who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

40
“Few of their children in the country learn English ... The signs in our streets have inscriptions in both languages ... Unless the stream of their importation could be turned they will soon so outnumber us that all the advantages we have will not be able to preserve our language, and even our government will become precarious.” -Benjamin Franklin, Founding Father, on German immigration to Pennsylvania, 1750s What are your feelings about immigration and immigrants?

Upload: basil-fry

Post on 04-Jan-2016

14 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

“Few of their children in the country learn English ... The signs in our streets have inscriptions in both languages ... Unless the stream of their importation could be turned they will soon so outnumber us that all the advantages we have will not be able to preserve our language, and even our government will become precarious.”-Benjamin Franklin, Founding Father, on German immigration to Pennsylvania, 1750s

What are your feelings about immigration and immigrants?

Page 2: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

S ee handout

Page 3: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Reasons for immigration to U.S.:

Post Industrialization era led to overcrowding in many European countries.

Mechanization Less jobs

80% came from Europe 1840-1920 37,000,000 came to U.S.

Page 4: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

1.Overcrowding Europe (Industrialization)2.Natural Disasters3.Economic opportunity $$$$4.Political unrest in homeland (Political

Refugee)/Wars5.Religious Persecution6.Romance & Adventure

Page 5: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?
Page 6: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Cheap land (Oklahoma Giveaway)

Myths/legends of U.S.Fast Growth in CitiesReligious ToleranceRules for harmony.Economic OpportunityLast Hope

Page 8: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Ellis Island, New York City (1892-1954) 12 million immigrants would come through here. 70% of all European immigrants passed through Ellis Island. Approximately 3% were rejected.

Page 9: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

In 1905 an extra $20 would buy you the status of cabin class. That would exempt you from being processed in America.

3rd class passengers quickly learned that money caused you to be treated differently in America.

“Isn’t it strange that we are coming to a country where there is equality, but not quite so for the poor newly arriving immigrant.” Quote from 3rd class passenger

Page 10: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

The inspection was often the most anxious part of the whole trip as this is where you found out if you were accepted or rejected

Page 11: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Long Lines –2 minutes per inspection, marked with chalk and separated by the ailment they were suspected to have.

32 questionsLines divided into

languages the immigrants spoke.

Names were often changed as the spelling was a struggle

Page 12: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?
Page 13: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

English/German/IrishW.A.S.P = White Anglo-

Saxon ProtestantOwner’s/BossesSuperior attitude“Know Nothing party”

designed to discriminate against Roman Catholic immigrants.

Believed they were a superior race.

Page 14: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Italians, Slavs, Greeks and Jews.

Different in beliefs and ideals.

Long-stem hatred from ancestry in Europe.

Different beliefs and customs.

Competition for work also fueled the resentment.

Page 15: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

“ The immigrants are an invasion of venomous reptiles… long haired, wild eyed, bad smelling , reckless foreign wretches, who never did a day’s work in their lives”

Page 16: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Literacy TestsLow wages, unsafe

conditions, not paid for mistakes.

No Overtime, worked Sundays.

Uneducated and had no way out.

No civil rights.

Page 17: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Melting Pot(Old):

Assimilate into “American” culture.

English Language must be spoken and American traditions observed.

Salad Bowl (New):

Keep own native culture.

Customs and traditions are kept alive and nurtured.

Native language spoken

Page 18: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Creation of political machines.

Ward BossesSupplied money,

jobs, advice and favors = votes.

City councils dominated by Bosses

Page 19: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Should the United States allow immigrants into the country?

If you answered yes above, under what conditions?

Page 20: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

First low income housing Inadequate sanitation

and ventilationOvercrowded, crime

filled, and disease infested

By 1900 4 out of 5 residents of New York City were immigrants or children of immigrants.

“1,231 people in a 120 room apartment”.

New York City had twice as many Irish as Dublin, More Italians than Naples, more Germans than Hamburg.

Page 21: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Established ethnic neighborhoods: “little Italy, Chinatown”

New York City built of Immigrants. Still today a city of diversity.

People felt more comfortable with people of similar values and customs. This also made it easier for stereotypes to exist.

Page 22: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?
Page 23: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Took jobs nobody else wanted and for a fraction of the pay; textiles mills, steel mills, stockyards, and coal mines.

Average pay 10 cents per hour 55 hours a week.

Between 1880 –1900 35,000 people were killed on the job.

