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IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

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Page 1: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian
Page 2: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

IMMIGRATION

-Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe

-New Immigration

1890-1920

Eastern Europe

• Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast)

Asian Immigration

• Come to America to mine, worked on railroads, then as farmers (West Coast)

Hispanic Immigration

• Come to the South and East for political freedom

“America…We were so near it seemed too much to believe. Everyone stood silent- like in prayer…Then we were entering the harbor. The land came so near we could almost reach out

and touch it…everyone was holding their breath…”

~Rosa Cavalleri, Italian immigrant

Page 3: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

WHY?

- Higher paying jobs, land, gold, religious freedom, and political freedom.

Page 4: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

NEW LIFE

-difficult journey

•1-3 weeks in steerage with diseases and not much food

-Ellis Island, NY

immigrant processing

•Physical exam, government inspection (criminal record)

-Angel Island, SF

•Harsher examinations, detentions

Waiting in line at Ellis Island in New York. This was the major immigrant in-processing station in the nation,

as 17 million immigrants passed through its gates to gain entrance

to the United States.

Page 5: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian
Page 6: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian
Page 7: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian
Page 8: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian
Page 9: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian
Page 10: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian
Page 11: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian
Page 12: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

~The Immigrant Experience~

Page 13: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

NEW LIFE

-Culture Shock

•Need a home and job in a brand new culture

-Ethnic communities

•Similar language/customs

-Melting Pot

•Mixing together of all cultures by assimilation

-Nativism

•Favoring native-born Americans over immigrants

Once in America, new immigrants had to endure physical examinations

(to check for disease and lice), as well as governmental examinations, which checked your criminal record

in your previous country. While many were admitted, some were

sent back home.

Page 14: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

Restrictions on Immigrants

Chinese Exclusion Act the first law passed restricting the immigration of Chinese people to America.

Gentlemen’s Agreement a deal struck with Japan, US citizens would not immigrate there and none of Japan’s citizens would immigrate here.

Page 15: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

URBAN GROWTH

-Urban life

1/12 in 1840--1/3 by 1900

-Immigrant settlement

• In cities for cheap housing and available jobs

-Decline of farmers

new technology, fewer workers

-Industrialization

•Available jobs

-cultural opportunities

Most immigrants settled in and around the major cities because of their proximity to jobs, as well as allowing cultural groups to stay together. When this happened,

places like “Little Italy” and “Chinatown” sprang up across major

cities.

Page 16: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

We cannot all live in the city, yet nearly all seem determined to do so.”

~Horace Greeley

Page 17: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

URBAN PROBLEMS

-tenements

• Multi-family dwellings; over-crowded, unsanitary

-rising crime rates

• Small police forces and the poor are very desperate

Page 18: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

“I looked about the narrow streets…ragged clothes, dirty bedding oozing out of the windows, ashcans and garbage cans cluttering the

sidewalks. A vague sadness pressed down on my heart-the first doubt of America.”

~Anzia Yezierska, Russian Immigrant

Page 19: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

URBAN PROBLEMS

-few city services

water

• Indoor plumbing rare, water unsafe to drink

sanitation

• Manure, sewage and trash in streets, foul air, pollution and disease

fire

• Wood dwellings with candles and oil lamps

• Small fire departments with limited water supply

Page 20: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

“’One half of the world does not know how the other half lives.’ That was true then. It

did not know because it did not care. The half that was on top cared little for the struggles, and less for the fate of those

who were underneath, so long as it was able to hold them

there.

“Suppose we look into a tenement on Cherry Street…Listen! That short hacking

cough, that tiny helpless cry…The child is dying of measles. With half a chance it might have lived. But it had none.

That dark bedroom killed it.”

~Jacob Riis, How the Other Half Lives

Page 21: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

RAISING AWARENESS

-Social Gospel

Christian theme of helping the less fortunate

Salvation Army

-Jacob Riis

“How the Other Half Lives”

• Book about the urban poor written to get help

-Jane Addams

Hull House, Chicago

Settlement Houses

• Community centers in slums that provide services to the poor

Jacob Riis and Jane Addams crusade for the poor to improve their urban living

conditions in the major cities.“Presently she established a kindergarten,

a gymnasium, evening classes, clubs for young people and clubs for old people, and a day nursery where workingwomen might leave their children. As her work advanced

she experienced the need of more room and several buildings were added to the original

brick Hull House.”

Page 22: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

Impact of ImmigrantsArea Result

Businesses Immigrants = cheap labor = good = more money

Unions Immigrants = cheap labor = bad = weaken bargain power for unions

Workers Immigrants = cheap labor = bad = fewer jobs for “natives”

Page 23: IMMIGRATION -Old Immigration (1620-1880) Western Europe -New Immigration 1890-1920 Eastern Europe Germany, Italy, Russia, Poland (to East Coast) Asian

Nativism•What? Belief that natural born Americans should receive benefits and jobs before immigrants.

•Why? job competition that immigrants created.

•Who? The Know-Nothings were a political party that actually stood against immigration.