Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
Immigration and Ethnicity in Florida History · 487
Haitian immigrants began
arriving in south Florida
during the 1970s. By 1985,
when this photo of a
Little Haiti botanica, or
voodoo shop, was taken,
Florida’s Haitian com-
munity surpassed 100,000
people. Courtesy of the
proofState Archives of Florida,
Florida Memory
, http://
floridamemory.com/items/
show/106159.
mid-1980s, some 75,000 opponents of the leftist Sandinistas had established
an exile base in Miami-Dade County. The Nicaraguans found Miami, with
its large population of anti-communist Cubans, a hospitable and convenient
place of refuge. Much like the Cubans in the early days of their exile in
Florida, the Nicaraguans initial y hoped to return home. A peaceful transfer
of power took place in Nicaragua in 1990, when the contras put down their
arms and a pro-U.S. government was elected, thus short-circuiting the new-
est Latino migration stream to Florida.
What began as a temporary exile migration eventual y resulted in a new
and seemingly permanent immigrant community in Florida. It was a re-
run of the Cuban exile migration. The earliest Nicaraguan exiles adjusted
quickly, as Spanish-language use was beneficial rather than detrimental in
Miami. Many Nicaraguans had business and professional backgrounds,
which in the 1980s stimulated a new surge of immigrant entrepreneurialism.
488 · Raymond A. Mohl and George E. Pozzetta
The Cuban enclave economy absorbed many other newcomers from Cen-
tral America. The Nicaraguans (or Nicas, as they are cal ed in Miami) settled
heavily in Sweetwater and Fontainebleau Park, communities on the western
fringes of the Miami metropolitan area. In keeping with a well-established
Miami tradition, this section of Miami-Dade County quickly earned the ap-
pel ation “Little Managua.” Miami’s Nicaraguans possessed a strong sense of
national identity that was sustained by transplanted communal institutions
and Catholic parishes in Sweetwater and Little Havana. By 1990, the Ni-
caraguans had become the second-largest Hispanic group in Miami-Dade
County, and Nicaraguan children supplanted Cubans as the largest-single
group of foreign-born students in Miami-Dade County schools. The 2010
census reported some 135,000 Nicaraguans in Florida, most residing in
metro Miami.
The heavy attention devoted to the Cuban, Haitian, and Nicaraguan mi-
grations to south Florida has tended to obscure a wider pattern of recent
immigration, especial y Hispanic and Asian immigration, to Florida as a
whole. The foreign-born and the Hispanic populations of Florida have been
rising rapidly for the past half century. Between 1960 and 1990, Florida’s
foreign-born population increased from 5.5 percent to 12.9 percent of total
state population; by 2010, the state’s immigrant population rose still further
proof
to 19.2 percent. Florida had about 272,000 immigrants in 1960, 1.7 million
in 1990, and 3.7 million in 2010. Florida’s Hispanic population has also been
increasing at a rapid pace, from about 405,000 in 1970 (when the U.S. Cen-
sus first began reporting data on Hispanics) to 1.5 million in 1990, 2 million
in 2000, and 4.2 million 2010. One final statistical measure emphasized the
degree to which the demography of modern Florida has been altered by a
half century of new immigration: 2010 census statistics reported that some
3.5 mil ion Florida residents, or just over 19 percent of the state’s popu-
lation, spoke a language other than English at home. About half of those
non-English speakers live in Miami-Dade County, where 71.9 percent of
the residents conversed in native languages at home, primarily Spanish
but also Haitian-Creole and several Asian languages. The remainder of the
non-English speakers are distributed throughout the state, both in large
metropolitan counties—Osceola, Broward, Orange, Palm Beach, and Hil s-
borough—where the foreign speakers ranged from 45 to 25 percent of resi-
dents, and in smaller agricultural counties—Hendry, Hardee, Collier, and
De Soto—where 42 to 29 percent of the population used other languages
at home. These demographic trends over several decades emphasized the
degree to which Florida has become a center of new immigration.
Immigration and Ethnicity in Florida History · 489
The Latinization of Florida general y has been attributed to the massive
exodus of Cuban exiles to south Florida since 1959. This is only partial y
true. Cubans did form a majority of all Florida Hispanics in 1970 and 1980,
but by 1990 other Hispanics considerably outnumbered Cubans. Since 1970,
the proportions of Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, and other Hispanics all grew
more rapidly than Florida’s Cuban population. For example, the number of
Mexicans in Florida—about 20,000 in 1970—grew enormously to 150,000
in 1990 and 630,000 in 2010. The state’s Puerto Rican population rose at a
staggering rate, from 28,000 in 1970 to 848,000 in 2010. The other Hispanic
category, which includes Central Americans, South Americans, and Carib-
bean Hispanics such as Dominicans, increased at an equal y amazing pace,
from 106,000 in 1970 to 1.5 million in 2010. At the county level, only in Mi-
ami-Dade and Monroe Counties did Cubans consistently outnumber other
Hispanic groups. In Broward and Palm Beach Counties, Central and South
Americans outnumbered other Latin groups by the time of the 1990 cen-
sus, and over the next two decades the number of other Hispanic peoples
increased faster than any other group. In other big, urban counties—Hil s-
borough, Pinel as, and Duval—other Hispanics dominated in the 1980s and
1990s, but by 2010 their numbers were equaled or surpassed by Puerto Ri-
cans. Puerto Ricans also became the predominant Latin group in the three
proof
metro Orlando counties—Orange, Osceola, and Seminole. And in seven
rural, agricultural counties in central Florida—Hardee, Hendry, Highlands,
Collier, Okeechobee, DeSoto, and Glades—Mexicans predominated, and in
most cases outnumbered the other three Latin groups combined, both in
1990 and 2010.
