Top Banner
US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910
20

US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

Dec 24, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

US IMMIGRATION1890-1910

Page 2: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

What is immigration?

To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native.

To send or introduce as immigrants: Britain immigrated many colonists to the New World.

Page 3: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

1892

Ellis Island

Page 4: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

Peak Immigration

Immigration reached its historical peak in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era when almost 12 million immigrants entered the U.S. between 1890 and 1910.

Page 5: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

Motivations for Immigration:

Push factors (need to leave in order to survive)

Pull factors (attracted to new way of life)

Page 6: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

1607-1830 Political Freedom (pull and push) Religious intolerance in home country

(push) Economic Opportunity - People want a

better life - better jobs - more money in US (pull)

Political Refugees fear for their lives (push) Some want free social atmosphere (pull) Forced Emigration (Slavery) Family Reunification

Reasons for Immigration

Page 7: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

Reasons for Immigration

1830-1890The main reason for immigration

in the period from 1830-1890 is Land.

It remained plentiful, and fairly cheap.

Jobs were abundant, and labor was scarce and relatively expensive.

A decline in the birthrate as well as an increase in industry and urbanization reinforced this situation.

Page 8: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

Reasons for Immigration1890-1924Jews came for religious freedom Italians and Asians came for Work Russians came to escape

persecution America had jobs America had religious freedom America was described in many

countries as the "Land of Opportunity."

Page 9: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

DISILLUSION“I came to America because I heard the streets were paved with gold. When I got here, I found out three things: First, the streets weren’t paved with gold; second, they weren’t paved at all: and third, I was expected to pave them.”

Page 10: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

WHERE DID THEY COME FROM?

GreeceHungary

ItalyPolandRussiaChinaJapan

IrelandGermany

Page 11: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:
Page 12: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

“All of us (immigrants) clustered on the foredeck and looked with wonder on this miraculous land of our dreams.”

Page 13: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

How did they enter? Immigrants entering through the east coast

would enter through Ellis Island, in New York Harbor.

Immigrants entering on the West Coast gained admission at Angel Island, in San Francisco Bay.

Immigrants endured harsh questioning and physical examinations. At Angel Island, immigrants were often subjected to long detention periods while awaiting entrance into the United States.

Page 14: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

People who could not meet guidelines, had contagious diseases or mental disorders, had criminal records or no means to support themselves were deported.

Page 15: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

Immigration Restriction

Many native-born Americans thought of the United States as a melting pot, a mixture of people of different cultures and races who blended together by abandoning their native languages and customs.

Many immigrants did not want to give up their native customs, causing anti-immigrant feelings.

Anti-Immigrant groups began springing up, which led to nativism, or favoritism toward native-born Americans.

Page 16: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

Why did Native-born Americans view immigrants as a threat?

•Unable to fit into society•Caused social problems; crime, poverty, violence.

•Cheap labor robbed Americans of jobs

Page 17: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

Chinese Exclusion

In California, Chinese immigrants were unable to own property or work at certain jobs.

Page 18: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

1882 – CHINESE EXCLUSION ACT

Denied citizenship and prohibited immigration of Chinese workers

Page 19: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants:

IMMIGRATION RESTRICTION LEAGUE

Wanted a literacy test for all immigrants.

Passed by Congress, but vetoed by President Cleveland.

He called it “Illiberal, narrow, and un-American”

Page 20: US IMMIGRATION 1890-1910. What is immigration? To enter and settle in a country or region to which one is not native. To send or introduce as immigrants: