1 / 8

1920s Quota Restriction

1920s Quota Restriction. HIS 206. Emergency Quota Restriction Act. Emergency Quota Restriction Act (1921) pocket-vetoed by Wilson, but re-passed and signed into law by Warren G. Harding in May 3% of foreign-born of each nationality in 1910 census allowed in each year Minimum quota = 400

marrim
Télécharger la présentation

1920s Quota Restriction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 1920s Quota Restriction HIS 206

  2. Emergency Quota Restriction Act • Emergency Quota Restriction Act (1921) pocket-vetoed by Wilson, but re-passed and signed into law by Warren G. Harding in May • 3% of foreign-born of each nationality in 1910 census allowed in each year • Minimum quota = 400 • Total of all quotas = 387,803 • Professionals, domestic servants, religious refugees & citizens of Western hemisphere nations exempt • Act extended for 2 more years in 1922 • Immediate enforcement of act created hardships that generated bad publicity for administration • Steamships raced to port in first days of each month • Ellis Island Commissioner Frederick Wallis resigned in protest Pres. Harding

  3. James J. Davis, Secretary of Labor1921-1930 • Davis tried to give Immigration bureau to State Dept. in 1922, but Charles Evans Hughes didn’t want responsibility • Davis wrote Selective Immigration or None (1924), endorsing eugenics • Proposed “strict, but just tests of physical and mental health” • Screening in Europe would avoid scrutiny by American courts & press • Proposed registration of all aliens • Warned that while “old” immigrants were “beavers,” “new” immigrants were “rats” • Offered himself as “master puddler of humanity” James J. Davis

  4. Reed-Johnson Immigration Act • Reed-Johnson Immigration Act (1924) set immigration policy for 28 years • Overseas consular inspection instituted • $9 visa fee added to $8 head tax • Japanese excluded as “aliens ineligible to citizenship” • Basis of quotas became 2% of 1890 census • 1890 marked high point of German & Irish immigration • Wives & kids of citizens, resident aliens, professionals & Western hemisphere immigrants exempt from quotas • Within quotas, preference given to immediate family members & skilled agriculturalists • Would change to “national origins” quotas in 1927 (delayed until 1929) • Developed by John B. Trevor & introduced by Sen. David Reed • Quotas were in same ratio to 150,000 as the number of inhabitants of that national origin were to the number of inhabitants in U.S. in 1920 • Sec. of State, Labor & Commerce to prepare quotas Pres. Coolidge

  5. Calculating the Quotas • Quota Board chaired by Dr. Joseph A. Hill • 2 representatives each from State, Labor & Commerce • Samuel Boggs prepared memo explaining methods • Hard to assign quotas due to newly created countries & changed borders after World War I • “National Origins” based on assumptions • White population est. to be 90 million • Foreign-born not identified by country of origin until 1850; children not distinguished until 1890 • “Original native stock” est. at 41 million • Marcus Hansen & Howard Barker lowered est. of 1790 British pop. from 82% to 60%, but quota board only lowered est. by 10.4% • Assumptions led to over-representation of British

  6. Quota Comparison • 1890 Census Quotas: • Britain: 34,007 • Germany: 51,227 • Ireland: 28,567 • Sweden: 9,561 • Norway: 6,453 • Italy: 3,845 • Poland: 5,982 • Russia: 2,248 • Czechoslovakia: 3,073 • National Origins Quotas: • Britain: 65,721 • Germany: 25,957 • Ireland: 17,853 • Sweden: 3,314 • Norway: 2,377 • Italy: 5,802 • Poland: 6,524 • Russia: 2,784 • Czechoslovakia: 2,874

  7. “Leaving the Back Door Open”

  8. Hoover & the Great Depression • Hoover called for return to 1890 census quotas in 1928 campaign • tried to avoid issuing National Origins quotas in 1929 • Asked Congress to repeal them • State Dept. began using LPC clause to exclude virtually all immigrants in 1930 • Began with Mexicans in March • Supreme Court ruled in Gegiow v. Uhl (1915) that Immigration Bureau couldn’t use LPC clause to keep out immigrants based on labor conditions at port of entry • Courts consistently upheld State Dept’s discretionary power to issue visas, however Pres. Hoover

More Related