A New Wave of Immigration Section 4 A New Wave of Immigration  The Big Idea A new wave of immigration in the late 1800s brought large numbers of immigrants.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The New Immigrants Changes in American Life Chapter 21, Section 2.
Advertisements

Chapter 21, Section 1: New Immigrants in a Promised Land
THE NEW IMMIGRANTS Sec Pages Define: emigrate – ethnic group – steerage – sweatshop – assimilate – nativist- quota Identify: Emma Lazarus.
Objectives Identify the reasons immigration to the United States increased in the late 1800s. Describe the difficulties immigrants faced adjusting to.
Immigration in America
PAGES TIME PERIOD: Chapter 8, Lesson 2: Immigrants in America.
21-1 The New Immigrants. The Lure of America Old Immigrants- mostly Protestant from northwestern Europe Irish, British, German, French Arriving between.
New Immigrants Lesson 15-1
IMMIGRATION COMING TO AMERICA. WHY IMMIGRANTS CAME In the late 19 th century, Europeans flooded American cities in search of work and homes “PUSH” FACTORS.
Chapter 20 – Immigrants and Urban Life
If you were applying for citizenship… U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services –
Ch. 20, Section 1 “A New Wave of Immigration”
Review an immigration literacy test. - Describe the problems/obstacles facing immigrants during the late 19 th and early 20 th century
Chapter 15 New Immigrants
Immigration in 2nd Industrial Revolution
The Cold War BeginsTechnology and Industrial GrowthThe Cold War Begins Section 1 The New Immigrants Compare the “new immigration” of the late 1800s to.
Old vs. New Immigrants Old: Before 1880 Came from Northern and Western Europe Protestant Similar culture Both settled in cities and rural areas Arrived.
IMMIGRATION OF SOUTHERN AND EASTERN EUROPE OLD AND NEW IMMIGRANTS.
What just happened and how did it make you feel?.
CHAPTER 7 THE TRANSFORMATION OF AMERICAN SOCIETY
The Transformation of American Society CH 7 Section 1.
You can type your own categories and points values in this game board. Type your questions and answers in the slides we’ve provided. When you’re in slide.
Immigration Industrialization undermines the idea that every American should be their own boss Prior Knowledge- Think- What do you feel American culture.
Unit VI – A Growing America Chapter 20 Section 1 – New Wave of Immigration Lecture Station.
Chapter 20: An Urban Society
Immigration. A. Who are They 1.Old Immigrants ( ) – Northern and Western Europeans – UK, Netherlands, Sweden, Germany, Norway – Religion: Protestants.
Immigration
American History Chapter 15-1
The New Immigrants Ch. 20/1. A flood of Immigrants Before 1865 most immigrants to the U.S. came from Northern and Western Europe. Before 1865 most immigrants.
Europeans Flood Into the United States Click the mouse button to display the information. By the late 1800s, most European states made it easy to move.
The Immigrant Experience EQ: Should the United States be a “melting pot” or a “salad bowl”?
Immigration Immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe Most came from Great Britain, Ireland and Germany Also came from Russia, Poland, Italy.
New Immigrants in a Promised Land
Unit 3 - Immigration Changes in American Life
IMMIGRATION IN THE LATE 19 TH CENTURY We’re coming to America!
Chapter 7, section 1.   Prior to the 1880s immigrants came from Great Britain, Germany, Ireland, and Scandinavia  Most were Protestants Old immigrants.
U.S. History Chapter 6 Section 2 The New Americans.
Gilded Age Immigration SOL 8A. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, economic opportunity, industrialization, technological change, and.
Immigration to the United States Immigrants came to America for many reasons and faced a number of challenges.
Immigration Chapter 6, Section 1
Call to Order Immigration Day 2 Choose any one of the characters in this photograph. List three details that might have happened on their voyage. Then,
Eliseo Lugo III. Old Immigrants Arrived before 1880s Mostly from Britain, Germany, Ireland, and Scandinavia Mostly Protestants, but some Roman Catholics.
Please Read. American Immigration Through the Golden Door Millions of immigrants entered the U.S. – Hope of better life – Escape from Famine.
The New Immigrants Chapter 20, Section 1 Pgs
The New Immigrants. Who came to America? Between 1800 – 1880 over 10 million immigrants came to America – Old Immigrants: many were Protestants from Northwestern.
Chapter 21, Lesson 1 New Immigrants. Immigrants More arriving from eastern and southern Europe, not northern and western Many non English speaking Catholics.
IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION CHANGES IN AMERICA. A FLOOD OF IMMIGRANTS Old Immigrants Before 1865, people who came to America, excluding African Americans,
Immigration Target 2 I can identify the reason why people came to America after the Civil War through World War One I can identify and explain the problems.
Next Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company Chapter 5 US History: Civil War to the Present A New Wave of Immigration The Big Idea.
Immigration Chapter 13 Section 1.
20.1: The New Immigrants. Reasons immigrants came to the US: Economic troubles Overcrowding Poverty Job scarce Not enough land/ Crop failures Machines.
Immigration ** Not needed to be copied. This is extra information.
A New Wave of Immigration
Immigrants worked hard to adjust to life in the United States.
Chapter 21, Lesson 1 New Immigrants.
20.1: The New Immigrants.
Immigration.
Ch. 5: Immigrants and Urban Life
A Nation of immigrants.
From , 23 million immigrants arrived looking for jobs and opportunities The USA did not have quotas (limits) on how many immigrants could enter.
Chapter 20 – Immigrants and Urban Life
1/21/15 Can you think of several possible reasons why a person immigrates to the United States? What is the main problem that many immigrants to the United.
Chapter 14, Section 4 The New Immigrants p
Immigration After 1865.
Chapter 20 – Immigrants and Urban Life
Prior Knowledge- Think- What do you feel American culture is based on
Age of Immigration
Chapter 20 – Immigrants and Urban Life
The need for Liberty and Labor
Immigrants in America Millions of immigrants moved to the United States in the late 1800’s & early 1900’s. Map of immigration
Presentation transcript:

