1 / 16

The Great Migration

The Great Migration. By, Tom, Mack, Ricardo, Trudy, Matt, and Caitlyn. 19 th century- Birthrates and death rates declined, which was caused by the medical revolution and increased standards of living From 1800-1900 the population more than doubled

quant
Download Presentation

The Great Migration

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Great Migration By, Tom, Mack, Ricardo, Trudy, Matt, and Caitlyn

  2. 19th century- Birthrates and death rates declined, which was caused by the medical revolution and increased standards of living • From 1800-1900 the population more than doubled • Majority of immigrants went to North and South America, New Zealand, Australia, and Siberia • Areas of European settlement • By 1914, Europeans were 38% of the total population • Increase in population was the primary drive behind Western expansion • Typical pattern was for emigration to increase 20 years after a population boom Pressure of Population

  3. The number of men and women who left Europe increased rapidly before WWI • Growing number of Europeans was the driving force for the emigration • Not enough land • Hunger • Overpopulation

  4. Imperialism was a driving force behind Western Expansion • Imperialism created more colonies due to political ambitions • More colonies Many immigrants migrated to colonies • Preference given to British Immigrants in the British Empire (India, South Africa, etc.) The Great Migrationand Imperialism

  5. Pressure of population growth gave people reason to find a less populated place • Less births however drastically lower death rates • Nationally drive to occupy and expand their colonial empires • Especially Britain, nations drove to occupy their holdings and explored regions • Gain benefits through agricultural expansion • Blacks in America, Italians in Argentina, Indians in India • Agriculture: huge expansion tool! Why the Great Migration Happened

  6. Argentina • Brazil • Australia, New Zealand • Canada • Asiatic Russia • United States Where They Went

  7. Types of Migrants • Younger generation, usually not married • Ordinary peasants or traditional worker • Old ways of life threatened • Search for more beneficial lands • Ex. German peasants • Held down by Friedrich List’s “dwarf economy” • Tiny landholdings and declining craft industries European Migrants

  8. The general European migrants wanted to keep or improve their social status • Above poverty, but below “living it up” • People would migrate in large family chains • The European migrant was more of the migrant rather than immigrant • Tended to never settle down in new lands • Work hard for benefits, then return home • Ex. “swallows:” Italian farmers migrate back and forth between Italy and Argentina for harvest seasons • hard life yet very profitable

  9. Did not always migrate to new continents • More common to easily move to nearby European countries • Depending on the nationality, different Europeans became either migrants or immigrants • Balkans had more land and job offerings, more likely for people to return • Ireland had little available land, most immigrated away from the country • Generally European migration depended on agriculture • How to get more land cheaper and produce more crops for more money

  10. China, Japan, India, Philippines • Response to rural hardship • 3 million Asians moved abroad by 1920 • Plantations or gold mines in the New World, southern Asia, Africa, and Australia • - Replaced or supplemented blacks after the suppression of the slave trade • Chinese laborers recruited in Cuba as field hands (1840s) Asian Immigrants

  11. Fled gold mines and plantations to ASAP to find better trade and towns • Great white walls • - discriminatory laws designed to stop Asian immigration in America and Australia (1880s) • “whites only” • - western dominance • - Australian, Canadian, and U.S. citizens had higher average incomes than people in Great Britain by 1913 Asian Immigrants (cont.)

  12. Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 • A 10 year act that suspended Chinese worker immigration to the US that actually lasted till 1943 • Breeding ground for discrimination again Chinese • Goal: to stop Chinese immigration so that men who were not new immigrants could find work too • The Chinese took jobs with very low pay and treatment Restrictions on Immigration

  13. Emergency Quota Act • Passed in 1921 and was a “turning point” in American immigration • Put a numerical limit on immigration numbers and used a quota system to do that • Changed restriction to 3% of the population from that same nation per the 1910 census • Slowed immigration of Eastern and Southern Europe

  14. Immmigration Act of 1924 • “revised” edition of the Emergency Quota Act • Limited the number from 3% down to 2% per the 1890 census • Aimed towards limiting Southern and Eastern Europeans as well as Middle Easters, East Asians, and Asian Indians • Goal: to keep the “ideal of American homogenity” • Removed under the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965

  15. There are tens of thousands of poems       on these walls They are all cries of suffering       and sadness The day I am rid of this prison and       become successful I must remember that this chapter       once existed I must be frugal in my daily       needs Needless extravagance usually       leads to ruin All my compatriots should       remember China Once you have made some small gains,       you should return  home early Written by one from Heungshan (An anonymous Chinese immigrant in the 1800s) “Poem from Angel Island”

  16. "American Immigration Past and Present." SCORE History/Social Science. Web. 05 Mar. 2012. <http://score.rims.k12.ca.us/activity/immigration/>. • "Digital History." Digital History. Web. 05 Mar. 2012. <http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/database/article_display.cfm?HHID=419>. • "Home." Our Documents -. Web. 05 Mar. 2012. <http://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?flash=true>. • "US Immigration History." Rapid Immigration. Web. 05 Mar. 2012. <http://www.rapidimmigration.com/1_eng_immigration_history.html>. Bibliography

More Related