On board an
emigrant ship -
the breakfast bell immigrants on ship deck,
1884, Library of
Congress Prints and
Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540
USA, LC-USZ62-60319
|
I believe America owes much to the millions of immigrants
who have come to this country. They have given their raw labor to build the
infrastructure that is the foundation of our nation: the canals, the railroads,
the roads. Although the jobs available to new arrivals have changed through the
decades and the centuries, the contributions of immigrants have always been
essential to the strength of America. Let’s take a look at what conditions
cause immigration. Why did Europeans, starting in the 1600s, emigrate to the
Americas?
From reading Marcus L. Hansen’s book The Atlantic Migration and from ideas formed over years of
reading about immigration to America, I have reached several conclusions. The reasons for emigration were mainly economic (worsened by
population growth), but people also left their birth countries seeking to avoid
religious persecution and forced conscription. I discussed the “push” and
“pull” factors that influence the movement of people in my post of April 19,2014.
“Descriptive
portraiture of Europe in storm and calm….,”
Edward King, 1886, C.A. Nichols,
Springfield, MA, https://www.flickr.com/photos/
internetarchivebookimages/14595849259/
|
The economic push factors first centered around agriculture.
For much of the time that humans have been on this earth, raising crops has
been the main way of survival. And anyone who has tried to grow a garden can
attest to the effect weather has on the harvest. For thousands of years, people
have been at the mercy of the elements as they try to grow enough food to pay
the landlord and feed their own families. Droughts, floods, insect
infestations, worn-out soil and other natural events have brought devastation
and starvation and driven people to seek new land.
It was not until the 18th century with the dawn
of the Industrial Revolution in England that the majority of the population would become less dependent on
farming for their livelihood. The Industrial Revolution caused a shift in the economic
paths people took to sustain their families. Although agriculture remained
paramount to the sustenance of most people, small cottagers benefited from
advances in transportation to increase markets for their hand crafts (spinning,
weaving, knitting) to supplement what they could raise on their small parcels
of land.
Mechanization slowly developed and
factories began pulling people from their homes.
The movement of poor peasants to factory work did not
relieve their poverty (due to low wages) and overcrowding in urban areas led to
the spread of disease. The health and life expectancy of the new factory
workers suffered from conditions brought about by mechanization, including
exposure in enclosed spaces to air full of toxins from textile production and
injuries from machines. As we have seen, poor economic conditions played a big
part in the urge for people to look for opportunities somewhere else.
Irish spinner
and spinning wheel.
County Galway, Ireland, between 1890 and 1900, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division,
Washington, D.C. 20540
USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
|
Walton, Perry, The Story of Textiles, 1912, J.S. Lawrence, Boston, MA, p. 166-A |
From the early 1600s through the early 1900s, the “New
World” (as it seemed to the Europeans) functioned as a safety valve for people
from Europe who were fleeing the situations caused by the events mentioned
above. Other things also “pushed” people to leave their birth countries. These include the intermittent warring between European countries that made daily living for people precarious: food
shortages, more taxes to pay for military activity, and forced conscription
were factors that encouraged emigration.
The lack of religious freedom was one other push factor that led people to leave Europe and sail across the Atlantic to America.
“Descriptive
portraiture of Europe in storm and calm….,” Edward King, 1886, C.A. Nichols, Springfield, MA, https://www.flickr.com/photos/ internetarchivebookimages/14595830779/ |
The lack of religious freedom was one other push factor that led people to leave Europe and sail across the Atlantic to America.
This discussion of push and pull factors leads us to ponder how
emigration affects both the sending (home) country and the receiving (destination) country.
The effects of immigration (economic, cultural, social) on America is right now
and historically has been the cause of heated debate and sometimes violent protests
all the way back to colonial times. In a post from July 9, 2014, I discussed the anti-immigrant movement symbolized by the Know Nothing Party which was born and became popular at a time of high immigration of poor, unskilled Catholics from Ireland.
