: CS1 maint: archived copy as title ( link) The Center for Community Solutions (Cleveland). ^ a b c d "Cleveland Neighborhoods and Wards: Brooklyn Centre Neighborhood Factsheet (2021)" (PDF).As of 2019, Brooklyn Centre had an estimated foreign-born population of 17.3%, with most being immigrants from Latin America (especially Guatemala, El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, and Mexico). Hispanics or Latinos of any race were 37.8% of the population. In 2020, the composition of the neighborhood was 61.1% white, 21.1% African American, 1.6% Asian and Pacific Islander, and 16.1% mixed and other groups. Today, Brooklyn Centre is a diverse neighborhood, with a mixed population of ethnic Europeans, African Americans, and, most prominently, a growing Hispanic community, Puerto Rican and otherwise. These new settlers relocated to the east end of the neighborhood so that they would be close to the factories in and around the Cuyahoga Valley such as the tanneries and steel mills. German immigrants arrived starting in the late 19th century, followed by Polish and Irish arrivals in the early 20th century. The northern border is a city street named Trowbridge.īrooklyn Centre was originally settled by residents from Connecticut who had purchased land from investors of the Connecticut Western Reserve. The border to the south is Big Creek which runs through the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo and is the largest tributary that flows into the Cuyahoga. Brooklyn Centre is bordered on the east by the Cuyahoga River I-176/The Jennings Freeway. The eastern portion of Brooklyn Centre is known as Barbarowa. In November 2008, Brooklyn Centre became a National Wildlife Federation registered Community Wildlife Habitat Site, and was among the first city neighborhoods to obtain the designation. In November 2004, The Brooklyn Centre Historical Society published Reflections from Brooklyn Centre: Presentations and Oral Histories from The Brooklyn Centre Historical Society. In 1984, the City of Cleveland created the Brooklyn Centre Historic District, recognizing the location's historic and architectural importance. Entire streets were lost and new cul-de-sacs and dead ends were created, changing the fabric of the neighborhood. In the early 1960s, the neighborhood was changed dramatically with the construction of I-71. By 1812, Brooklyn Centre became a township.
Two years later, around 200 people lived at Brooklyn Centre. Brooklyn Centre was founded in 1812 by James Fish and became the first settlement west of the Cuyahoga River.