Brief History of US Immigration Policy Ellis Island Inspection Station, c. 1910
Early Republic Open to “free white men” Citizenship (Naturalization Act 1802) Good moral character Loyalty to the Constitution Declaration of Intention
Homestead Acts 1860s Promise of land encourages immigration “Old Immigrants”
Know Nothing Movement Native American Party
Nativist Riot, Hoboken 1851
Beginning of tougher regulations Immigration Act of 1882 Head tax on immigrants (50 cents) Blocked entry of “lunatics”, convicts and destitute Immigration made a federal responsibility
Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 Severely limited Chinese immigration Not repealed until 1943 Immigration Act of 1891 Office of Immigration (later, INS) 1892: Ellis Island opens
: 14.5 million immigrants The “New” Immigrants
Immigration Act of 1917 Literacy requirement “Asiatic Barred Zone” All of Asia excluded, except Japan Passed by Congress over Wilson’s Veto Quota Act of 1921 Limits based on existing American population
Immigration Act of 1924 Annual quotas set at 2% of current non-resident population for each nationality (National Origins System) Exceptions: Wives and children Western hemisphere Beginning of illegal immigration as a problem
National origins system replaced in 1965 “Preference” System Unite families Skilled workers Refugee Act of 1980 Distinguishes those seeking asylum from those wishing to immigrate