Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Mass immigration- impact on society and politics
- Nation of immigrants
- 9 million foreign-born Americans by 1890
- still hadn't reached its peak
- American society transforming
- had been changed by earlier generation of immigrants
- e.g. Irish In
Boston,
Scandinavians in
the Great Lakes
region and
Chinese
labourers
brought in to help
with building the
transcontinental
railroads
- bewildering
mix of people
and culture
settled in the
great
metropolitan
cities like
Chicago and
New York
- Between 1890 and 1914, even greater flood of immigrants arrived
- Most earlier immigrants came from Northern Europe
- Britain, Ireland, Germany and Scandinavia
- After 1900 surge of
immigrants from southern
and eastern Europe
- Jews from Russian Empire, peasants from
southern Italy, Spain and Portugal, and millions
from south-east Europe
- The influx of these millions accelerated transformation of
USA - rapid economic growth due to population explotion
- After 1890, the flood of
immigration reached its
peak
- motivated by push and pull factors
- Many immigrants lured to America by positive dream of improving their life
- economic migrants
- Others forced to be uprooted- due to
political or religious persecution
- Russian Jews, economic collapse in own country, fear of starvation (many from Italy for this reason)
- two million African Americans migrated
northwards between 1900-1910
- The Impact of immigration on society
- 'melting pot'- traditional view
of assimilating new citizens
- forging new nation from those
seeking a better life in the New
World
- in actuality, it was more like a 'mosiac'
- immigrants often clung together in localised
communities
- for example, almost every city in the east had a 'Little Italy'
- Catholic Irish and Polish immigrants often lived in Boston and Chicago
- Jews from tsarist Russia dominated garment industry in New York until it was taken over by Italians
- After 1890- mass immigration led to fundamental changes in
both US society
- Although many earlier immigrants lived in rural areas, greatest impact within cities
- by 1900- population of USA grown to 76 million
- 38 cities with a population of
100,000 or more
- after 1900, increase in urban
population was dramatic
- birth rate actually declining compared with earlier in the 19th century
- but the death rate was 16.5 per thousand- lowest in the world
- tide of immigration led to tensions, discriminations and conflict
- many cases of friction between the new immigrants and the old
- often worsened through religion
- many that had arrived from Northern Europe in 19th century
were protestants
- those that had
come after the
1900 were
mostly Catholics
or Jews
- Mass immigration and politics
- political power remained chiefly with WASPs
- many instances of
anti-Catholic
prejudices holding
back the political
aspirations of
immigrant communities
- Discrimination
- also rivalries between different ethic
groups as the competed for things such as
jobs and housing
- Irish-Americans provide one notable example of an
ethnic community sticking together and maximising
political influence
- Prohibition
- big social issue for immigrants
- reflected impact of immigration on American society
- showed gulf between small US
towns and the new booming cities
- had religious overtones because not only the Irish but
also many in the new wave of immigrants after 1890
were Catholic
- drinking, especially
for men, essential part
of many immigrants
social lives
- people against immigration
- cultural conflict over prohibition overlapped
with other reactions against immigration
- ideas of nativism and the movement to
stop the flow of immigrants grew
stronger
- especially after 1910
- an aspect of this was the
revival of the KKK during
and after WW1
- reformed in 1915
- African Americans met with hostility
- much like the
discrimination from the
South
- migration had little impact on social attitudes or
politics
- segregated even
in WWI
- local acts of violence
- 11 Italian-American lynching's
in New Orleans 1891
- trade unions against immigration
- kept pay levels low
- most members immigrants/ sons
of immigrants
- Quota Act 1921
- regulated immigation
- 3% per year of foreign-born people of the same nationality who
already lived in the USA in 1910
- it would be another generation, after another world war, before
long-term trends finally opened the door for civil rights movements
- 1950s and 60s
- small-town America worried
about 'alien' influences
undermining traditional and
religious values
- such ideas gained widespread support during years of 20th century
- when immigration levels peaked
- issue gained national prominence 1912 election
- but Taft, Wilson and Roosevelt
were against setting quotas on
immigration