home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT0399>
- <link 93XP0245>
- <link 93XP0102>
- <link 93XP0094>
- <link 93XP0005>
- <link 93HT0085>
- <title>
- Dec. 02, 1993: The Great Migration
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 02, 1993 Special Issue:The New Face Of America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPECIAL ISSUE:THE NEW FACE OF AMERICA
- The Great Migration, Page 28
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The history of America is a prodigious tale of newcomers, replete
- with perils, triumphs and true grit
- </p>
- <p>By John Elson
- </p>
- <p> The most salient fact about American history is this: the ancestors
- of everyone who lives in the U.S. originally came from somewhere
- else. That includes even the Inuits and other Native Americans,
- whose forebears first crossed from Siberia to Alaska on a land
- bridge that now lies beneath the icy Bering Sea. From its colonial
- beginnings, the history of America has largely been the story
- of how immigrants from the Old World conquered the New. As the
- historian Carl Wittke noted, eight nationalities were represented
- on Columbus' first voyage to a continent that eventually received
- its name from a German mapmaker (Martin Walseemuller) working
- in a French college, who honored an Italian explorer (Amerigo
- Vespucci) sailing under the flag of Portugal.
- </p>
- <p> The tide of humanity that has washed over the American continent
- during the last three or four decades of the 20th century has
- had profound consequences, to be sure. But in relative terms,
- it is no match for the waves that came ashore during the 19th.
- Between Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo in 1815 and the assassination
- of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand at Sarajevo in 1914, more
- than 30 million Europeans left their homelands--some involuntarily--to settle in the U.S. It was by far the greatest mass movement
- in human history. The influx continues, in ever greater variety.
- For people in search of better lives, America remains the ultimate
- lure.
- </p>
- <p> America's immigration story actually starts in the darkness
- of prehistory. Archaeologists estimate that Paleo-Indians began
- their great trek from Asia around 30,000 B.C., in pursuit of
- shaggy, straight-horned bison (now extinct) and other edible
- fauna. They gradually moved south and east from Alaska as the
- glaciers of the Ice Age melted. By 19,000 B.C., the Indians--a short, hardy people who suffered from arthritis and poor
- teeth, among other infirmities--had built primitive homes
- in cliffs along Cross Creek, a few miles from present-day Pittsburgh,
- Pennsylvania. One tribal nation, the Cahokia federation, had
- the sophisticated skills to build a thriving trade center of
- 40,000 people, across the river from what is now St. Louis,
- Missouri, between A.D. 1000 and 1250. But by 1300, this metropolis--the largest on the continent north of Mexico--had been
- abandoned, a victim of overdevelopment. The Cahokians had run
- out of food.
- </p>
- <p> When the first Europeans arrived, the Indian population of North
- America north of Mexico was about 1 million. According to Ronald
- Takaki's A Different Mirror: A History of Multicultural America,
- some Indian sages had forecast the coming of white-skinned aliens.
- On his deathbed, a chief of New England's Wampanoag tribe said
- that strange white people would come to crowd out the Indians.
- As a sign, a great white whale would rise out of the witch pond.
- The night he died, the whale rose, just as he had predicted.
- Similar prophecies about predatory whites can be found in the
- lore of Virginia's Powhatans and the Ojibwa of Minnesota.
- </p>
- <p> Until recently, American history texts were resolutely Anglocentric,
- beginning the immigration story with the first successful English
- settlements--at Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607 and Plymouth
- Rock, Massachusetts, in 1620. The British, in fact, were latecomers.
- In 1565 a convicted Spanish smuggler named Pedro Menendez de
- Aviles, leading a ragtag army of perhaps 1,500 that included
- blacksmiths and brewers as well as foot soldiers, built the
- first permanent European settlement on American soil at St.
- Augustine, Florida. (The ruins of Menendez's first fort were
- discovered only last summer.) Thirty-three years later, Juan
- de Onate established a colonial capital at San Gabriel in what
- is now New Mexico.
- </p>
- <p> The Spanish, typically more interested in the pursuit of gold
- than in settlement, easily subjugated the Indians, enslaving
- those who did not die of imported diseases like smallpox. The
- 500,000 or so Indian inhabitants of Eastern North America at
- the time of the first English settlements were not so easily
- conquered. These resilient and warlike nations--principally
- the Algonquin and Iroquois in the north, the Muskoghean and
- Choctaw in the south--were happy to trade with the white man
- and adopt his weapons, but not his Christian faith or his mores.
- And they would fight to the death to defend their lands from
- encroachment.
- </p>
- <p> Many of the first immigrants from the British Isles were unwilling
- voyagers. Long before Australia became the fatal shore for millions
- of convicts, North America was London's principal penal colony.
