Immigrants came to the US in large waves from the early 1800s through the early 1900s. The first wave from 1815-1860 was mainly from northwestern Europe, including the Irish fleeing the potato famine. Later waves brought more southern and eastern Europeans. They came for economic opportunities and religious freedom, and worked in farms, factories, and mines. While they faced discrimination, immigrants maintained cultural traditions that influenced American culture over time.
This is a undergraduate student built powerpoint on AMERICAN CULTURE 101 assignment. I thought it would reflect the character of the free American youth and what our society has been going through in these burdensome economic times in the hearts, minds, and souls of the university student. This student has gone through alot of searches and has something to offer society and yet fun and freedom of young adulthood is reflected in the topical matter and the worrisomeness of the slides.
American Civ Chapter two: A Land of Immigrants Elhem Chniti
These are the slides of lectures 2 & 3: A Land of Immigrants.
It is an overview of the history of immigration to the US, from the first settlers to the current issues under the Trum Administration.
The 2nd and 3rd lectures for 1st year's students of English are devoted to the history of immigration to the United States from the Pilgrim Fathers to most recent legislation on immigration
Lecture NotesImmigration and the United States Chapter 4 Imm.docxsmile790243
Lecture Notes
Immigration and the United States
Chapter 4
Immigration and the United States
� The history of the United States is the history of immigration.
� Immigration in the U.S. was at it�s highest during the 1880-1920 period.
� Xenophobia � The fear of strangers or foreigners.
� Nativism �beliefs and policies favoring native-born citizens over immigrants.
Catholics and Irish Immigrants
� Catholics in general and the Irish immigrants were the first Europeans to be ill-treated.
� Irish did not suffer their maltreatment in silence.
� To many whites, the Irish were worst than Blacks because the Blacks at least �knew their place.�
Chinese Immigrants
� Sinophobes � People who fear anything associated with China.
� White settlers found Chinese immigrants and their customs and religion difficult to understand.
� Railroad provided the greatest demand for Chinese labor in the 1860�s.
� In 1882 Congress enacted the Chinese Exclusion Act which outlawed Chinese immigration for 10 years.
The National Origin System
� Attempt at blocking the growing immigration from southern European countries such as from Italy and Greece.
� Gave preference to English speaking people from Western Europe.
The 1965 Immigration and Naturalization Act
� The goals of this act were to reunite families and protect the American labor market.
� It also listed the rules for becoming a citizen of the United States or Naturalization.
The Brain Drain
� The Brain Drain is the immigration to the United States of skilled workers, professionals, and technicians who are needed by their home countries.
� We protest immigration but we do not mind as long as it is someone making a valuable contribution to our society.
Population Growth
� In the 1990�s legal immigration accounted for one fourth of the nation�s growth.
� California is the most extreme case of projected growth. It is expected to grow from 32 million people in 1995 to more than 49 million people by 2025.
Illegal Immigration
� Illegal immigrants and their families come to this country in search of higher-paying jobs than their home countries can provide.
� Most immigrants work in jobs that many U.S. born citizens do not want.
� The majority of illegal immigrants in the U.S. come from Mexico.
� In 2002 there were more than 8 Million illegal immigrants in the U.S.
The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986
� Hiring of illegal immigrants became illegal and provided fines and prison sentences to employers who did not comply.
� Also made it illegal for employers to discriminate against legal immigrants because of their not being U.S. citizens.
Economic Impact of Immigration
� In some areas, heavy immigration can drain community resources.
� In some areas, immigration may be an economic burden and create unwanted competition for jobs.
� On a positive note, Immigrants can help revitalize the local economy in some instances.
California’s Proposition 187
� An attempt to reduce illegal immig ...
2. THE POPULATION OF THE U.S
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!
3. QUESTIONS
Where did the immigrants come from?
When did they arrive?
Why did they leave their home countries?
Where did they settle?
Where did they work?
What aspects of their culture did they bring with
them?
What impact did immigrant cultural traditions have on
the United States?
4. FACTS
Due to potato rot which began in 1845, the potato
crop in Ireland began to fail.
From 1845 to 1850 there were famine conditions in
Ireland.
More than one million people died of starvation.
One-fourth of the Irish population moved to the
United States.
5. FACTS
Because of improved farming methods such as
crop rotation-and therefore greater abundance of
food-the population of Europe doubled between
1750 and 1850.
These improvements reduced the need for farm
workers → many peasants were forced off land that
they had lived on for generations.
6. FACTS
The passage to the United States in sailing vessels
took three months, on the average, at the beginning
of the 1800s.
The passage in steamships (which began to be
used in the mid-nineteenth century) took ten days.
The Russian government began to carry out
pogroms (organized attacks) against the Jews of
eastern Europe.
7. FACTS
A Norwegian worker could earn up to 4-5 dollars a day in the United
States.
This was more than triple the wage that the same person could have
earned in Norway at that time.
8. FACTS
The U.S. Congress passed the Contract Labour
Law in 1864.
Employers could make contracts with workers in
other countries and many employers lent money to
foreign workers to pay for their transportation to the
United States.
After the workers arrived, they were required to pay
the money back out of their wages.
9. THREE GREAT WAVES OF
IMMIGRATION
1815-1860:
5 million immigrants
- mainly
English, Irish, Germanic,
Scandinavian, and
others from
northwestern Europe.
