In 1953 the American Can Company, which produces containers for commercial pet foods and was Cat Breeds therefore interested, discovered in a survey that there were 26,700,000 domestic cats in the United States.
By “domestic” cats is meant cats who, however casual their membership, belong to human families. Most of them — 13.2 million — were found to be farm cats. Seven million were city cats, and 6.5 million lived somewhere in between.
The South had the most cats (9.7 million), the Far West the fewest (3.2 million). The East had the most urban cats (2.4 million), the Midwest the most farm cats (5.8 million); no surprises there.
Over-all, 29 per cent of the nation’s families had one or more cats. Farm families had the most cats; nearly half of them owned three or more. The nationwide average was 2.21 cats per cat-owning family. Low-income families were found to be far more likely to have cats than were the high-income families.
To arrive at a figure for all the nation’s cats, however, there must be added the worker types who patrol or inhabit our stores and factories, warehouses and wharves, restaurants and military bases, and who go down to the sea in ships. One estimate places them at half a million.
Then there are the cats nobody owns, who live a gypsy existence in the city streets and the wooded country areas. These may number another two million, although obviously a figure like this has to be either a wild guess or come straight from some cat.
Assuming the latter, we have a total of 29,200,000 cats, which is probably inexact and not highly important, yet rather nice to contemplate if you like cats.
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