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Region Country | 1870 | 1880 | 1890 | 1900 | 1910 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Northern and Western Europe | 4,845,679 | 5,499,889 | 7,288,917 | 7,204,649 | 7,306,325 |
Germany | 1,690,533 | 1,966,742 | 2,784,894 | 2,663,418 | 2,311,237 |
Ireland | 1,855,827 | 1,854,571 | 1,871,509 | 1,615,459 | 1,352,251 |
England | 550,924 | 662,676 | 908,141 | 840,513 | 877,719 |
Sweden | 97,332 | 194,337 | 478,041 | 582,014 | 665,207 |
Austria | 30,508 | 38,663 | 123,271 | 275,907 | 626,341 |
Norway | 114,246 | 181,729 | 322,665 | 336,388 | 403,877 |
Scotland | 140,835 | 170,136 | 242,231 | 233,524 | 261,076 |
Southern and Eastern Europe | 93,824 | 248,620 | 728,851 | 1,674,648 | 4,500,932 |
Italy | 17,157 | 44,230 | 182,580 | 484,027 | 1,343,125 |
Russia | 4,644 | 35,722 | 182,644 | 423,726 | 1,184,412 |
Poland | 14,436 | 48,557 | 147,440 | 383,407 | 937,884 |
Hungary | 3,737 | 11,526 | 62,435 | 145,714 | 495,609 |
Czechoslovakia | 40,289 | 85,361 | 118,106 | 156,891 | 219,214 |
The previous waves of immigrants from northern and western Europe, particularly Germany, Great Britain, and the Nordic countries, were relatively well off, arriving in the country with some funds and often moving to the newly settled western territories. In contrast, the newer immigrants from southern and eastern European countries, including Italy, Greece, and several Slavic countries including Russia, came over due to “push” and “pull” factors similar to those that influenced the African Americans arriving from the South. Many were “pushed” from their countries by a series of ongoing famines, by the need to escape religious, political, or racial persecution, or by the desire to avoid compulsory military service. They were also “pulled” by the promise of consistent, wage-earning work.
Whatever the reason, these immigrants arrived without the education and finances of the earlier waves of immigrants, and settled more readily in the port towns where they arrived, rather than setting out to seek their fortunes in the West. By 1890, over 80 percent of the population of New York would be either foreign-born or children of foreign-born parentage. Other cities saw huge spikes in foreign populations as well, though not to the same degree, due in large part to Ellis Island in New York City being the primary port of entry for most European immigrants arriving in the United States.
The number of immigrants peaked between 1900 and 1910, when over nine million people arrived in the United States. To assist in the processing and management of this massive wave of immigrants, the Bureau of Immigration in New York City, which had become the official port of entry, opened Ellis Island in 1892. Today, nearly half of all Americans have ancestors who, at some point in time, entered the country through the portal at Ellis Island. Doctors or nurses inspected the immigrants upon arrival, looking for any signs of infectious diseases ( [link] ). Most immigrants were admitted to the country with only a cursory glance at any other paperwork. Roughly 2 percent of the arriving immigrants were denied entry due to a medical condition or criminal history. The rest would enter the country by way of the streets of New York, many unable to speak English and totally reliant on finding those who spoke their native tongue.
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