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United States - The Making of a Nation

Feb 01, 2016

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The United States is a society of immigrants. Since its early days, the country has admitted more than 72 million newcomers, a larger number of immigrants than any country in history. Most people came, and still come today, for wealth, land, and freedom.
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Page 1: United States - The Making of a Nation
Page 2: United States - The Making of a Nation

FIRST IMMIGRANTS

1500s

• NEW WORLD’S GOLD

• SPANISH

• OUTPOSTS

• FLORIDA

Page 3: United States - The Making of a Nation

FIRST IMMIGRANTS

1500s

• PROSPECTS OF WEALTH

• FRENCH FUR TRADERS

• TRADING POSTS

• St. LAWRENCE

Page 4: United States - The Making of a Nation

FIRST IMMIGRANTS

1500s

• BRITISH

• PROFIT & RELIGIOUS FREEDOM

• JAMESTOWN, VIRGINIA

• PROTESTANT

Page 5: United States - The Making of a Nation

FIRST IMMIGRANTS

1600s – 1700s

• EAST COAST

• DUTCH – NEW YORK

• GERMAN – PENNSYLVANIA

• SWEDES – DELAWARE

• BRITISH – VIRGINIA

ALSO FROM AFRICA, FRANCE, SPAIN AND SWITZERLAND

Page 6: United States - The Making of a Nation

NATIVE AMERICANS

• Major changes when Europeans arrived

• CLASH of cultures

• Reservations

Native Americans watching the arrival of Europeans

Page 7: United States - The Making of a Nation

OLD IMMIGRATION

• Boomed during the 1840s and 1850s– From: NORTHERN AND WESTERN EUROPE, ENGLAND,

SCOTLAND, IRELAND, GERMANY AND CHINA

– Reasons: POOR HARVESTS, FAMINE, POLITICAL FREEDOM, BETTER LIFE, FAMILY REUNIFICATION

– EASILY ACCEPTED INTO US:• PROTESTANS

• READ, WRITE AND SPEAK IN ENGLISH

Prior 1800: OLD IMMIGRANTS

Page 8: United States - The Making of a Nation

SOUTHEASTERN EUROPEANS

• Those who arrive after 1880: NEW IMMIGRANTS– From: SOUTHERN & EASTERN EUROPE, POLAND, RUSSIA,

GRECCE, ITALY, AUSTRIA, HUNGARY

– Reasons: WORK, FAMINE, POLITICAL UNREST, BETTER LIFE

– NOT EASILY ACCEPTED INTO US:• CATHOLICS AND JEWS

• COULD NOT READ OR WRITE

• CUSTOMS, LANGUAGE AND APPEARANCE SET THEM APART

Page 9: United States - The Making of a Nation

• Affected American cities

• Crowding NEW YORK and CHICAGO

• ETHNIC NEIGHBORHOODS

• Preserve language and customs

• “Chinatown”

IN AMERICA

Page 10: United States - The Making of a Nation

NATIVIST SENTIMENT

• Rising immigrant populationcreates racists attitudes

• Prejudices

• Fear

• Americans pressuredcongress to act

• 1920s - QUOTA SYSTEM/RESTRICTION

Americans whohated immigrants

Page 11: United States - The Making of a Nation

ASSIMILATION PROCESS

• FIRST GENERATION– OBTACLES: DISCRIMITANION AND RELUCTANCY

• SECOND GENERATION– BETTER TO IDENTIFY THEMSELF AS AMERICANS, SPOKE

MOSTLY ENGLISH AND PRACTICED FEWER ETHNIC CUSTOMS

• THIRD GENERATION– USUALLY NO LONGER ABLE TO SPEAK THEIR GRANDPARENTS’

LANGUAGE

• FOURTH/FIFTH GENERATION– INTERMARRIAGE AGAINST ETHNIC IDENTITY

Page 12: United States - The Making of a Nation

RECENT IMMIGRACION

• 1920 IMMIGRATION DROPPED

• NEW ASSIMILATION PROBLEM

• NEW IMMIGRANTS:

– MEXICO, LATIN AMERICA, ASIA

– CAMBODIAN AND VIETNAM REFUGEES WHO FLED THE DESTRUCTION AND UPHEAVAL OF THE VIETNAN WAR

Page 13: United States - The Making of a Nation