We have the Irish and the Chinese. They both came to the US for wealth to take back home to have a better life. The only problem when they got to the US. They were not treated equals. They fought to get that treatment but in different ways. They came from different backgrounds, they migrated differently, they economic incorporated differently, also socially and political adapted differently. In the end they came to the US with the same goal. But the whites made it hard for them.
The Irish saw life through a peasant eyes. They went to the United States hoping to make enough money to return to Ireland and buy themselves their own land. As a result of that they could injure many negative things. There was still a group of Irish who had no intention
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The push for Chinese to the United States was the Two Opium Wars and the Treaty of Nanjing. A huge reason why they emigrated was because when they learned about Gam Saan, which mean Gold Mountains. They also would emigrate was because they were fleeing peasant Red Turban and Taiping Rebellions. They were convince by the labor recruitment and people stories for the US. Most of the Chinese went to California because of the gold but also they had more skills and the west was more promising for them. The Chinese by 1870 63,000 came to CA. Around one third of them stayed while the rest went …show more content…
They understood the problems of the Blacks. They knew what it was like to be a slave. Daniel O’Connell led a petition to end slavery and he got 70,000 signatures. The problem is that they wanted to be white Americans. They saw that they had to treat the blacks like the whites treated the blacks. The Irish and Democratic Party was a key role for them because it would give them power. It did not fully give them power like the whites but more then blacks and Chinese. They did not so much fight the whites but join them with the Democratic Party. The huge problem is that they might not be equal to colors but still were not equal to whites. The Civil War allowed you to pay 300 dollars so you would not have to join. Most Irish did not have the funds to pay that kind of money. So they protested against it. That shows they were rebelling against the whites. The problem is that they burned the draft office but then targeted the blacks to try to show that they are white Americans. The way they adapted was to try to be like a white person. The second way was because they were tough men and women they did not allow themselves to fully drop from all the negatives from the whites, blacks, and anyone else. Another thing they did was go to cities but find the most crowded area and found work near by. They socially adapted and politically adapted to Whites. The main way again was to be like the whites and try to become citizens under the 1790
Irish and Mexican immigrants had similar reasons for migrating to America. Both were leaving behind countries that had little to offer and were enticed by the many opportunities that were said to available in “the Promised Land” and “El Norte”. The Irish were coming from a poverty stricken land where many of them were dying from starvation, where their work was being taken advantage of, where they had become second-class citizens. The Mexicans were coming from to a country where, much like the Irish, they had come to be exploited, where the dangers of violence were very real, where they didn’t have a fighting chance at a better life. After all, all these immigrants wanted from America was a chance at a better life for themselves and their
After civil war had settled down, many immigrants came to America to live from many countries such as Germany, Ireland, and England. There are as many as 12 million immigrants at this time. Regarding Chinese immigration, they immigrated to the United States from 1849 to 1882. Between this period, America had California Gold Rush, which is one of the reasons Chinese people immigrated. Because the Chinese Exclusion Act was taken into practice, no more Chinese people could immigrate to the United States after 1882. Chinese immigration is the divergent point for Chinese’ lives who lived in America.
The factors that led to the Irish to emigrate from Ireland to America in the 1700’s and 1800’s were because of the scares resources. Potato was an important crop in Ireland because it can survive the war and provided their basic food needs. The Irish Famine forced them to make the choice to emigrate to America. The government was no help at all to the Irish because they did not do anything to really help the people going through hard times. Many people in Ireland were in poverty and lived of what they could grow but things diseases affected their crops. They were starving to death. Those working were paid little but most were unemployed. They were not given education in Ireland. The Irish had no hope left in Ireland. They left to America to
The Irish people left Ireland and immigrated to America to enjoy a better life, get away from the poverty and starvation that they were faced with in Ireland due to the potato famine. They face all kinds of discrimination and were forced to take the worst types of jobs, but they never gave up and kept fighting for their freedom. The Irish were brave, courageous, and hardworking and made it possible for all Irish to live happy and free lives in America.
