1840's- war and
poverty in China;
heard about gold
in California; came
to work in the
mines
came to build the
transcontinental railroad;
they were recruited by
Charles Crocker
Italians
Southern Italian peasants
some of the poorest in
Europe; exploited through
taxes and corrupt laws
Experienced many
natural disasters;
malaria epidemic in
1800's, 1905
earthquakes, eruption of
Mt. Vesuvius, 1908
tsunami that killed
1000,000 people
Russian
Jews
fled poverty
but mostly
religious
hatred;
segregated in shtetls;
anti-Semitism was
official governemnt
policy; couldn't own
land, be army officers,
judges, professors;
"pogroms"- raids of
terror through
Jewish shtetls;
massacres; 1905-
600 pogroms
Multiple groups
Refugees fled countries
torn apart by war or
destroyed by natural
disasters; 1.5 million
Vietnamese refugees
came to the US and
Canada to escape war
and " a controlling gov't"
Immigrants came for more
economic prosperity and a
better life
Mexicans
Many Mexican
immigrants came
because of great poverty
in Mexico, demand for
low-wage labor in US
Thousands of
Mexicans became
part of the US when
Mexico ceded half its
territory to the US at
the end of the
US-Mexico War; they
didn't cross the
border- the border
crossed them!
WHAT WERE THE
BENEFITS OF
IMMIGRATION?
Immigrants'
perspectives
Chinese
Chinese immigrants
were able to send
money home to their
families
Started lucrative
businesses-
restaurants,
laundries, and
shops; developed
fishing industries
Italians
Escape from the
cruel treatment of
landlords, taxation
by the government,
and natural
disasters like
malaria, floods and
volcanic eruptions
Able to maintain much of their
culture, live among their own
people, speak their own
language, own newspapers,
maintain a rich cultural life, and
go to restaurants, clubs and
theaters
Russian
Jews
Escape from the Czar and
have the relgious freedom
guaranteed in the US
Constitution (from indep.
reading)
Multiple
groups
People found jobs in
sweatshops; it was hard
work, but they were able to
survive, stay in the US, and
earn money to bring their
families to this country
Immigrants support the
economy by taking
jobs that citizens don't
want
Could find work to
support families
Could go to school
Perspectives of
Others in U.S.
Chinese immigrants
develolped the
shrimp and abalone
industries in Calif.
Chinese immigrants used
knowledge of farming to
build levees and
contributre to
agricultural
development.
Chinese immigrants
took jobs no one
else wanted; worked
long hours for little
pay
Got workers for
the growing
economy
Workers were willing to
work for low wages and
under difficult
conditions; bosses made
a lot of money and
created goods
Trangle fire
galvanized public
sentiment, and NY
legislature passed
many reform
measures for better
working conditions
Immigrants became
leading citizens and
excellent workers,
adding to the richness
of US culture
Immigrants fought
and died for the US
in WW I (and later
wars)
Senator Clancy argued to
keep immigration open;
cited how immigrants,
despite being treated as
inferior, helped build the
country; saw as a "fearful
fallacy: the idea that one
race was meant to be
dominant over others
Migrant workers did hard,
low-wage argicultural jobs
in harsh conditions that
many "Americans" did not
want
President Johnson described the
important contributions of
immigrants in his 1965 speech; "the
land flourished because it was ...
nourished by so many cultures and
traditions and peoples"
WHAT WERE THE
PROBLEMS OF
IMMIGRATION?
Perspectives of
Others in U.S.
Companies began to hire
Chinese laborers for jobs
people already here
wanted- thought the
Chinese immigrants were
replacing them
Only wanted immigrants
who would be good
workers to help the
economy; wanted to
filter out anyone else
Some people in the
US were angry with
immigrants for not
assimilating and for
taking jobs away
from "white
laborers."
Some people
thought
Russians, Jews
and Italians
were
anarchists
Some thought
immigrants might
have contagious
diseases
Senator Smith
argued that the US
was weakened by
allowing in people
who had no
experience with
democracy
Some who wanted to limit
immigration considered
new immigrants to be of
inferior genetics and
culture; afraid of race
mixing and wanted to
maintain "pure,
unadulterated,
Anglo-Saxon stock"
(Eugenics)
Proponents of
undocumented
immigrants say
businesses "benefit
by paying less" to
these workers
Some sources report as
many as 12 million
undocumented
immigrants live in the
US
Opponents of
immigration argue
that new immigrants
are a drain on
services like
healthcare, housing
and education
It was difficult
for gov't to
locate
undocumented
immigrants
Immigrants were
perceived as
taking jobs away
from exiting
workers
"paper families"-
earthquake in San
Francisco destroyed
documents- couldn't
prove immigrants were
related to someone
Chinese immigrants
sold false identities to
others in China, so
they could immigrate
Immigrants'
Perspectives
Chinese
Because of discriminatory
laws, Chinese immigrants
were not allowed to mine
in the best places and were
subject to higher taxes
Had to leave their families
in China and take very
little with them on the
journey
Other workers persecuted
the Chinese immigrants-
mobs destroyed their homes
and businesses, murdered
their families, rioted
Chinese immigrants
were held in Angel
Island detention
center for
months/years.
Angel Island was like a
prison. Men and
women were
separated and locked
in barracks with poor
sanitation and food
Jews/Italians
Difficult voyage on ships,
crowded in steerage,
everything was dirty and
sticky; there was little water
and spoiled food (from
indep. reading)
rented crowded homes
meant for far fewer
people; "dumbbell"
tenements with little air
or light; poor sanitation,
few toilets, rats, firetraps
Multiple
groups
Greenhorns- everything
was new and different,
including language
Had to get through inspection
at Ellis Island; meant to turn
back anyone who "might be a
burden"; called it "Island of
Fears"; if one family member
was rejected, he/she could be
sent back alone
In NY, children
didn't go to school;
they worked at
home or in
sweatshops; they
didn't have enough
food
Sweatshop bosses
treated workers like
animals, forcing them to
work nonstop; workers
had to keep up
monotonous and
dangerous work
Factories were dangerous;
children worked in
"harmful dust and fumes"
and "risked injuries from
accidents"; 146 people
killed in Triangle fire due
to lack of safety
equipment, fire escapes
and locked doors
Manufacturers increased
profit by paying as little
as possible to
contractors, who in turn
"sweated " the workers
into working every
minute
Child labor- in 1880
only 35% of children
between the ages of 5
and 21 went to public
school; child labor
laws were not enforced
People who live in the
US exhibited anger
and hatred toward
immigrants; they said
immigrants' different
cultures were
undesirable.
Laws were passed against
Chinese men entering the
country in 1882; Chinese
immigrants in the US were
reclassified as aliens and
could not become citizens;
exclusion laws were made
permanent in 1902
The US limited
immigration with
literacy tests (had to
prove ability to read);,
set quotas, and
outright excluded
Japanese and Chinese
immigrants
Some
thought
immigrants
might have
contagious
diseases
Families are divided by
citizenship- some might have
green cards, others might
have been born in the US and
are citizens, and others might
be undocumented and living
under the threat of
deportation
Undocumented
immigrants live in fear
of being caught and
deported