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Ecuadorian Americans

Ecuadorian Americans (Spanish: ecuatorio-americanos, norteamericanos de origen ecuatoriano or estadounidenses de origen ecuatoriano) are Americans of full or partial Ecuadorian ancestry. Ecuadorian Americans are the 9th largest Latin American group in the United States. Ecuadorian Americans are usually of Mestizo, Amerindian or Afro-Ecuadorian background.

Ecuadorian Americans
Total population
870,965 (2023)[1]
0.30% of the U.S. population (2023)[1]
Regions with significant populations
New York City, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Northern New Jersey,[2] Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, California, and much of Texas (including Houston and Dallas)
Languages
American English, Ecuadorian Spanish
Religion
Major: Roman Catholicism, Protestantism Minor: Judaism
Related ethnic groups
Spanish Americans, Andean culture

History edit

 
Christina Aguilera singer, songwriter, actress, and television personality.

Until the 1960s, very few Ecuadorians migrated to the United States. Between the years of 1930 to 1959, 11,025 Ecuadorians received lawful permanent resident status in the United States.[3] From here, slow trickles of emigration continued. Trade relations with and seasonal migration to New York became an avenue for emigration in the 1950s and 1960s. In the late 1960s, several waves of migration started. Most Ecuadorian immigration to the United States has occurred since the early 1970s. This emigration was because of several reasons: The first of them was that United States immigration law changed.

Before 1965, national quotas on immigrants favored more European immigration than Latin American immigration. After 1965, changes in immigration law made it easier for Latin Americans and other foreign groups to emigrate to United States. In addition, the price of air travel lowered making immigration more accessible to Latin Americans. They were drawn to the U.S. for economic opportunities and political freedoms.

 
Past Illinois Lieutenant Governor Evelyn Sanguinetti

Another factor in Ecuadorian emigration was the 1964 Ecuadorian land reform. This improved the lives of many Ecuadorian poor, but also had far-reaching and unpredictable consequences.[citation needed] Many new small landowners were forced to sell their land.[citation needed] Many landowners abandoned their land and migrated to countries like Spain, Venezuela, and the United States.

In the early 1980s, Ecuadorian emigration also saw a spike as oil prices fell due in part by the 1980s oil glut. The reduced demand for oil following the 1970s energy crisis caused for a surplus of crude oil. This resulted in Ecuador suffering an economic recession, as oil accounted for the country’s largest and main source of revenue. Another cause of Ecuadorian emigration was the El Niño event during 1982–1983. Other resources existing within Ecuador were severely damaged due to the extreme climate conditions caused by El Niño, which included floods, landslides, and torrential rains. Their fishing industry, another source of revenue, especially suffered due to a failed anchovy harvest and sardines unexpectedly moving south toward Chilean waters.

The passage of the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 also was a factor in Ecuadorian emigration. It provided legal status to undocumented immigrants who arrived prior to 1982. This provided nearly 17,000 Ecuadorian immigrants with legal residency status, which allowed for them to reside in the United States permanently. This became a major source of family-sponsored Ecuadorian migration to the country. Emigration again peaked in the political turmoil of 1996–97 and the national banking crisis of 1998–99. This turmoil placed seventy percent of Ecuadorians below the poverty line by 1997.

Most immigrants who live in the United States send money home. Many immigrants get U.S. citizenship, others simply are legalized, while other groups live illegally, crossing the border from Mexico or entering by boat from Puerto Rico. Ecuadorian Americans come from every part of Ecuador. During the 1970s, most of the Ecuadorians came from the northern and central highlands, including the area around Quito.

In the 1980s, many Ecuadorians came from the coast. In the 1990s, most of them came from the southern highlands, near the border with Peru. The majority of Ecuadorian immigrants emigrate into New York City and its surrounding suburbs. The 1990 census recorded that 60 percent of Ecuadorians living in the United States live in the New York City Metropolitan Area; while another 10% live in Miami.[4]

Ecuadorian Return Migration edit

In 2008, the Great World Recession made for a decline in Ecuadorian emigration. This event also hindered two of Ecuador’s major cash flows: remittances and exports. To aid in the country's recovery, Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa implemented the Welcome Home Plan. The plan fights unemployment and serves to boost the economy by encouraging migrants to come home through various ways, including aiding returnees in their own business ventures.[5]

Panama Hat Industry's role in Ecuadorian Emigration edit

 
Debbie Mucarsel-Powell first South American immigrant member of Congress elected in 2018.

