Our Foreigners eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 178 pages of information about Our Foreigners.

Our Foreigners eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 178 pages of information about Our Foreigners.

CHAPTER V

THE IRISH INVASION

After the Revolution, immigrants began to filter into America from Great Britain and continental Europe.  No record was kept of their arrival, and their numbers have been estimated at from 4000 to 10,000 a year, on the average.  These people came nearly all from Great Britain and were driven to migrate by financial and political conditions.

In 1819 Congress passed a law requiring Collectors of Customs to keep a record of passengers arriving in their districts, together with their age, sex, occupation, and the country whence they came, and to report this information to the Secretary of State.  This was the Federal Government’s first effort to collect facts concerning immigration.  The law was defective, yet it might have yielded valuable results had it been intelligently enforced.[21]

From all available collateral sources it appears that the official figures greatly understated the actual number of arrivals.  Great Britain kept an official record of those who emigrated from her ports to the United States and the numbers so listed are nearly as large as the total immigration from all sources reported by the United States officials during a time when a heavy influx is known to have been coming from Germany and Switzerland.

Inaccurate as these figures are, they nevertheless are a barometer indicating the rising pressure of immigration.  The first official figures show that in 1820 there arrived 8385 aliens of whom 7691 were Europeans.  Of these 3614, or nearly one-half, came from Ireland.  Until 1850 this proportion was maintained.  Here was evidence of the first ground swell of immigration to the United States whose subsequent waves in sixty years swept to America one-half of the entire population of the Little Green Isle.  Since 1820 over four and a quarter million Irish immigrants have found their way hither.  In 1900 there were nearly five million persons in the United States descended from Irish parentage.  They comprise today ten per cent of our foreign born population.

The discontent and grievances of the Irish had a vivid historical background in their own country.  There were four principal causes which induced the transplanting of the race:  rebellion, famine, restrictive legislation, and absentee landlordism.  Every uprising of this bellicose people from the time of Cromwell onward had been followed by voluntary and involuntary exile.  It is said that Cromwell’s Government transported many thousand Irish to the West Indies.  Many of these exiles subsequently found their way to the Carolinas, Virginia, and other colonies.  After the great Irish rebellion of 1798 and again after Robert Emmet’s melancholy failure in the rising of 1803 many fled across the sea.  The Act of Union in 1801 brought “no submissive love for England,” and constant political agitations for which the Celtic Irish need but little stimulus have kept the pathway to America populous.

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Our Foreigners from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.