The History of U.S. Immigration Here is not merely a nation, but a teeming nation of nations. Walt Whitman Why Immigrate? 1607-1830 Push factors: Political Freedom Religious Tolerance Economic Opportunity Refugees Slavery Family Reunification Why Immigrate? 1830-1890 Pull Factors: Land Jobs “streets paved with gold” Why Immigrate? 1890-1924 Jews for religious freedom Italians/Asians for work Russians to escape persecution “Land of opportunity” Why Immigrate? 1968-Present Higher wages Less harassment, chance of getting arrested, chance of getting deported Waves of Immigration 1820-1860 Great Britain, Germany, Ireland 1860-1890 Add Scandinavian nations 1890-1910 Austria, Hungary, Italy, Russia Ellis Island Ellis Island European immigrants 5+ hours Physical examination Government Inspector - proper documents - literacy test - ready for life in U.S. Ellis Island Examination Room Angel Island Angel Island *Asian immigrants *Harsh questioning *Many interrogations *Ramshackle buildings *Terrible conditions Riot of 1919 Chinese exclusion until 1943 The Naturalization Process 18 years old Lawful residence Good moral character Understand some basic English Some basic knowledge of government Some basic knowledge of U.S. history Oath of Allegiance Naturalization Oath of Allegiance to the U.S.A. I hereby declare, on oath, that I absolutely and entirely renounce and abjure all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potenate, state, or sovereignty, of whom or which I have heretofore been a subject or citizen; that I will support and defend the Constitution and laws of the United States of America against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I will bear arms on behalf of the United States when required by law; that I will perform noncombatant service in the armed forces of the United States when required by the law; that I will perform work of national importance under civilian direction when required by the law; and that I take this obligation freely without any mental or purpose of evasion; so help me God. Countries of Origin 1820-1996 63,140,227 total Germany 7.1 million Mexico 5.5 million Italy 5.4 million U.K. 5.2 million Ireland 4.8 million Destination of the Immigrants Polish Chicago Cleveland Buffalo Detroit Milwaukee Italians New York Chicago Cleveland Buffalo Detroit Milwaukee Germans New York Chicago Milwaukee Cleveland Philadelphia Irish New York Boston Philadelphia Chicago Russians New York Philadelphia Boston Chinese/Japanese California Hawaii Problems of Urbanization Attraction of the Cities Loss of farming jobs Cheaper to live in cities Unskilled labor positions Social support for immigrants Cultural opportunities “an extraordinary crazy quilt” The Cities The Cities Urban Problems Housing, transportation, water, sanitation Problems developed as a result of population explosions in cities Housing Live in outskirts; commute to work Boardinghouses in cities (share bathrooms/kitchens/ Solution: Row houses tenements Transportation Lack of decent, safe transportation Walked, horse drawn vehicles Solution: Cable car (1873) SF Subway (1897) Boston Water Bought from vendors Lack of adequate clean water Solution: Public Water Cleveland, New York 1850: public water 1893: chlorination 1908: filtration Sanitation Horse manure Sewage (open gutters) No dependable trash removal (scavengers) Solution: Underground sewers (1900) Fire Limited water supply Wooden dwellings Candles Kerosene heaters Volunteer firefighters Occurred in most major cities Chicago Fire 1871 29 hours 300 dead 100,000 homeless 3 square miles destroyed $200 million in damage 17,500 building destroyed Chicago Fire 1871 San Francisco 1906 Major earthquake (28 seconds) 4 days of fires 478 dead 250,000 homeless 5 square miles destroyed $500 million in damage 28,000 building destroyed San Francisco 1906 San Francisco 1906 Fire Solution: 1853: first paid fire department-Cincinnati 1900: in most cities 1874: auto fire sprinkler Use of brick, concrete, stone Cleveland Cleveland Cleveland Cleveland Cleveland Cleveland Cleveland Political Machines and the Gilded Age Political Machines Group that controlled the activities of a political party in a city Offer support services to voters/businesses in exchange for political/financial support