Studyspark Study Document

Immigration Late 1890's Toward the Term Paper

Pages:6 (1778 words)

Sources:6

Subject:Government

Topic:Immigration

Document Type:Term Paper

Document:#66531230


While some eventually returned to their homelands, the vast majority settled throughout the United States, forming ethnic communities in urban areas, and homesteading farmlands in the west and mid-west rural areas. They fled their homelands due to economic depressions, and/or religious and political persecutions for the opportunity to establish a better life in the New World, and in the process endured many hardships and often discrimination. Today, more than 43 million Americans claim German ancestry, and another 34 million claim Irish roots.

Works Cited

Cohn, Raymond L. "Immigration to the United States." Illinois State University.

Retrieved November 13, 2006 at http:/ / the.net/encyclopedia/article/cohn.immigration.us

Hansen, Lawrence Douglas Taylor. "The Chinese Six Companies of San Francisco and the smuggling of Chinese immigrants across the U.S.-Mexico border, 1882-1930." Journal of the Southwest. March 22, 2006. Retrieved November 13, 2006 from HighBeam Research Library.

Hardwick, Susan W. "Galveston: Ellis Island of Texas." Journal of Cultural Geography.

March 22, 2003. Retrieved November 13, 2006 from HighBeam Research Library.

Kelleher, Patricia. "Young Irish workers: class implications of men's and women's experiences in gilded age Chicago." Eire-Ireland: a Journal of Irish Studies. March 22, 2001. Retrieved November 13, 2006 from HighBeam Research Library.

Miller, Kerby A. "Sending Out Ireland's Poor: Assisted Emigration to North America in the Nineteenth Century." Journal of Social History. March 22, 2005. Retrieved November 13, 2006 from HighBeam Research Library.

Pascoe, Peggy. "At America's Gates: Chinese Immigration during the Exclusion Era, 1882-1943." Journal of Social History. March 22, 2005. Retrieved November 13, 2006 from HighBeam Research Library.

Telzrow, Michael E. "The story of immigration in America: though it is not often acknowledged today, immigration policy…


Sample Source(s) Used

Works Cited

Cohn, Raymond L. "Immigration to the United States." Illinois State University.

Retrieved November 13, 2006 at http:/ / the.net/encyclopedia/article/cohn.immigration.us

Hansen, Lawrence Douglas Taylor. "The Chinese Six Companies of San Francisco and the smuggling of Chinese immigrants across the U.S.-Mexico border, 1882-1930." Journal of the Southwest. March 22, 2006. Retrieved November 13, 2006 from HighBeam Research Library.

Hardwick, Susan W. "Galveston: Ellis Island of Texas." Journal of Cultural Geography.

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Immigration Heterogeneity and a Vibrant Multiethnic Ambiance

Pages: 5 (1408 words) Sources: 1 Subject: American History Document: #11934173

Immigration Heterogeneity and a vibrant multiethnic ambiance characterize urban life in America. For the past several hundred years, the population of the United States has been bolstered by people migrating from abroad: from Europe at first, and later, from countries from the far corners of the world. According to Nancy Kleniewski in her article "Immigrants and the City," at least 22 million current residents of the United States are immigrants (p.

Studyspark Study Document

Immigration - Drawing the Line

Pages: 25 (7210 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Criminal Justice Document: #49580604

There is no question, however, that immigration issues will remain in the forefront of our national policy debates. Deportation Factors and Crimes Involving Moral Turpitude Research indicates that since the late 1980s, Congress had been tightening the substantive provisions of the immigration laws, to make it far less likely that a convicted criminal alien can find a way to be relieved of expulsion. For many years the basic statutory pattern was

Studyspark Study Document

United States, From Its Beginnings,

Pages: 8 (2458 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: American History Document: #4250465

They needed to pass a medical exam, a test on their language skill and many others. Among the people who were turned away without exception were those deemed mentally deficient, admitted or suspected revolutionaries, and those who did not pay for their own passage (Anderson 28-29). In short, many immigrants felt that they were being inspected, manhandled, mistreated, and dealt with in a manner more befitting of animals than

Studyspark Study Document

Catholics in America: During the

Pages: 4 (1386 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Mythology - Religion Document: #68992155

However, Cardinal Gibbons, even after this encyclical by the Pope, "took a dim view of strikes (by the Catholic immigrants)" and any "concrete action by American Catholics was slow in coming, (due to) the conservatism of the clergy and the parochial concerns of the lay leaders" (Carnes 654). The Catholic church responded in other ways to the crucial needs of immigrant Catholics in the United States, especially in the area

Studyspark Study Document

Illegal Immigrants in the U.S.

Pages: 6 (2196 words) Sources: 2 Subject: American History Document: #39582268

So who is an American and what an America can or cannot do are questions which are critical to the issue of legalizing immigrants. Does being an American mean you cannot show allegiance to any other country? The images of people raising and waving Mexican flag had enraged many but it need not have. It should be accepted that people who come from different countries would forever hold in their

Studyspark Study Document

American History American Foreign Policy

Pages: 2 (670 words) Sources: 2 Subject: American History Document: #28235759

Beginning in the 1890s, America's position toward Latin America began to change, largely based on Secretary of State James G. Blaine's ideas. A historian writes, "Blaine's policy toward Latin America had two main objectives: promotion of peace and increased trade. Both were in a sense anti-European" (DeConde, 1963, p. 295). During this time, negotiations were underway to build what would eventually become the Panama Canal through Central America, so there

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".