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Published byWilliam Stone Modified over 8 years ago
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Stages of Immigration
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Objectives After today’s lesson, you will: Describe some of the patterns of immigration throughout U.S. History
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Focus Question List five reasons for people to move from one place to another. Explain which is the best reason to move.
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Four Major Waves Colonial Immigration Antebellum Immigration Gilded Age Immigration Modern Immigration Each wave has similarities and differences
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Colonial Immigration 1650 through 1800 Largely from the British Isles and Africa Sought freedom and land Faced difficulties Border warfare with Native Americans Carving home from wilderness
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Antebellum Immigration 1835-1860 Largely from Germany and Ireland Came seeking liberty, land, and work Faced discrimination and poverty
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Gilded Age Immigration 1870-1920 Largely came from Southern and Easter Europe and Asia Came seeking work and freedom Faced discrimination, culture shock, poverty
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Modern Immigration 1970 through today Largely came from Latin America, Africa, and Asia Come largely seeking freedom and work Face discrimination
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Gilded Age Immigration “New Immigrants” Tended to settle in the cities Drawn to the industrial jobs of the period Lacked funds to purchase land elsewhere
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Ellis Island Major immigration processing center on the East Coast 12 million from 1892 to 1954 Angel Island on the Pacific
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Culture Shock Lives of Immigrants turned around Move from the farms to the factory Move from the country to an urban world Move away from familiar customs and languages to a new world
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Coping Mechanisms Settle in Immigrant Neighborhoods Form attachments to “national” churches Form ethnic solidarity clubs Find the familiar in the chaos of the new
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Faced Discrimination Rising tensions with “Old Immigrants” and Native-born Promoted Immigration restriction Chinese Exclusion Act of 1880 Alien Land Laws “Gentlemen’s Agreement” with Japan
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National Origins Act of 1924 Set up immigration quotas Set at 2% of the ethnicity’s population from 1890 Designed to limit immigration from “undesirable” countries Promoted by “eugenicists”
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Summary Summarize the main points of today’s lesson in a short, 2-3 sentence response
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