New Hampshire White Alone Voting-age Population By County in Census 2020
According to the data from the US 2020 decennial Census, as at April 2020, among all the New Hampshire voting-age population (18 years and over), there were 1,005,446 people who identified their race as White Alone, which is 89.72% of the total voting-age population of New Hampshire.
Hillsborough County had the highest number of White Alone voting-age population (287,294), followed by Rockingham County (234,040), and Merrimack County (114,147).
On the other hand, the three counties with low number of White Alone voting-age population were: Coos County (24,427), Sullivan County (32,441), and Carroll County (40,425).
In terms of the percentage of each county's voting-age population, Carroll County had the highest percentage, with 94.97% of its voting-age population identifying their race as White Alone, followed by Belknap County (93.85%), and Coos County (93.35%).
You can see similar information for other states and also for the United States by state. You can also see similar information for other racial groups as well as the different ethnicities in New Hampshire.
Hover over or click on the counties to see the number and percentage of each county's voting-age population that identified as White Alone. The data can also be filtered, sorted, and explored further in a table below.
County | White Alone Voting-age Population | % of County Voting-age Population |
---|---|---|
Belknap County | 49228 | 93.85 |
Carroll County | 40425 | 94.97 |
Cheshire County | 58020 | 92.53 |
Coos County | 24427 | 93.35 |
Grafton County | 69087 | 90.07 |
Hillsborough County | 287294 | 84.93 |
Merrimack County | 114147 | 91.13 |
Rockingham County | 234040 | 92.11 |
Strafford County | 96337 | 89.65 |
Sullivan County | 32441 | 92.62 |