The first Russian immigrants to the United States arrived in the end of the 18th century (one of the first immigrants from Russia was Demetrius Galitzen, a Russian noble who became a Catholic priest in Mount Savage, Md.). Historians differ on the number and timing of the waves of Russian immigration. The first large influx of refugees from Russia, primarily to New York City, began in the 1880s after massive
pogroms and restrictions imposed upon the
Jews in the Russian Empire. By the time of the
Russian Revolution, prominent political exiles from Russia in New York included
Leon Trotsky,
Nikolai Bukharin, and
Emma Goldman. With the start of the Revolution of February 1917 some Russian exiles moved back to Russia to participate in the Revolution; some of the radicals who stayed in the US suffered from Palmer Raids of 1919 and some were deported from the US. After the
Bolshevik takeover in October 1917 and their victory in the Civil War of 1918-20, some of their opponents, including
Alexander Kerensky, fled to the US (some call this the "First Wave" of Russian immigration). Many of them made their way to New York City, most of them moving to
Hamilton Heights, Manhattan, and other sections of New York City. Many emigres of this wave also moved to the US on the eve of WWII from Western European countries already occupied by the
Nazis. The so-called "Third Wave" of Russians were largely Russian (Soviet) Jews, who came primarily as refugees during the 1970s to Brighton Beach, as well as Rego Park/Forest Hills, Washington Heights and other parts of the city, including Manhattan. Among the most prominent immigrant writers and artists of this wave in New York were
Joseph Brodsky,
Mikhail Baryshnikov,
Sergei Dovlatov and
Eduard Limonov. Brighton Beach was
revitalized after being a neglected area of Brooklyn. After the collapse of the
Soviet Union in 1991, the "Fourth Wave" of Russians had a larger share of ethnic Russians and
Russian Christians who immigrated to the United States with the largest number going to the
New York metropolitan area. Majority of the Russian Americans who considered Brighton Beach their home, began to migrate out to Suburbia tri state area during the early 2000s. ==Demographics==