How American-born or
even many naturalized citizens feel about new immigrants often stems from fear
of the outsider: will our language/culture be lost, will our society be taken
over by foreigners, will our jobs be lost?
What never seems to enter the equation are two factors. First, history
has shown that the children of immigrants nearly always embrace this country
with its language, culture and government as their own. Second, the immigrant
generation provides labor for jobs that many native Americans do not want.
America has been eager to accept immigrant labor for more than three centuries, but many Americans have not been as willing to welcome them into the fabric of our society. Joseph Connor wrote an excellent article in "American History Magazine,"1 chronicling American sentiment toward immigrants since our nation began. Connor shows that the American people’s vacillating relationship with immigration often coincides with economic shifts in the economy. This view is corroborated by Eytan Meyers in his study2 of immigration policy, where he states that laws restricting immigration were passed during the recession of 1882-1885 and again during the depression of 1891-1897.
Know-nothingism
in Brooklyn, 1881, Illus. in: Frank Leslie's illustrated newspaper,
vol. 51
(1881 Jan. 15), p. 340,
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
Division
Washington, D.C. 20540 USA
|
America has been eager to accept immigrant labor for more than three centuries, but many Americans have not been as willing to welcome them into the fabric of our society. Joseph Connor wrote an excellent article in "American History Magazine,"1 chronicling American sentiment toward immigrants since our nation began. Connor shows that the American people’s vacillating relationship with immigration often coincides with economic shifts in the economy. This view is corroborated by Eytan Meyers in his study2 of immigration policy, where he states that laws restricting immigration were passed during the recession of 1882-1885 and again during the depression of 1891-1897.
Politicians and others have long tried to understand and sway public opinion. And one of the best ways to grab the public’s
attention is through images. With the advent of newspapers and magazines, would-be
movers and shapers of popular belief found a successful tool in the art of political
cartooning. The political cartoon also functions on the back end to capture the
prevailing mood of the citizenry, actually responding to the public’s attitude
to many things, including immigration, at different points in our history.
Joseph Connor included two political cartoons in his piece
that clearly show how public opinion on immigration parallels economic
downturns. One can ask several questions of these cartoons. Do they convey just
the opinions of the artist? Does the artist attempt to capture the widespread
feelings/fears/beliefs of the day? Is the artist conveying the opinions of one
political party or another? Is the artist simply portraying the feeling of the
publication paid for his/her work?
The title of the first cartoon, “Columbia's Unwelcome Guests”
gives us a big clue as to the sentiment behind the drawing. Frank Beard was the illustrator, and the cartoon was
published in 1885 by Judge Magazine at the tail end of a four year recession.
In the drawing, Mr. Beard depicts multitudes of immigrants from the sewers of
Germany, Russia, and Italy pouring across the Atlantic and breaching our
shores. As you can see from the labels he places on the newcomers, (Socialists,
Communists, Anarchists, Dynamiters) Beard shows them threatening the law and
order of America.
'Columbia's
Unwelcome Guests.' American cartoon by Frank Beard,
1885, showing unrestricted
U.S. immigration policies
encouraging the arrival of anarchists, socialists,
and the Mafia from the sewers of Italy, Russia,
and Germany; used by permission
under 2019
The Granger
Collection LTD d/b/a Granger Academic.
|
The title of the second cartoon, “Where the Blame Lies” by
Grant T. Hamilton is a not-so-subtle condemnation of immigrants also. It was published in 1891,
(the beginning of a seven-year depression) in Judge Magazine. Hamilton goes a bit further in his name-calling as
he links political movements, crime and poverty to certain nationalities: German Socialist, Russian Anarchist, Italian
Vagabond, English Convict, and Irish Pauper. Perhaps the saddest part
of the cartoon is the Statue of Liberty is pictured in the background.
In conclusion, humans have been on the move for centuries. Many reasons spur this movement, and we have mentioned some of the major ones in this post in our discussion of immigration to this country. Throughout its history, America has been the beneficiary of the labor and the many other contributions that newcomers bring. Let us never forget this.
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