6.2 notes immigration immigrants provided the labor for the factories. the irish and chinese...
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“Pull Factors” (positive reason to move to the US) The reputation of the US for political and religious freedom Economic opportunities afforded by the settling of the West The abundance of industrial workers in US cities The introduction of large steamships and the relatively inexpensive one-way passage in the ships’ “steerage” made it possible for millions of poor people to emigrate.TRANSCRIPT
6.2 NotesImmigration•Immigrants provided the labor for the factories.•The Irish and Chinese immigrants built the transcontinental railroad.•Part of settling the West provided jobs in mining, cattle ranching, and farming.•As mines developed, mining companies employed experienced miners from Europe, Latin American, and China. In many mining towns, half the population were foreign-born. About one-third of the western miners in the 1860s were Chinese immigrants. Native-born Americans resented the competition. In California, hostility to foreigners took the form of a Miner’s Tax of $20 a month on all foreign-born miners. Political pressure from western states led to the Chinese Exclusion Act, 1882 which prohibited further immigration to the US by Chinese laborers. Immigration from China was severely restricted until 1965. The 1882 law was the first major act of Congress to restrict immigration on the basis of race and nationality.
More on immigration“Push Factors” (negative forces driving Europeans to emigrate)•The poverty of displaced farmworkers driven from the land by political turmoil and the mechanization of farm work•Overcrowding and joblessness in cities as a result of a population boom•Religious persecution, particularly of Jews in eastern Europe
“Pull Factors” (positive reason to move to the US)• The reputation of the US for political and religious freedom• Economic opportunities afforded by the settling of the West• The abundance of industrial workers in US cities• The introduction of large steamships and the relatively inexpensive
one-way passage in the ships’ “steerage” made it possible for millions of poor people to emigrate.
“Old” immigrants (1880s)• Refers to those from northern and western Europe• Most were Protestants, although many were Irish or German
Catholics• Mostly English-speaking, literate, and skilled• Easy for these immigrants to blend into a mostly rural American
society
“New” immigrants (1890s-the start of WWI)• Were from southern and eastern Europe• Were Italians, Greeks, Poles, Russians• Many were poor, illiterate peasants who left autocratic countries and
were unaccustomed to democratic traditions• Mostly Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Russian Orthodox & Jewish• Moved into poor ethnic neighborhoods in NY, Chicago• 25% were “birds of passage” – young men contracted for unskilled
factory, mining, and construction jobs, who would return to their native lands once they had saved a fair sum of money to bring back to their families
Restricting Immigration• By 1886 – the year that the Statue of Liberty was placed on its
pedestal in New York harbor – Congress had passed laws restricting immigration.• Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 – hostility to the Chinese mainly came
from the western states• Contract Labor Law of 1885 restricted temporary workers to protect
American workers.• A literacy test 1917.• With the opening of Ellis Island as an immigration center in 1892, new
arrivals had to pass rigorous medical exams and pay a tax before entering the US.
Who supported restrictions on immigration?• Labor unions who feared that employers would use immigrants to
depress wages and break strikes• A nativist society, the American Protective Association, which was
openly prejudiced against Roman Catholics• Social Darwinists who viewed the new immigrants as biologically
inferior to English and Germanic stocks
Reform Movements• The immigrants were blamed for the poverty and crime of the cities.• Settlement houses – Jane Addams (reformer) was concerned about
the living conditions of the poor. Settlement houses provided social services. The most famous was Hull House in Chicago. They taught English to immigrants, pioneered early childhood education, taught industrial arts, and established neighborhood theaters and music schools. Settlement workers created the foundation for social workers.
More reforms…Woman’s Christian Temperance Union, formed in 1874•Advocated total abstinence from alcohol
Anti-saloon League, formed in 1893, became a powerful political force and by 1916 had persuaded 21 states to close down all saloons and bars. Unwilling to wait for the laws to change, Carrie A. Nation of Kansas created a sensation by raiding saloons and smashing barrels of beer with a hatchet.
National American Woman Suffrage Association-Founded by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony-Fought for women’s suffrage-Wyoming was the first state to grant full suffrage to women , 1869. By 1900, some states allowed women to vote in local elections and most allowed women to own and control property after marriage.
Political Machines• Political parties in major cities came under the control of tightly
organized groups of politicians known as political machines. Each machine had its boss, who gave out government jobs to loyal supporters.• Tammany Hall in NY City started as a social club and later developed
into a power center to coordinate the needs of businesses, immigrants, and the underprivileged. In return, machines asked for people’s votes on election day.• Political machines often brought modern services to the city including
a crude form of welfare for urban newcomers. The machine would find jobs and apartments for newly arrived immigrants in return for their political loyalty.