- Others came to the New World as indentured servants, bound into
- service to pay the cost of their passage for specified terms--usually three to seven years--before being set free. During
- the 17th century, for example, 75% of Virginia's colonists arrived
- as servants, some of whom had been kidnapped by unscrupulous
- "recruiters."
- </p>
- <p> And then there were the slaves. In 1619 the Virginia settler
- John Rolfe made a diary note of a dark moment in American history.
- "About the last of August," he wrote, "came in a dutch man of
- warre that sold us twenty Negars." In Virginia alone, the slave
- population grew from about 2,000 in 1670 to 150,000 on the eve
- of the American Revolution. Most of the slaves sailed from West
- Africa, chained together in dank, fetid holds for transatlantic
- journeys that often lasted three months or more. The conditions
- were unspeakable, the mortality rate horrifying: on some ships
- more than half the slaves died during the passage.
- </p>
- <p> Initially, blacks worked alongside whites in the tobacco fields
- of Virginia and the Carolinas, but by 1650 field hands were
- invariably men and women of color. One reason: because of what
- science now knows is the sickle-cell trait, blacks were often
- less susceptible than whites to the depredations of malaria.
- More important, a terrible distinction had been made, first
- informally but then in legislation: white servants were considered
- persons despite their temporary state of servitude; blacks were
- mere property that could be bought and sold.
- </p>
- <p> In sharp contrast to Mother England, the 13 American colonies
- were heterogeneous in character. By the mid-18th century, Welsh
- and Germans had settled in Pennsylvania and the Carolinas, which
- also had a substantial population of Scotch-Irish. South Carolina
- and the major towns of New England were home to thousands of
- French Huguenots. There were Swedes and Finns in Delaware, Sephardic
- Jews from Holland and Portugal in Rhode Island and Dutch in
- New York. Visiting New Amsterdam in 1643, the French Jesuit
- missionary Isaac Jogues was amazed to discover that in this
- town of 8,000 people, 18 languages were spoken. In his famous
- Letters from an American Farmer, J. Hector St. John Crevecoeur
- wrote in 1782, "Here individuals of all nations are melted into
- a new race of men, whose labors and posterity will one day cause
- great changes in the world."
- </p>
- <p> But did these myriad groups really melt? A unique characteristic
- of the U.S. immigration experience, historian Daniel Boorstin
- has noted, is the way in which so many ethnic communities were
- able to preserve their separate identities. Instead of "E pluribus
- unum" (From many, one), Boorstin suggests, the American motto
- should have been "E pluribus plura." New York offers an early
- case history. The Dutch lost political control of the Hudson
- River within 40 years of New Amsterdam's founding in 1624, but
- their cultural influence proved longer lasting. As late as 1890,
- some inhabitants of villages near Albany still spoke a form
- of Dutch at home.
- </p>
- <p> Early immigrants found their way to the New World for a variety
- of reasons. The Huguenots and German Mennonites were escaping
- religious persecution. The Irish had been deprived of their
- farmlands. As Crevecoeur observed, the primary motive for most
- newcomers was economic: "Ubi panis ibi patria [Where there
- is bread there is country] is a motto of all emigrants." A
- primitive form of advertising helped the cause. William Penn
- wrote pamphlets extolling the attractions of what was called
- "Quackerthal" in German, which were circulated widely in the
- Netherlands and the Rhineland. "Newlanders appeared in Old World
- villages as living specimens of New World prosperity, dressed
- in flashy clothes, wearing heavy watches, their pockets jingling
- with coins."
- </p>
- <p> Brochures promoting the New World's glories understandably did
- not emphasize the difficulty of getting there. An 18th century
- journey from, say, Amsterdam to Philadelphia or Boston could
- last anywhere from five weeks to six months. The tiny ships,
- whose height between decks seldom exceeded 5 ft., braved pirates
- as well as North Atlantic storms. Conditions below decks were
- hardly better than on slave ships. As one passenger wrote, "Betwixt
- decks, there can hardlie a man fetch his breath by reason there
- ariseth such a funke in the night that it causeth putrifaction
- of the blood and breedeth disease much like the plague." Fatal
- outbreaks of scurvy, dysentery and smallpox were common. And
- yet the tide of emigration could not be halted. Between 1700
- and 1776, 450,000 Europeans crossed the ocean to find a new
- life.
- </p>
- <p> Most 18th century immigrants were peasant farmers--the poor,
- huddled masses of Emma Lazarus' famous poem. Some, though, elevated
- the quality of life in the colonies. The Huguenots and their
- descendants--Paul Revere among them--maintained a tradition
- of craftsmanship and provided the colonies with many of their
- physicians. Major Pierre Charles L'Enfant designed not only
- the new capital of Washington but also the badge for the Society
- of the Cincinnati--which was one of the earliest uses of the
- eagle as the symbol of America. Royalist political refugees
- from the French Revolution turned up as dancing masters in the
- salons of Philadelphia.
