IMMIGRATION NOTES
“OLD IMMIGRANTS”(1840 – 1870) / “NEW IMMIGRANTS”
(1880 – 1920)
Came mostly from North West Europe.
¨ Britain
¨ France
¨ Scandinavia
→ most were farmers who came for land / Came mostly from South and East Europe and
¨ Italy
¨ Greece
¨ Russia
¨ Poland
¨ Ireland
→ most came for jobs (industry)
¨ PUSH FACTORS: reasons people LEFT their countries.
Ø Emigrate: means to leave a country
¨ PULL FACTORS: reasons people were ATTRACTED TO a new country
Ø Immigrate: means to enter a country
PUSH FACTORS / PULL FACTORS
Ø Most immigrants were small farmers. Overcrowding leads to a scarcity (shortage) of land.
Ø Political persecution
Ø Religious persecution
§ Pogroms in Russia – organized, methodical attacks on Russian Jews
Ø Mexican Revolution: causes famine and disorder
Ø China: poverty
Ø Crop failures throughout Europe and Potato Famine in Ireland / Ø Promise of political and religious freedom
Ø Industry: Jobs available in factories
Ø Homestead Act: United States government is giving away land in the Great Plains
Quote: “First the streets were not paved with gold. Second, the streets were not paved at all. Third, they expected me to pave them.”
DREAM VS. REALITYØ Wealth ($) – “streets paved with gold”
Ø Better living conditions
Ø Political and religious freedom
Ø Equality
Ø Cheap land in the west
Ø Good jobs / Ø Low paying jobs
Ø Discrimination
Ø Poor living conditions:
- tenements/slums
Ø Land was not inexpensive
WHAT WAS LIFE LIKE IN THE CITIES?
POSITIVES / NEGATIVESØ Jobs
Ø Cheap housing
Ø More production
Ø Opportunity
Ø Entertainment
- baseball, football, & basketball
- vaudeville ( shows that included comedians, singers, dances and acrobats)
- Ragtime ( a new kind of upbeat music) / Ø Poverty
Ø Overcrowding
Ø Crime and violence
Ø Tenements
Tenements -1 or two rooms per family.
Ø - no bathrooms
Ø - no windows
Ø - no garbage collection
Ø - disease was commonplace.
Ø - pollution from factories
-
Ø
RESTRICTIONS ON IMMIGRATION
Many nativists resented the wave of “new immigrants” coming into the United States.
Ø They thought they were culturally different and would never assimilate.
Ø They resented that many immigrants accepted low wages.
Pressured by nativists Congress passes a series of laws to limit immigration…….
1) Chinese Exclusion Act (1882) – an act that barred the immigration of Chinese laborers
2) Gentlemen’s Agreement (1907) an unofficial agreement between the United States and Japan.
3) Literacy Test (1917) – after numerous vetoes, Congress passes a law that denies entry into the United States to anyone who can not read their own language
4) Quota Act (1921 &1924) – allows only a certain amount of people from each country into the United States. This act favors immigration from northern and western Europe