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Immigration to the USA

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Immigration to the USA The Reality of Life for Migrants Despite promises that life in America was going to be a huge improvement, many migrants faced many hardships. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Immigration to the USA


1
Immigration to the USA
2
Aims
  • Identify the main groups who arrived in the USA
    between 1870 and 1920.
  • Examine the difference between Old and New
    immigrants.

3
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4
Old and New
Old and New Immigrants
  • The first wave of immigrants arrived from
    Britain, Ireland, Germany and other northern
    European countries from the mid 1800s to late
    1800s. These were called Old Immigrants
  • The second wave came from countries in Southern
    and Eastern Europe such as Italy, Poland and
    Russia and were known as New Immigrants

5
Growing Tension
Growing Tensions
  • Overall, the population of America was increasing
    dramatically in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
  • In 1870 the US population was 40 million by 1920
    this had risen to 106 million.
  • This increase in population led to competition
    for jobs and houses.
  • The lack of integration between different groups
    led to tensions between old and new
    immigrants.

6
Tasks
  • Copy down the heading Where the Immigrants Came
    From?.
  • Complete Activities 1-3 on pages 16-17.
  • Complete Activities 1-2 on page 18.
  • Complete Activities 1-2 on page 19.
  • Extension Effects of Immigration. Activities
    1-4 on page 20.

7
The Roaring Twenties
  • America in the 1920s seemed like an exciting and
    modern country.
  • Skyscrapers were built, radio and cinema spread
    new forms of music and dance to a mass audience.
  • It was a period of great social change and
    modernisation.

8
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9

Times Sure Do Change
It was also a period of liberation for women who
could vote, work and enjoy more freedom
10
Prohibition
  • Prohibition From January 1920 the sale and
    consumption of alcohol was banned throughout the
    USA.
  • Illegal bars called speakeasies appeared, alcohol
    was imported or manufactured illegally.

Bootlegging
11
St Valentines Day Massacre
  • It was also a time when violent gangsters got
    away with murder.
  • Police and government took bribes.
  • The most famous gangster was Al Capone.

12
American Dream
  • None the less many people were driven by poverty,
    and persecution to leave their own countries to
    go to America in the hope of living the American
    Dream.
  • Immigrants travelled to America in the hope they
    would find a better standard of living, get a
    better job and give a better start in life to
    their children.
  • No matter what your background was you could make
    a fresh start in America and if you worked hard
    you would be successful.

13
Effects of Immigration
  • Aims
  • Examine the divisions which existed between the
    different groups who had emigrated to the USA.

14
Old and New
Old and New Immigrants
  • The first wave of immigrants arrived from
    Britain, Ireland, Germany and other northern
    European countries from the mid 1800s to late
    1800s. These were called Old Immigrants
  • The second wave came from countries in Southern
    and Eastern Europe such as Italy, Poland and
    Russia and were known as New Immigrants

15
Effects of Immigration
  • In 1920 the US President Wilson described the USA
    as a Melting Pot different immigrant groups
    mixed well together and became Americans.
  • However other people did not believed immigrants
    mixed well together. They described America as a
    Salad Bowl immigrants became Americans but
    they still tried to keep their old cultures
    alive.
  • Some people were concerned that this was causing
    growing tension between immigrants.

16
The Reality of Life for Migrants
  • Despite promises
  • that life in
  • America was
  • going to be a
  • huge
  • improvement,
  • many migrants
  • faced many
  • hardships.

17
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18
Effects of Immigration
  • Complete Activities 1-2 on page 21 of your
    workguide.
  • Write down the heading The Immigrant Experience
  • Complete Activities 1-2 on page 22.

19
Immigrant Tensions
  • Aims
  • Understand the meaning of the WASP hierarchy.
  • Examine the problems faced by new immigrants
    living in the USA.

20
Effects of Immigration
  • Old Immigrants
  • Lived in the USA for several generations.
  • From countries such as Britain, Germany, Ireland.
  • Saw themselves as the Founders of America.
  • English speaking
  • Mainly rich and wealthy
  • Also known as WASPs
  • New Immigrants
  • Spoke little English
  • Stayed with relatives or friends from their old
    country
  • From countries such as Italy, Poland, Russia.
  • Rarely mixed with other groups

21
WASPs
  • White Anglo Saxon Protestant
  • Old immigrants were usually WASPs.
  • They were some of the most successful people in
    America.
  • They thought they were better than everyone else.
  • This contributed to the ignorance and prejudice
    between groups.

22
Source A is from a letter to the Boston News in
1910.
  • We created this nation by our sweat and blood.
  • We made this country a Protestant nation. We
  • came from countries in Europe that shared an
  • Anglo Saxon tradition of hard work. Now we
  • must suffer the arrival of the dirty, unwashed
  • crowds from lazier countries. People with brown
  • skins and yellow skins arrive daily. Catholics
  • and Jews spread their superstitious beliefs in
    this
  • Protestant country. Power in America should be
  • in the hands of the WASP people who made it
  • great.

23
The WASP Hierarchy
24
WASPs
  • Copy down the diagram of the WASP hierarchy.
  • Complete Activities 1-3 on page 24.
  • Copy down the heading Different Ethnic Groups.
  • Complete Activities 1-3 on page 26.

25
Growing Tension
  • Mexicans
  • Moved North from Mexico to escape poverty and
    war.
  • Many were Catholic and had a coloured skin.
  • Orientals
  • Came from Asian countries e.g. China, Japan.
  • Many found work building the railways.
  • They were regarded as yellow people.

26
Growing Tension
  • Red Indians
  • Original inhabitants of the USA. Now called
    Native Americans.
  • By the 1900s they had been defeated in wars with
    the US Government.
  • Allocated land known as reservation.
  • Blacks
  • At the bottom of society. Until the middle of
    the 1850s most had been slaves.
  • Largest minority group - mainly concentrated in
    Southern states.
  • Discriminated in schools, workplace and legally.

27
Slums and Immigrants
  • Many immigrants crowded into the growing cities.
  • New York was the city most immigrants poured into
    after coming into the USA at Ellis Island.
  • Slums quickly developed in overcrowded cities.
  • People lived in terrible conditions where disease
    spread easily and crime rates for high.
  • Many new immigrants settled next to family or
    friends from their old countries areas such as
    Little Italy.

28
  • Activities
  • Read pages 27-28 from your workguide.
  • Complete questions 1-5 from pages 28-29.
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