County-level U.S. census data, then, revealed two important and often
overlooked demographic trends that began to emerge as early as the 1970s.
First, these statistics documented the diffusion of the Hispanic population
throughout the state. Second, they demonstrated the rapid diversification
of Florida’s Latin population, as groups other than Cubans came to pre-
dominate in areas outside the southeast corner of the state. For example,
in the Orlando area, beginning in the 1980s Puerto Rican real estate devel-
opers embarked on a successful campaign to build for and attract Puerto
Ricans, often retirees, from the New York City area and from Puerto Rico.
Their efforts proved to be remarkably successful. By 2010, almost 848,000
Puerto Ricans resided in Florida, mostly in a broad, central Florida corridor
along Interstate 4 from Deltona through Orlando and Kissimmee to Tampa.
Dominican immigrants, many moving from New York City, increased the
diversification of Hispanic population in the Miami, Tampa, and Orlando
490 · Raymond A. Mohl and George E. Pozzetta
metro areas during the 1990s and after, and the 2010 census reported more
than 172,000 Dominicans in Florida. In southwest Florida, the Cape Coral–
Fort Myers metro area more than doubled its foreign-born population be-
tween 2000 and 2010, rising from just over 40,000 to more than 95,000,
primarily a consequence of Hispanic migration. The latest census also re-
ported that other Central and South American nationality groups had ar-
rived in Florida in large numbers by 2010—300,000 Colombians, 107,000
Hondurans, 102,000 Venezuelans, 101,000 Peruvians, and tens of thousands
of others from Argentina, Ecuador, Peru, El Salvador, Panama, and the rest
of Latin America. Brazilians, Latin but not Hispanic, also established large
ethnic communities in Florida in recent decades, especial y in the three-
county Miami metro area, but also in Orlando, Jacksonville, and the Tampa
Bay area.
The Latinization process, moreover, has now extended to Florida’s rural
areas, where over several decades Hispanic immigrant workers have largely
replaced black and white Americans in the farm labor force. For instance, in
2010, Mexicans comprised 43 percent of the population of Hardee County,
an agricultural area once known as the cucumber capital of the world. Mi-
ami’s Little Havana is well known as a center of Hispanic life and culture in
Florida, but a visit to Wauchula, Bowling Green, or Zolfo Springs—Hardee
proof
County’s chief towns—provides unmistakable visual and cultural evidence
that the Latinization process has spread to the agricultural center of the
state. The most popular holiday in Hardee County now may be Cinco de
Mayo, a Mexican national holiday, during which Aztec music, dancing, and
folk culture are celebrated by these new Floridians. In Indiantown, a small
agricultural community in Martin County, the big holiday is the festival of
San Miguel Acatan, the patron saint of a large colony of Maya Indians, exiles
from civil war in Guatemala who have settled in Indiantown and nearby
farm communities. By 2010, a Mayan diaspora of almost 84,000 resided in
Florida, primarily in agricultural and farmworker communities stretching
from Immokalee to Homestead. As these examples demonstrate, the Lati-
nization of Florida has spread far beyond Miami’s Little Havana, and the
Hispanic newcomers to the state represent a broad spectrum of Caribbean,
Central American, and Latin American peoples. Nicaraguan, Brazilian, and
Dominican, Puerto Rican and Cuban, Aztec and Maya—these newcomers
and others from south of the border represented the powerful impact of
immigration and migration, forces that reshaped the social, cultural, and
economic life of much of modern Florida over the past half century.
Immigration and Ethnicity in Florida History · 491
By the end of the twentieth century, new immigration streams of Mexican and Guate-
malan farmworkers began to transform Florida’s rural spaces. Here, in 1990, three gen-
erations of a Latino family watch American television at a laundromat in Greenacres,
an unincorporated area of Palm Beach County. Photo by Raymond J. Mohl, from the
personal collection of Raymond A. Mohl.
proof
The ethnic transformation of modern Florida is not simply a conse-
quence of Latino immigration, however. Mirroring national patterns, Asian
immigrants emerged as another fast-growing foreign-born group in Florida
as early as the 1980s. The 1990 census reported 152,000 Asians in Florida,
almost triple the number in 1980, but by 2010, Florida’s Asian population
had surged to 455,000. When the census added Asians “in combination,”
that is, multiracial people with some Asian heritage, the total number of
Asians or part Asians in Florida reached 571,244. As noted earlier, small
colonies of Chinese and Japanese emerged in the late nineteenth century,
but racial discrimination and immigration restriction limited Asian immi-
gration until the post–World War II era. The more recent Asian immigra-
tion to the Sunshine State stemmed initial y from U.S. military involvement
in Asia and the Pacific region, involvement that brought war brides and
military spouses, military employees, and refugees. Asian numbers in Flor-
ida remained small until after passage of immigration reform legislation in
1965 that abolished the national origins quota system and established new
492 · Raymond A. Mohl and George E. Pozzetta
immigration preferences based on family reunification and professional
skil s in such fields as engineering, science, and medicine. This shift in im-
migration policy led to a rapid rise in the nation’s Asian population from
about 1.2 mil ion in 1965 to 14.7 mil ion in 2010. Most Asian immigrants
entered the United States in California or New York, but over time a second-
ary internal migration brought rising numbers of Asian people to Florida,