Friday, September 26, 2025

Mississippi River cities in Iowa continue to lose residents

 
Keokuk's population has decreased 43% since its 1960 peak of 16,316.
 
Photo, map and populationWikipedia
Headline:  Des Moines Register, 9/25/2025




And in the process, Lee County (89.1% white) went Trumpy.

Election results:  Wikipedia
3rd party votes:  17.5% in 1992, 12.1% in 1996, 7% in 2016
(Alabama segregationist George Wallace 
received 6% of the vote in 1968)


Nick El Hajj reports:
Seven of the 10 biggest numeric losers sit along the Mississippi River: Davenport, Dubuque, Muscatine, Keokuk, Burlington, Clinton and Fort Madison. Together they’ve shed nearly 4,000 people since 2020, continuing a slide that dates back decades. “These were once manufacturing and grain-handling communities,” Peters said. “The manufacturing crisis of the 1990s really hit hard, and those communities haven’t been able to transition to a services-based economy.”

Related posts:
2025
Fort Madison.  (9/26/2025)

Why are some counties experiencing population increases?  They are now in the orbit of a metro area.  (Dallas County/Des Moines Iowa edition).  (6/14)

2022 series

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