A New Wave of Immigration Section 4

A New Wave of Immigration  The Big Idea A new wave of immigration in the late 1800s brought large numbers of immigrants to the United States

New Immigrants  Main Idea 1: The late 1800s brought a wave of new immigrants from southern and eastern Europe and Mexico.

New Immigrants  Old Immigrants Arrived before 1880s Mostly from Britain, Germany, Ireland, and Scandinavia Mostly Protestants, but some Catholics Many were skilled workers who spoke English. Settled in rural areas and became farmers  New Immigrants Came after 1880 From southern and eastern Europe; included Czechs, Greeks, Hungarians, Italians, Poles, Russians, and Slovaks Included Eastern Orthodox Christians, Roman Catholics, and Jews Wanted job opportunities in cities

New Immigrants  Immigrants faced a difficult journey, usually traveling in steerage: the area below the ship’s deck. Immigrants get off of a boat Immigrants traveling in the steerage

New Immigrants  Ellis Island in New York opened in 1892; millions of immigrants came through its center over the next 40 years. Officials in processing centers interviewed immigrants to determine whether to let them enter the country. Immigrants exit the boat after arriving at Ellis Island in New York

Ellis Island, New York – the first stop for most immigrants in the early 1900s

New Immigrants  Many immigrants moved into neighborhoods with others from the same country. They could hear their own language, eat familiar foods, and keep their customs. Many immigrants lived in tenements—poorly built, overcrowded apartments. Little Italy in New York in the early 1900s

New Immigrants  Many immigrants were farmers in their homelands, but had to find jobs in cities in the United States. Had to take low-paying, unskilled jobs in garment or steel factories and construction Some worked long hours for little pay in small shops or mills called sweatshops.

New Immigrants  Some immigrants saved, shared, or borrowed money to open small businesses.  Some Mexican immigrants worked on large commercial farms in Arizona, Texas, and California. Thank you come again.

Opposition to Immigration  Main Idea 2: Some Americans opposed immigration and tried to enact restrictions against it. Get out.

Opposition to Immigration  Anti-immigrant feelings grew with increases in immigration. Some unions feared immigrants would take their jobs. This anti-immigrant poster shows how some Americans felt about the Chinese.

Opposition to Immigration  Americans called nativists held racial and ethnic prejudices. Thought immigrants’ poverty and presumed lack of education might harm American society Some were violent toward immigrants.

Opposition to Immigration  Some nativists worked to pass laws limiting immigration. Congress passed the Chinese Exclusion Act in Nativists in Boston founded the Immigration Restriction League in 1894.