi 0 0.0%
 Missouri 23  Missouri 4
 Montana 5  Montana 0 0.0%
 Nebraska 6  Nebraska 0 0.0%
 Nevada 55  Nevada 0 0.0%
 New Hampshire 47  New Hampshire 0 0.0%
 New Jersey 403  New Jersey 27
 New Mexico 13  New Mexico 2
 New York 1,281  New York 135
 North Carolina 461  North Carolina 13
 North Dakota 0 0.0%  North Dakota 1
 Ohio 93  Ohio 4
 Oklahoma 48  Oklahoma 0 0.0%
 Oregon 25  Oregon 2
 Pennsylvania 439  Pennsylvania 12
 Puerto Rico 80  Puerto Rico 14
 Rhode Island 44  Rhode Island 10
 South Carolina 86  South Carolina 3
 South Dakota 4  South Dakota 3
 Tennessee 69  Tennessee 4
 Texas 913  Texas 15
 Utah 7  Utah 0 0.0%
 Vermont 8  Vermont 0 0.0%
 Virginia 391  Virginia 15
 Washington 115  Washington 2
 West Virginia 6  West Virginia 2
 Wisconsin 22  Wisconsin 5
 Wyoming 0 0.0%  Wyoming 0 0.0%
 USA 11,670  USA 573

Notable people[edit]

Actors[edit]

Artists[edit]

Athletes[edit]

  • Christian Lloyd Joseph born 1972, Professional Boxer and former I.B.C Intercontinental Middleweight Champion
  • Raja Bell (born 1976), basketball player; born on St. Croix
  • Tombi Bell (born 1979), basketball player, who last played for the Minnesota Lynx of the WNBA; born on St. Croix
  • Joe Christopher (born 1935), the first Virgin Islander to play in Major League Baseball; born in Frederiksted, St. Croix
  • Midre Cummings (born 1971), baseball player; born on St. Croix
  • Tim Duncan (born 1976), professional basketball player (San Antonio Spurs); born in Christiansted, St. Croix
  • Emile Griffith (1938–2013), boxer; born on St. Thomas
  • Elrod Hendricks (1940–2005), Major League Baseball player and coach; born in Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas
  • Julian Jackson (born 1960), boxer; born on St. Thomas
  • Calvin Pickering (born 1976), baseball player; born on St. Thomas
  • Sugar Ray Seales (born 1952), 1972 Olympic Gold Medalist (139 lbs.) boxer; born on St. Croix.

Musicians[edit]

  • Alton Adams (1889–1987), musician, first black bandmaster in the United States Navy; born in Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas
  • Bennie Benjamin (1907–1989), composer, songwriter, philanthropist; born in Christiansted, St. Croix
  • Jon Lucien, jazz musician; born on Tortola, raised on St. Thomas
  • Rock City, a musical duo of composed brothers Timothy and Theron Thomas, born on St. Thomas
  • Sonny Rollins, jazz musician; born in New York, of St. Thomas (mother) and St. Croix (father) descent

Political leaders[edit]

Writers and intellectuals[edit]

News Media Personalities[edit]


New York City[edit]

During the 1920’s, a large influx of Virgin Islanders migrated to New York City, particularly Harlem in search of jobs and better opportunities. In 1925, the population of island-born Virgin Islanders in the city was 8,000.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "U.S. Census website". Retrieved 2008-09-06.
  2. ^ a b "Detailed Races and Ethnicities in the United States and Puerto Rico: 2020 Census".