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A Rising Tide of Immigration: 1880-1920. A Great Migration. Largest Mass Movement in Human History About 46 mill. left their own homes to settle in other countries. The majority of immigrants- over 50%- came to the US. B/t 1880-1921, more than 23 mill. imms arrived on US shores .
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A Great Migration Largest Mass Movement in Human History • About 46 mill. left their own homes to settle in other countries. The majority of immigrants- over 50%- came to the US. • B/t 1880-1921, more than 23 mill. imms arrived on US shores. Demographics of Immigrants After 1880 • Ethnic makeup of immigrants changed after 1880. • B/t 1880 -1921, approx. 70% of all imms entering the US came from S & E Euro. • Besides being from S. or E. Europe, the typical immigrant was young, male & either Catholic or Jewish. • Most spoke little or no English. • Most were very poor & unskilled agricultural laborers.
Push & Pull Factors Economic Decline in Europe • Maj. of imms came to US for econ. reasons. ($) • Farmers w/o machines found themselves unable to compete with those who did • Local craftsmen couldn’t compete with factories(which made goods cheaply & faster) • Rising populations put more strain on Euro economies • Resulting in more people competing for fewer resources- land, food, and jobs. Political & Religious Persecution in E. Europe • Other Euro imms, esp. E. Euro Jews, left to escape poli. & religious persecution.
Push & Pull Factors • 1880-1921, over 2 million Jews – 1/3 of Europe's Jewish population - came to the US. • Other ethnic minoritiescame to US escaping poli. & econ. repression. • Including Greeks from Turkey, & Poles from Russian & Austro-Hungarian rule. Pull Factors • Newspaper articles & letters from family in US often painted it as a "magic land" of unlimited opportunity & riches. • In addition, some American businesses & factories sent reps overseas in search of available, cheap labor. • Often the info was inaccurate or outdated, such as pamphlets advertising cheap land that was actually no longer available in the American West.
Journey Across Atlantic Living Conditions in Steerage • Most imms came across in steerage- • uncomfortable @ best; inhumane @ worst • Passengers spent most of voyage deprived of sky, sunlight, & fresh air, with an unbearable smell • Passengers were so crammed together that diseases such smallpox and typhoid spread quickly. Cabin Class • Ships realized changes were necessary- created new class • It consisted of cabins that held 2, 4, or 6 beds, providing more privacy. • In addition, passengers had access to better and more toilet facilities, a dining room, and a lounge.
Arrival in America • B/t 1890-1920, approx. 75% of all imms who entered the US passed through Ellis Island, located in New York Harbor. • Imms were processed in hours or at the most, days • Angel Islandcontrasted w/ Ellis Island completely • Designed to hinder immigration, not make it smooth • Asian imms who came through were detained for weeks or months • Conditions cramped: 100 women in 30 x 30 room; 3 tiered bunks
Medical Inspections • All new imms faced some kind of inspection • But 1st & 2nd class passengers had much shorter inspections (usually on board by an immigration inspector who checked for contagious diseases & then asked a few routine questions. • Steerage passengers were transported to Ellis Island- for a longer ordeal • Frequently, imms underwent an unknown “6-second exam” while they walked up the stairs from the Baggage Room to the Great Registry Hall. • Immigrants were observed for limps, itching, or general poor health • At the top of the steps, imms were given an inspection card and given a more thorough examination • Many imms found the med. inspection a painful ordeal- emotionally. • They were forced to undress and probed closely for lice or physical abnormalities • They also used a “buttonhook” to peel back the eyelid to inspect for trachoma • Asian imm women endured indignities that Euro women did not
Legal Inspections • Legal inspections essentially same for all imms; lasted approx. 2-3 minutes. • Inspector asked 32 questions to determine whether imm, "was coming to this country for a legitimate reason, had a proper moral character, and was unlikely to become a ward of the state, or a violent revolutionary." • Before 1921, few were denied entrance to the US. • U.S. officials detained approx. 20% of all imms after the legal inspection, but only 2% actually sent back to their homeland
Ethnic Enclaves • After arriving in US, about 2/3 of imms settled in cities, such as NYC, Chicago, Boston, & Philly. • By 1920, 75% of foreign-born U.S. residents lived in cities. • Initially stayed with friends or relatives, maj. of whom lived in ethnic neighborhoods, or “enclaves”, in US cities. • Provided imms with sense of community & security • Familiar customs, food, language, & institutions of their homeland surrounded the immigrants.
Living Conditions • Most cities ill-equipped to handle needs of increasing pops. • Streets often flooded w/ waste- bad sewage systems. • Decent housing scarce. • Most imms lived in tenements-run-down, low-rent apartment buildings clustered together in the poorest parts of town. • Tenements typically had 6 or 7 floors, each of which usually contained 4 four-room apartments. • Most tenement apartments were filthy, run-down, and had little ventilation, light, or conveniences • Row houses built single family, connected buildings • Fires, disease, and death were common among imm tenement communities.
Living Conditions- Add-ons(No need to add to your notes) • Typically, $10-20/month, one NYC social worker counted 1,231 people living in just 120 rooms in one part of the city. • Jacob Riis wrote, “In a room not thirteen feet either way slept twelve men & women, two or three in bunks set in a sort of alcove, the rest on the floor . . . Most of the men were lodgers, who slept there for five cents a spot.“ • One historian noted 40% of NYC’s immigrants had contagious lung disease, tuberculosis, and 60% of immigrant babies died before their first babies.
Working Conditions • Majority of imms worked in industrial jobs, for a variety of reasons • 1st, most US industries growing & needed workers. • Most imms desperate for work. • 2nd, a substantial # of immigrants had been farm laborers in Europe. • Didn’t want to go back to back-breaking labor in fields • Third, a majority of imms - about 80% either unskilled or semiskilled. • Few had specialized skills which could earn $$, such as bookkeeping, carpentry, or tailoring. • Many imms sought industrial jobs- no skills or even a strong command of English • Imms vulnerable to exploitation; many worked in intolerable conditions. • Few employers paid immigrants a living wage.
Working Conditions • Families typically needed about $16/wk to make a min. standard of living.- most imms brought home far less. • The average worker's salary was about .10/ hr, & child workers often made 1/2 that. • In addition, many employers demanded that their employees work from 12-16 hours/day. • One statistic revealed that women garment workers typically worked a 108-hour week! • Working conditions in industrial occupations were often unsafe, unsanitary, & uncomfortable. • Most factories had poor ventilation, and employees often breathed in dangerous chemical fumes, smoke, and airborne fibers.
Am. Treatment of Immigrants • Many native-born Ams viewed new imms. w/ combo of fear, anger, & suspicion. • Believed threat to native-born Ams & their way of life • Stealing jobs from native-born Ams • Nativists held deep prejudices about imms. • Based on religion, ethnicity, race(which was equated with ethnicity), poli & social beliefs • N & W Euros were considered superior- • “Free, energetic, & progressive” v. historically down-trodden, in-bred, & stagnant • Nats began working to restrict # of imms entering the US in several ways • 1st- pushed for harsher inspections @ Ellis • 2nd- Called for laws restricting immigration –Quota Actamongst others • Most imms forced to assimilate • Americanization movement pushed them to drop their cultural uniqueness & adopt “American culture”
Rising Tide of Immigration 1880-1920 • The End.