History- Section 1- Immigration

Cards (49)

  • Melting Pot
    People from different countries 'blending' together
  • Open Door Policy
    Accepting immigrants from various countries
  • Push factors

    Reasons people want to leave their own countries
  • Pull factors

    Factors that attracted people to the USA
  • Ellis Island
    70% of immigrants arrived at Ellis Island near New York
  • WASP
    White Anglo-Saxon Protestant
  • Red Scare
    Concern regarding the spread of communist and socialist ideas
  • Xenophobia
    Dislike of, or prejudice against people from other countries
  • Communism
    System where property is owned by community
  • Palmer Raids
    Series of arrests of thousands of suspected Communists
  • 13m people arrived mainly from Southern/Eastern Europe

    1900 - 1914
  • Bolshevik Revolution in Russia
    Oct 1917
  • Bomb explodes outside house of Mitchel Palmer, Attorney General, fuelling the Red Scare

    Jun 1919
  • Arrest of Sacco and Vanzetti
    May 1920
  • Sacco and Vanzetti executed after losing their appeal
    Aug 1927
  • Literacy Test
    1917
  • The Emergency Quota Act

    1921
  • The National Origins Act
    1924
  • Immigration Act
    1929
  • Many Americans were frightened by the Communist Revolution that had happened in Russia in October 1917
  • Many Americans feared that communist and anarchist ideas would spread. They viewed immigrants with increasing suspicion and became increasingly xenophobic
  • There were over 3,000 cases of industrial strikes in 1919, including the Boston Police force
  • Feelings of anger and animosity arose towards communists and many Americans believed that some of the events of 1919 and 1920 were linked to communism
  • In September 1920, a bomb exploded on Wall Street killing 38 people, and another bomb destroyed the front of the Attorney General, A. Mitchell Palmer's house
  • These events gave rise to the Red Scare and fear that communism was a real danger that threatened the American way of life
  • United States Attorney General, A. Mitchell Palmer organised attacks against left wing organisations. Palmer spread rumours about the Red Scare saying that there were around 150,000 communists living in the country (0.1 per cent of the population)
  • As many as 6,000 were arrested and held in a prison without a hearing and hundreds were deported. The Palmer Raids were a response to imaginary threats. Eventually they were released and the Red Scare receded
  • With the number of immigrants increasing, some Americans began to question the government's Open Door policy
  • Immigrants had tended to come from northern and western Europe and were White Anglo Saxon Protestants (WASPs). Between 1900 and 1914, 13 million arrived, mainly from southern and eastern Europe – Italy, Austria-Hungary, Russia, Western Poland and Greece
  • People started feeling angry towards these 'new' immigrants because they were often poor, illiterate and many were Roman Catholics or Jews, therefore from a different cultural and religious background
  • The fear of communism spread following the Bolshevik revolution in 1917 which led to the Red Scare
  • As a result, the US Congress passed laws to restrict immigration and each law in turn was more severe than the previous one
  • Literacy Test, 1917 – a series of reading and writing tests. Many of the poorer immigrants had received no education and therefore failed the tests and were refused entry
  • The Emergency Quota Act, 1921 - restricted the number of immigrants to 357,000 per year, and also set down a quota - only 3 per cent of the total population of any overseas group already in the USA in 1910 could come in after 1921
  • The National Origins Act, 1924 – This law cut the quota of immigrants to 2 per cent of its population in the USA in 1890
  • Immigration Act, 1929 – This made the quotas of the 1924 act permanent and restricted immigration to 150,000 per year
  • In May 1920, two Italian immigrants, Sacco and Vanzetti, were arrested for armed robbery of a shoe factory, during which two people were killed
  • They had radical anti-government pamphlets in the car when they were arrested and both owned guns. They could not indisputably prove where they had been on the day of the murders
  • From the beginning, public opinion was against them because of their political ideas and because they were immigrants
  • Although 61 witnesses said they had seen them, the defence had 107 witnesses alleging that they had seen them somewhere else when the crime was committed