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Home > My Ancestors >
Puerto Rican > Timeline:
1850-1949
- 1860: The United States Census lists three Puerto Ricans living
in the city of Boston.
- 1875: Puerto Rican patriot and scholar Eugenio MarÌa de Hostos
joins an expedition sailing from Boston Harbor to Cuba to initiate
an independence war against Spain. The expedition's chartered boat
sunk off the coast of Boston. Fortunately, Hostos and the other freedom
fighters survived the boat's sinking.
- 1880: The United States Census lists three Puerto Ricans living
in the city of Boston.
- 1895: A chapter of the "Partido Revolucionario Cubano" (Cuban
Revolutionary Party) is founded by Cuban, Latin American, and Puerto
Ricans to fight for the independence of Cuba and Puerto Rico from
Spain.
- 1898: United States troops invade Puerto Rico as part of the
Spanish-American-Cuban
War. The first U.S. troops to land in the port of Gu·nica, located
on the southern part of the Island, are the volunteer militia from
the 6th Massachusetts, United States Volunteers.
- 1917:
The Jones Act gives Puerto Ricans United States citizenship. The act
also mandates that all appeals of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico
should be taken and prosecuted to the United States Court of Appeals
for the First Circuit in Boston.
- 1920:
The United States Census lists forty-eight Puerto Ricans living in
the city of Boston. Most of them reside in the South
End and Jamaica Plain.
- 1940:
Club Hispano-Progresivo (Hispanic-Progressive Club) is founded at
188 Hanover Street. The club is open to Puerto Rican, Cuban, Spanish
and other Latin Americans residing in Boston.
See 1750-1849 | See 1950-present
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