The Great Immigration - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Great Immigration

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Title: The Great Immigration Author: magonzalez Last modified by: Mark Gonzalez Created Date: 10/18/2005 4:51:11 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Great Immigration


1
The Great Immigration
  • 1880-1921

2
The Great Migration
  • 23 million immigrants arrived in the USA from
    1880-1921
  • They were called the New Immigrants
  • 70 came from Southern and Eastern Europe
  • 30 came from Asia (especially China) and some
    from Latin America

3
The Southern and Eastern European Immigrants
  • Italy, Poland, Hungary, Greece, Russia and Jews
    from many of these countries
  • Religion-mostly Catholic Christian or Jewish
  • Spoke little or no English
  • Unskilled farmers with little money or little
    education

4
PUSH and PULL Factors causing the Great
Immigration
  • Eastern and Southern European Immigrants

5
PUSH Factors (what pushed people away from where
they lived)
  1. Famine and disease
  2. Natural disasters-earthquakes and
    volcanoes-especially in Italy
  3. Lack of jobs and overpopulation
  4. Religious Persecution (especially for Jews)

6
PULL Factors (factors in America that attracted
them to immigrate)
  • 1. The USA was viewed as the magic
    land-unlimited opportunities
  • 2. Factories recruited overseas
  • 3. Pamphlets with false advertising
  • 4. The Homestead Act-free land

7
The Journey to America
  • Often cost a family or individual a whole lifes
    savings
  • Usually 1 or 2 members of a family would come
    here first
  • The boats to the America were overcrowded
  • RMS Titanic (1912) most of the poorer immigrants
    were trapped on lower decks when the ship sank

8
Arrival in America
  • 75 of immigrants arrived at Ellis Island in New
    York Harbor
  • 1910- 6 million came to Ellis Island
  • The immigrants were inspected, questioned and w/
    any luck cleared for entry into the USA

9
Ellis Island, NY
10
Where is Ellis Island?
11
The Medical Inspections
  • 1st and 2nd class boat passengers didnt have to
    endure the medical inspections
  • 6-second exam
  • 45-minute thorough physical
  • They checked your entire body and marked you w/
    an X with chalk if you had a medical defect

12
Medical Exam
13
Legal Inspection
  • Occurred at the Registry Hall
  • You were asked your name- many times the
    inspectors couldnt spell it right
  • Asked you 32 questions and then they processed
    you
  • Only 2 of the immigrants failed and were sent
    back home
  • 20 of immigrants were kept in hospitals due to
    physical or mental reasons

14
Legal Inspection
15
The Registry Hall (Ellis Island)
Break for The Cities video
16
The Immigrant Experience Working and Living in
America
  • The Cities and Factories

17
Leaving Ellis Island
  • You either took a ferry to settle in New York
    City greeted by waiting friends or relatives
  • Or you took a ferry to a railroad station in New
    Jersey and traveled to another city or to the
    Western homesteads

18
Ethnic Neighborhoods
  • 2/3 of all immigrants settled in the big cities
    of the east (Philly, New York, Boston, Baltimore)
  • The immigrants settled in ethnic neighborhoods or
    enclaves- very crowded
  • Greek, Italian (Little Italy), Polish, German,
    Jewish and Irish neighborhoods were
    established-some still exist (South Philly is
    still mostly Italian)

19
The Melting Pot Theory
  • Melting Pot-the belief that a new and mixed
    society would develop blending all the new and
    old immigrant groups
  • At the same time each ethnic group would still
    maintain some of its own culture, foods, religion
    and language, etc.
  • Are we a melting pot today?

20
Polish immigrants
21
Italian Immigrants
22
Greek Immigrants
23
Jewish Immigrants
24
Living condition for the New Immigrants
  • The big cities were not ready to handle all the
    new immigrants
  • Many immigrants lived in tenements
  • Tenements were run-down, low-rent apartment
    buildings
  • Immigrants were crowded together sometimes as
    many as 20 in a 3-room apartment
  • 10-20 a month for rent

25
Living condition for the New Immigrants
  • No windows, no bathrooms-as many as 100 people
    had to share a community bathroom
  • The tenement apartments were havens of foul
    stink, disease and rats
  • Some immigrants could escape the cities and live
    on the frontier, but there were other challenges
    as you saw in Frontier House

26
(No Transcript)
27
New York City Tenement Apartments
28
Working Conditions for New Immigrants
  • Most immigrants worked in the city factories
  • Why hire immigrants?
  • 1. Plentiful and cheap labor
  • 2. Immigrants were desperate for any kind of job
  • 3. Factory jobs required little skill

29
Working Conditions for New Immigrants
  • The Immigrants were exploited (taken advantage
    of)
  • Worked 12-16 hour work days 6 or even 7 days a
    week
  • Dangerous working conditions
  • Despite all these hardships, most immigrants were
    better off in the USA than they were in their
    home country

30
American-born citizens attitudes towards
Immigrants
31
Nativism
  • Nativists believed that new immigrants were a
    threat to native-born American citizens and their
    way of life
  • Many Northern and Western European Americans
    (Nativists) considered the Southern and Eastern
    Europeans a different and inferior race
  • Nativists accused the new immigrants of taking
    the jobs away from the real Americans

32
The Great Fear
33
Nativist Flag
34
Nativism Successful
  • The Emergency Quota Acts (1921 and 1924) passed
    by the US Congress-put a quota (limit) on the
    amount of immigrants coming to America from
    Eastern and Southern Europe and Asia
  • End of the Great migration

35
Attitudes Towards Immigrants today
  • 21st Century

36
Latin American Immigrants
  • Many legal immigrants arrive from
    Spanish-speaking countries such as Mexico,
    Guatemala, and The Dominican Republic
  • Most do not speak a word of English when they
    arrive here
  • Most come to USA as farm laborers and then seek
    to make a better life and obtain an education

37
Mexican and Terrorist Illegal Immigration
  • Hundreds sneak across the US-Mexican border each
    day despite the US Immigration Services efforts
  • Private citizens in Arizona have formed their own
    militias to catch illegals
  • Many Mexican illegals die along the way
  • The 9-11 terrorists (some legally and some
    illegally) crossed the US-Canadian border

38
Other Illegal Immigration
  • Many Cubans seeking freedom from communist
    dictator Fidel Castro escape across the Gulf of
    Mexico into Florida
  • Many Dominicans fleeing poverty and corruption
    escape across the Mona passage into Puerto Rico
    (USA)
  • If a Cuban makes it to Florida without being
    caught along the way, he/she can legally stay
  • Dominicans and Mexicans who are caught are either
    detained or sent home

39
Cuban, Haitian, and Dominican boat people
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