America’s Diverse Population In the nineteenth century, rates of immigration across the world increased. Within thirty years, over eleven million immigrants came to the United States. There were new types of people migrating than what the United States were used to seeing as well. Which made people from different backgrounds and of different race work and live in tight spaces together; causing them to be unified. Not only did they immigrate to the United States, there were cities all over the world attracting all sorts of individuals. In this essay, I will discuss the variety of people who migrated, why so many people leaned towards immigration, and why the majority of immigrants populated the cities instead of rural areas like their homelands. …show more content…
Those two cities were London and Paris. By the end of the 19th century, several cities had a population over a million people. Those cities included New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Berlin, Tokyo, St. Petersburg, Moscow, Buenos Aires, and Osaka. In “Edison Newsreels: San Francisco Earthquake aftermath”, it showed big groups of people, overly crowed, on the streets of San Francisco. Cars were trying to weave through all these groups. It was like the citizens over powered transportation, because there were so many of people in the city. Which just goes to show how populated the cities were, not only of immigrants but Americans too. The reason why so many immigrants choose urban areas instead of the rural, village land that they were used to, is because that was where all the jobs were located. Most of the immigrants could not compete with the new technology in agriculture, so they had no other option than to go to the cities. Also, some of the immigrants were not very skilled which made it beneficial to move to the cities. The cities had a lot of unskilled industrial jobs. That made it easier for the immigrants to find jobs, and make money
Without the factories being built the generated new jobs, the northern cities turned out to be a more appealing place for an immigrant looking for a job. With New Orleans was no
Throughout the mid 1800s to the late 1800S, millions of immigrants flooded into the United States hoping for a new life. Most of them faced a difficult journey by ship to enter “The Land of Opportunities”. Many of the immigrants moved to the city in search for jobs because machines were replacing farm laborers in the rural parts of the country. Along with the immigrants, thousands of other families moved to the city. This rapid increase of city dwellers led to new inventions and technologies.
From riots to invasions, many urban problems arose during the late 19th and 20th centuries. Technology was improving and it was making jobs easier and more productive but American’s were tired and weren’t working. Wage cuts were becoming more popular and economically, the U.S was falling apart slowly. Despite the problems, Americans discovered a way to replace the exhausted Americans who no longer took part in labor. Immigrants from Europe were pulled to New York in hope to find what the Americans had said they’d offer.
Not only Americans but also people from European, Asian, and African also moved to the cities in order to seek opportunities in terms of jobs and affordable housing. The cities begin growing as a center of economy and financial, and also the number of population increased rapidly in the period of time. Several infrastructure projects and development in the West occurred to support people more
From an agrarian republic, which it was still in the 60s of the XIX century, the country has turned into an industrial power (Remini, 2009). For 40 years, the US population increased from 31 to 76 million people. During this time, 15 million of immigrants arrived to the country. Millions of immigrants from Europe and Asia became the necessary workforce (Brogan, 2001). Large industrial cities such as New York, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Detroit, began to grow rapidly.
Did the benefits of the immigration boom in the late 1800s outweigh the drawbacks? During the 1800s, many people migrated to urban areas because they wanted jobs and land. Many people thought that migrating to urban areas would be like a perfect dream, however they were disappointed when they realized that the benefits of migration did not outweigh the drawbacks. During the late 1800s, millions of immigrants were coming to the United States. Most of the immigrants came from Europe.
This was due to a great surge of immigration from people all around the world. The U.S was known and perceived as the land of freedom and opportunity. Many migrated to the United States to flee from the violence, persecution, prejudice, poverty, and many other external factors that they had faced in their own country. By going to America, they would have freedom and better wellbeing. Rapid immigration was also due to many immigrants seeking economic welfare because of the large amount of job opportunities created from the development of factories.
During the 1920s Chicago became a home to many people from all around the world. Period of the industrialization changed the course of history and was a turning point for the development of ethnic neighborhoods. Majority of people who were coming to Chicago were Europeans. Furthermore, Eastern Europeans, Germans, Italians, the Irish and Mexicans were among the most common immigrants who came to Chicago. These groups during the immigration deeply impacted the overall development of the neighborhoods and how Chicago is constructed today.
Most immigrants who came to the U.S had high expectations that they would find wealth but once they arrived they realized their expectations weren’t what they expected. Although, they were disappointed in not finding wealth the conditions in which the U.S was in by the late 1800s were still a lot better than the places they all had left behind to come. The majority of the immigration population anticipation was to find profitable jobs and opportunities. When the large numbers of immigration were migrating to the U.S, it was during the “Gilded Age”, which was the prime time for the country’s expansion of industrialization. This rapid expansion of new industries led to the need of workers which motivated people from other countries to come to
During the era of the 19th century, immigrants of all countries overflowed the United States. Immigrants populated America, wishing to gain a fresh start from their hectic lives back in their home land. However, it caused
Since transportation was easier and faster, people could live in the suburbs on the edge of towns. For example, queens outside New York doubled in size in the 1920s. By the end of the 1920s, more than 26 million cars were sold, and lots of new towns were created. Another advancement that is important is the development of trucks. In the beginning, trucks were old fashioned and had lots of flaws.
The early 1900s came with an abundance of changes. There were multiple waves of immigration causing increased social separation. There was also increased industrialization. The increase in industrialization provided many jobs for the incoming immigrants. However, these immigrants took on a lot more than just a new job when they came to America.
Halfway through the nineteenth century, something called the “American Fever” “swept through nation after nation” (“Immigrants in Motion”).In the 1850’s “mass migrations” occurred
Immigration Back Then and Now Immigration has been one of the major issues in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. The United States started becoming more urbanized and many Americans were moving from rural areas to the cities and this is what attracted many immigrants to come to the United States. Immigrants came from different parts of the world such as East Asia, Western Europe, and northern and southern Europe. Besides the U.S. is becoming a land of opportunity, immigrants have also traveled to South America and Australia, but more than 70 percent of them chosen to travel to North America.
This had a profound impact on the look and feel of cities. Skyscrapers and densely populated areas giving way to people moving to suburban areas with single-family