Ecuadorians had been sewing straw hats ever since the 16th century with the introduction of the Spanish Elites, it was not until 1835 when Manuel Alfaro would start an exportation business that would increase Ecuador's GDP. The success of selling and trading goods relies heavily on a country's location and at the time Ecuador was not a busy stop for travelers. Business people realized that a few miles north, a very busy stop for travelers seeking to go west during the California Gold rush; Panama. One of the only few ways to go west from the east coast or Canada fast and safe was to travel by sea to Panama, cross Isthmus and continue your journey through boat again.[6]

Panama became the location where manufactures from Ecuador, specially in the region of Cuenca would export their hats, making Cuenca a Hat industry. A fond importer and buyer of these Hat was the United States, specifically New York. Usually women were in charge of weaving the hats and men were in charge of the business side. Although the hats were very beautifully hand crafted and took months of manufacture, imitations at a cheaper price joined the competition and fashion trends started to change, decreasing the demand for them, thus leading to the decline of the Panama Hat Trade in 1950s, and 1960s. This heavily affected the working class that actually weaved the hats and the elites whom ran the exportation sites. Laborers had to migrate out of their isolated region in hopes to find job opportunities. A wave of Ecuadorians emigrated to New York City through the same connections established during the Hat trade, they were known as "pioneer migrants".

Migration to New York was very regionally focused in Ecuador, due to the Ecuadorians high economic reliance on the revenue that the exportation industry created, which was only in Cuenca and Azuay.[7] Ecuador was so involved in this type of economic system because of the impact of pre and post Spanish colonial rule, and thus instead of exporting hats they started to export their own people. When the pioneer migrants reached NYC their families and friends joined as well, leading to a mass out migration in duding the 1980s, and 1990s after the 1980 economic crisis that left a majority of Ecuadorians, even those living in the urban areas unemployed.[7]

The exportation of people was facilitated by the only way that Ecuadorians knew, with the help of intermediary guides, who would provide finical needs, foraged papers, and other necessary services in their host countries. These intermediaries, known as "tramitadores," would profit through high interests imposed on prices for the journey to the states typically ranging from $6–10,000 with 10-15% interest, and Ecuador as a whole benefited from remittances sent back.[7] So far in 2019,[needs update] 780 million of Ecuador's GDP is accounted through remittances which is the second highest source of revenue. Ecuadors regional migration industry is much like the Panama Hat industry in the sense that only a few members run the operation, where the tramitadores were members of one family in an Azyuan town and money lenders as well [7]

In 2000, 400,000 Ecuadorians joined the other 1 million already residing in United States. Today stricter immigration policies are in effect forcing Ecuadorians that are already here to stay permanently. This transnational migration of Cuenca and New York City continues today. Ecuadorians are the third largest Latin American group in the New York City and New Jersey Area. Of all the Ecuadorians the migrate to the U.S., 62 percent of them reside in NYC as of 2005 research.[8]

Land Reform Act of 1964 edit

In 1964 Ecuador passed the Land Reform, Idle Lands, and Settlement Act. The law was an attempt to end the feudal system that had existed in the Sierra for centuries. It redistributed land from absentee landlords to the peasants who farmed it. The law set the minimum amount of land to be granted in the redistribution at 4.8 hectares.[9] However, the land redistributed to the peasant farmers was of terrible quality. It was mountainous, unfertile land and often just barely larger than the minimum required amount of land. The large farm owners kept the fertile valley land for themselves. The peasant farmers who received these small plots of land, called minifundios, received little to no government assistance. In spite of these difficulties, however, by 1984 over 700,000 hectares had been distributed to 79,000 peasants. Distribution of the land remained highly unequal. In 1982, 80 percent of the farms consisted of less than ten hectares; yet these small farms accounted for only 15 percent of the farmland.[9]

While the Land Reform Act improved the lives and working conditions of many poor Ecuadorian farmers, it shook the country and made it unstable. The system that had been in place for so long had been remodeled and forced many of these farmers to sell their land due to lack of credit and experience. The peasant farmers left the land their forefathers had farmed for generations and headed to Venezuela and the United States.[citation needed]

Demographics edit

 
The New York City Metropolitan Area is home to the largest Ecuadorian population in the United States, by a significant margin.[4]

Many Ecuadorians in the United States have settled in cities such as New York City (most residing in various areas of Queens, as well as in Bushwick and Fordham); Ossining, New York; Hudson, New York; Washington Heights; Danbury, Connecticut; Jersey City, New Jersey; Union City, New Jersey; Newark, New Jersey; Plainfield, New Jersey; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Chicago, Illinois; Orlando, Florida; Tampa, Florida; Fort Lauderdale, Florida; Miami, Florida; Houston, Texas; Dallas, Texas; San Antonio, Texas; Minneapolis, Minnesota; San Francisco, California; Los Angeles, California; and Cleveland, Ohio.

Queens County's percentage of Ecuadorians is about 4.7%, and it has the largest Ecuadorian community of any county in New York and in the United States, numbering just about 101,000 in 2010. Ecuadorians are the 2nd largest South American Hispanic group in New York City as well as in the State of New York.[10]

Ecuadorians are the fifth largest Hispanic group in New York after Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, Colombians, and Mexicans. Ecuadorians also constitute Queens County's 2nd largest Hispanic group. Another New York group of Ecuadorians live in the Bronx, in the Morris Heights and Highbridge neighborhoods north of Yankee Stadium. Still other Ecuadorian neighborhoods are situated in Brooklyn; in New Jersey cities such as Newark and Jersey City; and in towns in Connecticut.[10]

States with highest Ecuadorian population edit

The 10 states with the largest Ecuadorian population were (Source: Census 2020[11]):

  1. New York - 421,865 (2.1% of state population)
  2. New Jersey - 237,523 (2.6% of state population)
  3. Florida - 104,927 (0.5% of state population)
  4. Connecticut - 63,677 (1.7% of state population)
  5. California - 58,662 (0.15% of state population)
  6. Illinois - 36,879 (0.2% of state population)
  7. Texas - 31,127 (0.1% of state population)
  8. Pennsylvania - 28,596 (0.1% of state population)
  9. Massachusetts - 24,677 (0.3% of state population)
  10. Georgia - 6,603 (0.1% of state population)

The U.S. state with the smallest Ecuadorian population (as of 2010) was North Dakota with 55 Ecuadorians (less than 0.1% of state population).

