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Published byCynthia Walton Modified over 8 years ago
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Immigration The doubling of foreign-born population between 1870-1900
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Key Vocabulary Terms Push Factors Pull Factors Ellis Island Angel Island Assimilation Nativism Quotas Gentlemen’s Agreement Chinese Exclusion Act
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Push and Pull Factors Push Factors (reasons for being pushed out of their home countries) Farmers pushed off land, needed new start (China, 7% of population of Mexico) Wars and revolutions in home countries (China & Eastern Europe) Political Persecution Religious Persecution (especially Russian and eastern European Jews) Famine Pull Factors (reasons to be attracted to move to America) Plentiful land (Homestead Act) Plentiful work with industrial explosion Recruited to build railroads, dig mines, work in factories, harvest produce Discovery of gold – get rich quick “Birds of Passage” – make $, go home Chain immigrants – joining family or friends already here
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Ellis Island vs. Angel Island Ellis Island (East/European) Located in New York Harbor “Right” immigrants – Most spoke English, progressive ideas, Anglo- Saxon background Mostly 3 rd Class European Immigrants Only 2% denied entry to America After 1900, 70% of immigrants from Eastern and Southern Europe (Italy, Greece, Poland, Russia, Hungary) Inspections included medical, background for crimes, make sure immigrant could speak at least some English, had some money Angel Island (West/Asian) Located in San Francisco Bay “Wrong” immigrants – Latin and Asian, downtrodden, looked different, hard to assimilate Processed mainly Chinese and Japanese Were interrogated and often detained for days or weeks Processors assumed the immigrants would be lying about their circumstances to gain entry to America Most turned away
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Assimilation Before the 1900s, most immigrants tried to assimilate into American society They learned English They learned how to cook American dishes They tried desperately to blend into the American culture After 1900, with the increasing population from Asia and Eastern and Southern Europe, immigrants tried less to fit in, and instead kept their own cultures They congregated with people who shared the same culture, religions, languages, values They created their own newspapers They formed their own social clubs and aid societies
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Nativism With immigrants refusing to assimilate, the idea of nativism, the superiority of those native born to America, started to rise Protestants in America were suspicious of Catholics (most Italians, Irish, Germans, and Polish), and refused to hire, vote for, or work with them Some Americans signed contracts agreeing not to sell or rent property to Jews, Catholics, Asians and other “non- natives” Scientific evidence was developed linking immigrants’ physical characteristics with criminal tendencies and lower intelligence
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Limiting Immigration with Quotas When Americans started to fear that their culture was suffering, they started heavily limiting immigration…focusing especially on how to limit Asian and Eastern/Southern Europeans. The Immigration Act of 1921 set up emergency quotas for how many people could immigrate. The Act set the annual quota of any nationality at 2% of the number of foreign-born persons of that nationality who resided in the US as of 1890. The impact was minimal for British and Irish immigrants, but significant for countries like Italy, whose immigration fell more than 90%. It was revised in 1927, limiting immigration totals to 150,000, percentages based on population in the 1920 census.
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Restricting Asians Chinese Exclusion Act 1882 Chinese were viewed as inferior because they would work for far less than what an American could afford to work for The Chinese Exclusion Act halted the immigration of all Chinese except merchants, clergy, diplomats, students, or people with close blood relatives in America Limited rights of Chinese in America Chinese afraid to visit home because they would be denied entrance back into America The act continued to be renewed until the 1940s Gentlemen’s Agreement Japanese were mostly immigrating to work in gold fields, make money, then return home California segregated the Japanese in schools and neighborhoods The Japanese government, in protest, threatened to start treating visiting Americans they same way, so the Gentlemen’s Agreement was signed Japan agreed to limit the amount of unskilled laborers sent to America, and America agreed to desegregate the Japanese
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