Objective. We seek to describe trends in the geographic destination of Mexi
can immigrants to the United States. Methods. Using the Integrated Public U
se Microdata Samples for 1910-90 and the 1996 Current Population Survey, we
tabulate the distribution of all foreign-born Mexicans and recent Mexican
immigrants (those arriving in the prior five years) by state and metropolit
an area. Results. We find that early in the century, Mexicans went primaril
y to Texas, but after 1910, California emerged as a growing pole of attract
ion. California continued to gain at the expense of Texas through the 1920s
and 1930s, but it did not surpass Texas until the Bracero Program of 1942-
1964. Following the demise of this program, California came to dominate all
other destinations; but since 1990, Mexican immigration has shifted away f
rom it toward new states that never before have received significant number
s of Mexicans. Conclusions. During the 1990s, Mexican immigration was trans
formed from a regional to a national phenomenon. By 1996, nearly a third of
new arrivals were going to places other than the five traditional gateway
states, which historically have absorbed 90% of all Mexican immigrants.