Immigration and the Making of America, 1880-1965
The definitive narrative history of American immigration — Ellis Island, the great wave, Chinese exclusion, the 1924 quota law, and the Hart-Celler Act that remade the nation, 1880-1965.
On April 17, 1907, 11,747 immigrants passed through Ellis Island in a single day — one person every few seconds, doctors scanning for trachoma with a metal hook, inspectors asking fourteen questions before waving each family through. More than twelve million people had followed Annie Moore, a fifteen-year-old Irish girl given a ten-dollar gold coin as the first arrival in 1892. They came from Italy, Poland, Russia, Hungary, China, Japan — speaking dozens of languages, carrying the customs of dozens of civilizations — because what lay behind the golden door seemed worth almost any sacrifice to reach.
This is the story of how Emma Lazarus, Albert Johnson, David Reed, Ted Kennedy, and César Chávez — reformers, restrictionists, and the immigrants themselves — shaped the most contested question in American history. Across twenty-four chapters, historian Michael Patrick Shanahan traces the full arc from the great wave of the 1880s through the Hart-Celler Act of 1965, which abolished the racial quota system and set in motion the demographic transformation still unfolding today.
The question has never been whether to be a nation of immigrants but what kind — how many, from where, on what terms. Those questions were answered badly in 1924, reconsidered in 1965, and are being debated again today with the same urgency. This is the history of how they were first asked.
For readers of Oscar Handlin's THE UPROOTED and Jill Lepore's THESE TRUTHS.
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