Political Machines cont….• Were also greedy and stole millions from the taxpayers in the form of
graft (acquiring money by dishonest means) and fraud. • Ex: In NY City in the 1860s, 65% of public building funds ended up in
the pockets of Boss Tweed and his cronies.
Settling the WestThe Mining Frontier •1848 California Gold Rush•Discovery of gold near Pike’s Peak, Colorado, 1859•Discover of the Comstock Lode, 1859, which produced more than $340 million in gold and silver by 1890, was responsible for Nevada entering the Union in 1864.
Settling the WestThe Farming Frontier•Homestead Act of 1862 encouraged farming on the Great Plains by offering 160 acres of public land free to any family that settled on it for a period of 5 years.•The promise of free land combined with the promotions of railroads and land speculators led to hundreds of thousands of native-born and immigrant families to attempt to farm the Great Plains between 1870 and 1900. •About 500,000 families took advantage of the Homestead Act.•However, 5 times that number had to purchase their land because the best public lands often ended up in the hands of railroad companies and speculators.
Farming FrontierProblems:The first sodbusters on the dry and treeless plains often built their homes of sod bricks. Extremes of hot and cold weather, plagues of grasshoppers, and the lonesome life on the plains challenged even the most resourceful pioneer families.
The invention of barbed wire by Joseph Gliden, 1874, helped farmers to fence in their lands on the lumber-scarce plains.160 acres was not adequate for farming the Great Plains. Long spells of severe weather, falling crop prices, and the cost of new machinery caused the failure of 2/3rds of the homesteaders’ farms on the Great Plains by 1900. Those who survived adopted “dry farming” and deep-plowing techniques to use the moisture available. Learned to plant hardy Russian wheat that withstood the extreme weather. Dams and irrigation saved many western farmers, as humans reshaped the rivers and physical environment of the West to provide water for agriculture.
American Indians in the West• 1830s – Reservation Policy (Jackson) – lands west of the Mississippi
River would permanently remain “Indian Country”• 1851 (after the acquisition of the Oregon Country) the federal
government assigned the Plains tribes large tracts of land or reservations with definite boundaries but most Plains tribes refused to restrict their movements to the reservations and continued to follow the migrating buffalo wherever they went.
Indian Wars• 1866, Sioux Wars• 1871 Indian Appropriation Act ended recognition of tribes as
independent nations by the federal government and nullified previous treaties made with the tribes• 1876 Battle of Little Big Horn• 1877 Chief Joseph’s courageous effort to lead a band of Nez Perce
into Canada ended in defeat and surrender.• 1880s – most of the buffalo were slaughtered which doomed the way
of life for the Plains people• The last effort of American Indians to resist US government controls
came through a religious movement known as the Ghost Dance.• 1890 – Battle of Wounded Knee, the last major Native American
battle
Assimilationists• Helen Hunt Jackson wrote A Century of Dishonor which was about the
injustices done to the American Indians.• The book created sympathy for American Indians but it also
generated support for ending Indian culture through assimilation. • Reformers advocated formal education, job training, and conversion
to Christianity. Set up boarding schools such as the Carlisle School in PA to segregate American Indian children from their people and teach them white culture and farming and industrial skills.
Dawes Severalty Act, 1887• This act was designed to break up tribal organizations, which many felt kept
American Indians from becoming “civilized” and law-abiding citizens.• This act divided the tribal lands into plots of up to 160 acres, depending on
family size.• US citizenship was granted to those who stayed on the land for 25 years and
“adopted the habits of civilized life.”• Under this act, the government distributed 47 million acres of land to
American Indians. However, 90 million acres of former reservation land – often the best land- was sold over the years to white settlers by the government, speculators, or American Indians themselves.• This act was a failure. By the turn of the century, disease and poverty had
reduced the American Indian population to just 200,000, most of whom lived as wards of the federal government.
Changes in the 20th Century• 1924 – in partial recognition that forced assimilation had failed, the
federal government granted US citizenship to all American Indians, whether or not they had complied with the Dawes Act.• As part of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal in the 1930s,
Congress adopted the Indian Reorganization Act (1934) which promoted the reestablishment of tribal organization and culture.• Today more than 3 million American Indians, belonging to 500 tribes,
live in the US.