- </p>
- <p> In the early years of the new American republic, however, immigration
- was modest. Apart from slaves, only about 4,000 foreigners entered
- the U.S. annually between 1800 and 1810. One reason for the
- laggard pace was Britain's Passenger Act of 1803, which raised
- the cost of transatlantic tickets and served to discourage a
- brain drain of talented workers who might carry with them England's
- industrial secrets.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. government did not begin to record immigration data
- until 1820. A decade later, the nation's population was around
- 13 million, of whom only 500,000 were foreign-born. But by then
- the century's great tide of immigration had truly begun, primarily
- from Ireland, Germany and Scandinavia. Profoundly influencing
- this exodus were the so-called America letters--glowing accounts
- of life in the New World by recent voyagers that became as popular
- in Europe as best-selling novels. In Ole Rynning's America Book
- (1838), the U.S. is described as a classless society with high
- wages, low prices, good land and a nonrepressive government.
- </p>
- <p> Ads by shipping firms and land-speculation companies also beckoned
- peasants from the Old World to the New. Midwestern states, beginning
- with Michigan in 1848, set up their own immigration agencies
- and offered special inducements to newcomers, like voting rights
- after only six months' residency. In the Dakotas a poetasting
- huckster promised women that the territories were prime land
- for husband hunting: "There is no goose so gray, but, soon or
- late,/ Will find some honest gander for a mate."
- </p>
- <p> In one key respect, emigrating to America was different from
- moving from one country to another in Europe. The newcomers
- would face hostility and prejudice from native-born Americans.
- But in the eyes of the law, once they became citizens they were
- fully equal to those whose ancestors had sailed aboard the Mayflower.
- In the words of Marcus Hansen, the pioneering historian of U.S.
- immigration, "The immigrant was to enjoy no special privileges
- to encourage his coming; he was also to suffer no special restrictions."
- With that goal in mind, Congress in 1818 rejected requests from
- Irish societies in Eastern cities to set aside certain frontier
- lands for colonies of indigent Hibernians. America was not to
- become "a patchwork nation of foreign settlements."
- </p>
- <p> Relatively few emigrants found the paradise promised by the
- ads and the letters home. The early arrivals were, by and large,
- poor, ill-schooled and young (two-thirds were between 15 and
- 39 years old). In Europe's principal ports of exodus--Liverpool
- and Cork, Bremen and Rotterdam--they were beset by thieves
- and hucksters, cheated by ship's captains (there was no set
- fee for tickets to America) and, until the age of steam, often
- even ignorant of where they would eventually land. If they survived
- the journey--and as many as one-third died aboard ship or
- within a year of landing in the New World--fresh hazards awaited
- them in America. Among them were streetwise recent immigrants
- who would rob them of their few remaining shillings or kronen.
- </p>
- <p> No European nation lost proportionately more of its sons and
- daughters to the U.S. than Ireland: in all, some 4,250,000 from
- 1820 to 1920. Native-born Americans sniffed at these Gaels--made desperate by the potato famine that devastated their homeland
- in the 1840s--as filthy, bad-tempered and given to drink.
- The haunting, taunting employment sign NO IRISH NEED APPLY became
- a bitter American cliche. And yet Irish lasses made the clothmaking
- factories of New England hum. Irish lads built the Erie Canal,
- paved the highways and laid tracks for the railroads. In the
- South the Irish were sometimes considered more expendable than
- slaves and were hired, at pitifully low wages, for the dirtiest
- and most dangerous jobs, like clearing snake-infested swamps.
- </p>
- <p> But the Irish had a gift for mutual self-help and taking care
- of their own. Out of this instinct, manifest in America's dozens
- of "little Dublins," emerged institutions, like New York City's
- notorious Tammany Hall, that would transform the quality and
- character of urban politics in America. As early as 1852, the
- immigrant vote (principally Irish) was so important that Winfield
- Scott, the staunchly Protestant Whig candidate for President,
- ecumenically attended Sunday Mass on campaign visits to New
- York. Some 210,000 Irish fought during the Civil War, 170,000
- of them on the Union side.
- </p>
- <p> As Irish migration began to recede, a second great wave--of
- Germans (or perhaps more properly, German speakers)--began.
- As Oscar Handlin pointed out in his classic study The Uprooted,
- most 19th century European immigrants thought of themselves
- not as ex-citizens of a national state (which, in the case of
- Poland, for instance, did not even exist) but as speakers of
- a common tongue, or residents of a particular village or province.
