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Immigration, U.S. History II
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A Century of Immigration: 1820 - 1920
5,907,893 Germans 16.4% of all immigrants 25-36% between 4,578,941 Irish 12.7% of all immigrants 35-45% between 4,195,880 Italians 3,000,000 between 2,147,859 Scandinavians
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Why They Left – Push Factors
Lack of jobs Agriculture no longer viable Escaping persecution Dodging the draft Irish Tenants Evicted
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Why They Came – Pull Factors
Wages 2-3 times higher in U.S. Friends & relatives already here Greater economic, social, & political freedom Immigrants on board
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How They Came – Means Recruitment Padrones Steamships
“Birds of Passage” HMS Majestic, White Star Line, 1889
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Cabin vs. Steerage Accommodations
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Ellis Island, New York
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Covered Entrance
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Great Hall
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Inspection
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Hearing Room
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Where Immigrants Settled
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Urban Immigrants
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Ethnic Ghettoes Never completely homogenous Dumbbell tenements
Created organizations to preserve culture Churches Schools Benevolent associations Singing clubs Mulberry St., Manhattan Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2000
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Tenement Sweatshop Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2000
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Nativist Attacks Nativists distinguished between good “old immigrants” & bad “new immigrants” “old” immigrants hailed as pioneers who settled as families on the land, assimilated & became citizens “new” immigrants were single men who worked in factories, lived in slums, & were less intelligent & more degenerate Immigrants blamed for evils of urban, industrial America Conservatives claimed they were labor radicals – socialists, anarchists Unions saw them as strikebreakers Social workers decried their unsanitary living conditions Academics claimed they were racially inferior TR warned of danger of “race suicide” Anti-immigrant cartoon from The Ram’s Horn, 10/31/1896
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Immigration Restriction Legislation
Page Act (1875) – prostitutes & convicts excluded from entry Asian Exclusion: 1882 – Chinese Exclusion Act 1907 – Gentlemen’s Agreement with Japan 1917 – Asiatic Barred Zone created 1924 – all “aliens ineligible to citizenship” excluded Foran Act (1885) – contract labor outlawed (except professionals) 1891 – federal Immigration Bureau created Federal inspection centers like Ellis Island built Courts ruled that immigration decisions were administrative – not subject to due process or judicial review
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Restrictive Legislation, continued
1882, 1891, 1903 & 1907 acts excluded those with a variety of physical or mental defects 1917 act imposed literacy test on all immigrants “Emergency” Quota Act (1921) – quotas set at 3% of 1910 census figures for each nationality Reed – Johnson National Origins Act (1924) Initial quotas set at 2% of 1890 census figures In 1929 “national origins” quotas took effect, based on estimates of ethnic heritage of white population
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