ch. 20, section 1 “a new wave of immigration”

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Ch. 20, Section 1 “A New Wave of Immigration”

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Ch. 20, Section 1 “A New Wave of Immigration”. Old Immigrants. Old immigrants – name that was used in the late 1800s for immigrants who arrived in the mid-1800s They were from Northern Europe (Great Britain, Germany, Ireland, Scandinavia) They were mostly Protestant - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ch. 20, Section 1  “A New Wave of Immigration”

Ch. 20, Section 1 “A New Wave of Immigration”

Page 2: Ch. 20, Section 1  “A New Wave of Immigration”

Old Immigrants• Old immigrants – name

that was used in the late 1800s for immigrants who arrived in the mid-1800s

• They were from Northern Europe (Great Britain, Germany, Ireland, Scandinavia)

• They were mostly Protestant

• Many were skilled laborers and many were able to buy their own farms

Page 3: Ch. 20, Section 1  “A New Wave of Immigration”

New Immigrants• New immigrants – they were

part of a new wave of immigrants in the 1880s that were mostly from southern and eastern Europe

• There were fewer skilled laborers and they were generally poorer than those who arrived earlier

• They brought new cultures and religions to the U.S.

• Most found work in cities in the new industries of the time period

Page 4: Ch. 20, Section 1  “A New Wave of Immigration”

Arriving in a New Land

• Immigrants faced a difficult journey to America

• Tickets were cheap, but they were crowded on ships and sickness and disease was common

Page 5: Ch. 20, Section 1  “A New Wave of Immigration”

Ellis Island• Ellis Island was an

immigrant processing center in New York Harbor

• It opened in 1892 and processed millions of immigrants from Europe over the next 40 years

• These processing centers interviewed and examined immigrants and turned away those with diseases or with legal problems (#3)

Page 6: Ch. 20, Section 1  “A New Wave of Immigration”

Other Immigration Centers

• Angel Island – a West Coast immigrant processing center in San Francisco Bay

• It opened in 1910 and processed mostly Chinese immigrants

• These immigrants were detained longer than those at Ellis Island and more were sent back to where they were from

• Mexican immigrants came in large numbers in the late 1800s and came through El Paso, Texas (#5)

• Mexican immigrants found work in construction, in mills, in mines, and on large farms

Page 7: Ch. 20, Section 1  “A New Wave of Immigration”

Adjusting to a New Life

• Immigrants after arrival had to find homes and work and had to adjust to a new language and a new culture (#1)

• Chain migration – when immigrants moved into new neighborhoods with others from their old country so they could keep their language and culture after they arrived (Immigrant Neighborhoods #1)

Page 8: Ch. 20, Section 1  “A New Wave of Immigration”

Immigrant Neighborhoods• New immigrants published

newspapers in their own neighborhoods and founded schools, clubs, and churches to help preserve their customs (#2)

• Immigrants opened local shops and small banks that often gave credit to new arrivals to help them as they started out (#3)

• Benevolent societies – aid organizations that offered immigrants help in cases of sickness, unemployment, or death (which wasn’t provided by govt. at the time)

Page 9: Ch. 20, Section 1  “A New Wave of Immigration”

Tenements• tenements – poorly built

over-crowded apartment buildings in cities which many immigrants lived in during the late 1800s

• Immigrants worked hard to adjust to their new country and their children learned more quickly as they attended public schools (#6)

• assimilation – process of immigrants adjusting to their new country and adopting the new country’s culture

Page 10: Ch. 20, Section 1  “A New Wave of Immigration”

Finding Work• Most immigrants had been farmers,

but in the US most couldn’t afford land so they got jobs in cities in manufacturing (#1)

• Few of the new immigrants had skills in industrial work and took low-paying, unskilled jobs with long hours (#2)

• Sweatshops – small shops or mills located in immigrant neighborhoods know for long hours for workers and hot, unhealthy working conditions in the late 1800s

• Some immigrants with skills and those with a little money to start small businesses became more successful than other immigrants (#4)

Page 11: Ch. 20, Section 1  “A New Wave of Immigration”

Opposition to Immigration• Some Americans welcomed new

immigrants, particularly business people whose businesses profited from using lower paid immigrant workers (#1A)

• Anti-immigrant feelings rose in the late 1800s as people believed immigrants would take jobs away from native-born Americans (#1B)

• Nativists – Americans who held prejudices against other races and ethnic groups, who feared that too many immigrants were coming to the US and would destroy American culture

Page 12: Ch. 20, Section 1  “A New Wave of Immigration”

Opposition to Immigration(continued)

• Chinese Exclusion Act – 1882 law that banned Chinese people from immigrating to the US for 10 years (which was renewed for decades afterwards)

• Despite opposition, immigrants came in large numbers and helped power the industrial growth of the late 1800s and early 1900s