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  1. History of Polish Americans in Metro Detroit. In 2023, Polish Americans are most heavily concentrated in the Upper Midwest and Northeast regions of the United States. As the second most Polish populated state, Michigan follows closely behind Wisconsin with 784,200 people identifying as Polish, or 7.82% of the state's population, identifying as ...

  2. The Hmong had moved to Detroit in order to obtain employment and so members of the same families could live in the same area. [3] Hmong people had migrated to Detroit from various places in the United States. [4] By 2000 there were about 1,700 Hmong people in the Osborn neighborhood of Detroit. [5] As of 2001 there were about 5,000 Hmong in ...

  3. EDT. (. UTC-4. ) Vùng đô thị Detroit, thường được gọi là Metro Detroit, là vùng đô thị nằm trong khu vực Đông Nam Michigan Hoa Kỳ tập trung vào các thành phố Detroit mà chia sẻ một biên giới quốc tế với Windsor, Ontario của Canada. Vùng đô thị Detroit là khu vực đô thị lớn thứ ...

  4. Detroit (IPA: [dɪˈtʰɹɔɪt]; tiếng Pháp: D'étroit, phát âm [detʁwa]) là thành phố lớn nhất của tiểu bang Michigan, Hoa Kỳ, là thủ phủ của Quận Wayne. Thành phố được thành lập năm 1701 bởi các nhà buôn lông thú người Pháp .

  5. Als Metro Detroit wird die Metropolregion um Detroit bezeichnet. Sie umfasst den Südosten des US-amerikanischen Bundesstaates Michigan und bildet gemeinsam mit der am östlichen Ufer des Detroit River liegenden kanadischen Stadt Windsor und ihrem Umland die gemeinsame internationale Stadtregion Detroit–Windsor.

  6. The Detroit metropolitan area developed as one of the larger geographic areas of the United States. Immigrants and migrants have contributed significantly to Detroit's economy and culture. Later in the century, industrial restructuring and trouble in the auto industry led to a dramatic decline in jobs and population. Since the 1990s, the city ...

  7. In 1951 in Detroit there were about 15,000 to 17,000 U.S.-born ethnic Mexicans and 12,000 Mexican-born residents. [5] Around the 1950s/1960s, the second generation and third generation of Mexicans had been born in Michigan and their presence caused the size of the Metro Detroit Mexican community to increase. [6]