Page 24: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?
Page 25: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?
Page 26: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?
Page 27: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?
Page 28: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Many escaping the same problems facing the European immigrants, famine, overpopulation, civil warfare but also romance of “Gold”.

1877 17% of CA’s population was Chinese.

1882 Chinese Exclusion Act forbade Chinese to immigrate.

Page 29: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

1740 naturalization act for America required residence for seven years, sworn loyalty to the Crown, evidence of Christianity; Catholics were excluded from applying. 1774 immigration to the colonies prohibited 1790 naturalization restricted to "free white persons." Required two-years residency. 1795 residency extended to five years 1798 Alien and Sedition Acts. Resident aliens suspected of being subversives could be expelled. Residency extended to fourteen years. 1802 reinstated five-year waiting period 1808 federal government made slave trade illegal 1819 Steerage Act regulated conditions on ships entering American ports 1862 American vessels forbidden to transport Chinese immigrants to the U.S. 1868 Passage of the Fourteenth Amendment, "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside."

Page 30: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

1875 Page Law. Prohibited transporting convicts and prostitutes to America. Strict interpretation barred Chinese wives as well as prostitutes.

1882 Chinese Exclusion Act (repeal 1943); not even for family reunification. Ten year exclusion period for Chinese laborers.

1882 general immigration act barred paupers, criminals, insane; levied a tax on each immigrant arriving by vessel at a U.S. port

1884 all Chinese travelers carry official documents showing profession and destination

1885 87,88,91 Alien Contract Labor Laws prohibit people from entering to work under contracts. 1888 no reentry for Chinese laborer or former resident without wife, children, parents, or property

valued over $1000 in the U.S. 1891 Immigration Act--medical inspection of immigrants and exclusion of

polygamists, those suffering from a dangerous disease, or convicted of moral turpitude.

1892 Chinese Exclusion Act extended for another ten years; Chinese laborers in U.S. required to

have certificate of residence 1902 Chinese Exclusion Act extended indefinitely 1903 Immigration Act barred anarchists and those who believe in the

overthrow by force or violence of the government.

Page 31: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

1908 unwritten diplomatic agreement, Japan would not issue passports to Japanese laborers wishing to come to the U.S. There would also be no immigration from Japan's protectorate in Korea

1917 Immigration Act. Set literacy test for reading English "or some other language or dialect, including Hebrew or Yiddish." Created Asiatic Barred Zone which excluded immigrants from India, Indochina, the East Indies, Polynesia, parts of Russia, Arabia, and Afghanistan. Kept out anyone likely to become a public charge.

1918 Anti-Anarchist Act excluded subversive aliens 1920 Anti-Anarchist Act--deportation of those with materials

advocating violent overthrow of government 1921 National Origins Act-separate quotas for people from each

nation based on 3% of the total foreign-born population in the U.S. in 1910. Excluded from quota tourists, diplomats, minor children of citizens, and Asians already excluded. There was no restriction on those from the Americas.

1924 Amendments to National Origins Act--No persons ineligible for citizenship (including Japanese) were allowed to enter. Quotas were revised downward to 2% of the foreign-born population. Still no restriction on the Americas. Fully implemented in 1929, 82% of the visas went to northern and western Europe, 16% southern and eastern Europe, and 2% to the rest of the world. Persons ineligible to become citizens were barred.

Page 32: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

1929 became possible for illegal entrants in the U.S. since 1921 to legalize their status 1940 Alien Registration Act--unlawful to advocate overthrow of the

U.S.; deport aliens who refuse to register and be fingerprinted. 1941 refuse visas to aliens who would endanger public safety 1943 repeal of Chinese Exclusion Act; Chinese eligible for

naturalization for first time. 1943 Bracero Program--temporary guest worker program allowed

workers from Mexico in fields and railways, those from British Honduras, Barbados, and Jamaica in

factories. 1945 War Brides Act allowed veterans to bring spouses and children

above the quota numbers. 1946 allowed entry of those engaged to veterans; immigration

quotas for India and the Philippines; Chinese wives of American citizens not part of quota 1948 Displaced Persons Act--preference to Baltic states while

excluding more than 90 percent of displaced Jews; those admitted to be deducted from future quotas

1950 eliminated racial impediment to American citizenship for those from Guam; all born there since 1899 became U.S. citizens

1950 Internal Security Act--kept out present or past members of a Communist or Fascist party or their affiliates

Page 33: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

1952 Immigration and Nationality Act/McCarren-Walter Act repealed and codified earlier laws; removed all remaining racial prohibitions, but retained quotas; felony to bring in illegal aliens; first 50% of quota to those with skills considered valuable to the'U.S., rest to relatives of citizens and residents.