U.S. Metro areas with largest Ecuadorian population edit

The largest Ecuadorian populations are found within these areas (Source: Census 2020)

  1. New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA MSA - 656,912
  2. Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach, FL MSA - 67,695
  3. Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana, CA MSA - 40,986
  4. Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, CT MSA - 40,335
  5. Chicago-Joliet-Naperville, IL-IN-WI MSA - 32,045
  6. Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV MSA - 17,121
  7. Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL MSA - 15,293
  8. Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI MSA - 7,121
  9. New Haven-Milford, CT MSA - 6,680
  10. Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD MSA - 6,440
  11. Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL MSA - 5,292
  12. Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, TX MSA - 5,011
  13. Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA MSA - 4,662
  14. Charlotte-Gastonia-Rock Hill, NC-SC MSA - 4,590
  15. Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, MA-NH MSA - 4,287
  16. Trenton-Princeton, NJ MSA - 4,264
  17. Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA MSA - 3,944
  18. Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX MSA - 3,004
  19. Poughkeepsie-Newburgh-Middletown, NY MSA - 2,957
  20. Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, PA-NJ MSA - 2,700

U.S. counties with largest Ecuadorian immigrant population

The total nationally is 438,500. All figures are taken from the 2015 - 2019 American Community Survey per the Migration Policy Institute website. [12]

1) Queens County (Queens), NY -------------71,300

2) Essex County, NJ ---------------------------- 21,800

3) Hudson County, NJ --------------------------- 20,600

4) Kings County (Brooklyn), NY ---------------19,000

5) Bronx County (The Bronx), NY ------------ 17,500

6) Westchester County, NY -------------------- 17,000

7) Cook County, IL ------------------------------- 15,900

8) Miami-Dade County, FL --------------------- 15,700

9) Suffolk County, NY ---------------------------- 14,200

10) Fairfield County, CT ------------------------- 11,500

11) New York County (Manhattan), NY ------ 11,400

12) Los Angeles County, CA ------------------- 11,400

13) Broward County, FL ------------------------- 10,800

14) Bergen County, NJ ---------------------------- 9,800

15) Union County, NJ ------------------------------ 9,700

16) Nassau County, NY --------------------------- 7,600

17) New Haven County, CT ---------------------- 5,300

18) Orange County, FL ---------------------------- 4,700

19) Hennepin County, MN ------------------------ 4,500

20) Palm Beach County, FL ---------------------- 4,200

21) Rockland County, NY ------------------------- 4,100

22) Middlesex County, NJ ------------------------ 3,600

23) Montgomery County, MD -------------------- 3,000

24) Passaic County, NJ --------------------------- 2,900

25) Mecklenburg County, NC -------------------- 2,900

26) Harris County, TX ------------------------------ 2,800

27) Mercer County, NJ ----------------------------- 2,700

28) Morris County, NJ ------------------------------ 2,600

U.S. communities with high percentages of people of Ecuadorian ancestry edit

The top 25 U.S. communities with the highest percentage of people claiming Ecuadorian ancestry (as of the 2000 census, 2010 numbers in parentheses) are:[13]

  1. Sleepy Hollow, New York 10.76% (17.54%)
  2. Montauk, New York 8.08% (4.21%)
  3. East Newark, New Jersey 7.87% (19.87%)
  4. Ossining, New York 7.48% (19.31%)
  5. Patchogue, New York 7.09%
  6. Hightstown, New Jersey 6.31% (14.11%)
  7. Union City, New Jersey 5.94% (9.23%)
  8. North Plainfield, New Jersey 5.39%
  9. Town of Ossining, New York 4.98% (19.31%)
  10. Port Chester, New York 4.90% (9.58%)
  11. Hackensack, New Jersey 4.78% (9.98%)
  12. Springs, New York 4.46% (17.25%)
  13. West New York, New Jersey 4.45%
  14. Peekskill, New York 4.32%
  15. North Bergen, New Jersey 4.02%
  16. Harrison, New Jersey 3.90%
  17. Guttenberg, New Jersey 3.88%
  18. East Hampton, New York 3.81%
  19. East Windsor, New Jersey 3.39%
  20. Dover, New Jersey 3.37%
  21. Rye, New York 3.18%
  22. Belleville, New Jersey 3.06%
  23. Danbury, Connecticut 2.92% (7.57%)
  24. Guttenberg, New Jersey 2.9%
  25. Weehawken, New Jersey 2.83%

