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Chapter 15 Urban America. Section 1 Immigration. Europeans Flood Into the U.S. By the 1890s, eastern and southern Europeans made up more than half of all immigrants. Of the 14 million, many were European Jews. America offered immigrants: Employment Few immigrant restrictions
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Chapter 15Urban America Section 1 Immigration
Europeans Flood Into the U.S. • By the 1890s, eastern and southern Europeans made up more than half of all immigrants. • Of the 14 million, many were European Jews. • America offered immigrants: • Employment • Few immigrant restrictions • Avoidance of military service • Religious freedom • Chance to move up the social ladder
The Atlantic Voyage • Most immigrants took the difficult trip to the U.S. in steerage, the least expensive accommodations on a steamship. • Normally took 14 days and ended at Ellis Island, the processing center on the East coast after 1892.
The Atlantic Voyage • Most passed through Ellis Island in a day. • Some faced possible separation from family and deportation due to health problems.
Ethnic Cities • Most immigrants settled in cities. • Neighborhoods were separated into ethnic groups. • They duplicated many of the comforts of their homelands, including language and religion.
Asian Immigration to America • Factors in the increase in Asian immigration: • Severe unemployment, poverty, and famine in China. • Discovery of gold in California • The Taiping Rebellion in China • Demand for RR workers in the U.S.
Asian Immigration to America • In Western cities, Chinese immigrants worked as: • Laborers • Servants • Skilled tradesmen • Merchants • Some opened their own laundries
Asian Immigration to America • B/w 1900 & 1919, Japanese immigration to the U.S. drastically increased as Japan began to build an industrial economy and empire.
Asian Immigration to the U.S. • 1910 – barracks opened on Angel Island in California. • Asian immigrants, mostly young men and boys, waited sometimes for months for the results of immigration hearings.
The Resurgence of Nativism • The increase in immigration led to nativism, an extreme dislike for foreigners by native-born people and the desire to limit immigration. • 1840s & 1850s nativism was directed toward the Irish. • Early 1900s, it was the Asian, Jews, and eastern Europeans.
The Resurgence of Nativism • Nativism led to the formation of 2 anti-immigration groups: • The American Protective Association • Workingman’s Party of California
American Protective Association • 500,000 members by 1887. • Henry Bowers – founder • Disliked Catholics and foreigners. • Wanted to stop immigration.
Workingman’s Party of California • Denis Kearny, an Irish immigrant, organized the party. • They wanted to stop Chinese immigration. • Racial violence resulted • Party won seats in CA legislature and made Chinese immigration a national issue.
Impact of the Anti-Immigration Movement • 1882 – Congress passed Chinese Exclusion Act. • Barred Chinese immigrants for 10 years & prevented Chinese already in America from becoming citizens. • Act renewed in 1892, made permanent in 1902. • Repealed in 1943.
End of Section 1 Next: Section 2 Urbanization