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i Tour Puerto Rico

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i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
i Tour Puerto Rico
Phone:
787-244-0099

Address:
5249 Ave. Isla Verde, San Juan 00979, Puerto Rico

Puerto Ricans and people of Puerto Rican descent have participated as members of the United States Armed Forces in every conflict in which the United States has been involved since World War I. One of the consequences of the Spanish–American War was that Puerto Rico was annexed by the United States in accordance with the terms of the Treaty of Paris of 1898, ratified on December 10, 1898. On January 15, 1899, the military government changed the name of Puerto Rico to Porto Rico . On March 21, 1915, the first shots by the United States in World War I were fired by the Porto Rico Regiment of Infantry from El Morro Castle at a German ship in San Juan Bay. U.S. Citizenship was imposed upon Puerto Ricans as a result of the 1917 Jones–Shafroth Act and were expected to serve in the military. Puerto Ricans who resided in the island were assigned to the Porto Rico Provisional Regiment of Infantry, organized on June 30, 1901. The United States implemented the policy of military segregated units in Puerto Rico. Puerto Ricans of African descent where assigned to units made up only of blacks, such as the 375th Regiment.Those who resided in the mainland served in regular units of one of the following branches of the United States military, the United States Marine Corps, Army or the Navy. As such, they were assigned to regular military units; however, Puerto Ricans of African descent were assigned to segregated all-black units and were subject to the discrimination which was rampant in the U.S. in those days.It is estimated that 236,000 Puerto Ricans in the island registered for the World War I draft and that 18,000 served in the war. It is, however, impossible to determine the exact number of Puerto Ricans residing on the United States mainland who served and perished in the war because the War Department did not keep statistics in regard to the ethnicity of its members.
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