Filipino Americans in the Pacific Northwest
- Filipino and US
ties began in 1898 when Spain
left the Philippines
and the United States
took over.
- The first official immigration of Filipinos to the US was between 1906 to
1934 when Filipinos were recruited to work in California,
Hawaii and Washington as agricultural workers.
- By 1920s, Filipinos, largely Alaska
salmon cannery, and Washington lumber and
farm workers, became a major segment of the Pacific
Northwest’s Asian Pacific American (APA) population,
- The 1965 Immigration Act drew many Filipino
professionals and non-technical workers to the USA.
- In 1939, the Washington State Supreme Court declared
the State’s Anti-Alien Law of 1937 unconstitutional. Henceforth, Filipino
Americans could own and lease land.
- Approximately 1,000 Filipinos enter the US each year through the Port of Seattle.
Most stay in Washington State and could be found in the King, Pierce, Thurston Counties, in Bremerton
and in Yakima
Valley.
- Filipino-Americans make up the largest ethnicity
within the Northwest APA community and in Washington state number 66,000. In the
entire USA,
there are some 1.5 million Filipino Americans.