1865-1890:
10 million immigrants
- again mainly from
northwestern Europe.
1890-1914:
15 million immigrants –
mainly from Eastern
Europe.
10. REASONS FOR IMMIGRATION
There are two types of motivation for
immigration:
- Push factors (reasons to leave home country),
- Pull factors (reasons for settling in USA).
11. REASONS FOR IMMIGRATION –
1607-1830
Political Freedom.
Religious Tolerance.
Economic Opportunity -
People want a better life -
better job - more money.
Political Refugees fear for
their lives.
Some want free atmosphere.
Forced Immigration (slavery).
Family Reunification.
12. REASONS FOR IMMIGRATION
1830- 1890
Land plentiful, and fairly
cheap.
Jobs were abundant, wages
high.
Birthrate → decline.
Industry and urbanization →
increase.
Notion that in America, the
streets were, "paved with
gold”.
Religious and political
freedom.
13. REASONS FOR IMMIGRATION
1890-1914
Jews came for religious
freedom.
Italians and Asians came
for work.
Russians came to
escape persecution.
America had jobs.
America had religious
freedom.
America was hyped up in
many countries as "Land
of Opportunity„.
14. WHO WERE THE IMMIGRANTS?
1830-1890
Nationality → Mainly Irish, English and
Scandinavians.
Circumstances
The Irish → potato famine.
They resented the British rule of their country.
British landlords.
The British Protestantism.
British taxes.
The average life expectancy was 19.
The British → look for better opportunities of
work.
15. Age:
Irish: Teenager to Young Adult.
British: Most immigrants from Britain were fairly
young, although not quite as young as their Irish
counterparts.
Social Classes:
Most Irish → tennant farmers before they came to
the United States.
They had little taste for farm work and little money to
buy land in America anyway.
The British → professionals, independent
farmers, and skilled workers.
16. THE IRISH
Settled in New York (too poor to
travel).
Discriminated against.
Poor living conditions (80% of Irish
infants died in New York).
Took the jobs no one wanted.
"Let Negroes be servants, and if not
Negroes, let Irishmen fill their.
place..."
With the arrival of Eastern
Europeans the Irish no longer lowest
class.
Became policemen & firemen.
17. WHO WERE THE IMMIGRANTS?
1890 - 1914
Italians
Voluntary
White
Catholics and Roman
Catholics
Eastern Europeans
Voluntary
White
Jewish & Christian
Greeks
Voluntary
White
Eastern Orthodox
Russians:
• Voluntary
• White
• Jewish
18. EASTERN/SOUTHERN EUROPE
IMMIGRANTS
Immigrants from
Southeastern Europe
blamed for increasing
problems
1880 – 1920 →New York
grew by 300%, Chicago →
400%, L.A→1000%
These newcomers were
often described by what
they were not:
Not Protestant
Not English-speaking
Not skilled
Not educated
Not liked.
Anglo-Saxon Myth created
Restrictions on immigration
gradually imposed
Anti-Catholic feelings
Anti-eastern European
feelings
Polish immigrant
assassinated the American
president (McKinley
19. NORWEGIAN SETTLERS
Nearly 1 million between 1820-
1920
Why?
Land
Social and political reasons
Higher wages
Increase in poulation
Cleng Peerson
”Sloopers”
Where?
Most settled in the Mid West
1851 - Treaty of Traverse
des Sioux
1862 – Homestead Act
20. VIEWS ON IMMIGRANTS
” The ones who come here are usually the most stupid of their
nation. Few understand our language, so we cannot
communicate with them.. It has been reported that young men
do not believe they are true men until they have shown their
manhood by beating their mothers. They do not believe they
are truly free unless they also abuse and insult their teachers.
And now they are coming to our country in great numbers.
Few of their children know English. They bring in much of their
own reading from their homeland and print newspapers in
their own language. In some parts of our state, ads, street
signs, and even some legal documents are in their own
language and allowed in courts.
Unless the stream of these people can be turned away, they
will soon outnumber us so that we will not be able to save our
language or our government. However, I am not in favour of
keeping them out entirely. All that seems necessary is to
distribute them more evenly among us and set up more
schools that teach English. In this way, we will preserve the
true heritage of our country.”
Benjamin Franklin about German immigrants in 1751
21. IMMIGRATION LAWS
1790 → Naturalization rule establishes →a two-year residency requirement for
immigrants wanting to become U.S. citizens.
1875 → No convicts or prostitutes.
1882 → Immigration from China is stopped; ex-convicts, lunatics, idiots, and those
unable to take care of themselves are excluded. A tax (50 cents) must be paid by
immigrants.
1892→ Ellis Island opens.
1903 → No political radicals, epileptics, professional beggars.
1907 → No feeble-minded, tuberculars, persons with physical or mental defects, and
persons under age 16 without parents. Tax on new immigrants is increased ($8).
1910 → No criminals, paupers, diseased.
1917 → Immigrants over 16 years old must pass literacy exam.
1921 → Annual immigration limited to 350 000. Quotas for each nationality are
introduced.
1924 → immigration limited to 165 000 annually.
The nationality quota is revised to 2% of each nationality's representation
22. MELTING POT VS SALAD BOWL
Melting Pot → All
immigrants mixed
together form the
”American”.
Salad Bowl → All
immigrants are
American, yet keep
their cultural heritage
from their ”home”.