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Immigration and Urbanization

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Presentation on theme: "Immigration and Urbanization"— Presentation transcript:

1 Immigration and Urbanization

2 The “New” Immigrants Between : 20 million Eastern and Southern Europe (religious/political freedom) Before 1870 (“old imm”): Northern and Western Europe 300,000 Chinese (gold and railroads) 200,000 Japanese (Hawaii-sugar industry) 260,000 from W. Indies 700,000 from Mexico

3 Ellis Island Located in New York City 2% denied entry
Requirements: physical exam, document check, literacy exam 17 million checked in

4 Ellis Island

5 Ellis Island

6 Dormitory (Ellis Island)

7 Angel Island Located in San Francisco 1910-1940: 50,000 from China
Endured harsh questioning and a long detention in harsh conditions

8 Bathrooms (Angel Island)

9 Barracks (Angel Island)

10 Interrogation Room (Angel Island)

11 Discrimination Nativism: overt favoritism toward native- born Americans Reasons: religion, appearance, willing to work for lower wages Chinese Exclusion Act Banned all Chinese except teachers, merchants, students, tourists, and gov’t officials Gentlemen’s Agreement Japan agreed to limit immigration to the US

12 Urban Problems Housing: tenements- multifamily dwellings
Transportation: street cars, electric subways Water: no indoor plumbing, diseases Sanitation: sewer lines created by 1900 Crime: NYC- first full-time police Fire: Chicago and San Francisco

13 Political Machines Attracted immigrants: provided housing and jobs in exchange for votes Led by political bosses who controlled cities, usually corrupt Tweed Ring NYC; led by William M. Tweed Exposed by political cartoonist Thomas Nast and he was arrested for embezzlement

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16 Federal Jobs Graft: illegal use of political influence for personal gain Patronage: giving gov’t jobs to people who helped a candidate get elected (not the most qualified) Pendleton Civil Service Act: used a merit system to appoint federal jobs

17 Voting Restrictions (Af. Amer.)
Poll Tax Grandfather Clause Literacy Test

18 Mexican Americans Came to US to work on Railroads
Debt peonage: forced labor to work of debts (illegal in 1911)


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