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The South Side of Providence, Rhode Island, originally South Providence, is a term frequently used to describe the collective region comprising the official neighborhoods of Upper and Lower South Providence, Elmwood and the West End. The name was first used in the 1830s when the New York, Providence and Boston Railroad established its first station at a pier on the Providence River on a point of land about one half mile south of downtown Providence. The station was named South Providence. Hispanics comprise the majority of the population, with over half its residents claiming Hispanic ancestry, as compared to thirty percent of Providence residents as a whole.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Providence Neighborhood Profiles: Southside ).〕 Consequently, it has a high percentage (64%) of children enrolled in public school whose first language is not English, with the most commonly spoken language being Spanish.〔 The area continues to struggle with poverty issues; the South Side's median family income is $23,379 as compared with $32,058 for the city as a whole, and more than one out of three families lives in poverty.〔 == Demographics == 52.3% of South Side residents are Hispanic, 24.4% are African-American, 12.2% are white, 9.1% are Asian, and 2% are Native American. 64% of public school children under the age of six speak a language other than English as their primary language.〔(Southside )〕 The median family income is $23,379, which 75% of the city-wide average. 35.5% of families live below the poverty-line. 30.3% of families receive some form of public assistance.〔 Nearly one in four children has been exposed to unsafe quantities of lead.〔 This is due to the prevalences of lead paint in older homes. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「South Side, Providence, Rhode Island」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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