In 1844, Ireland had a populace of around 8.4 million, however by 1851 their populous dropped to 6.6 million. One million kicked the bucket as a result of starvation amid the Great Potato Famine and one million moved to different nations, yet a large portion of the Irish moved to North America and settled basically amongst Boston and Baltimore and the vast majority of the Irish workers were Protestants. The Irish went to America basically on the grounds that there were more employments, more terrains and more open doors. There is many positive things that came from the immigration such as things like the large portions of the Irish workers that came into North America that were single men, which were imperative to the United States economy at the time since they were utilized as work. These Irishmen dug the Erie Canal in the 1820s and the New Canal in New Orleans in the 1830s. Ethnic and ANTI-CATHOLIC RIOTING happened in numerous northern refers to, the biggest happening in Philadelphia in 1844 amid a time of financial misery. Protestants, Catholics and nearby volunteer army battled in the
The book, “The Irish Way” by James R. Barrett is a masterpiece written to describe the life of Irish immigrants who went to start new lives in America after conditions at home became un-accommodative. Widespread insecurity, callous English colonizers and the ghost of great famine still lingering on and on in their lives, made this ethnic group be convinced that home was longer a home anymore. They descended in United States of America in large numbers. James R. Barrett in his book notes that these people were the first group of immigrants to settle in America. According to him, there were a number of several ethnic groups that have arrived in America. It was, however, the mass exodus of Irish people during and after the great
Around the mid 1800’s we started to see the movement of the Chinese immigrants in the pacific-coast of the united states, more specifically in California. They laid railroad tracks in the west coast and also serviced in mining during the California gold rush. You start to see the success of the Chinese immigrants which encouraged the poor Chinese to come to America. The Chinese started to spread and settle in Oregon as well as in Washington in the 1860’s providing labor for the state’s mines and salmon canneries and also setting up the Northern Pacific Railroad which connected Lake Superior to Tacoma, Washington and also helped build the Seattle to Newcastle railroad.(cite #2) These immigrants were very industrious, willing to work long hours
The Irish had come from a hostile Boston in search of a place in the job market. They found an equality they had been unable to find in New England (Potter 670; Howard 225). Although they found jobs, few were very successful. A majority still lived in shantytowns and poverty even in California.
There were two distinct groups in the Irish community. There were the Roman Catholic Irish and the Protestant Irish based on their faith it divided the Irish community. It was such an
The Irish Immigrants that came to the United States after the potato crop failure were not greeted with a warm reception. In fact, they migrated at a time when the U.S. was experiencing anti-immigrant movements, consequently leading to acts of violence and harsh words against them. A major contributing factor to the oppression they faced was the fact that they were so far off from meeting the White Anglo-Saxon Protestant criteria that was present in society. Surprisingly, the Irish were at one point treated and viewed worst than the African Americans because they would not accept their mistreatment in silence. Essentially, their resistance to the mistreatment that they endured made the White American consider them to be “out of place” therefore they were a problem, much like that of the Native American Indian, whom the British settlers feared during the early colonization of America. Similarly, the Irish were separated by employers and mixed with other immigrant groups to prevent revolts just as they did with the African slaves and Native American Indians during the colonial days. Notably, the Catholic Irish received the worst treatment for a period of time as their customs were considered unusual and were not tolerated. Unfortunately, the intolerance that persisted in society led to the burning of Catholic homes and a convent, destruction of churches, murders, as well as death (pg. 120). In an effort to save their selves, the Irish noticed the need to assimilate with
When many think of the times of immigration, they tend to recall the Irish Immigration and with it comes the potato famine of the 1840s' however, they forget that immigrants from the Emerald Isle also poured into America during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The assimilation and immigration of the Irish has been difficult for each group that has passed through the gates of Ellis Island or South Boston. Like every group that came to America, the Irish were looked down upon; yet, in the face of discrimination, political, social and economic oppression, the Irish have been a testament to the American Dream as their influence in
Irish Immigrants came to America from poverty of Ireland to have to be treated bad and to live in harsh conditions.
By 1870 the Chinese population made up 8.6% of California and constituted 25% of the labor force. Chinese immigrants came to U.S. between 1849 and 1882 until the law was placed in 1882 to prevent Chinese immigrants from entering or remaining in the United States. Under the Chinese Exclusion Act Chinese laborers that already reside in the U.S. were allowed to leave and return with a reentry certificate from customs. This was then challenged by Chew Heong vs. United States in 1884. Immigration officials denied former residents who couldn’t obtain the certificates because of being out of the country when the act was passed. The court then decided to rule that Chinese people could reenter without a certificate if he/she was a resident at the time
The beginning of Chinese immigration to the United States first started in the 19th century, the political unrest and economic pressures in China and the Gold Rush era in California prompted thousands of Chinese immigrants to migrate to the United States to search for temporary work, and to seek for the dreams of gold in the 1850s. Many of them arrived in America hoping to acquired wealth to send money back to support their families and hoping to return back to their home after a few years with wealth, but some of them entered the United States for freedom.
There are two mainly waves of Chinese immigrates to the United States: the first wave occurred in the 1850s, because of federal law to restrict Chinese immigrant and stop; the second wave form 1980s, conform to the normalization of Sino-American relations and change of immigration policy. At present, Chinese immigrants is the third largest U.S in row after Mexico and India. Population of 2013, according to the number of Chinese in the United States more than 2 million, accounting for 5% of the total immigrant population. The U.S. census report shows that Chinese residents in the United States has a population of more than 1 hundred thousand people, nearly 3 hundred thousand Chinese immigrants to the United States during 1850-1889. But the waves