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Race and Immigration in early 20 th America. Prof. Jose Alamillo CEDS 101:06 Spring 2008. 1907-1908 Gentleman’s Agreement. The Gentlemen’s Agreement was an unofficial and undocumented treaty that confronted direct immigration.Â
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Race and Immigrationin early 20th America Prof. Jose Alamillo CEDS 101:06 Spring 2008
1907-1908 Gentleman’s Agreement • The Gentlemen’s Agreement was an unofficial and undocumented treaty that confronted direct immigration. • Japan was to issue passports only to those who had previously been admitted to the United States. • The Gentlemen’s Agreement did allow for Japanese men living in the United States to send for their wives and children in Japan
1917 Immigration Act • Literacy Act which stated that any person over sixteen years of age had to be literate in some language in order to enter the United States. • “100 % Americanism” & “Unhyphenated Americanism” • American Protective League (APL) and “First Red Scare” • “Asiatic Barred Zone” (East Asia & Pacific Islands, except Philippines) • “Alien Land Laws” (state laws) • 1917 Jones Act (Puerto Rican Citizenship)
1924 Immigration Act(Johnson-Reed Act) • INVENTION OF NATIONAL ORIGINS QUOTA SYSTEM • Slowed Southern and Eastern European Immigration to a trickle (1890 Census) • Albert Johnson (US Congress,Hoquium, WA) • Race and Eugenics • CONSTRUCTION OF “INELIGIBILITY OF CITIZENSHIP”
Mexican Immigrants • “Foreigners in their own Land” • Creation of the Border Patrol (1925) • Criminalization of unlawful entry as felony • Rise of the “Mexican Problem” (late 1920s) • Repatriation & Deportation Campaigns (early 1930s)
Filipinos • Colonial Subjects or “Nationals” • U.S. Imperialism and the Philippines • Rise of the “Filipino Problem” • Tydings-McDuffie Act 1934 (50 visa quota) • Philippines Independence (1945)
“Double Consciousness” • “It is a peculiar sensation, this double consciousness, this sense of always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others, of measuring one’s soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity. One ever feels his twoness—an American, a Negro, two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being town asunder..”--W.E.B. Dubois (1903)