You would get in the US State Department, since Puerto Ricans are American citizens.
People born in Puerto Rico are citizens of the United States of America.
They are US Citizens.
Puerto Ricans are citizens of the United States they have (U.S Citizenship). But are also given/offered a certificate of Puerto Rican Cititzenship. So they are citizens of the United States and Puerto Rico.
Be a resident of Puerto Rico. Have an American citizenship or be a legal resident of United States and territories.
US citizenship.
It gave them the right of citizenship.
The Jones Act of 1917.
Puerto Ricans are United States citizens. They have been such since an act of Congress in 1917. There is no such thing as "Puerto Rican citizenship". Puerto Rico is part of the United States and is subject to its federal laws.
The commonwealth you are referring to is Puerto Rico. Inhabitants of Puerto Rico were granted U.S. citizenship through the Jones-Shafroth Act, which was enacted in 1917 during World War I. This act established U.S. citizenship for Puerto Ricans while also providing a local government structure. Puerto Rico remains a U.S. territory today, with its residents enjoying U.S. citizenship but lacking full voting representation in Congress.
Because they can be based on birth in a US Territory, also US citizenship was forced on them after the US invaded Puerto Rico. Today puerto ricans are also offered/given a certificate of Puerto Rican Citizenship.
You don't have to go to any intermediate palce to get from miami to Puerto Rico. there are direct flights from miami to San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Jones-Shafroth Act gave them U.S. citizenship .