Allapattah
is a neighborhood partly in the city of Miami, Florida, and partly
in an adjacent unincorporated area of Miami-Dade County.
The name is derived from the Seminole Indian language word meaning alligator. At the beginning of the 20th Century, the area was known as the Allapattah Prairie. The area is northwest of downtown, and about five miles east of Miami International Airport.


Allapattah
was predominantly White from early in the 20th Century until the
late 1950s, when there was a large influx of African-Americans displaced
by the construction of Interstate Highway 95. Cubans began moving
into the neighborhood in the 1960s. In the 1980s there was an influx
of Dominicans, Nicaraguans, Hondurans, and later, Haitians. It was
then that the area began to become the mix that it is today. Now,
residents from all across the Caribbean and Latin America reside
in the area of Allapattah.
Today,
many of the businesses and educational institutions in the neighborhood
are generally located on Northwest 36th Street (US 27). The boundaries
are roughly as follows: to the north, State Road 112, to the south,
Northwest 20th Street, to the east, Northwest Seventh Avenue (US
441), and to the west, Northwest 27th Avenue.
Recommended Links
Allapattah - A Mix to the Max - A page on the history of Allapattah.
If you have any questions about Allapattah feel free to contact us (see below).