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The Immigrant Experience American Immigration from 1865-1920

Statue of Liberty -Gift from France -Designed by Frédéric Bartholdi and dedicated on 28 October 1886 -Bartholdi completed the head and the torch-bearing arm before the statue was fully designed, and these pieces were exhibited for publicity at international expositions

Emma Lazarus The New Colossus Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame, With conquering limbs astride from land to land; Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame. "Keep ancient lands, your storied pomp!" cries she With silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"

Coming to America In the 5+ decades following the Civil War (1865-1920) a flood of immigrants came to America U.S. population in 1860 was 31.5m people Between 1865 and 1920, close to 30m additional people entered the country

Push/Pull Migration Factors Push Factors Poverty: new agricultural techniques unemployment Religious persecution (e.g. Jews) Political tyranny War/Compulsory military service Lack of social mobility Emigration laws allow migration Pull Factors Economic opportunity: work or land Civil liberties Democracy Social mobility Loose immigration laws (think industrialization leading to a demand for labor) Better standard of living

The U.S. experienced four major waves of immigration 1 st Wave 2 nd Wave 3 rd Wave 4 th Wave -Began in 1600s with first colonists -Majority of immigrants from England -1820s-1870s - Mostly from Northern and Western Europe - 1/3 Irish, 1/3 German -1881-1920 - Approx 23.5 million immigrants -Mostly from Eastern and Southern Europe -Begins in 1965 - Built upon new immigration law reform

Transportation to America Passage often cost a life s savings -Families would save enough money to send one or two family members to America and hoped those family members could earn enough to bring over the rest of the family ( Birds of Passage ) From Europe: 1 week From Asia: 3 weeks

The steerage deck was usually overcrowded Below deck was crowded, dark, and damp Lack of air Low food rations Contagious disease During the twelve days in the steerage I lived in surroundings that offended every sense. Only a fresh breeze from the sea overcame the sickening odors. Everything was dirty, sticky, and disagreeable to the touch

Ellis Island In 1890, Congress designated a three acre island in NY Bay as an immigration station (open from 1892-1954) By 1910, 6 million immigrants had come through Ellis Island

Many immigrants had their names changed by the inspectors because they didn t have the time or patience to struggle with foreign spellings

Immigrants then faced a medical inspection -If evidence was found of a communicable disease, they could be immediately deported back to their home country -Could be placed into quarantine for an indefinite period of time The immigration inspection process could be a humiliating and dehumanizing experience

Asian Immigrants During the mid-1800s, Chinese and Japanese immigrants began to arrive on the West Coast Processed at Angel Island -Located in CA - Very slow process, sometimes taking months to clear immigration hearings

Ethnic Cities The majority of immigrants settled in big cities where factory jobs were available -Many immigrants lived in areas with people of similar ethnic backgrounds -Neighborhoods provided a sense of community and support but slowed assimilation into American culture

Melting Pot A mixture of people of different cultures and races who blended together by abandoning their native languages and customs Salad Bowl A mixture of people of different cultures and races who form a new community while retaining some pieces of their native cultures

Nativism Increased waves of immigration led to increased feelings of nativism: An extreme dislike for immigrants by *native-born people and a desire to limit immigration WASPS (White, Anglo-Saxon Protestants) Disliked unfamiliar customs and languages Viewed immigrants as a threat to American way of life Anti-immigration Societies Grow American Protective Association: anti-catholic and foreigners Workingman s Party of California: goal aimed at limiting/ending Chinese immigration

Old Immigrants Northern or Western Europe Protestant Literate and skilled Quick to assimilate Came from more democratic countries Came with an amount of wealth New Immigrants Southern or Eastern Europe Catholic, Orthodox, Jewish Illiterate and unskilled Settled into ethnic neighborhoods Less democratic countries Arrived poorer

THE NEW IMMIGRANTS - Why such hatred? - Unlimited immigration kept wages low: -Worked in factories, coal mines, or became farmers because of the Homestead Act -Most immigrants avoided the South

Impact of Anti-Immigrant Prejudice against immigrants stimulated new federal laws 1882: Chinese Exclusion Actbarred Chinese immigrants for 10 years - Chinese already in country denied citizenship Movement 1882 Immigration Act: banned convicts, paupers, and the mentally disabled from immigrating with a 50 cent tax on every person coming into the country

The Rise of Large Cities Growth of Industrial Cities - Most Americans had lived in rural areas, but were now moving to the new cities -Searching for factory jobs and higher wages -Urbanization: City building and the movement of people to cities - City populations doubled or tripled in size Cities such as NYC, Philadelphia, Chicago and Boston grew into industrial hubs

Construction Brooklyn Bridge (1883) 14 years to build Skyscrapers invention of elevators and development of internal steel skeleton them to be built Louis Sullivan designed the 10- story Wainwright Building in St. Louis Daniel Burnham designed the Flatiron building in 1902 Frederick Law Olmsted started planned urban parks Central Park in New York

Living Conditions No building codes No sanitation codes

-Lacked adequate amount of housing -Little opportunity for education -Very little police protection -Most of the unpaved streets had no drains, and collected heaps of garbage -Human waste disposal went unchecked -Crime rate skyrocketed -Workers in the city had average life span of 17 yrs. in rural areas: 38 yrs.

-In 1878, a publication offered $500 to the architect who could provide the best design for mass housing -Most cost-efficient: Dumbbell Tenements, which were unsafe and crowded -Poorly ventilated -Massively overcrowded -Disease was widespread

New Immigrants settled into what would become known as ghettos -Cholera (1832 worldwide) and Yellow-fever epidemics swept through the slums on a regular basis -Tuberculosis was most prevalent and fatal; Infants suffered the most (25% of infants would die before the age of 1) Other common diseases: smallpox, typhoid, malaria

POLITICAL MACHINES - Corrupt local and state politics - Organized by a boss who: -Picks who will run for office -Uses fraud and intimidation to get people elected -Siphons off tax money for profit -Stays in the good graces of the local immigrant/poor communities through small favors and public works

Lincoln Steffens: Shame of the Cities Muckraker exposing corruption and graft

Tammany Hall - Most infamous NYC political machine - Led by Boss Tweed (William Macy Tweed) - Stole millions through patronage, bribes, kickbacks, and fraudulent contracts - Exposed by the cartoons of Thomas Nast and muckraking newspapers - Investigated, brought to trial, and found guilty by Governor Samuel Tilden (who would win the 1876 Election and lose out in the Compromise of 1877) - Tammany Hall was then taken over by the Irish Graft illegal use of political influence for private gain. (i.e. helping someone find a job on construction project for the city)

Social Gospel Movement preached salvation through service of the poor Reform Settlement Houses community centers in poor neighborhoods that provided assistance; especially immigrants Hull House one of the most famous settlement houses founded by Jane Addams and located in Chicago