2 Steps Closer! puerto Rican Genealogy



  1. 2 Steps Closer Puerto Rican Genealogy Sites
  2. 2 Steps Closer Puerto Rican Genealogy Information

Puerto Rico’s Second City Steps Out Ponce, on Puerto Rico’s south coast, has taken pains to retain its historical architecture. This building on the main square, Plaza las Delicias, is now a bank. “We find that populations from the insular Caribbean are best modeled as mixtures absorbing two independent waves of African migrants. Assuming a 30-year generation time, the estimated average of 15 generations ago for the first pulse (circa 1550) agrees with the introduction of African slaves soon after European contact in the New World” (Moreno-Estrada et al., 2013, p.13).

On November 6, 2012, the people of Puerto Rico voted to join the U.S. as its 51st state. Or did they?

  1. Puerto Rico and Global History. Even though Puerto Rico is known as a tropical island in the Caribbean that only measures 111.5 x 39.8 miles, it is an island with a vibrant history. Puerto Ricans recognize their identity as being a mixture of three cultures: Native American, European, and African.
  2. Your Puerto Rican ancestors are probably listed on the U.S. Residents of Puerto Rico have been counted in the following Federal Census years: 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940, and 1950–present. There are a few things to remember: first, Puerto Rico's Census records are in Spanish! The Puerto Rico Genealogy Guide provides some helpful.

The referendum was non-binding and was conducted in a two-step process. The first question asked whether Puerto Ricans were happy with the current Commonwealth status. Fifty-two percent of Puerto Ricans indicated they were not. The second question was a choice: independence, statehood, or a freely associated state (a revised Commonwealth status that would have granted independence with close connections to the U.S.). About 61% chose statehood, but that figure is misleading.

See, the Commonwealth Party asked voters not to answer the second question. Almost 500,000 voters left that question blank as a result. Thus, compared to about 810,000 votes for statehood, over one million (55%) actually voted against it. The referendum was anything but a clear indication that Puerto Ricans want statehood.

In addition, the people of Puerto Rico voted out Luis Fortuno and the pro-statehood party from the Governor’s office. Just four years after they handed Fortuno a landslide victory, they replaced him with the pro-Commonwealth Party candidate Alejandro Garcia Padilla. In a strange way, Puerto Rican voters went beyond thinking about statehood by making a statement about the global political-economic system. The referendum was a reflection of the terrible pain that severe inequality and globalization has brought to their Island.

This convoluted referendum process and outcome suggests Puerto Ricans are not necessarily looking for a new political status, but for a new economy. Puerto Rico is deeply polarized in class terms. There is a small rich upper stratum that lives well. But there is also a large (and growing) strata that lives below the poverty line (over 41%), is increasingly unemployed or underemployed (14%), has declining income. Many are able to live only because of government transfer programs, and over 30% of Puerto Rico’s GDP comes from federal transfers in the form of social security, Medicaid, and more. Over 37% of its people are receiving federal food stamps.

Inequality in Puerto Rico is higher than in most states. As measured by the Gini index—here, a measure of income inequality—Puerto Rico’s inequality is comparable to Washington, D.C.’s and higher than that of most states, even New York, Mississippi, and Missouri. It’s even higher than El Salvador’s. Puerto Rico has become an economy of extremes. Wealth and jobs exist at one small end, but a mass of unemployment and poverty lurks at the other larger end. Puerto Rico is a sort of harbinger of a U.S. economy that continues to move toward greater stratification.

This increasing class polarization paradoxically makes Puerto Rico attractive for some industries (pharmaceuticals, electronics, food products). It is a very productive economy: the Puerto Rican GDP is the highest among Latin American countries, and is even higher than Spain’s, according to most international economic data.

The problem is that most of that productivity comes from what remains of the declining pharmaceutical industry. As one analyst described it, Puerto Rico is not an underdeveloped state, but rather “a developed economy that stopped growing.” Manufacturing is shrinking (in the 1990s, the loss of federal tax exemptions hastened this process), while government jobs make up about 30% of all employment, according to government indicators.

Puerto Rico has also already experimented with the kinds of toxic austerity policies that have been imposed on countries like Greece and that Republicans want to impose in the U.S. Fortuno’s regime made drastic cutbacks in government programs and jobs, and it privatizated many government services and assets. Further, Fortuno fired 17,000 government workers, froze all government salaries, and reduced government spending by 20% of the budget. In 2011, he granted a 40-year concession to Goldman Sachs and Albertis to profit from toll roads in exchange for $1.14 billion. When he lost re-election, Fortuno had plans to sell off or lease the Luis Munoz Marin International Airport, as well as energy, water, and public school infrastructure and transportation public assets.