1953 Refugee Relief Act-214,000 visas to victims of war and disaster, not counted against individual quotas

1958 permanent immigrant status for 30,000 Hungarian refugees

1962 Migration and Refugee Assistance Act--facilitated resettlement of Cubans and other international refugees

1965 Immigration Reform Act--the amendments abolished quotas, also eliminated restrictions on Asians. Stressed family reunification. Allowed 120,000 immigrants from the Western Hemisphere, 170,000 from the rest of world; outside the Americas no country was to exceed 20,000. A welcome for extended families from Latin America and Asia.

1966 Cuban Refugees Act established procedures for Cuban parolees to become permanent legal residents.

Page 34: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

1973 ended preference for the Western Hemisphere; no country to exceed 20,000 at a time when 62,000 were coming from Mexico each year.

1976 Immigration Act. Immigration limited to 20,000 for each country in the Americas

1977 Indochinese Refugee Act allowed Indochinese refugees to become permanent resident aliens, rather than "parolees" under the Attorney General's emergency parole authority.

1980 Refugee Act. Routine admission for 50,000 refugees annually. The number could be raised in consultation with Congress. Not just those fleeing communism or the Middle East, but anyone who fled because of a well-founded fear of persecution due to race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or social group membership--ifthey were deemed of "special humanitarian concern to the United States."

1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act gave legal status to those in the U.S. since January 1, 1982, making them eligible for eventual citizenship. Also, anyone who worked in "perishable agriculture" for ninety days prior to May 1986 qualified for legalization. The law prohibited employers from hiring illegal aliens. Authorized up to 5,000 supplemental visas annually for two years for countries from which immigration had dropped since 1965. Set aside 10,000 visas for "adversely affected" countries; 36 countries were invited to participate in a lottery.

Page 35: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

1990 Immigration Act amended the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, which remains the basic law. The new law raised the total number of numerically limited immigrants entering the U.S. annually in FY 1992-94 to 700,000 (excluding refugees whose admission numbers are announced annually and some others not subject to limitation). The visas were distributed as follows: 465,000 for family immigrants; 55,000 for the spouses and children of aliens legalized under IRCA [Immigration and Control Act of 1986]; 140,000 for employment- based immigrants; 40,000 for nationals from "adversely affected" countries. Beginning in FY 1995 the number dropped from 700,000 to 675,000. These visas were distributed as follows: 480,000 for family immigrants; 140,000 for employment-based immigrants; 55,000 for "diversity immigrants." Under the latter category, the allotment of FY 1995 visa numbers for each region was as follows: Africa 20,200; Asia 6,837; Europe 24,549; North America (Bahamas) 8; South, Central, and Caribbean America 2,589; and Oceania 817.

1996. Strengthened border patrols, restricted judicial authority to

review deportation cases, set greater penalties for the smuggling of immigrants and voting by noncitizens. 1997. Resident aliens with felony convictions may be deported.1997. Refugees from civil wars in Central America exempted from deportation rules; illegal immigrants on track to become legal residents are able to apply for visas in the U.S. without going home

Page 36: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Listen to the news story and take notes.

What do you hear in the story that is similar to what you already know about the immigrant experience?

What is different?

Page 37: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

The first immigration laws for America were fashioned under the British crown in 1740, but laws have changed and evolved almost continuously since.

Read your page of laws and summarize different elements of the laws. . .

1. Excluded Chinese, made people wait 5 yrs. for citizenship, had to be Christian, etc. (prepare to share).

Page 38: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Write an immigration law that is appropriate for today.

1. Who will it apply to?2. What will be the

requirements for immigration, services, or citizenship?

3. How will you implement the law or enforce it?

Page 39: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?

Items to consider from yesterday:

Race (Chinese, Japanese, name it)

Religion (Catholics, Jews)

Politics (communists, anarchist)

Residency (time) requirements

Education Requirements

Job Requirements (skills or jobs)

Language requirements

Quotas (numbers, per cents)

Regional Exceptions (Americas)

Refugees (humanitarian concerns)

Page 40: Who made this “nativist” quote and what immigrant group was being criticized?