Little Poland, Brooklyn

Little Poland is an informal name for part of a neighborhood in Greenpoint, in the New York City borough of Brooklyn. The name "Little Poland" came to be applied to it following an influx of Polish immigrants after 1900. Several other places in New York City had been called "Little Poland." 

As described by The New York Times in a June 22, 1984, article: "Manhattan Avenue is the heart of what residents call Little Poland. There are Polish meat stores with strings of kielbasa, bakeries with Polish bread and babkas and supermarkets with Polish pickles, jams, dried soups and sauerkraut." The neighborhood is served by the NYPD's 94th Precinct.

Related neighborhoods
A similar neighborhood is Maspeth, due east about two or three miles, in Queens. Historically Polish since 1890, the Broad Street neighborhood in New Britain, Connecticut was designated "Little Poland" by the City Council in 2008 at the urging of the Polonia Business Association.