U.S. communities with the most residents born in Ecuador edit

The top 25 U.S. communities with the most residents born in Ecuador are:[14]

  1. Sleepy Hollow, New York 10.4%
  2. East Newark, New Jersey 10.3%
  3. Ossining, New York 10.1%
  4. Hightstown, New Jersey 9.5%
  5. North Plainfield, New Jersey 7.8%
  6. Montauk, New York 7.8%
  7. Patchogue, New York 7.7%
  8. Union City, New Jersey 7.5%
  9. Wainscott, New York 6.4%
  10. Peekskill, New York 5.9%
  11. Springs, New York 5.4%
  12. Hackensack, New Jersey 5.3%
  13. West New York, New Jersey 5.2%
  14. Port Chester, New York 4.8%
  15. Queens, New York 4.7%
  16. Dover, New Jersey 4.6%
  17. Harrison, New Jersey 4.1%
  18. Twin Rivers, New Jersey 4.0%
  19. Belleville, New Jersey 3.8%
  20. Danbury, Connecticut 3.7%
  21. Newark, New Jersey 3.6%
  22. Spring Valley, New York 3.5%
  23. Tarrytown, New York 3.4%
  24. Brewster, New York 3.1%
  25. Guttenberg, New Jersey 2.9%

Notable people edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "B03001 HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN BY SPECIFIC ORIGIN - United States - 2018 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates". U.S. Census Bureau. July 1, 2018. Retrieved November 25, 2019.
  2. ^ Monsy Alvarado (April 18, 2016). "In North Jersey's Ecuadorean community, excruciating worry". North Jersey Media Group. Retrieved April 18, 2016.
  3. ^ "Immigration Data & Statistics". Department of Homeland Security. July 19, 2012. Retrieved March 4, 2018.
  4. ^ a b "Yearbook of Immigration Statistics: 2011 Supplemental Table 2". U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Retrieved February 21, 2013.
  5. ^ Jokisch, Brad (November 24, 2014). "Ecuador: From Mass Emigration to Return Migration?". Migration Policy Institute. Retrieved March 3, 2018.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ "History of the Panama Hat — Brent Black Panama Hats". www.brentblack.com.
  7. ^ a b c d Kyle, David. "Migration Industries: A Comparison of the Ecuador-US and Ecuador-Spain Cases" – via www.academia.edu. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. ^ Jokisch, Brad D. (November 20, 2014). "Ecuador: From Mass Emigration to Return Migration?". migrationpolicy.org.
  9. ^ a b "Ecuador - Land Use and Tenure". www.country-data.com.
  10. ^ a b Jeremy Mumford (2010). "A Countries and Their Cultures: Ecuatorians Americans". Countries and their cultures. Retrieved December 10, 2011.
  11. ^ American FactFinder - QT-P10: Hispanic or Latino by Type: 2010
  12. ^ "U.S. Immigrant Population by State and County". migrationpolicy.org. February 4, 2014. Retrieved May 9, 2022.
  13. ^ . Epodunk.com. Archived from the original on November 10, 2006. Retrieved July 29, 2008.
  14. ^ "Top 101 cities with the most residents born in Ecuador (population 500+)". city-data.com. Retrieved July 30, 2008.
  15. ^ "If The Glove Fits: Charles Castronovo & The Rake's Progress. Royal Opera 7–18 July".
  16. ^ "Luis Fierro".
  17. ^ "Bizarrecovers".
  18. ^ Powers, Scott. "Silent car rides, a growing bond and the second chance that..." The Athletic. Retrieved January 21, 2019.
  19. ^ "Helado Negro". Helado Negro.
  20. ^ Castro, Tony (January 14, 2003). "Eastside Mourns Death of Pacheco's Top Aide". WAVE Community Newspapers.[permanent dead link]
  21. ^ "Asa President Jose Valencia Interviews with the New York Post".

Further reading edit

  • Mumford, Jeremy. "Ecuadorian Americans." Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 2, Gale, 2014), pp. 47–60. online
  • Pineo, Ronn F. Ecuador and the United States: Useful Strangers (University of Georgia Press, 2007).
  • Pribilsky, Jason. La Chulla Vida: Gender, Migration and the Family in Andean Ecuador and New York City (Syracuse University Press, 2007).

