Download - Ellis Island and Angel Island Experience
Through Ellis Island and Angel Island: The Immigrant Experience
Why Europeans Immigrated
• “Give me your tired, your poor, / Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free…”
• Where did immigrants come from?-They usually came from Europe due to poverty, economics, etc. (Also known as push and pull factors.)
Push / Pull Factors • What is a push / pull factor?
• PUSH: population growth, hunger and religious persecution
• Pogroms – organized, anti-Jewish attacks
• PULL: opportunity, jobs, land and the sometimes misleading America letters
• “land of milk and honey…streets paved with gold…”
Push Factor: Conditions that encourages people to move away from their homeland
Pull Factors: Conditions that attract people to settle into a new area
The Trip
• Two- three months now took two weeks due to steamships• Seasickness, spoiled food, spread in disease
and filthy toilets
• Separation on the ship by class• What did third class passengers face?• They faced disease, some naked, hunger, people
Stealing food and other things.
Ellis Island
• “Six second exam”– Marked clothing with chalk (L,H,X and E)
– Faced possible deportation
• 29 Question Exam– “Do you have work waiting for you?” / Foran
Act of 1885
• About 2% of immigrants were denied entry– Ride on ferry to NYC
Urban Populations Explode
• Most immigrants settled in places like New York, Chicago, Boston, Cleveland, etc.– Lived in areas with those who spoke the same
language – Riis’s imagined map of the city (p. 192)– Also lived in areas were there was works such
as farms and factories. (usually factories because of unskilled workers)
American Response
• New immigrants had to “find their own way” financially
• Who could they rely on?– “pass the hat”
– Settlement Houses – established as a community center to help guide immigrants
• Political Bosses –
• Assimilation / Americanization• Happened with children at school, needing to fit in
American Response
• Cultural differences created backlash – Anarchy / Socialism
• Nativism spreads like wildfire– Religious and cultural differences and economic downturn
fueled the fire
• By the 1920’s Congress had passed legislation to slow immigration– Became based on quotaQUOTA: System that limited immigration by allowing only a
certain number of people from each country to immigrate to the United States
Immigration from Asia
• Immigrants, mainly from China, came to strike it rich on Gold Mountain (California)– Majority were men, most ended up staying in
the US– Friction between white men and Chinese
immigrants grew over labor – Chinese worked for less
Immigration from Asia
• “…utter heathens, treacherous, sensual, cowardly, cruel…” - Henry George
• Chinese “could never be Americanized”– Mob violence towards Chinese– Economic woes blamed on Chinese– Chinese Exclusion Act (1882) – no
immigration of Chinese for 10 years
Angel Island
• “Ellis Island of the West”
• Detained for questioning– Asked extremely specific questions to prevent
Chinese from forging their way into the country
– Could be detained for weeks, months, even years
• Angel Island = miserable place
Other Asian Immigrant Groups• Immigrants came as farm laborers and
service industry workers from:– Korea, Philippines, and Japan
• Anti-Asian feelings caused segregation – led to a Gentleman’s Agreement between TR and Japan
• Japanese allowed emigrants, with certain family demands
Immigrants From North and South
• As immigration slowed from Asia, farmers found new laborers from Mexico– Higher wages and plentiful opportunity –
Mexican Revolution was also a push factor– Faced similar segregation and racist attitudes from white
people
• Canadians immigrated without many problems – hard to tell them apart
What Affects Immigration?• Unemployment
• Poverty
• Hunger
• Freedom
• New opportunities
Immigrations has defined U.S history!
Reminder: Push and Pull Factors