Demographics of Bermuda

This article is about the demographic features of the population of Bermuda, including population density, ethnicity, education level, health of the populace, economic status, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population.

Census population and average annual growth rate
YearPop.±% p.a.
190117,535    
191118,994+0.80%
192120,127+0.58%
193127,789+3.28%
193930,814+1.30%
195037,403+1.78%
196042,640+1.32%
197052,976+2.19%
198054,670+0.32%
199058,460+0.67%
200062,098+0.61%
201064,319+0.35%
Source:[1]

History

Demographics is a thorny subject, in Bermuda, the legacy of a long history of racism. From settlement until the 19th century, the largest demographic group remained White English. The reason Black slaves did not quickly come to outnumber Whites was that Bermuda's 17th-century agricultural industry continued to rely on indentured servants, mostly from England, until 1684, thanks to it remaining a company colony. Spanish-speaking Blacks began to immigrate in numbers from the West Indies as indentured servants in the mid-17th century, but White fears at their growing numbers led to their terms of indenture being raised from seven years, as with Whites, to ninety-nine years. Throughout the next two centuries, frequent efforts were made to lower the Black population.

Free Blacks, who were the majority of Black Bermudians in the 17th century, were threatened with enslavement as an attempt to encourage their emigration, and slave owners were encouraged to export enslaved Blacks (with all slaves seen, like horses on an archipelago with dense forests and few roads, as a status symbol) whenever a war loomed, as they were portrayed as unnecessary bellies to feed during times of shortage (even before abandoning agriculture for maritime activities in 1684, Bermuda had become reliant on food imports).

In addition to free and enslaved Blacks, 17th-century Bermuda had large minorities of Irish indentured servants and Native American slaves, as well as smaller number of Scots, all ethnically cleansed from their homelands and shipped to Bermuda.[2] The Irish and Scots were ostracised by the English population, who were particularly fearful of the Irish, who plotted rebellions with Black slaves, and intermarried with the Blacks and Native Americans.[3]

Some islanders, especially in St David's, trace their ancestry to Native Americans, and many more are ignorant of such ancestry. Hundreds of Native Americans were shipped to Bermuda. The best known examples were the Algonquian peoples, who were exiled from the New England colonies and sold into slavery in the 17th century, notably in the aftermaths of the Pequot War and King Philip's War, but some are believed to have been brought from as far away as Mexico.

During the course of the 18th century, Bermuda's population was boiled down to two demographic groups: White and Coloured. The population of the Bermuda on the 17th April, 1721, was listed as 8,364, composed of: "Totals:—Men on the Muster roll, 1078; men otherwise, 91; Women, 1596; boys, 1072; girls, 1013. Blacks; Men, 817, women 965; boys 880; girls, 852." [4]

The term coloured was generally used in preference to black as anyone who was of wholly European ancestry (at least Northern European) was defined as white, leaving everyone else as coloured. This included the multi-racial descendants of the previous minority demographic groups (Black, Irish and Native American), as well as the occasional Jew, Persian, East Asian or other non-White and non-Black Bermudian.[5]

It was largely by this method (mixed-race Bermudians being added to the number of Blacks, rather than added to the number of Whites or being defined as a separate demographic group) that Coloured (subsequently redefined in the twentieth century as Black) Bermudians came to outnumber White Bermudians by the end of the 19th century, despite starting off at a numerical disadvantage, and despite low Black immigration prior to the latter 19th century (other contributing factors included the scale of White relative to Black emigration in the 17th and 18th centuries, the greater mortality of Whites from disease in the late 17th century, and large-scale West Indian immigration, which began, like Portuguese immigration, in the 19th century to provide labourers for the new export agriculture industry and expansion of the Royal Naval Dockyard. The Black West Indians, unlike the Portuguese, were British citizens, and not obliged to leave Bermuda, as many Portuguese were, at the end of a contracted period.

In the twentieth century, those with any degree of sub-Saharan African ancestry (which was virtually everyone who had been defined as coloured) were redefined as Black, with Asian and other non-White Bermudians defined by separate racial groups (although it also, in that century, ceased to be the practice to record race on birth or other records). On Census returns, only in recent years have Bermudians been given the option to define themselves by more than one race, although there was considerable opposition to this from many Black leaders who discouraged Black Bermudians from doing so.

