What was the first stop for most people coming to America?

Sixty-five years ago, on November 12, 1954, a Norwegian merchant seaman named Arne Peterssen became the last immigrant to pass through Ellis Island. Later that month, the ferry Ellis Island made its final stop at the island in New York Harbor and the immigration facility closed for good, ending its run as a gateway to the United States for generations of immigrants.

These days Ellis Island is a national symbol remembered in sepia tones, but while it was in active service the station reflected the country’s complicated relationship with immigration—one that evolved from casual openness to rigid restriction. “It was not a great welcoming place for immigrants, but it was not a place of horrors either,” says Vincent Cannato, author of American Passage: The History of Ellis Island.

Until the end of the 19th century, individual states handled immigration with rules varying by jurisdiction. But then immigration soared. “From 1880 to 1889 [it] was just massive,” says Barry Moreno, librarian and historian at the Statue of Liberty National Monument and author of the Encyclopedia of Ellis Island. “Never before had the country ever received such numbers.” In light of the influx, the federal government decided in 1891 that it had to take charge.

New York was immigration’s epicenter. Some 75 percent of the country’s steamship traffic came through New York Harbor—and so did 75 percent of the nation’s immigrants, according to Cannato. New York state ran an immigration facility called Castle Gardens at the tip of Manhattan, but the new federal Office of Immigration wanted an intake and inspection station in a more controlled location. It selected Ellis Island, a three-acre spot of land in the harbor between New York and New Jersey, but before it could open the island had to be doubled in size with landfill.

The demographics of immigration had changed drastically in the decades before Ellis Island opened. Where once most immigrants came from western and northern Europe and were predominantly Protestant, after the Civil War they began to come from Russia, Eastern Europe, and Italy—and they were Jewish and Catholic, fleeing pogroms and poverty. (See 200 years of U.S. immigration visualized.)

Some Americans wondered how the influx would affect the country’s character, says Moreno. “These were strange countries to many people,”

Even so, during the early decades of federal control there were few restrictions on who could enter the country (except for Chinese immigrants, who were effectively banned by the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882). The U.S. government made it clear that they would not welcome anarchists, polygamists, criminals, or anyone who was sick, had loose morals, or couldn’t support themselves. At the same time, however, neither visas, passports, nor any other documentation were required, and there weren’t limits on how many people could enter the country. (Here's the history of the U.S. passport.)

The immigrants who eventually passed through Ellis Island started their journey by buying passage on a steamship, usually sailing from Europe. The steamship companies were encouraged to thoroughly screen passengers to ensure health, good character, and financial solvency: If they didn’t, they’d be fined $100 for every person who was refused entry into the U.S. and have to pay for the rejected immigrant’s return voyage.

Ships steaming into New York Harbor would be met by a small boat from Ellis Island carrying immigration inspectors, who would board to quickly examine the first and second-class passengers, many of whom were not immigrants. Passengers free of obvious diseases and whose answers matched the information on the ship manifest would be allowed to disembark when the ship docked at one of the city’s piers.

All third-class and steerage passengers, on the other hand, were put on a ferry to Ellis Island, where women and children were separated in one line and men in the other. The lines would snake through the Great Hall as the new arrivals proceeded through an assembly line of cursory medical examinations conducted by uniformed doctors.

“Most had no problem with the medical examination,” says Moreno, “even though they were frightened.” Many of the immigrants had never been to a doctor before.

If a medical condition was discovered, the person’s clothing would be marked with a chalk letter and they’d be ushered into what was called the “doctor’s pen” where they would be confined until they could be more thoroughly examined.

Once that gauntlet was passed, immigrants proceeded upstairs where a line of inspectors awaited, each with a section of the ship’s manifest. Immigrants wore tags with the name of the ship they’d sailed on and the page number where they appeared on the manifest. Inspectors would quiz immigrants to make sure the information on the manifest—including their race, as defined then, and how much money they carried—matched their answers. If it did, they were free to go. (Will climate change swamp the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island?)

Between 1892 and 1924, 12 million people successfully traversed this highly efficient conveyor-belt immigration system. Most immigrants were processed through Ellis Island in a few hours, and only 2 percent that arrived on the island were prevented from entering the United States.

What "Lady Liberty" and Ellis Island Mean Today

A visit to Ellis Island today, and to the nearby Statue of Liberty, can be emotional, even for those born in the United States.

But this era of mass immigration came to an end with the passage in 1921 and 1924 of new laws that severely limited immigration by establishing quotas for individual countries and requiring immigrants to obtain visas from American consulates. Quotas were designed to reflect ethnic diversities recorded in earlier U.S. censuses, as way to restrict the numbers of people of southern and eastern Europe. People “forget the intense prejudice and discrimination that immigrants from Europe faced,” says Nancy Foner, a sociologist who serves on Ellis Island’s history advisory committee.

Since most official immigration screening now happened at U.S. consulates abroad, Ellis Island became increasingly irrelevant. The facility, which had once teemed with thousands of hopeful immigrants, transformed into “a major center for deportation and for holding enemy alien spies,” says Moreno. “It was like night and day.” President Eisenhower quietly closed Ellis Island in 1954.