Machine Organization City Boss: controls activity of a political party/try to get their candidate elected Ward Boss: tries to secure votes in all precincts in return for city jobs, contracts, appointments Precinct Workers/Captains: worked to gain voters support on a city block or neighborhood The City Boss Controlled thousands of city jobs (fire, police, sanitation) Controlled business licenses & inspections Influenced courts/judges Provided gov’t support for businesses Problem solving: loyalty= votes Immigrants and Political Machines Received sympathy & understanding Many bosses could relate to immigrant problems Immigrants would support machines in return Power Corrupts In order to win elections some bosses turned to fraud Added fake names to voting lists Received kickbacks from gov’t contracts Favors for businesses in return for gifts (graft) Accept bribes to allow illegal activities to continue Tammany Hall Society of St. Tammany (1789) to promote patriotism and fraternity Became linked to the mayor’s office (NYC) and the Democratic Party during the Civil War era Fernando Wood became the first Tammany Democrat to be elected mayor of NYC Tammany Hall William “Boss” Tweed helped unite Democrats with Tammany Hall as chairman Boss Tweed was head of Tammany from 18631871 Boss Tweed Tweed convinced the city legislature give City government more power Tweed sought rapid expansion of infrastructure (extending streets & sewers) Tammany Hall gained much power and became caught up in one of the biggest political scandals of the nation’s history The Tweed Ring Corrupt politicians led by Tweed that used power to “line their pockets” Pocketed $200 million through graft and kickbacks Thomas Nast Samuel Tilden called for early reform Nast drew political cartoons for Harper’s Weekly Began a campaign to expose the Tweed Ring Tweed sentenced to 12 years Led to political reform movement Nast Cartoons Nast Cartoons The End of Tweed The Gilded Age The external glitter of wealth conceals a corrupt political core that reflects the growing gap between the very few rich and the very many poor. America in the 1870’s1890’s coined by Mark Twain Hayes-Tilden Election 1876 Tilden- Democrat Hayes- Republican Tilden originally projected as President Fla, La, SC still counting Republican officials sent south to “observe” Both parties offered bribes to secure votes Hayes-Tilden Election 1876 The 3 states in questioned turned in 2 sets of electoral votes Congress left to decide the outcome Southern Democrats voted for Hayes in exchange for the end of Reconstruction Kennedy-Nixon 1960 113,000 votes separated candidates Votes in Texas, Illinois, California could have gone either way Widespread rumors of fraud Kennedy family tied to organized crime Kennedy-Nixon 1960 Texas: voting machines fixed, people voted illegally, move votes than voters Chicago: ghost voting, more votes than voters, voters voting twice, Most are unsubstantiated rumors, Nixon never pushed the issue Election Fraud 1960 Patronage vs. Civil Service Spoils System “To the victor go the spoils” Most federal jobs given out by the President Interfered with the function of government A merit system was called for to give federal jobs to qualified people Ulysses S. Grant 1869-1877 One of the worst examples of scandal Congressmen received bribes/kickbacks Cabinet cheated Indians on reservations “Whiskey Ring” distillers bribed treasury official not to pay taxes Rutherford B. Hayes 1877-1880 Began civil service reform Named independents to his cabinet Investigated gov’t corruption(fired 1,000) Enraged Conkling & the Stalwarts Republican Factions Stalwarts: opposed change Mugwumps: wanted reform Half-Breeds: wanted reform, but loyal to party James A. Garfield 1881 Ties to reformers, but VP was Chester Arthur (Stalwart) Garfield gave most jobs to reformers Garfield assassinated by a Stalwart that did not get a job Chester A. Arthur 1881-1885 Turned reformer after he became President Signed the Pendleton Act (1883) Created commission to make appointments of federal jobs Today 90% are merit jobs Pendleton Act Increased number of merit jobs Politicians could no longer uses spoils system to gain power (decrease of contributions) Tie between government and big business became stronger