In the US, there is similar resistance from minority groups to defining themselves by more than one race on census returns, or as multi-racial, as it is feared that this will fragment demographic groups, and lower the percentage of the population recorded as belonging to a particular race, with possible negative effects on government policies aimed at addressing the concerns of disdvantaged minority groups. As Bermuda's Blacks (whether perceived as a diverse, multi-racial group, or as homogenously Black African) have been in the majority for more than a century, but are still comparatively less well-off than White Bermudians, this fear may presumably also be the cause for the opposition to census reform in Bermuda. Large-scale West Indian immigration over the last century has also decreased the number of Black Bermudians who are multi-racial, and hardened attitudes. Most academic books on the subject emphasise the characteristic multi-racialism of Bermuda's Black population [3] (at least those who might be defined as ethnically Bermudian, as opposed to those resulting from recent immigration), and it has been pointed out in other publications [6] that, if those Black Bermudians who have White ancestry were numbered instead with the White population, the Black population of Bermuda would be negligible.

This overlooks the resentment felt by most Black Bermudians over a history of racial repression, segregation, discrimination, and marginalisation that continued long after slavery, and that did not distinguish between black and bi/multi-racial Bermudians. With the increasingly racially divisive politics that have followed the election of the PLP government, as well as the decades of increasing costs-of-living, the exclusion of unskilled workers from jobs in the white collar international business sector that has come to dominate Bermuda's economy, and the global economic downturn, all of which many Black Bermudians perceive as hitting them hardest, there is little sentiment today amongst people who have long been obliged to think of themselves as Black, in opposition to being White, to identify even partly with their European ancestry. Additionally, most multi-racial Bermudians do not today result from having parents of different races, but inherit diverse ancestry via many generations of mixed-race forebears, all of whom may be assumed to have been themselves entirely of Black African ancestry.

Despite these concerns, small numbers of Black Bermudians have chosen to describe themselves on census returns as mixed-racial, and the Native American demographic, which had disappeared for centuries, is slowly re-emerging, as more Bermudians - especially on St. David's Island - choose to identify to some degree, if not exclusively, with their Native American ancestry (although many may feel that, in an increasingly polarised climate, this is a safer option than identifying themselves as in any way White, or European).

Nonetheless, any assumption of Bermudian demographics that is based on census returns, or other sources derived from them, suffers from anecdotal evidence being the basis of all of the data, in asking Bermudians to self-identify, without resorting to any documentary evidence or genetic studies being used to confirm their ancestry, if not their identification. There is similar pressure on Black Bermudians (most of whom are multi-racial) not to self-identify as mixed race as there is in Blacks in the USA, where President Barack Obama, raised by his single, white mother, sparked debate when he identified himself on the census as black, rather than mixed race, and in the UK, in both of which countries greater flexibility is also now allowed for people to describe themselves racially.[7][8][9][10][11]

Portuguese immigration, from Atlantic islands including the Azores, Madeira and Cape Verde Islands, began in the 19th century to provide labour for the nascent agricultural industry. From the beginning, Portuguese labourers, who have immigrated under special agreements, have not been allowed to do so on the basis of permanent immigration. They were expected to return to their homelands after a fixed period. Some were able to stay, however, and by the 1940s there was a sizeable number Portuguese-Bermudians who were legally Bermudian (and British by citizenship). Until the recession of the 1990s, however, Bermuda continued to rely on large-scale immigration of temporary Portuguese workers who laboured at jobs Bermudians considered unworthy (notably, anything to do with agriculture or horticulture). Many of these immigrants lived and worked in Bermuda for decades on repeatedly renewed work permits, without gaining the right to permanent residence, British citizenship, or Bermudian status. When work permits were not renewed, especially during the recession, many were forced to return to the Azores, often with full-grown children who had been born and raised in Bermuda. Although the numbers of Portuguese guest workers has not returned to its former levels, the number of Bermudians today described as Portuguese (historically considered a distinct racial group from Whites of Northern European ancestry, and stygmatised by all other Bermudians) is usually given as ten percent of the population. This number does not include many Black Bermudians with White Portuguese ancestry, and obscures also that some of the Portuguese immigrants were Blacks from the Cape Verde Islands. The actual percentage of Bermudians with Portuguese ancestry is likely far larger.[12]

Population

Demographics of Bermuda, Data of FAO, year 2005 ; Number of inhabitants in thousands.

According to the 2010 census the de jure population was 64,319 on 20 May 2010,[13] compared to 62,098 in 2000 and 58,460 in 1991.