- The Germans were lured by the vision of unlimited economic opportunity
- and greater freedom than Central Europe offered in the post-Napoleonic
- era.
- </p>
- <p> If the Irish brought a new spirit to American politics, the
- Germans brought culture in varied forms, from singing groups
- to vineyards to poetry societies. Some German railway workers
- could recite Homer in Greek. More pioneering than the Irish,
- they helped develop America's hinterland, from Ohio to Texas.
- (In 1900, 1 out of 3 Texans was German in origin.) The town
- of Hermann, Missouri, still known for its wines, was typical:
- when laid out in 1837, streets were named for Schiller, Gutenberg,
- Goethe and Mozart.
- </p>
- <p> "The Scandinavian immigrant to the United States," wrote historian
- Wittke, "has been the Viking of the Western prairie country."
- In the mid-19th century, American newspapers carried accounts
- of immigrant Swedes disembarking en masse from cargo ships and
- marching--often with their country's flag carried aloft--to railway depots where trains would take them upriver to Buffalo,
- along the Erie Canal and thence to the prairie country of the
- upper Mississippi valley. "What a glorious new Scandinavia might
- not Minnesota become!" wrote Frederika Bremer in 1853, and she
- was right. Today about 400 place names in Minnesota are of Scandinavian
- origin.
- </p>
- <p> After 1880, immigration changed once again. Most of the newcomers
- were from Eastern and Southern Europe: Russian Jews, Poles,
- Italians and Greeks. They too left the Old World to escape poverty
- and, in the case of the Jews, persecution. Like their predecessors,
- they were mostly peasants, but they faced a different and unhappy
- prospect. The great era of frontier settlement was coming to
- an end. After being processed at Ellis Island in Upper New York
- Bay and other immigration centers, millions of these rural folk
- found themselves confined to the mean streets of urban ghettos
- like Manhattan's festering Lower East Side, working at menial
- jobs and crammed into narrow railroad flats that lacked both
- heat and privacy.
- </p>
- <p> The nativist sentiment that foreigners are somehow inferior
- to the American-born may be the nation's oldest and most persistent
- bias. (Curiously, it was not until 1850 that the U.S. Census
- took note of where Americans were born.) Apart from slaves,
- Asians (principally the Chinese) suffered most from this prejudice.
- Seeking fortune and escape from the turmoil of the Opium Wars,
- Chinese first began arriving in California during the 1840s.
- Initially, they were welcomed. During the 1860s, 24,000 Chinese
- were working in the state's gold fields, many of them as prospectors.
- As the ore gave out, former miners were hired to build the Central
- Pacific Railroad; others dug the irrigation canals that poured
- fertility--and prosperity--into the Salinas and San Joaquin
- valleys.
- </p>
- <p> The Chinese were rewarded for their labor with low wages, typically
- a third less than what white workers could earn. Even so, hostility
- forced them from many jobs as times got tough. Excluded from
- the mines and farms, many set up shop as laundrymen, a trade
- that did not exist in their homeland. They were ineligible for
- citizenship under a 1790 federal law that limited that privilege
- to whites. In 1882 Chinese workers were barred from entering
- the U.S. by an act of Congress that was extended indefinitely
- in 1902 and was not rescinded until 1943.
- </p>
- <p> After the Chinese were excluded, Japanese became the principal
- concern of nativists who feared America's contamination by a
- "Yellow Peril." The shameful nadir of this bias followed the
- attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941. Under pressure from
- security-conscious Army officials, the Federal Government exiled
- more than 100,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans from their
- homes on the West Coast to internment camps in Arizona, Arkansas,
- California, Colorado, Idaho, Utah and Wyoming. Despite this
- humiliation, 30,000 Japanese Americans served in uniform, and
- the all-Nisei 442nd Regimental Combat Team and the 100th Battalion
- became the most decorated units in U.S. military history.
- </p>
- <p> American immigration is like a book with no ending. Despite
- a resurgence of nativism, newcomers continue to seek entry,
- with the same sense of hope and yearning that fired their 19th
- century predecessors. Illegal Irish seek jobs, escaping an 18%
- unemployment rate in their homeland. Jews from the former Soviet
- Union want relief from an ugly surge of anti-Semitism at home.
- Perhaps 80% of the newcomers in recent years have come from
- Asia and Latin America, adding to the country's unparalleled
- cultural and racial diversity. (New York City alone has more
- than 170 distinct ethnic communities.) "Of every hue and caste
- am I," wrote Walt Whitman in Song of Myself. True enough when
- he composed that line in 1881. Truer still today.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-