| Migrating to a New Land
The
story of the Puerto Rican people is unique in the history
of U.S. immigration, just as Puerto Rico occupies a distinctive—and
sometimes confusing—position in the nation’s
civic fabric. Puerto Rico has been a possession of the
U.S. for more than a century, but it has never been a
state. Its people have been U.S. citizens since 1917,
but they have no vote in Congress. As citizens, the people
of Puerto Rico can move throughout the 50 states just
as any other Americans can—legally, this is considered
internal migration, not immigration. However, in moving
to the mainland, Puerto Ricans leave a homeland with its
own distinct identity and culture, and the transition
can involve many of the same cultural conflicts and emotional
adjustments that most immigrants face. Some writers have
suggested that the Puerto Rican migration experience can
be seen as an internal immigration—as the experience
of a people who move within their own country, but whose
new home lies well outside of their emotional home territory.
At
first, few Puerto Ricans came to the continental U.S.
at all. Although the U.S. tried to promote Puerto Rico
as a glamorous tourist destination, in the early 20th
century the island suffered a severe economic depression.
Poverty was rife, and few of the island’s residents
could afford the long boat journey to the mainland. In
1910, there were fewer than 2,000 Puerto Ricans in the
continental U.S., mostly in small enclaves in New York
City, and twenty years later there were only 40,000 more.
To
find more photos of Puerto Rico in the early 20th century,
search in “Touring
Turn-of-the-Century America.”
After
the end of the Second World War, however, Puerto Rican
migration exploded. In 1945, there had been 13,000 Puerto
Ricans in New York City; in 1946 there were more than
50,000. Over the next decade, more than 25,000 Puerto
Ricans would come to the continental U.S. each year, peaking
in 1953, when more than 69,000 came. By 1955, nearly 700,000
Puerto Ricans had arrived. By the mid-1960s, more than
a million had.
There
were a number of reasons for this sudden influx. The continuing
depression in Puerto Rico made many Puerto Ricans eager
for a fresh start, and U.S. factory owners and employment
agencies had begun recruiting heavily on the island. In
addition, the postwar years saw the return home of thousands
of Puerto Rican war veterans, whose service in the U.S.
military had shown them the world. But perhaps the most
significant cause was the sudden availability of affordable
air travel. After centuries of immigration by boat, the
Puerto Rican migration became the first great airborne
migration in U.S. history.
To
hear firsthand about one Puerto Rican man’s journey
to the mainland in the 1950s, listen to interviews
with Ralph Soria in the collection “Working
in Paterson: Occupational Heritage in an Urban Setting.”
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