Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byStella Wiggins Modified over 9 years ago
1
US History 10/07 Historical Immigration: Document Activity
2
Entrance Ticket 10/07 Many private universities depend heavily on -------, the wealthy individuals who support them with gifts and bequests. (A) instructors (B) administrators (C) monitors (D) accountants (E) benefactors
3
Essential Questions How has immigration changed throughout history? What do today’s immigrants have in common with immigrants who arrived in the 19th and 20th centuries? What challenges have immigrants faced?
4
Objectives Students will compare and contrast multiple primary documents. Students will work collaboratively to analyze primary sources.
5
Agenda 10/07 Essential Terms Lecture Primary Source Activity Debrief Primary Source Activity Exit Ticket
6
Essential Terms Primary Source: an artifact, a document, a recording, or other source of information that was created at the time under study.
7
Other Primary Sources:
9
Essential Terms Secondary Source: a document or recording that presents information originally presented elsewhere.
10
How has immigration changed throughout history? Patterns of Immigration
11
Waves of Immigration 3 Waves of Immigration to the US: 1 st Wave: 1840s-1880s 2 nd Wave: 1880s-1910 3 rd Wave: 1965-present
12
1 st Wave (1840s – 1880s) Main Groups: Irish, German, English and Scandinavian 1 st wave also included about 300,000 Chinese people Chinese immigration stopped in 1882 with the Chinese Exclusion Act
13
2 nd Wave Immigration (1880s-1910) Like 1 st wave immigrants, mostly poor More numerous than 1 st wave 1870s: 2.8 million 1880s: 5.2 million 1900-1910: 8.8 million Arrived from: Eastern Europe, Italy, Russia, Greece, Syria, Mexico + continued coming from 1 st wave countries
14
Italian immigrants to the US, circa 1915.
15
2 nd Wave Immigration (1880s-1910) Many hoped to work in US and return home with wealthy, but vast majority changed their minds and stayed. Substantial trend of return migration to Asia and Europe
16
1 st and 2 nd Wave Immigrants Many settled in cities, particularly older, denser areas of cities New York’s Lower East Side Boston’s North End Chicago’s West Side Los Angeles’ East Side
17
1 st and 2 nd Wave Immigrants Immigrant enclaves quickly developed Little Italy Bohemiatown Whole villages came from Italy to neighborhoods in New York, Philadelphia, and Chicago
18
Hester Street, Lower East Side, New York.
19
Ethnic Neighborhoods Important institutions in immigrants’ lives Supported ethnic businesses, churches, aid organizations, and newspapers Immigrants developed networks that helped them survive
20
New York’s Little Italy, circa 1900
21
TAKE-AWAYS:
22
Small Group Work: Comparing Primary Documents 30 minutes
24
Debrief: Primary Source Comparison
26
Exit Ticket 10/07 What’s the difference between a primary source and a secondary source?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.