DOMINICANS AND
PUERTO RICANS
The Spanish-speaking Caribbean—Cuba,
the Dominican Republic, and Puerto
Rico—continued to be important sources
of Hispanic migration to the United
States in the late 20th century. As of
2000, the Dominican-American commu-
nity was among the most recently devel-
oped Hispanic-American groups. Their
numbers had swiftly come to rival those
of Cuban Americans. Mostly poor and
living in urban areas, Dominican
Americans were facing socioeconomic
problems similar to those Puerto Rican
Americans have historically faced.
Dominican Immigrants
Already growing in the 1970s, Dominican
immigration skyrocketed in the 1980s and
1990s. In the 1980s more than 20,000
Dominicans on average were legally
admitted to the United States each year;
in the 1990s, the annual average number
202 ATLAS OF HISPANIC-AMERICAN HISTORY
NEW JERSEY
Middlesex-
Somerset-
Hunterdon
Newark
Bergen-
Passaic
Dutchess County
CONNECTICUT
Stamford
Waterbury
New Haven
Bridgeport
Nassau
County
Less than 300
300 to 799
800 to1,599
1,600 to 2,999
3,000 to 122,000
NUMBER OF DOMINICANS
0 20 km
0 20 miles
Less than 5,000
5,000 to 19,999
20,000 to 49,999
Over 50,000
IN METROPOLITAN AREAS
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000, 5% PUMS file.
Waterbury
New Haven
Danbury
Dutchess County
Newburgh-
Middletown
Bergen-
Passaic
Bridgeport
Stamford
New York
Jersey City
Newark
Trenton
Middlesex-
Somerset-
Hunterdon
Nassau
County
NEW YORK
CONNECTICUT
NEW JERSEY
Dominican Population in New York City