Pessac - Population

Population

Historical population
Year Pop. ±%
1793 1,430
1800 1,336 −6.6%
1806 1,414 +5.8%
1821 1,349 −4.6%
1831 1,502 +11.3%
1836 1,341 −10.7%
1841 1,708 +27.4%
1846 1,785 +4.5%
1851 2,094 +17.3%
1856 2,334 +11.5%
1861 2,537 +8.7%
1866 2,676 +5.5%
1872 4,743 +77.2%
1876 3,103 −34.6%
1881 3,227 +4.0%
1886 3,759 +16.5%
1891 3,944 +4.9%
1896 4,411 +11.8%
1901 4,239 −3.9%
1906 4,612 +8.8%
1911 5,234 +13.5%
1921 6,691 +27.8%
1926 8,268 +23.6%
1931 10,706 +29.5%
1936 13,004 +21.5%
1946 17,769 +36.6%
1954 19,226 +8.2%
1962 24,281 +26.3%
1968 36,986 +52.3%
1975 51,360 +38.9%
1982 50,267 −2.1%
1990 51,055 +1.6%
1999 56,143 +10.0%
2008 57,632 +2.7%

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Famous quotes containing the word population:

    O for a man who is a man, and, as my neighbor says, has a bone in his back which you cannot pass your hand through! Our statistics are at fault: the population has been returned too large. How many men are there to a square thousand miles in this country? Hardly one.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    This was the Eastham famous of late years for its camp- meetings, held in a grove near by, to which thousands flock from all parts of the Bay. We conjectured that the reason for the perhaps unusual, if not unhealthful development of the religious sentiment here, was the fact that a large portion of the population are women whose husbands and sons are either abroad on the sea, or else drowned, and there is nobody but they and the ministers left behind.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    It was a time of madness, the sort of mad-hysteria that always presages war. There seems to be nothing left but war—when any population in any sort of a nation gets violently angry, civilization falls down and religion forsakes its hold on the consciences of human kind in such times of public madness.
    Rebecca Latimer Felton (1835–1930)