External links edit

  • Ecuador News newspaper

ecuadorian, americans, spanish, ecuatorio, americanos, norteamericanos, origen, ecuatoriano, estadounidenses, origen, ecuatoriano, americans, full, partial, ecuadorian, ancestry, largest, latin, american, group, united, states, usually, mestizo, amerindian, af. Ecuadorian Americans Spanish ecuatorio americanos norteamericanos de origen ecuatoriano or estadounidenses de origen ecuatoriano are Americans of full or partial Ecuadorian ancestry Ecuadorian Americans are the 9th largest Latin American group in the United States Ecuadorian Americans are usually of Mestizo Amerindian or Afro Ecuadorian background Ecuadorian AmericansTotal population870 965 2023 1 0 30 of the U S population 2023 1 Regions with significant populationsNew York City Massachusetts Pennsylvania Illinois Northern New Jersey 2 Connecticut Florida Georgia California and much of Texas including Houston and Dallas LanguagesAmerican English Ecuadorian SpanishReligionMajor Roman Catholicism Protestantism Minor JudaismRelated ethnic groupsSpanish Americans Andean culture Contents 1 History 2 Ecuadorian Return Migration 3 Panama Hat Industry s role in Ecuadorian Emigration 4 Land Reform Act of 1964 5 Demographics 5 1 States with highest Ecuadorian population 5 2 U S Metro areas with largest Ecuadorian population 5 3 U S communities with high percentages of people of Ecuadorian ancestry 5 4 U S communities with the most residents born in Ecuador 6 Notable people 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory edit nbsp Christina Aguilera singer songwriter actress and television personality This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ecuadorian Americans news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Until the 1960s very few Ecuadorians migrated to the United States Between the years of 1930 to 1959 11 025 Ecuadorians received lawful permanent resident status in the United States 3 From here slow trickles of emigration continued Trade relations with and seasonal migration to New York became an avenue for emigration in the 1950s and 1960s In the late 1960s several waves of migration started Most Ecuadorian immigration to the United States has occurred since the early 1970s This emigration was because of several reasons The first of them was that United States immigration law changed Before 1965 national quotas on immigrants favored more European immigration than Latin American immigration After 1965 changes in immigration law made it easier for Latin Americans and other foreign groups to emigrate to United States In addition the price of air travel lowered making immigration more accessible to Latin Americans They were drawn to the U S for economic opportunities and political freedoms nbsp Past Illinois Lieutenant Governor Evelyn SanguinettiAnother factor in Ecuadorian emigration was the 1964 Ecuadorian land reform This improved the lives of many Ecuadorian poor but also had far reaching and unpredictable consequences citation needed Many new small landowners were forced to sell their land citation needed Many landowners abandoned their land and migrated to countries like Spain Venezuela and the United States In the early 1980s Ecuadorian emigration also saw a spike as oil prices fell due in part by the 1980s oil glut The reduced demand for oil following the 1970s energy crisis caused for a surplus of crude oil This resulted in Ecuador suffering an economic recession as oil accounted for the country s largest and main source of revenue Another cause of Ecuadorian emigration was the El Nino event during 1982 1983 Other resources existing within Ecuador were severely damaged due to the extreme climate conditions caused by El Nino which included floods landslides and torrential rains Their fishing industry another source of revenue especially suffered due to a failed anchovy harvest and sardines unexpectedly moving south toward Chilean waters The passage of the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 also was a factor in Ecuadorian emigration It provided legal status to undocumented immigrants who arrived prior to 1982 This provided nearly 17 000 Ecuadorian immigrants with legal residency status which allowed for them to reside in the United States permanently This became a major source of family sponsored Ecuadorian migration to the country Emigration again peaked in the political turmoil of 1996 97 and the national banking crisis of 1998 99 This turmoil placed seventy percent of Ecuadorians below the poverty line by 1997 Most immigrants who live in the United States send money home Many immigrants get U S citizenship others simply are legalized while other groups live illegally crossing the border from Mexico or entering by boat from Puerto Rico Ecuadorian Americans come from every part of Ecuador During the 1970s most of the Ecuadorians came from the northern and central highlands including the area around Quito In the 1980s many Ecuadorians came from the coast In the 1990s most of them came from the southern highlands near the border with Peru The majority of Ecuadorian immigrants emigrate into New York City and its surrounding suburbs The 1990 census recorded that 60 percent of Ecuadorians living in the United States live in the New York City Metropolitan Area while another 10 live in Miami 4 Ecuadorian Return Migration editIn 2008 the Great World Recession made for a decline in Ecuadorian emigration This event also hindered two of Ecuador s major cash flows remittances and exports To aid in the country s recovery Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa implemented the Welcome Home Plan The plan fights unemployment and serves to boost the economy by encouraging migrants to come home through various ways