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Chapter 8 Immigration

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Title: Chapter 8 Immigration


1
Chapter 8Immigration
  • Many people moved to the United States about 100
    years ago. In the late 1800s, millions of people
    moved to cities and built the first tall
    buildings and established a way of life. In the
    early 1900s, people called progressives wanted
    to fix what they thought was wrong with our
    country and make it a better life for all.

2
Arriving in America
  • Millions of immigrants moved to the United States
    in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
  • Most immigrants came from southern or eastern
    Europe, and others came from Italy, Asia, and
    Mexico.
  • Immigrants came to America looking for work. They
    also came to escape war or persecution.
  • Persecution is unfair treatment or punishment.
  • Most immigrants found greater political freedom
    here in the States.

3
  • European Immigrants

4
Immigration Stations
  • Immigrants that arrived in the U.S. went through
    immigration stations, such as Ellis Island in New
    York Harbor.
  • Government workers at the stations asked
    newcomers about where they planned to live and
    work.
  • Doctors examined the immigrants to be sure they
    didnt have any diseases that could spread to
    others.
  • Almost all European immigrants who came to the
    U.S. were allowed to enter.

5
Asian Immigrants
  • Chinese immigrants first arrived on the West
    Coast in the 1850s.
  • They went through immigration stations like Angel
    Island in San Francisco Bay.
  • They faced more prejudice than European
    immigrants.
  • Many had to stay on the island for weeks, months,
    or years before being allowed to enter the U.S.
  • About 25 were forced to return to their home
    countries.

6
Inventions
  • Arrival at Ellis Island

7
Big Business
  • Detainees at Angel Island

8
Living in a new country
  • Many immigrants moved to large cities and worked
    in factories.
  • Most immigrants settled near family or friends.
  • In some cities whole neighborhoods were made up
    of a single ethnic group.
  • An ethnic group is a group of people who share a
    culture or language.

9
Living in a new country
  • Immigrants lives were not easy.
  • Some worked in dangerous steel mills, jobs were
    very noisy, and the factories were dirty where
    they sewed clothing or made thread.
  • They worked long hours for low pay, making so
    little money they could barely buy food for
    themselves or their families.
  • Many lived in tenements which was a poorly build
    apartment building.
  • They were crowded and unsafe.
  • Most had no windows or running water and several
    families might live in one small apartment.

10
Laws against immigration
  • In 1882, Congress limited immigration by passing
    the Chinese Exclusion Act.
  • This law excluded, or kept out, almost all new
    Chinese immigrants.
  • In 1921 and 1924, Congress passed laws that
    greatly lowered the number of Europeans allowed
    into the U.S.

11
Laws against immigration
  • Laws made it hard for immigrants to enter the
    U.S., and they faced prejudice when they arrived.
  • Immigrants overcame these hardships and helped
    the U.S. become one of the richest and
    fastest-growing countries in the world.
  • They helped build railroads, dug mines, and
    worked in factories.

12
John D. Rockefeller and Standard Oil
  • Congested Immigrant Neighborhood

13
Growing Cities
  • Lesson 3

14
Monopoly
  • Cities in the U.S. grew quickly in the late
    1800s and early 1900s.
  • Most of the millions of immigrants lived and
    worked in the city.
  • Fewer farm workers were needed after new machines
    increased productivity on farms.
  • Cities in both the north and the south
    specialized in making goods using the resources
    in their area.
  • Better transportation made this specialization
    possible.
  • Railroads and canals made it easy to ship raw
    materials and finished goods into and out of
    cities.

15
Chicago booms
  • Chicago grew quickly because of its location near
    transportation routes, natural resources, and
    Lake Michigan.
  • Factories in Chicago cut logs into lumber.
  • Mills turned wheat and corn into food.
  • Stockyards held thousands of animals.
  • A stockyard is a fenced area where large numbers
    of animals, such as pigs and cattle, are kept
    until they are used as food or moved to another
    place.
  • Many people moved to Chicago to find jobs.