The estimated mid-year population of 2014 is 65,500 (medium fertility scenario of The 2012 Revison of the World Population Prospects).[14]

Vital statistics[15][16][17]

Average population (x 1000) Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate (per 1000) Crude death rate (per 1000) Natural change (per 1000) TFR
1934 29 842 303 539 28.710.318.4
1935 30 727 278 449 24.39.315.0
1936 30 748 300 448 24.79.914.8
1937 31 728 329 399 23.710.713.0
1938 31 769 332 437 24.710.714.1
1939 32 729 308 421 23.19.813.4
1940 32 739 314 425 23.29.913.4
1941 32 765 400 365 23.712.411.3
1942 33 827 394 433 25.312.013.2
1943 33 920 308 612 27.89.318.5
1944 34 879 337 542 26.110.016.1
1945 34 886 337 549 25.99.916.1
1946 35 878 348 530 25.310.015.3
1947 35 1 042 341 701 29.69.719.9
1948 36 914 311 603 25.58.716.8
1949 37 929 330 599 25.59.016.4
1950 37 1 138 352 786 30.79.521.2
1951 38 1 046 375 671 27.79.917.8
1952 38 1 095 316 779 28.48.220.2
1953 39 1 026 333 693 26.18.517.6
1954 40 1 102 308 794 27.57.719.8
1955 41 1 052 337 715 25.78.217.5
1956 41 1 153 334 819 27.88.019.7
1957 42 1 087 354 733 25.88.417.4
1958 43 1 059 359 700 24.68.316.3
1959 44 1 182 374 808 27.08.518.4
1960 45 1 208 363 845 27.38.219.1
1961 46 1 183 310 873 26.67.019.7
1962 46 1 185 334 851 26.67.519.1
1963 47 1 215 333 882 26.77.319.4
1964 48 1 173 363 810 25.27.817.4
1965 49 1 117 358 759 23.57.516.0
1966 50 1 004 355 649 20.77.313.4
1967 50 980 328 652 19.86.613.2
1968 51 984 404 580 19.58.011.5
1969 51 934 369 565 18.27.211.0
1970 52 1 062 385 677 20.37.412.9
1971 52 1 119 428 691 21.38.213.2
1972 53 1 008 388 620 19.27.411.8
1973 53 919 366 553 17.46.910.5
1974 54 894 349 545 16.96.610.3
1975 54 837 398 439 15.87.58.3
1976 55 856 384 472 16.07.28.8
1977 55 809 375 434 15.17.08.1
1978 55 745 374 371 13.97.06.9
1979 56 791 358 433 14.76.78.0
1980 56 807 397 410 14.97.37.6
1981 56 777 457 320 14.38.45.9
1982 57 805 379 426 14.76.97.8
1983 57 913 398 515 16.57.29.3
1984 57 840 396 444 15.17.18.0
1985 58 914 421 493 16.37.58.8
1986 58 889 415 474 15.37.18.1
1987 59 899 438 461 15.37.57.9
1988 59 935 399 536 15.86.89.1
1989 59 912 462 450 15.37.87.6
1990 60 895 445 450 15.07.47.5
1991 60 901 452 449 15.07.57.5
1992 60 909 462 447 15.07.67.4
1993 61 821 480 341 13.57.95.6
1994 61 851 462 389 13.97.66.4
1995 61 839 423 416 13.76.96.8
1996 62 833 414 419 13.56.76.8
1997 62 849 437 412 13.77.06.6
1998 62 825 505 320 13.28.15.1
1999 63 828 427 401 13.26.86.4
2000 63 838 473 365 13.37.55.8
2001 63 831 442 389 13.27.06.2
2002 63 830 404 426 13.16.46.7
2003 64 834 434 400 13.16.86.3
2004 64 831 406 425 13.06.46.6
2005 63.571 835 437 398 13.16.86.3
2006 63.797 798 461 337 12.57.25.3
2007 64.009 859 468 391 13.47.36.1
2008 64.209 821 443 378 12.86.95.9
2009 64.395 819 470 349 12.77.35.42.025
2010 64.129 769 475 294 12.07.44.61.825
2011 63.193 670 429 241 10.66.83.81.798
2012 62.408 648 422 226 10.46.83.61.763
2013 648 471 177 10.57.62.91.630

Structure of the population [18]

Structure of the population (20.05.2010) (Census) :