These austerity policies and privatization were meant to deal with a hemorrhaging economy and its attendant tax deficits. They are also the result of increased competition from other Latin American countries after NAFTA and from general globalization. Since production and consumption remains dominated by the foreign sector, Puerto Rico has little room to maneuver. It must offer foreign firms an increasingly attractive package of lower taxes and wages, though jobs and income in the private and public sector are falling under these circumstances. This is a terrible economic and political vise. Puerto Rico cannot even devalue its own currency to boost its economy, since it uses U.S. dollars.

In the meantime, labor unions are vibrant, but on the defensive, as economists and political leaders push to solve economic woes by calling for even lower wages. The result is a bizarre hybrid economy in which workers survive only by making expert use of remaining public or private sector jobs, government transfer payments, and money generated from activities in the informal underground economy. This means that the route to independence holds great moral and political value, but such an abrupt move to independence would send hundreds of thousands of families into economic freefall—they truly are dependent on federal government transfer programs.

It is no wonder, then, that the referendum and recent elections suggest Puerto Ricans are fickle, responding with incredible suspicion to what their political leaders offer. They just don’t trust or know which political party can lead them out of the wilderness. But this indecisiveness is not so different from that of voters in the U.S. (where the electoral college numbers masked a much closer popular vote tally in the presidential election); Puerto Ricans, too, have little confidence about how to best move forward in a world where the U.S. is no longer immune to global economic pressures and political incompetence.

Voting this way, Puerto Ricans were, as they have so often in the past, leading the way for others—including other U.S. citizens. Puerto Ricans have exposed the serious unmet challenges of the global economy and have rejected the fiscal austerity solutions offered in Puerto Rico, in the wider U.S. by the Republican Party, and to the world by neo-liberal regimes. The shameful police attack on students protesting at the University of Puerto Rico in 2011 was the most glaring, but certainly not the only, example of this battle. The November vote was not clear, binding, or any kind of solution.

Recommended Reading

Jorge Duany. 2001. The Puerto Rican Nation on the Move: Identities on the Island and in the United States. A brilliant reminder that any understanding of Puerto Rico must come to grips with the blurred and divided identity of Puerto Ricans. Their racial, national, and political identity overlaps, conflicts, and is shared between the Island and the U.S., and Puerto Ricans remain connected to a cultural sense of national difference even as they continue to move back and forth between the island and the U.S. mainland.

Gordon K. Lewis. 1963.Puerto Rico Freedom and Power in the Caribbean. Still one of the best historical analyses of Puerto Rico’s long colonial experience and how it continues to haunt and shape the island’s contemporary politics and economy.

Frances Negrón-Muntaner. 2007. None of the Above: Puerto Ricans in the Global Era. A stellar collection of some of the most astute and fascinating thinking about Puerto Rico’s politics, culture, and global identity.

***Si eres descendiente de los Magraner de Sóller, Mallorca, especialmente a través de Damián Magraner Morell o uno de sus hermanos, me gustaría hablar con usted para ver si podemos establecer una conexión genética. Puedes dejar un comentario aquí en este blog para contactarte conmigo. ¡Muchísimas gracias!***

While in Puerto Rico for Spring Break, one of my goals was to test various family members through various companies. Since I don't have easy access to men who carry Avilés and Correa Y-DNA like I do the Rivera line (myself being a carrier of this Y-DNA group) since those members live in Puerto Rico, I decided I would focus on getting a male cousin from my Avilés family and my Correa grandfather to test. I decided to buy two Y-DNA67 exams for them from FTDNA. Recently, they had a DNA day sale and I decided to myself a Y-DNA111 exam to test my Rivera branch as well. So those are boxes I can check off on my genealogical goals for 2019! This blog will focus solely on my Avilés Y-DNA results.
Buying a FTDNA Y-DNA test is not cheap! I would recommend to get these tests if you are an experienced genealogist interested in learning more about your Y-DNA group or an amateur genealogist trying to crack a wall in your direct paternal family. I have been fortunate to test various branches and I have done so for genealogical purposes such as: Establishing whether I have an African or European Guadeloupean Y-DNA group (Charles family), potential Jewish/Arab Y-DNA group (Correa family), Mallorcan connection to the Magraner family (Avilés family), and trying to establish a stronger connection for a relatively uncommon haplogroup (Rivera family).