including aiding returnees in their own business ventures 5 Panama Hat Industry s role in Ecuadorian Emigration edit nbsp Debbie Mucarsel Powell first South American immigrant member of Congress elected in 2018 Ecuadorians had been sewing straw hats ever since the 16th century with the introduction of the Spanish Elites it was not until 1835 when Manuel Alfaro would start an exportation business that would increase Ecuador s GDP The success of selling and trading goods relies heavily on a country s location and at the time Ecuador was not a busy stop for travelers Business people realized that a few miles north a very busy stop for travelers seeking to go west during the California Gold rush Panama One of the only few ways to go west from the east coast or Canada fast and safe was to travel by sea to Panama cross Isthmus and continue your journey through boat again 6 Panama became the location where manufactures from Ecuador specially in the region of Cuenca would export their hats making Cuenca a Hat industry A fond importer and buyer of these Hat was the United States specifically New York Usually women were in charge of weaving the hats and men were in charge of the business side Although the hats were very beautifully hand crafted and took months of manufacture imitations at a cheaper price joined the competition and fashion trends started to change decreasing the demand for them thus leading to the decline of the Panama Hat Trade in 1950s and 1960s This heavily affected the working class that actually weaved the hats and the elites whom ran the exportation sites Laborers had to migrate out of their isolated region in hopes to find job opportunities A wave of Ecuadorians emigrated to New York City through the same connections established during the Hat trade they were known as pioneer migrants Migration to New York was very regionally focused in Ecuador due to the Ecuadorians high economic reliance on the revenue that the exportation industry created which was only in Cuenca and Azuay 7 Ecuador was so involved in this type of economic system because of the impact of pre and post Spanish colonial rule and thus instead of exporting hats they started to export their own people When the pioneer migrants reached NYC their families and friends joined as well leading to a mass out migration in duding the 1980s and 1990s after the 1980 economic crisis that left a majority of Ecuadorians even those living in the urban areas unemployed 7 The exportation of people was facilitated by the only way that Ecuadorians knew with the help of intermediary guides who would provide finical needs foraged papers and other necessary services in their host countries These intermediaries known as tramitadores would profit through high interests imposed on prices for the journey to the states typically ranging from 6 10 000 with 10 15 interest and Ecuador as a whole benefited from remittances sent back 7 So far in 2019 needs update 780 million of Ecuador s GDP is accounted through remittances which is the second highest source of revenue Ecuadors regional migration industry is much like the Panama Hat industry in the sense that only a few members run the operation where the tramitadores were members of one family in an Azyuan town and money lenders as well 7 In 2000 400 000 Ecuadorians joined the other 1 million already residing in United States Today stricter immigration policies are in effect forcing Ecuadorians that are already here to stay permanently This transnational migration of Cuenca and New York City continues today Ecuadorians are the third largest Latin American group in the New York City and New Jersey Area Of all the Ecuadorians the migrate to the U S 62 percent of them reside in NYC as of 2005 research 8 Land Reform Act of 1964 editIn 1964 Ecuador passed the Land Reform Idle Lands and Settlement Act The law was an attempt to end the feudal system that had existed in the Sierra for centuries It redistributed land from absentee landlords to the peasants who farmed it The law set the minimum amount of land to be granted in the redistribution at 4 8 hectares 9 However the land redistributed to the peasant farmers was of terrible quality It was mountainous unfertile land and often just barely larger than the minimum required amount of land The large farm owners kept the fertile valley land for themselves The peasant farmers who received these small plots of land called minifundios received little to no government assistance In spite of these difficulties however by 1984 over 700 000 hectares had been distributed to 79 000 peasants Distribution of the land remained highly unequal In 1982 80 percent of the farms consisted of less than ten hectares yet these small farms accounted for only 15 percent of the farmland 9 While the Land Reform Act improved the lives and working conditions of many poor Ecuadorian farmers it shook the country and made it unstable The system that had been in place for so long had been remodeled and forced many of these farmers to sell their land due to lack of credit and experience The peasant farmers left the land their forefathers had farmed for generations and headed to Venezuela and the United States citation needed Demographics edit nbsp The New York City Metropolitan Area is home to the largest Ecuadorian population in the United States by a significant margin 4 Many Ecuadorians in the United States have settled in cities such as New York City most residing in various areas of Queens as well as in Bushwick and Fordham Ossining New York Hudson New York Washington Heights Danbury Connecticut Jersey City New Jersey Union City New Jersey Newark New Jersey Plainfield New Jersey Philadelphia Pennsylvania Chicago Illinois Orlando Florida Tampa Florida Fort Lauderdale