Where We Came From, State by State
Interactive charts, screenshot below.
Wisconsin is interesting.
"The share of Wisconsin residents born in the state is the lowest it has been since 1920."
Immigrants to Wisconsin in the early 20th C. were mostly from other countries, especially Germany and Scandinavia. Much of the recent immigration to Wisconsin has come from the conservative areas of the U.S. This may explain why our voting patterns have done such a switch from progressive to far-right.
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/08/13/upshot/where-people-in-each-state-were-born.html?_r=0
We charted how Americans have moved between states since 1900. See how your state has changed:
Foreign immigration is a hot topic these days, but the movement of people from one state to another can have an even bigger influence on the United States economy, politics and culture. Americans have already seen this with the Western expansion, the movement of Southern blacks to Northern cities and the migration from the Rust Belt.
The patterns of migration continue to change. California, shown above, has long been the destination of American dreamers from other states. It no longer plays that role; residents are leaving for greener pastures out East. Today, the state is still pulling in foreign immigrants, but the percentage of American-born transplants has shrunk significantly as more people leave the state. There are now about 6.8 million California natives living elsewhere, up from 2.7 million in 1980.
States in the South that have traditionally been dominated by people who were born there are seeing significant in-migration for the first time. The South used to lead the country by a wide margin with people who were born in the state where they live. Now, several Midwestern states Iowa, Ohio, Wisconsin and, stretching toward the East, Pennsylvania are near the top of that list.
The following charts document domestic migration since the turn of the last century, based on census data. For every state, weve broken down the population by residents state of birth. The ribbons are color-coded by region, and foreign-born residents are included at the bottom, in gray, to complete the picture for each state.