Immigration to New York I was born in the Dominican Republic, an island in the Great Antilles 23 years ago. In my country there is the word "Mitiera mi corazon". This means my country is my love. This is enough to explain my view on the Dominican Republic. For me, Santo Domingo is the most wonderful island in the world; beautiful people, beautiful weather, and all the mango I have ever had. One day the parents gave me bad news and moved to this place called New York, they told my brothers and I, they would send it to us in the future.
In the 1950s and 1880s, the population of German immigrants to New York reached its peak. My grandfather emigrated to New York in 1904, so he is part of the German population. German immigrants established a new community near downtown Manhattan. The German tradition was celebrated through tradition such as language and food, but the Germans felt the need to become an American. The generation of children born from German immigrants tries to become Americans, but they also retain their ancestral tradition.
It represents a "new town". Millions of European immigrants came to New York and the city is at the corner. Rockefeller, Carnegie and other people helped transform the city into a busy metropolis. Immigrants are the center of New York. Since the colonial era, the majority of New York's growth has come from immigrants from other countries and abroad. Prior to the American Revolution, the Dutch, British, Scottish, Germans were the main settlers, in the first half of the 19th century New England was in the developing areas of northern New York, West Chester and North. I followed Long Island. The influx of immigrants from Europe originated from the northern and central parts of Europe first and then from southern countries. Although they are not often educated, they are numerous, the number of Italians is one million, followed by the Jews of Russia, Poland and Romania. this
New York will be the main trade port in the 18th century. In the meantime, New York was also the center of famous slavery. Fast forward in Ireland's great famine for several years, influx of Irish immigrants to New York in the late 19th century. Between 1820 and 1978, Italians moved to New York and settled in a small Italian region in Manhattan. Today Italians became the largest European community in New York. Due to mass migration, most ethnic minorities (mainly African Americans) migrate from the South to New York and the population composition of the city changes again. This popular movement continued from around 1910 until around 1970 and will be the main influence behind the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s. Especially in the year after World War II and destruction between 1965 and 1980, the Greeks moved to the city in large quantities.