Migration DBQ The United States of America has, and will always be, a country where immigrants and refugees can migrate to, internally and internationally, to vastly improve their lives. During the late 19th century in the US, there was a massive influx of immigrants from all over the world, as well as movement of people already living in the US to different areas. These people were primarily seeking better job opportunities due to numerous economic issues in foreign countries and social tensions in the post-Reconstruction US. Therefore, the US became much more culturally diverse and areas were inhabited to form mini “hubs” for people of similar ethnicities and races to live together. Although internal migration in the US had a big impact …show more content…
Post-Reconstruction US was a very difficult time for many groups of people within the US. These people, specifically blacks, struggled to get and maintain jobs due to Jim Crow laws and severe racism and segregation. Sharecropping also limited the amount former slaves could rise on the social ladder, as it was basically a legal form of segregation. Doc. 7 shows this by proving that very little blacks were actually born in Philadelphia, a city notorious for its black population. Instead, most black adults that live in Philadelphia moved there from other places, the majority of them from the South. However, 83% of kids who lived in Philadelphia were born there. The purpose of this document is to show that blacks are moving into major cities, like Philly, to start their families in an effort to build a better life for themselves, disproving the misconception that blacks have lived in Philadelphia for a long time and were not moving throughout the US. White farmers who moved West also had a significant impact on the US due to numerous economic issues and policies. First off, the prices of …show more content…
People from all over the world came to the US for many reasons, and with them came their culture. The US is considered today as a place where, for the most part, all people and cultures are accepted. This can all be traced back to the immigrants that came to the US in the late 1800s. These people brought their customs and traditions to the US and allowed the people to really experience how other people around the world live. Foods, religions, governments, and ideals are just some of the many thing immigrants brought to the US that overall made the US a much more complex country. No other place in the world could rival the US’s diversity, leading to many greats things in the US immediately, and in the long term. For example, Doc 3 shows Chinese workers in a salmon cannery, bringing along their knowledge of fish and how to prepare it. Something as small as this proves the larger idea that foreign immigrants bring along with them their traditions that make the US a more complex and interesting place to live. Due to this new diversity, places such as the “Hull House” were created to help immigrants adapt to life in the US, as well as a place to interact with other cultures. As Hilda Statt Polacheck said, “Hull House was an oasis in a desert of disease and monotony.”(doc 6) The purpose of this document is to show how
From the early settlers to the present new comers, ethnic and cultural diversity is abundant. When this country was formed the settling population was mainly white Protestants. In time, other Northern Europeans sought entry, and eventually, Southern and Eastern Europeans, Asians, Central and South Americans immigrated and colonized all over the nation. The American "mosaic" was slowly developing, Differences became increasingly more apparent. Such differences involved variation in religions, races, and ethnic heritage.
Black migration slowed considerably in the 1930s, when the country sank into the Great Depression, but picked up again with the coming of World War II. By 1970, when the Great Migration ended, its demographic impact was unmistakable: Whereas in 1900, nine out of every 10 black Americans lived in the South, and three out of every four lived on farms, by 1970 the South was home to less than half of the country’s African-Americans, with only 25 percent living in the region’s rural
As the Great War raged on, people began fleeing their war torn homelands. Immigrants flooded into the United States at a breakneck pace. The way of life for all civilians was dramatically altered as their husbands and baby boys were shipped overseas to fight. Immigrants that were thrown into the fray of the developing United States faced the most drastic change to their lives during World War I.
Immigrants from all over the world migrate to American in the search of a true and honest life in search of liberty and the pursuit of
Following the Civil War, westward migration increased rapidly; this was mainly due to acts such as the Homestead Act, which provided 160 acres of land for anyone who settled on it for a period of five years, the Morrill Act, and the Transcontinental Railroad, which ignited the transportation revolution. Nevertheless, life was difficult for farmers in the west, as they faced droughts, severe weather, and loneliness, leading many to leave their Western homesteads. However, often the greatest difficulty for farmers was competing with industrial farming, large corporations, and the global economy. As production increased and global prices decreased, many farmers fell into poverty, burned with debt they could not pay off due to deflation. As farmers
The United States of America is the most diverse country in the world today. You can travel to the mountainy southern states, or the flat midwest, and the two places are basically completely different countries with completely different cultures. This is a direct correlation from in Colonial America how the colonies were so different even though they were all English owned. Because the English colonies were all so diverse, this led to our present day nation to be such a “melting pot.” Although England had thirteen Colonies in America, the Colonies had substantial differences between them, like how they were formed for different reasons, the basis of their economies were different, and the role religion played in each colony varied.
We had a big drop in immigration during World War II. Now we have many different populations coming from a lot of different countries. I am going to tell you where they came from, how they got here, and a few problems we have today. in 1620 around 100 people later became known as the pilgrims fled religious persecution in europe and arrived in plymouth where they formed a colony. They were later followed by a huge group also seeking religious
In addition to geographical and economic factors, family ties figured into where immigrants were attracted and settled. In what is termed “chain migration”, immigrants would follow their relatives to the U.S. and they would settle near family members. (“Exploitation During the Industrial Revolution”) The text has a map that shows the ethnic neighborhoods in Chicago in 1900; members of each ethnic group clustered together to provide help and community to one another. (Schaller, p.
The United States has been a place of hopes and dreams for many people trapped by poverty, famine, and political instability in their homelands. They have migrated to the New World to find equality, freedom, and opportunity which could not be found in their home countries. From the arrival of the earliest settlers to colonize America in the seventeenth century, the land has been receiving people from all over the world, looking for a decent life for themselves and their families. They believed that America would grant them a comfortable life and a certain future. Immigrants entered the United States through several ports.
All things considered, this argument was convincing. In reality, one-third of the South’s population was black, and held an economic weight in society especially because of the emancipation of slaves. If whites ostracized blacks from working in the South, even as meager farmers and industrialist, the southern economy would falter as a
Introduction Throughout history, the United States has been the melting pot of immigration. Many people of different races, religions, and reasons came to the United States; either willingly or forced. Either way, immigration to the United States is what our country had been built on. Immigration had begun in the early 1400s and its activity has only increased, but for a multitude of reasons.
Arguably the most profound effect of World War I on African Americans was the acceleration of the multi-decade mass movement of black, southern rural farm laborers northward and westward in search of higher wages in industrial jobs and better social and political opportunities. This Great Migration led to the rapid growth of black urban communities in cities like New York, Chicago, St. Louis, and Los Angeles.117 While relatively small groups of southern African Americans migrated after Reconstruction to border states such as Kansas and into the Appalachians, it was not until the imposition of Jim Crow segregation and disfranchisement in the South that large numbers of blacks left their homes and families to search elsewhere for a better life. Still, in 1910, nearly 90 percent of American blacks lived in the South, four-fifths of them in rural
At the Hull House’s hight, it hosted 9,000 people per week. The main goals of the Hull House, which were achieved, were to assimilate immigrants and help victims of harsh industrialism. Immigrants could be taught to speak English through the schooling offered at the house which opened up many possibilities for them in America. Thus, Jane Addams’
At one time or another, most of the population has been an immigrant, whether that is an hour away or half-way around the world. Possibly fleeing a war zone, making a better life for yourself or maybe to be closer to your love ones. Not necessarily yourself but an ancestor, and chances are people in your family have migrated and face new experiences. Firstly, diversity can help with understanding people from other communities.
Benefits 2 The benefits of immigration is statistically present. Immigration increases the efficiency of the U.S. economy by being part of the labor force. “Immigrants are about 16% of the labor force, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, yet represent 50% of the labor force without a high school diploma.”