. The French, who had been arriving on the Island since the 1700s, quickly became part of the Spanish colonial community. They accomplished this by quickly establishing commercial and social connections with the already prospering Spanish settlers and marrying into the ever-increasingly successful Spanish-descended families, adopting the Spanish language and all Ibero-European customs of their new homeland, that they already had familiarity with in France. Their influence in Puerto Rico is very much present and in evidence in the island's
cuisine,
literature and arts. French surnames are common in Puerto Rico. This prolonged immigration flow from mainland France and its Mediterranean territories (especially Corsica) to Puerto Rico was the largest in number, second only to that of the steady flow of Peninsular Spanish immigrants from mainland Spain and its own Mediterranean and Atlantic Maritime provinces of Mallorca and the Canary Islands. Today, the great number of Puerto Ricans of French ancestry are evident in the 19% of family surnames on the island that are of French origin. These are easily traceable to mainland France, French Louisiana émigrés, and other French colonies in the Caribbean which experienced catastrophic slave upheavals that forced the French colonists to flee. The descendants of the original French settlers have distinguished themselves as business people, politicians and writers. "La Casa del Francés" (The Frenchman's House), built in 1910, is a turn-of-the-century plantation mansion recently designated as a historical landmark by the
National Register of Historic Places. It is located on the island of
Vieques and is currently used as a guest house. Besides having distinguished careers in agriculture, the academy, the arts and the military, Puerto Ricans of French descent have made many other contributions to the Puerto Rican way of life. Their contributions can be found, but are not limited to, the fields of education, commerce, politics, science and entertainment. Among the poets of French descent who have contributed to the literature of Puerto Rico are
Evaristo Ribera Chevremont, whose verses are liberated from
folkloric subject matter and excel in universal lyricism,
José Gautier Benítez, considered by the people of Puerto Rico to be the best poet of the
Romantic Era, the novelist and journalist
Enrique Laguerre, a nominee for a Nobel Prize in literature, and writer and playwright
René Marqués, whose play
La Carreta (The Oxcart) helped secure his reputation as a leading literary figure in Puerto Rico. The drama traces a rural Puerto Rican family as it moved to the
slums of San Juan and then to New York in search of a better life, only to be disillusioned and to long for their island. In the field of science Dr.
Carlos E. Chardón, the first Puerto Rican
mycologist, is known as "the Father of Mycology in Puerto Rico". He discovered the
aphid "Aphis maidis", the vector of the sugar cane Mosaic virus. Mosaic viruses are plant viruses.
Fermín Tangüis, an
agriculturist and scientist developed the seed that would eventually produce the Tangüis cotton in
Peru, saving that nation's cotton industry. ==Surnames==