Age Group Male Female Total %
Total 30 858 33 379 64 237 100
0-4 1 851 1 716 3 567 5,55
5-9 1 759 1 697 3 456 5,38
10-14 1 706 1 775 3 481 5,42
15-19 1 682 1 749 3 431 5,34
20-24 1 608 1 734 3 342 5,20
25-29 1 947 2 129 4 076 6,35
30-34 2 259 2 386 4 645 7,23
35-39 2 572 2 478 5 050 7,86
40-44 2 588 2 570 5 158 8,03
45-49 2 811 2 920 5 731 8,92
50-54 2 531 2 896 5 427 8,45
55-59 2 146 2 352 4 498 7,00
60-64 1 733 1 959 3 692 5,75
65-69 1 290 1 517 2 807 4,37
70-74 961 1 202 2 163 3,37
75-79 747 1 021 1 768 2,75
80-84 432 688 1 120 1,74
85-89 185 399 584 0,91
90-94 41 146 187 0,29
95-99 8 40 48 0,07
100+ 1 5 6 0,01
Age group Male Female Total Percent
0-14 5 316 5 188 10 504 16,35
15-64 21 877 23 173 45 050 70,13
65+ 3 665 5 018 8 683 13,52

Ethnic groups

One race

The 2010 Census results reported 92% of the population selecting only one racial group which remained constant with the 2000 Census.[13] The largest group reported Black alone, which decreased slightly from 55% in 2000 to 54% in 2010. Similarly, the White alone population reduced its representation from 34% in 2000 to 31% of the total population in 2010. The remaining 8% of the 2010 population who reported one race consisted of persons reporting Asian only (4%), and only some reporting other race (4%). The proportions of these respective racial groups each doubled from 2% in 2000 to 4% in 2010.

More than one race

Eight percent of the population reported belonging to more than one race in 2010, up from 7% in 2000.[13] The black and white category was the most common, representing 47% of the number reporting multi-racial groups. During the intercensal period, the black and white population increased its proportion from 3% in 2000 to 4% in 2010. In contrast, the proportion of black and other, and white and other populations remained unchanged at 2%. The changing racial composition of Bermuda’s population is a reflection of the Island’s diversity due to immigration and an increase of persons choosing mixed racial heritage.

Languages

English (official), Portuguese

Religions

During the intercensal period, the distribution of persons across the various religious affiliations shifted but remained generally widespread.[13] All religious groups experienced declines in their followings with the exception of Roman Catholics, Seventh-Day Adventists and non-denominational groups. Nearly one fifth or 20% of the population claimed no religious affiliation in 2010 compared with a 14% share in 2000. Although the number of Roman Catholics increased to 9,340 persons, its share remained constant at 15% compared to 2000. Over the ten-year period, nondenominational congregations increased a strong 33% while the Seventh-Day Adventist following rose 6%.

Population by religious denomination in 2010 (2000): Anglican 16% (23%), Roman Catholic 15% (15%), African Methodist Episcopal 9% (11%), Seventh Day Adventist 7% (7%) Pentecostal 4% (4%), Methodist 3% (4%), Presbyterian 2% (3%), Church of God 2% (2%), Salvation Army 1% (2%), Brethren 1% (2%), Baptist 1% (1%) non-denominational 9% (6%), other 9% (6%).

References

  1. http://www.govsubportal.com/ministries/2012-02-10-14-05-02/cabinet-office/statistics/publications
  2. Slavery in Bermuda, by James E. Smith. Vantage Press. First Edition edition (1976). ISBN-10: 0533020433. ISBN-13: 978-0533020430
  3. 1 2 Slavery in Bermuda, by James E. Smith. Vantage Press (1976). ISBN 978-0533020430
  4. Calendar of State Papers Colonial, America and West Indies, Volume 32, 1720-1721. Pages 281-297. America and West Indies: April 1721. Originally published by His Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1933.
  5. 19th Century Church Registers of Bermuda, indexed by A. C. Hollis Hallett. Updated by: C. F. E. Hollis Hallett. Published by Juniperhill Press and Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, 2005. ISBN 0-921992-23-8
  6. The Royal Gazette. Opinion Editorial by Sanders Frith-Brown.
  7. Multi-American: Black or mixed race? Obama’s census choice sparks debate over how people identify
  8. Intermix UK: To Be Or Not To Be Mixed-Race
  9. USA Today: Multiracial no longer boxed in by the Census
  10. The New York Times: RACE REMIXED: Black? White? Asian? More Young Americans Choose All of the Above
  11. University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Check All that Apply: The Census and the Multiracial Population
  12. Bermuda Sun: Bonds, rivalries that date back centuries
  13. 1 2 3 4 http://www.govsubportal.com/images/Cabinet_Office/Dept_of_Statistics/Docs/Census/Census2010/Census%20Report%202010-Final%20(2).pdf
  14. Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations Secretariat, World Population Prospects: The 2012 Revision
  15. United nations. Demographic Yearbooks
  16. Government of Bermuda Department of Statistics
  17. http://www.caricomstats.org/Files/Databases/Demography/BM.pdf
  18. http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/dyb/dyb2.htm

See also

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