Early settlement and demographic shifts The area encompassing present-day Little Caribbean was originally part of the
Dutch colonial town of
Flatbush, one of the six original
European settlements on Long Island. Following consolidation into Greater New York in 1898 and the extension of the subway system in the early 20th century, the area developed into middle-class neighborhoods populated largely by
Jewish and
Italian American families.
First wave (1880s-1920s) The first large-scale wave of immigration from Caribbean countries took place between the 1880s and 1920s. Immigrants formed mutual aid organizations such as the West Indian Benevolent Association, which provided job and housing assistance, rotating lines of credit, help with naturalization, and support for members during illness and for burial expenses. These institutions became spaces for discussion of Caribbean American life and fostered collective identity among migrants from different islands, contributing to early
Pan-Africanist organizing. Female leaders played significant roles, including Elizabeth Hendrickson, co-founder of the American West Indian Ladies' Aid Society and the Harlem Tenants' League.
Second wave (post-1965) Beginning in the 1960s, the demographic composition of the area underwent significant change. The
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, which eliminated national-origin quotas, facilitated a wave of immigration from Caribbean nations including
Jamaica,
Trinidad and Tobago,
Barbados,
Grenada,
Guyana,
Haiti, and
Panama. Many new immigrants settled in Flatbush and East Flatbush during the late 1960s and 1970s, drawn by the availability of affordable housing as white residents relocated to the suburbs in a process sometimes described as
white flight. Sociologist
Roy Bryce-Laporte characterized this period as "the new Caribbean immigration," noting the distinctive patterns of settlement in New York City. Caribbean immigrants established ethnic enclaves, transforming commercial corridors with restaurants, bakeries, markets, churches, and cultural institutions that catered to their communities. By the 1970s and 1980s, the Caribbean community had established a substantial presence in central Brooklyn. Caribbean immigrants in New York reached half a million by the late 1980s, and the core of the community shifted during the 1970s from Harlem and Bedford-Stuyvesant to central Brooklyn. By 1980, over half of New York's West Indian population, and almost one-fourth of the nation's, lived in Brooklyn. Political scientist
Philip Kasinitz documented how West Indian immigrants in Brooklyn navigated questions of racial solidarity and ethnic distinctiveness, forming a community that was both part of and distinct from African American Brooklyn. The population of the neighborhood shifted significantly, with Afro-Caribbean immigrants and African Americans comprising an increasing share of residents. == Demographics ==