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Chapter 7

Chapter 7. Section 1 Pages 252-259. Terms to Know. Ellis Island Angel Island Melting Pot Nativism Chinese Exclusion Act Gentlemen’s Agreement. The Big Ideas in Section 1. Increase in the numbers and the kinds of immigrants (Late 19th and early 20th centuries) Why did they come?

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Chapter 7

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  1. Chapter 7 Section 1 Pages 252-259

  2. Terms to Know • Ellis Island • Angel Island • Melting Pot • Nativism • Chinese Exclusion Act • Gentlemen’s Agreement

  3. The Big Ideas in Section 1 • Increase in the numbers and the kinds of immigrants (Late 19th and early 20th centuries) • Why did they come? • The impact of the immigrants on the growth of cities • The rise of corruption in city politics • The rise of calls for reform

  4. They came: • To escape religious and political persecution • For economic opportunities

  5. Before 1890’s most immigrants were from Western and Northern Europe • Most Protestants, literate, assimilated well • EXCEPTION: The Irish. Were poorer, illiterate, Catholic • 1840’s the potato famine = 2 million to the U.S.

  6. Between 1870 and 1920 • 2 million immigrants from Eastern and Southern Europe to the East Coast of the U.S. • Much poorer, most illiterate, unskilled, Catholic

  7. Religious persecution • Especially the Jewish population in Russia • Were subjected to government-sponsored persecution and violence • Called Pogroms

  8. Between 1800 and 1900 • European population doubled but resources did not • Lack of land • Abject poverty, starvation • Loss of unskilled jobs : competition and automation

  9. Immigration to the U.S. • for religious freedom • political freedom • economic opportunities

  10. The Chinese and the Japanese • Immigrated to the U.S. West Coast • 1851-1883: 300,000 Chinese • The gold rush beginning in 1848 • The Railroads

  11. The Anson-Burlingame Treaty • Sped up the process for Chinese workers to come to the U.S> to work on the railroads.

  12. The government passed this legislation because they were pressured by RR companies to get more Chinese rr workers to the U.S. • They worked hard • They were paid poorly • They rarely complained

  13. The Japanese • Had worked on American-owned plantations in Hawaii since 1884 • The U.S. annexed Hawaii in 1898 • Then Japanese began to come to the U.S. • By 1920, over 200,000 had come

  14. The West Indies • Between 1880-1920 over 260,000 to the East and Southeast U.S. • Cuba, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, etc.

  15. Mexico • Between 1910-1930 More than 700,000 came to the U.S. • About 1/7 of the population of Mexico! • Began with the 1902 National Reclamation Act: Cheap arid land to those who would be willing to irrigate it (SW U.S.)

  16. The Journey • Most came by steamship • One week from Europe • Three weeks from the Pacific

  17. The Journey • Most were so poor they came in the steerage compartment (below deck) • Crowded, unsanitary, many to a toilet, rarely allowed above deck, lice • Unsanitary, undernourished so more vulnerable to disease • Sometimes were locked up below!

  18. Immigration Stations • Before 1892 immigrants were taken to Castle Garden on the east coast • 1892-1943: Ellis Island on the East Coast • Angel Island on the Wet Coast

  19. Immigrants had a long wait in sometimes filthy conditions • Had to under fo medical exams by doctors and were questioned by government inspectors

  20. The Physical Exam • was conducted by doctors who looked for serious or contagious illnesses (like TB). If these were found, the immigrants were sent back home

  21. The Government Inspectors • Checked documents • Rejected Felons • Assessed ability to work • Had to have some money (after 1900 one had to have at least $25) • Interpreters were often needed

  22. Angel Island • On the West Coast (San Francisco area) • Mostly Chinese and Japanese • Harsher questions • More unsanitary conditions • Longer wait

  23. Once Admitted • Needed a place to live • Needed a job • Needed to adjust to new languages, traditions, laws, culture

  24. Ethnic Communities • The new immigrants sought out others like themselves • Little Italy • Chinatown • Mexican Village • Hamtramck

  25. Those in Ethnic Communities • Pooled Resources • Built churches, synagogues • Aid Societies • Orphanages • Cemeteries • Kept many traditions…newspapers in old language

  26. Sometimes • These ethnic communities stood in the way of assimilation

  27. Hyphenated Americans • Polish-Americans • Italian-Americans • Japanese-Americans

  28. America • The Great Melting Pot • The ethnic communities stood in the way of assimilation • This led to resentment by Americans • Economic competition did not help

  29. Nativism • Discrimination against ethnic groups • With the increase of immigrats came the increase of nativism

  30. Most Americans • Favored immigrants from Northern and Western Europe • The were Protestant • Easily assimilated • Literate • Not quite so poor

  31. Southern and Eastern Europeans • Catholic • Poorer • Seemed more foreign • Many illiterate

  32. The New Immigrants • Tended to not assimilate as well • Also these Southern and Eastern Europeans competed for factory jobs • Their sheer numbers caused a labor surplus

  33. A Labor Surplus • Kept wages low, hours long • Hurt the ability of unions to improve the lives of their members • Unionized workers were fired and easily replaced

  34. Evidence of Nativism • The Irish: 1840’s-1850’s • The Know-Nothing Party: Tried to get the government to restrict Irish immigration and to keep those Irish who were already here from voting or holding public office

  35. The Chinese 1870’s • The formation of anti-Coolie Societies • Eventually led to the Chinese ExclusionAct (1882): Banned Chinese immigration (with some exceptions) and kept the Chinese who were already here (but not yet citizens) from gaining citizenship

  36. 1887 The American Protective Association • 1915: The KuKlux Klan! • Most nativist organizations seemed to be patriotic and claimed that they were protecting America from foreign influence

  37. In 1887 • Congress, influenced by the Immigration Reform League, passed a law requiring immigrants to pass a literacy test but it was vetoed by President Cleveland • Remember,,,Big Business WANTED cheap labor so did not want immigration restrictions…and Government was overly influenced by Big Business

  38. By 1917 • Congress did require a literacy test and overrode President Wilson’s veto to do it • By this time we had our first Red Scare • All immigrants over 16 had to read 49 words in English or in their native languages. Usually passages from the Bible

  39. Anti-Asian feelings in the West • Much of the nativism was economically-based • After the Panic of 1873, much competition for jobs • Most of the railroad building was complete

  40. the Railroad Companies • Had put pressure on congress to speed up the process of getting Chinese workers here to build railroads • 1868 Conngress passed the Anson-Burlingame Treaty • By 1882 RR companies did not need Chinese labor anymore so…The Chinese Exclusion Act was passed

  41. The Chinese Exclusion Act • Was repealed in 1943 • The Chinese were our allies during WWII

  42. The Japanese • 1904-05 Russia and Japan were at war • Teddy Roosevelt arranged for the treaty that ended that war • The Treaty of Portsmouth

  43. The Treaty of Portsmouth • The Japanese believed that they were cheated by the treaty • Anti-American riots broke out in Tokyo • The San Francisco School Board began to segragate Japanese-American children in their schools!

  44. The American Press • Called the Japanese, “The Yellow Peril” • It looked like we might go to war with the Japanese! • The issue was solved with …

  45. The Gentlemen’s Agreement • Was pretty racist • 1907 • Japan agreed to stop its citizens from coming to the U.S. (some exceptions) • The San Francisco School Board agreed to stop segregating Japanese-American children in school

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