16
Changes in cities
  • Technology allowed cities to grow, but crowding
    caused problems.
  • The first skyscraper in the U.S. was built in
    Chicago in 1885.
  • A skyscraper is a very tall building with strong
    steel frames that towers over city streets.
  • The growth of the steel industry made skyscrapers
    possible. Structures with steel frames could be
    taller than buildings with heavy iron or brick
    frames.

17
Changes in cities
  • Electricity powered rapid transit vehicles, such
    as streetcars and subways.
  • Rapid transit is a system of trains used to move
    people around cities.
  • Rapid transit moved large numbers of people
    faster than ever before.
  • Those who could not find good housing lived in
    slums.
  • A slum is a poor, crowded part of a city.
    Buildings in slums were built quickly and
    cheaply.
  • Tenements were in slums and could catch fire
    easily, and many had no fire escapes.

18
Helping each other
  • Settlements were put into place to help
    immigrants.
  • A settlement house is a community center for
    people in cities.
  • They settlement houses provided English
    instruction, medical care, and assistance in
    finding a job.
  • Also, there were clubs for girls and boys and
    working mothers could leave their babies in the
    nursery.

19
Labor Union
  • Rooftops of a tenement building

20
  • The inside of an Immigrant home

21
  • B
  • Because conditions were unsanitary in most
    immigrant homes, children were given baths in
    settlement houses.

22
  • Tenement Building

23
Time of Reform
  • Lesson 4

24
The Progressives
  • Progressives tried to improve life in the U.S.
  • Factories dumped dirt and poisons into city
    water.
  • Smokestacks blew soot and smoke into the city
    air.
  • People who lived near factories got sick from
    drinking dirty water and breathing dirty air.
  • Progressives wanted to make cities and factories
    cleaner and safer.
  • Progressives were reformers.
  • They did not always agree with one another, but
    most thought governments should make laws to
    protect workers, consumers, and citizens rights.

25
Making changes
  • Progressives who wrote about the need for change
    were called muckrakers.
  • Muck is something dirty or unpleasant.
  • A muckraker is someone who rakes up, or points
    out, unpleasant truths.
  • President Theodore Roosevelt worked with Congress
    to pass two laws in 1906 to make food safer.
  • The Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat
    Inspection Act stated that medicine in foods had
    to be made without harmful chemicals .
  • The factories where these products were made had
    to be clean.

26
Constitutional Amendments
  • 16th amendment Allowed congress to pass an
    income tax. Why? Progressives said that people
    who earned more money should pay more of the
    governments costs.
  • 17th amendment allowed citizens to elect
    senators. Why? Progressives said that voters
    should choose their lawmakers.
  • 18th amendment made it against the law to make
    or sell alcoholic beverages. Why? Progressives
    said that it would reduce violence and crime
    thought to be caused by alcohol.
  • 19 amendment recognized the right of women aged
    21 or older to vote. Why? Progressives though
    women should be allowed to vote.

27
  • Children working in a factory

28
Voting rights for women and racial equality
  • Women first called for the right to vote before
    the Civil War began.
  • Womens suffrage movement was a movement where
    women gave speeches, wrote letters, and even
    marched in protest for their right to vote.
  • In the early 1900s, African Americans faced
    prejudice when they applied for jobs or tried to
    rent or buy homes.
  • The NAACP (National Association for the
    Advancement of Colored People) was founded in
    1909 to work for equality for African Americans.

29
Racial equality
  • W.E.B. Du Bois was a leader of the NAACP.
  • He was an African American writer and professor.
  • His writings on African American life helped
    persuade many Americans that change was needed.
  • Booker T. Washington was another leader who
    started a school to educate and give job
    training to southern African Americans.
  • In the early 1920s, the Ku Klux Klan, the groups
    that attacked African Americans, grew larger.

30
The Great migration
  • Between 1910 and 1930, about 1.5 million African
    Americans left the rural South.
  • They went North to work in large factories and
    businesses.
  • This became known as The Great Migration.
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