Merlo Partido - Demographics

Demographics

Partido of Merlo
Population by year
1866 1,904
1869 2,469
1895 3,595
1914 6,990
1947 19,865
1960 100,146
1970 188,868
1980 292,587
1991 390,858
2001 469,985
2007 520,391

Villa San Antonio del Camino started with 101 inhabitants grouped into twelve families, most of them Spaniard and Criollo people.

At the dawn of 19th century more than fifty black African people lived in Merlo as slaves of the mercedarian friars. After his death Francisco de Merlo left five African slaves to the hospice.

Many Irish and Basque immigrants settled in Merlo around mid 19th century, the first ones after left Ireland because of the Great Irish Famine and British oppression, and the second ones fleeing from Spain’s Carlist Wars. Both communities lived basically in the surrounding estancias; the Irish-Argentine community integrated Merlo's ruling class and four of the five members of the first municipal government belonged to this national affiliation. The Basques worked basically as dairy farmers.

More than half of the population can trace its origins from the Italian and Spaniard immigrants that arrived to Merlo from the late 19th century and continued well into the 20th century.

By the mid 20th century many market gardens were run by members of the Japanese and Portuguese communities.

Looking for better jobs and well-paid salaries, people from the provinces and neighbor countries started to settle in Merlo in the late 1940s and 1950s. These people are from mestizo ascendancy and constitute - at the present days- the principal ethnic group in Merlo.

By the same time many Polish families arrived to Merlo at the end of World War II.

In the present days −and as a curious note− many supermarkets in the district are run by Chinese people.

Read more about this topic:  Merlo Partido