1 / 10

Immigration in mid-1800s

Immigration in mid-1800s. Emigrant: Someone who leaves a country Immigrant: Someone who comes to a country. Push and Pull Factors. Push Factors: Causes that “push” or force people away from a country (emigration) Examples?

Télécharger la présentation

Immigration in mid-1800s

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. Immigration in mid-1800s • Emigrant: • Someone who leaves a country • Immigrant: • Someone who comes to a country

  2. Push and Pull Factors • Push Factors: • Causes that “push” or force people away from a country (emigration) • Examples? • Population growth, Agricultural Rev, crop failures, Industrial Rev, Religious & Political Persecution • Pull Factors: • Causes that “pull” people to a certain country (immigration) • U.S. Examples? • Freedom, Economic Opportunity, Land!, Gold!

  3. Ireland & Germany • Ireland “Potato Famine”: crop failure  widespread hunger and death • British Govt. gave no aid • English landlords evicted 100,000s for no rent • 2 million Irish emigrated 1845-1860 (most went to U.S., Canada, Australia) • Germany • Restrictive Economy • 1848 – failed revolution & political persecution

  4. Sailing the Atlantic Ocean • Took 1-2 months to get to U.S. ports • Wealthy travelers: State rooms • Good Ventilation • Captain dined with passengers • Poor travelers: Steerage • Had to cook food themselves • Little time allowed in fresh air • Overcrowding, rats, poor food, abuse, disease

  5. Handouts • Review Answers to Questions on Immigration Charts • Read Lazarus Poem on Statue of Liberty • Read Know Nothing Platform • List several contrasts in the different views toward immigration • Answer the Questions on the Know Nothing Party

  6. Nativism • What was Nativism? • An anti-immigration movement • The policy of favoring native inhabitants over new immigrants • What is discrimination? • The unjust or prejudicial treatment of certain groups of people • Which immigrant groups face discrimination today in the U.S.? • Why do you think discrimination exists?

  7. Know-Nothing Party • What was their platform? • Resist Catholic Church policies • Resist foreign influences on our Republic • Place in office only native-born Protestants • Protect the Constitution • Who was attacked by the platform? • Catholics and new immigrants • How does their platform contrast to the inscription on the Statue of Liberty? • If their platform were law, would it be constitutional today? • No. 14th Amendment Equal Protection clause says: “No state shall….deny to any person….the equal protection of the laws.”

  8. Know Nothing Party • Why did they call themselves the Know Nothings? • Secretive due to illegal activities; Members said “I know nothing.” • Where did the party have most support in 1855? • Northeast • Where did the party have least support in 1855? • West (except CA) • Why didn’t the party survive beyond the 1850s? • Slavery disagreements and Civil War

  9. Discrimination against the Irish • Why do you think the Irish were targeted for discrimination more than the Germans in the 1850s? • Largest group of new immigrants • Catholic (in contrast to Protestant majority)

  10. Nativist Political Cartoons • Skill: Identify assumptions • Examine the political cartoons • Identify examples of prejudice in each cartoon (prejudice is a negative opinion of a group of people, which is not based on facts) • Explain the message of each cartoon. • How do you think this cartoon would be received by people today? • Have you seen examples of prejudice today?

More Related