Florida Miami Florida Houston Texas Dallas Texas San Antonio Texas Minneapolis Minnesota San Francisco California Los Angeles California and Cleveland Ohio Queens County s percentage of Ecuadorians is about 4 7 and it has the largest Ecuadorian community of any county in New York and in the United States numbering just about 101 000 in 2010 Ecuadorians are the 2nd largest South American Hispanic group in New York City as well as in the State of New York 10 Ecuadorians are the fifth largest Hispanic group in New York after Puerto Ricans Dominicans Colombians and Mexicans Ecuadorians also constitute Queens County s 2nd largest Hispanic group Another New York group of Ecuadorians live in the Bronx in the Morris Heights and Highbridge neighborhoods north of Yankee Stadium Still other Ecuadorian neighborhoods are situated in Brooklyn in New Jersey cities such as Newark and Jersey City and in towns in Connecticut 10 States with highest Ecuadorian population edit The 10 states with the largest Ecuadorian population were Source Census 2020 11 New York 421 865 2 1 of state population New Jersey 237 523 2 6 of state population Florida 104 927 0 5 of state population Connecticut 63 677 1 7 of state population California 58 662 0 15 of state population Illinois 36 879 0 2 of state population Texas 31 127 0 1 of state population Pennsylvania 28 596 0 1 of state population Massachusetts 24 677 0 3 of state population Georgia 6 603 0 1 of state population The U S state with the smallest Ecuadorian population as of 2010 was North Dakota with 55 Ecuadorians less than 0 1 of state population U S Metro areas with largest Ecuadorian population edit The largest Ecuadorian populations are found within these areas Source Census 2020 New York Northern New Jersey Long Island NY NJ PA MSA 656 912 Miami Fort Lauderdale Pompano Beach FL MSA 67 695 Los Angeles Long Beach Santa Ana CA MSA 40 986 Bridgeport Stamford Norwalk CT MSA 40 335 Chicago Joliet Naperville IL IN WI MSA 32 045 Washington Arlington Alexandria DC VA MD WV MSA 17 121 Orlando Kissimmee Sanford FL MSA 15 293 Minneapolis St Paul Bloomington MN WI MSA 7 121 New Haven Milford CT MSA 6 680 Philadelphia Camden Wilmington PA NJ DE MD MSA 6 440 Tampa St Petersburg Clearwater FL MSA 5 292 Houston Sugar Land Baytown TX MSA 5 011 Riverside San Bernardino Ontario CA MSA 4 662 Charlotte Gastonia Rock Hill NC SC MSA 4 590 Boston Cambridge Quincy MA NH MSA 4 287 Trenton Princeton NJ MSA 4 264 Atlanta Sandy Springs Marietta GA MSA 3 944 Dallas Fort Worth Arlington TX MSA 3 004 Poughkeepsie Newburgh Middletown NY MSA 2 957 Allentown Bethlehem Easton PA NJ MSA 2 700U S counties with largest Ecuadorian immigrant populationThe total nationally is 438 500 All figures are taken from the 2015 2019 American Community Survey per the Migration Policy Institute website 12 1 Queens County Queens NY 71 3002 Essex County NJ 21 8003 Hudson County NJ 20 6004 Kings County Brooklyn NY 19 0005 Bronx County The Bronx NY 17 5006 Westchester County NY 17 0007 Cook County IL 15 9008 Miami Dade County FL 15 7009 Suffolk County NY 14 20010 Fairfield County CT 11 50011 New York County Manhattan NY 11 40012 Los Angeles County CA 11 40013 Broward County FL 10 80014 Bergen County NJ 9 80015 Union County NJ 9 70016 Nassau County NY 7 60017 New Haven County CT 5 30018 Orange County FL 4 70019 Hennepin County MN 4 50020 Palm Beach County FL 4 20021 Rockland County NY 4 10022 Middlesex County NJ 3 60023 Montgomery County MD 3 00024 Passaic County NJ 2 90025 Mecklenburg County NC 2 90026 Harris County TX 2 80027 Mercer County NJ 2 70028 Morris County NJ 2 600 U S communities with high percentages of people of Ecuadorian ancestry edit The top 25 U S communities with the highest percentage of people claiming Ecuadorian ancestry as of the 2000 census 2010 numbers in parentheses are 13 Sleepy Hollow New York 10 76 17 54 Montauk New York 8 08 4 21 East Newark New Jersey 7 87 19 87 Ossining New York 7 48 19 31 Patchogue New York 7 09 Hightstown New Jersey 6 31 14 11 Union City New Jersey 5 94 9 23 North Plainfield New Jersey 5 39 Town of Ossining New York 4 98 19 31 Port Chester New York 4 90 9 58 Hackensack New Jersey 4 78 9 98 Springs New York 4 46 17 25 West New York New Jersey 4 45 Peekskill New York 4 32 North Bergen New Jersey 4 02 Harrison New Jersey 3 90 Guttenberg New Jersey 3 88 East Hampton New York 3 81 East Windsor New Jersey 3 39 Dover New Jersey 3 37 Rye New York 3 18 Belleville New Jersey 3 06 Danbury Connecticut 2 92 7 57 Guttenberg New Jersey 2 9 Weehawken New Jersey 2 83 U S communities with the most residents born in Ecuador edit The top 25 U S communities with the most residents born in Ecuador are 14 Sleepy Hollow New York 10 4 East Newark New Jersey 10 3 Ossining New York 10 1 Hightstown New Jersey 9 5 North Plainfield New Jersey 7 8 Montauk New York 7 8 Patchogue New York 7 7 Union City New Jersey 7 5 Wainscott New York 6 4 Peekskill New York 5 9 Springs New York 5 4 Hackensack New Jersey 5 3 West New York New Jersey 5 2 Port Chester New York 4 8 Queens New York 4 7 Dover New Jersey 4 6 Harrison New Jersey 4 1 Twin Rivers New Jersey 4 0 Belleville New Jersey 3 8 Danbury Connecticut 3 7 Newark New Jersey 3 6 Spring Valley New York 3 5 Tarrytown New York 3 4 Brewster New York 3 1 Guttenberg New Jersey 2 9 Notable people editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ecuadorian Americans news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Christina Aguilera American singer songwriter actress and television personality who is the daughter of a White mother and mestizo Ecuadorian father Cecilia Alvear Latina journalist in television news and the former President of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists Adrienne Bailon American actress