Family Tree DNA Home Page [FTDNA]
Information

2 Steps Closer Puerto Rican Genealogy Sites


Background
For anyone that has been following my blog (thank you kindly!), you have probably seen the surnames Avilés and Magraner various times throughout many old posts. My trying to solve this family's mystery dates back to the beginning of my blog in 2011, wondering about my 2nd great-grandfather's origins. I spent time researching and writing about José Avilés Magraner in 2014 for the 52 Ancestors Challenge. I learned the name of my potential 3rd great-grandfather, Damián Magraner Morell, and traveled to Sóller, Mallorca a year later in 2015, his hometown, to learn more about the man who made his way to Río Prieto, Lares, Puerto Rico. The closest I've gotten to confirming this on paper has been José's brother Lorenzo Avilés who mentions Damián Magraner on his Social Security Application as his father. I stepped on Lares land for the first time in many years in 2017 but didn't make it up to Río Prieto. This year though I did!
Also, having a DNA match with a fellow genealogist with a grandmother from Sóller, Mallorca through various family members connected to the Avilés family helped me to help prove that genetically there is something there!
Collecting DNA
With my grandmother and great-aunts in tow we headed over to Río Prieto by car, my great-aunt wasn't too comfortable driving up the steep and narrow roads so I took charge of getting us there. The ride ended up not being too bad and I got to visit a few members connected to my paternal grandmother and great grandmother, I was introduced to the family as 'el nieto de Carmen' (the grandson of Carmen) since they had never met me before and my dad spent his childhood between San Juan and New York and not in the mountain town of Lares. The ride over was amazing and here are some photos of getting to and being in Lares, it was amazing to see the land transform as we made our way up the mountain!
Driving up the mountain [Personal Photo]

Nature at its best! [Personal Photo]

The view from my cousin's land [Personal Photo]

The 'two way road' near my cousin's land [Personal Photo]

Our first stop was the house of my 1st cousin 2x removed. After seeing his land, talking about the effects of Hurricane María, and being gifted many fruits, I gathered up the courage to ask if he was willing to take two DNA tests for me. I was a bit scared he would say 'no' for fear of not knowing what the test would do, but he was very willing to help out. I collected his DNA, wrote down some important information, and when we got back to San Juan mailed off the DNA test.
My reason to test this line was because I wanted to know where in the world it was connected to and whether or not it could prove that my family was related to the Magraner family. The test results came back pretty quickly and so I took a look at them!
Interpreting results
Magraner Haplogroup? [Personal Photo]

Getting a Y-DNA67 gave me basic results, in the sense that R-M269 is a fairly common group and doesn't give too many specifics into the smaller, more recent branches of this Y-DNA branch. My next step would be to upgrade the test to get more detailed results and potentially make more educated results of my connection in R-M269. Under matches, I currently have 2 matches at the Y-DNA67 level but at a genetic distance of 5 and 7, this would mean that our connection is much farther back in history versus having a genetic distance with a smaller number which would mean having a closer relationship in generations. My genetic cousin at the 'genetic distance 5' reached out to me and we quickly chatted and noticed our relation was too far to discover at the moment but interestingly noticed that our surnames both had to deal with fruits - Magraner being a surname connected to the pomegranate tree! Lowering my markers to 37 for example gives me more matches but again, at a pretty far distance. The cousins seem to be wide spread across various countries in Europe, I do have some matches from Puerto Rico but they are at Y-DNA12 which is fairly distant as well. As you can see below my Y-DNA67 match has recent roots in the US but he said his family has older roots in southern France.

Y-DNA67 Match [Personal Photo]

My goal is that by hopefully writing about this branch and taking a Y-DNA test I'll be able to confirm my connection to the Magraner family of Sóller, Mallorca. If you descend from this branch, I'd love to chat and see if we can figure out our potential connection!
2 Steps Closer! puerto Rican Genealogy
Conclusion
Though in a sense my results were 'inconclusive', there still is hope! Y-DNA usually takes longer from what I know to establish stronger connections because it's such a specific group that is being tested versus for example autosomal DNA. 23andme has given me a bit of a deeper glance into the R-M269 group and hopefully as I upgrade to Y-DNA111, I will have stronger/clearer results and hopefully a Magraner descendant tests as well. This will in turn allow me to make a genetically educated guess about my Avilés family and whether our roots really are in Mallorca.
Haplogroup R-Z209 [Personal Photo]

2 Steps Closer Puerto Rican Genealogy Information


Here's to hopefully solving a 128 year mystery in the making!