This essay surveys the available statistical data on the experience of
Spanish immigration to Brazil. The 700,000 Spanish immigrants were ma
inly attracted through subsidized passage for work in the coffee plant
ations of Sao Paulo; they were the most family oriented, least educate
d and most agricultural of the immigrants arriving in the period 1880-
1960. They, along with the Japanese, were the group most concentrated
in the state of Sao Paulo. Within a generation of arrival, the Spaniar
ds were becoming landowners, and by the 1940s had achieved a substanti
al place as producers of coffee and all other major agricultural produ
cts in the state of Sao Paulo. Unlike the other Europeans, however, th
e Spaniards were less well represented in the cities and did not do as
well in commerce and industry. Though initially the most highly endog
amous in marriage, they were marrying more native born Brazilians by t
he 1940s. Less wealthy and less concentrated, the Spaniards had the le
ast developed social institutions among the major immigrant groups. Th
ey were also subject to high rates of out-migration, with most Spaniar
ds initially traveling to other Spanish American countries rather than
to Spain. A final specialized immigration of skilled workers came to
Spain after World War II, but had little impact on the older community
and was subject to much higher repatriation rates to Spain.