Transcript for:
American Immigration Responses in the Gilded Age

Well hey there and welcome back to Heimler’s  History. We’ve been going through Unit 6 of   the AP U.S. History curriculum, and in the  last video we talked about the huge waves   of immigrants and migrants moving into and  around the United States. In this video it’s   time to talk about the American responses  to international immigrants, and if you can   already taste the sauce, then get them brain  cows ready because I’m about to milk them. SO in this video I’m basically  trying to do one thing:   I’m trying to explain the various responses  to immigration in the period 1865-1898. So just as a refresher, during the Gilded Age  European and Asian immigrants were arriving   in America by the millions. Many of them  settled in urban industrial centers and   took up work in factories where they were  exposed to dangerous working conditions,   but don’t worry, they got paid  a pittance for such risks. And right along with this wave of immigration,  debates sprang up over what to do about all   these immigrants. I mean, they don’t look  American, they don’t act American, and they   shore as Moses don’t speak American. And  so many Americans began to grow concerned   over the identity of America with all these  non-Americans running around. Additionally,   the immigrants themselves were grappling with  their own identity in American society. Should   they assimilate to American society or hold on  to their native society, or some mixture of both?   Ultimately, many immigrants partially assimilated  and partially held on to their ethnic identities. But it was the nativists who were nigh unto  having an apoplectic stroke about what they   considered to be the immigrant attack on American  culture. Now nativism, when being defined, is   essentially a policy of protecting the interests  of native born folks over against the interests   of immigrants. And nativism reached a fever pitch  in the hands of Protestant ministers like Henry   Cabot Lodge who argued that white Anglo-Saxon  Americans were committing, and I quote, “race   suicide” by allowing so many members of “inferior  races” to intermingle with pure-blooded Americans. Nativists formed groups like the American  Protective Association which was a powerful   organization against Catholics. Wait, I thought we  were talking about resistance to immigrants, why   were they against Catholics? Well, as it happened,  the millions of Irish immigrants who were coming   to America just so happened to be Catholic in  large measure, and so you can see why the APA   was resisting Catholicism. Now, if you asked  them, they would say that they had no quarrel   with Catholicism, per se, they just couldn’t  handle the fact that with many Irish Catholics   being voted into office, the Catholic Church was  clearly planning a hostile takeover of America. But it wasn’t only nativists who opposed  immigrants, it was also labor unions. At   the end of the day, labor unions feared this  huge influx of immigrants precisely because   they were desperate for work and would therefore  agree to be hired for meager wages. Union leaders   in particular worried that immigrants would  undermine their ability to negotiate with   manufacturers, because if the union decided  to strike, then manufacturers could just   fire all the unionized workers and  replace them with underpaid immigrants. But it wasn’t only labor unions that  opposed immigrants, so did the thinky-thinky   people. Owing to the growing popularity of a  pseudoscientific idea called Social Darwinism,   immigrants had to bear the brunt  of philosophical racism too. Now,   proponents of Social Darwinism applied biological  Darwinism to societal realities. In nature,   they argued, the strong eat the weak and only the  fittest survive. Why wouldn’t that also apply to   culture as well? And so Social Darwinists believed  that immigrants, especially Irish immigrants,   were racially inferior to the true standard of  American whiteness, and that if they were allowed   to intermingle with our American ladies, then the  gene pool would be forever degraded. Now, as I’ve   mentioned before, this is kind of an astonishing  theory because the Irish immigrants showing up to   America were, in fact, white. But under the  auspices of this kind of thinking, Social   Darwinists actually came to believe that the  Irish were in fact a different race altogether. Now those were the responses people had  to immigrants mainly on the east coast,   but the immigrants on the West coast were  treated with utmost dignity and honor.   Wouldn’t that be hilarious if that’s how  it went? No, it was the same in the west. Now remember that on the west coast, the bulk  of immigrants arriving there were from Asia,   and no small portion of those people  were Chinese. By 1852 something like   20,000 Chinese were living in California,  for example. By 1870, it was over 50,000.   Chinese immigrants were responsible for  the lion’s share of the work done on the   transcontinental railroad and others largely took  up jobs that no one else was willing to do anyway. Even so, Chinese immigrants experienced the  same kind of hostility from nativists that   we talked about earlier. When the Panic of  1873 hit, Californian nativists blamed their   economic troubles on the Chinese because since  they were willing to work for such low wages,   that, they argued, depressed wages for everyone  else. And so the nativists got to work and   one of their crowning achievements against the  Chinese was the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. This law banned any further Chinese  immigration to the United States. Like,   all of it. And this act represents the only law in  U.S. History to target a specific nationality to   be excluded from immigration. So, you know, not  one of our prouder moments in American history. However, even with all the bleakness I just  mentioned, there was a little light with respect   to immigrants, and now is where I introduce you  to Jane Addams. She could see that the immigrants   streaming in to Chicago were suffering, and  therefore she sought to do something about   it. Addams’s solution was the establishment of  settlement houses, the most famous of which was   the Hull House which she opened in 1889. The  purpose of these settlement houses were to   help immigrants better assimilate to American  society so they could find better economic and   social opportunities. In the settlement houses  immigrants were taught English and their children   were enrolled in early childhood education  programs. Immigrants were taught democratic   ideals and given opportunities to attend  recreational outings in, for example, theaters. So the point of all of this basically comes  down to this: immigrants had it hard during the   Gilded Age, and many people worked against  their inclusion in American society. But   folks like Jane Addams softened the nativist  blow and helped them get on their feet. Okay, that’s what you need to know about  Unit 6 Topic 9 of the AP U.S. History   Curriculum. If you need help getting an A  in your class and five on your exam in May,   and want me to keep making them, then  let me know by subscribing. Heimler out.