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U.S. History Chapter 6 Section 2 The New Americans
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The New Immigration Two waves of immigration in the 1800’s ▫1 st phase lasted until 1880- old immigration Protestants from Germany, Great Britain, Ireland, and Sweden Farmers leaving poverty and overcrowding As conditions in Europe improved, immigration slowed ▫2 nd phase took off after 1880- new immigration Mostly Catholic and Jewish from Italy, Greece, Poland, and Russia
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2,000,000 more in the 1880’s than the previous decade Southern and eastern Europe immigration ▫>5% in the 1870s ▫75% of the total by 1990s
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Reasons to Leave Emigration laws in their countries were relaxed Regular steam ships Letters from friends and relatives Religious persecution People also moved to Canada, Argentina, New Zealand, and Australia
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The Immigrant Experience Excited, nervous, and afraid ▫The unknown Traveled in the steerage ▫Lowest deck of the ship ▫Seasickness and diseases Read the passage on pg. 142
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U.S. had an immigration center on Ellis Island in New York City ▫Medical exams and questioning ▫Convicts and those with contagious diseases could be deported Old immigrants went to farm, new immigrants went to cities ▫Good farm ground is disappearing ▫Mills and factories hiring unskilled workers
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Ethnic groups began to cluster together ▫Began to look and feel like “old country” Language, food, and company were all familiar Immigrant children adjusted easier than parents ▫Can’t teach an old dog new tricks ▫Family heritage vs. new life Some groups did provide help ▫Parochial schools Schools run by religious groups
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Help from the Bosses City leaders ▫Created political machines Bribes and favoritism to gain power ▫Rig elections by buying votes ▫Friends got important jobs Smaller machines in city neighborhoods
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Bosses did help in some areas ▫Getting jobs ▫Paying for funerals ▫Christmas turkey Pg. 143
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The Nativist Reaction Hostility from native born Americans 1840 secret society in NY ▫Don’t support Catholics or immigrants running for public office ▫“Know Nothing Party” ▫Wanted to restrict immigration
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Jobs would be lost Immigrants would return after making a profit Immigrants couldn’t become “real” Americans ▫Catholic ▫Jewish ▫Ethnic neighborhoods Racial prejudice against Chinese in San Francisco
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Rules on Immigration 1882- no convicts, mentally insane, or person living on charity 1885- no skilled foreign workers under contract 1896- Congress passed a law stating all immigrants must pass a literacy test ▫President Cleveland vetoed the bill Willingness to work was more important
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Building Modern America Immigrants worked hard! Poles and Italians: flour mills and rail yards of Buffalo Jews: NY clothes factories Slavs: Pennsylvania coal fields Chicago: by 1890, 80% of residents were immigrants or children of immigrants Many different cultural factors ▫Pg. 145
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