NEW YORK: World They Never Made

NEW YORK: World They Never Made

This immigration had been different. The
Puerto Ricans came not by ship, huddled in the steerage, but by plane.
Being U.S. citizens, they beat at no immigration bars, never had their
pictures taken in colorful native costume behind the wire enclosures of
Ellis Island. They simply seeped in, landing by 20s and 30s from
battered planes at La Guardia field, Teterboro and Newark, suddenly
appearing beside their cardboard suitcases on the city's sidewalks
outside a hole-in-the-wall travel agency. Jobless, speaking a strange tongue, crowded into miserable tenements,
thousands soon turned up on the relief rolls, costing the city
$15,600,000 a year. Their children crowded the already crowded public
schools. With shrill cries of outrage and alarm, the sensational
journals gave tongue, blaming them for every civic woe. Feature writers
found them living five and six to a room, two and three families to an
apartment, in cellars and abandoned stores, even in coalbins. The
average Puerto Rican was pictured heaving his disease-racked body off
the plane and heading straight for a relief center. More sinister yet,
he was herded about to vote for Communist-minded Congressman Vito
Marcantonio. Willing But Beset. There was some truth, but a lot of exaggeration in
this alarming picture. Last week it was possible to get a clearer and
cooler idea of the “Puerto Rican problem.” Even Marcantonio's hold on
the immigrants was not what it once was. Mayor William O'Dwyer's
administration had done a lot to cut down Marcantonio's power, by
installing Spanish-speaking teachers and relief workers in the
neighborhood, thus convincing the new people that someone besides Vito
Marcantonio took an interest in them. Columbia University had just completed the first comprehensive study
of New York's Puerto Ricans.
Columbia men surveyed 1,113 Puerto Rican families comprising 5,000
people. They found that one out of every three had been on relief at
one time or another. They found a willing people, beset by all kinds of
difficulty. “The opportunities for advancement seem increasingly narrow
for the poor, the uneducated, and 'the foreign,' ” said Columbia's
report. But the Puerto Ricans had also done better than anyone expected. Nine
out of ten had found jobs. The percentage of Puerto Ricans on relief,
authorities estimated, was now no more than other bottom-of-the-ladder
groups, e.g., the Negroes. “When you consider the language handicap and the economic position of
these people when they arrived,” said City Commissioner of Welfare
Raymond M. Hilliard, “it is remarkable that the relief figure isn't
higher than it is.” The Puerto Rican invasion began long ago, and slowly. But at the end of
World War II, thousands of Puerto Ricans were seized with a sudden,
simultaneous urge. In the four years-since V-J day, 122,935 Puerto
Ricans have poured into the U.S. To them, the U.S. is New York City
and 275,000 to 300,000 of them now live in its five boroughs.

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