singer songwriter dancer and television personality Lourdes Baird former United States federal judge Nancy Bermeo professor of political science who is the daughter of an Irish and Danish mother and an Ecuadorian father Nuffield Chair of Comparative Politics at Oxford University Chico Borja retired U S Ecuadorian soccer player and current soccer coach Samantha Boscarino American actress How to Rock Ecuadorian descent from her mother Charles Castronovo American tenor 15 F Javier Cevallos president of Framingham State University in Framingham Massachusetts Violet Chachki American drag queen singer and actress born in Atlanta Georgia Cree Cicchino American actress from Game Shakers who has descendance from Italy and Ecuador Carla Esparza professional MMA artist partial Ecuadorian heritage Irina Falconi professional American tennis player Raul Fernandez son of a Cuban father and an Ecuadorian mother Gabriela Barzallo Ecuadorian born journalist Luis Fierro Ecuadorian born economist climate change expert politician and writer 16 April Flores American actress and plus size model 17 Alexandra von Furstenberg director and businesswoman Jose Garces chef and restaurant owner Pia Getty independent filmmaker Cork Graham writer George Gustines journalist Vinnie Hinostroza NHL player 18 Jaime Jarrin Spanish language voice of the Los Angeles Dodgers Mike Judge American actor animator writer producer director musician and creator of King of the Hill and Beavis and Butthead who was born in Ecuador to parents working there Helado Negro South Florida native born to Ecuadorian immigrants and based in Brooklyn New York 19 Xolo Mariduena Cobra Kai actor of Ecuadorian descent Gerardo Mejia Latin rapper and singer Nadia Mejia Miss California USA in 2016 Marie Chantal Crown Princess of Greece Lloyd Monserratt 1966 2003 20 Francisco Moya New York City Council member former New York Assembly member from Corona Queens Debbie Mucarsel Powell Congresswoman first Ecuadorian American elected to the U S House of Representatives John Paulson American hedge fund manager Lady Pink graffiti artist Fatima Ptacek American child actress and model Ernesto Quinonez American novelist Diego Serrano American actor Nelson Serrano former Ecuadorian businessman and a nationalized American citizen since 1971 who was convicted for murder Hugo Savinovich former Ecuadorian professional wrestler Pancho Segura former leading tennis player Jason and Kristopher Simmons American actors Martha de la Torre entrepreneur CEO of El Clasificado Nina G Vaca Chairman and CEO of PinnacleGroup Jose F Valencia President ASA College New York and Florida 21 Carmen Velasquez New York Supreme Court Justice first to be elected in New York State Civil Court 2009 2014 and Supreme Court 2015 2028 Roberto de Villacis American Latino fashion designer and artist Emanuel Xavier American poet spoken word artist novelist editor and activistSee also edit nbsp United States portal nbsp Ecuador portal nbsp Hispanic and Latino Americans portalCorona Jackson Heights Ecuador United States relationsReferences edit a b B03001 HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN BY SPECIFIC ORIGIN United States 2018 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau July 1 2018 Retrieved November 25 2019 Monsy Alvarado April 18 2016 In North Jersey s Ecuadorean community excruciating worry North Jersey Media Group Retrieved April 18 2016 Immigration Data amp Statistics Department of Homeland Security July 19 2012 Retrieved March 4 2018 a b Yearbook of Immigration Statistics 2011 Supplemental Table 2 U S Department of Homeland Security Retrieved February 21 2013 Jokisch Brad November 24 2014 Ecuador From Mass Emigration to Return Migration Migration Policy Institute Retrieved March 3 2018 permanent dead link History of the Panama Hat Brent Black Panama Hats www brentblack com a b c d Kyle David Migration Industries A Comparison of the Ecuador US and Ecuador Spain Cases via www academia edu a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Jokisch Brad D November 20 2014 Ecuador From Mass Emigration to Return Migration migrationpolicy org a b Ecuador Land Use and Tenure www country data com a b Jeremy Mumford 2010 A Countries and Their Cultures Ecuatorians Americans Countries and their cultures Retrieved December 10 2011 American FactFinder QT P10 Hispanic or Latino by Type 2010 U S Immigrant Population by State and County migrationpolicy org February 4 2014 Retrieved May 9 2022 Ancestry Map of Ecuadorian Communities Epodunk com Archived from the original on November 10 2006 Retrieved July 29 2008 Top 101 cities with the most residents born in Ecuador population 500 city data com Retrieved July 30 2008 If The Glove Fits Charles Castronovo amp The Rake s Progress Royal Opera 7 18 July Luis Fierro Bizarrecovers Powers Scott Silent car rides a growing bond and the second chance that The Athletic Retrieved January 21 2019 Helado Negro Helado Negro Castro Tony January 14 2003 Eastside Mourns Death of Pacheco s Top Aide WAVE Community Newspapers permanent dead link Asa President Jose Valencia Interviews with the New York Post Further reading editMumford Jeremy Ecuadorian Americans Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America edited by Thomas Riggs 3rd ed vol 2 Gale 2014 pp 47 60 online Pineo Ronn F Ecuador and the United States Useful Strangers University of Georgia Press 2007 Pribilsky Jason La Chulla Vida Gender Migration and the Family in Andean Ecuador and New York City Syracuse University Press 2007 External links editEcuador News newspaper Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ecuadorian Americans amp oldid 1192391031, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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