Today many immigrants arrive by airplane with a visa already stamped in their passport. Meanwhile, the descendants of the people who arrived at Ellis Island account for nearly half of all American citizens alive today, according to one estimate. (Read more about the some 55 million Europeans who sought new lives in the U.S. and South America.)

“It took a couple of generations for people to move up and become accepted,” says Foner. “In a sense, it’s a hopeful story.”

Migration to the Americas / New World began in the 16th century. Early attempts at colonisation were made by the English at Roanoke. Though this colony failed, it paved the way for colonies at Jamestown in the early 17th century. English migration to America continued throughout the 17th century. People migrated for a number of reasons. Some, like the Pilgrim Fathers, for religious reasons. Others saw the opportunity for riches in a new world. Explorers and prospectors sought a passage to the far east which also fuelled colonisation.

What was the first stop for most people coming to America?

Early colonisation was often due to economic pressures in England. Push factors led to the decision to migrate. As the English took hold of the Eastern seaboard of North America the English moving there were not all rich, expectant prospectors. Many were escaping a wretched life.

English migrants in Virginia had good reason not to feel grateful. Most came unfree, pushed out of England by economic forces that privatized shared pastures and farmlands and pushed up the prices of basic necessities. By the 17th century, more than half of the English peasantry was landless. The price of food shot up 600 percent, and firewood by 1,500 percent. Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/17th-century-english-who-settled-southern-us-had-very-little-be-thankful-180953466/#H5Rigw7dg2cfY5XU.99 Give the gift of Smithsonian magazine for only $12! http://bit.ly/1cGUiGv

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To escape from the economic conditions in England many opted to sign up to Indenture agreements. This was a contract that gave free passage to America in return for a fixed period of time working for the master or company paying for the transportation. Roughly 80% of English migrants to America before 1700 were transported under such a contract. They were usually tied to the master for 5 to 7 years.

Headright System

After the Glorious Revolution there was a change in migration patterns. The Headright System was introduced by the Virginia Company. This system promised 50 acres of land to anybody who paid for their transport or for that of another person. In England it was virtually impossible for ordinary people to own any land. This presented a huge opportunity to farm and prosper. It led to an increase in migration to the Americas.

Migrants return to England to fight in the Civil Wars

Some migrants returned to England as the Civil Wars broke out. There was a lot of support for the Parliamentarians from Puritans in the colonies. The support was such that there was actually some fighting of the English Civil Wars in Colonial America.

Following the Glorious Revolution and failure of Jacobite Rebellions Irish and Scots began to migrate to North America in greater numbers. The migration was in part in hope of religious tolerance in the colonies; partly in hope of better prospects and partly because of the plantation of Ireland and clearances of the Highlands. Schemes such as the Darien Scheme were established to encourage migration from both areas. Migration also continued to take place from England. In the colonial period and up to 1900, the majority of people living in the colonies and later United States self identified as English.

Expansion of Northern American Migration

The 1700’s saw migration continue as colonisation expanded into America. Victories in the wars against Native American’s paved the way two much more land being available. Exploration in the north had led to additional trading options. Hudson Bay was taken from the French for the British. Towns and colonies had become established and the stability that this created plus the proximity of new lands increased the lure of migrating to America.

Migration to the US Data

The first census of the United States was of 12 colonies in 1790. It counted just over 3.9 million people. 66% of these were of English origin. 5.6% Scottish. 4.5% German. 2% Dutch. Roughly 20% ‘Other’ which included some 697624 slaves.

National Archives – Emigration and Emigrants

Liverpool Museums – Child Migrants

Migration Museum – Departures podcast: 400 years of emigration from Britain

Further Reading on the British Empire

Making of the United Kingdom

Making of the United Kingdom unit homepage – Glorious Revolution – The British in Ireland, 1688-1691 – Settlement of Ireland – Jacobite Opposition – Glencoe Massacre – Darien Scheme – Act of Union – Migration to the Americas

Economic Consequences of Empire

Economic Consequences of Empire – Unit homepage – Royal African Company – Triangular Trade – Lifting of the RAC monopoly – Plantations – The Slave Economy – Opposition to the Slave Trade in North America – Slave Resistance – East India Company – Expansion of trade in East India – Bank of England – South Sea Bubble Bursts

How did the Empire affect working lives and consumer habits in Britain?

Empire and consumerism – Involvement of the British population in the slave trade and the ‘slave ports’ – Emergence of consumerism

How did the Empire affect British politics and changing ideas?

Politics and changing ideas – Coffee houses and developing political activism – growth of ideas of a racial hierarchy and the impact on settled minority communities

Common questions about the British Empire

Questions about the British Empire – When did the British Empire start? – When did the British Empire end? – What countries were in the British Empire? – Why did Britain want an empire? – What was life like in the British Empire? – Was the British Empire a force for good or bad? – What is Is perfidious Albion? – How was the British Empire controlled?

The British Empire – Making of the United Kingdom – Economic Consequences of the British Empire– How did the Empire affect Great Britain? – Society changes: Political Thought and the British Empire – Questions about the British Empire – British Empire Teaching Resources