Respuesta :
Hmm, so just to clarify, the 1st wave was in the mid-1800s and composed mainly of Irish (escaping the potato famine) and Germans (coming to America for better opportunity.) The 2nd wave went on from the late 1800s into the early 1900s and composed of people from Eastern and Southern Europe & Asia.
differences-the first wave was mainly from Western Europe, most of these people spoke English, and were able to assimilate (blend in) with Americans; the second wave had very different languages and did not know English; the Italians and Chinese were the two groups of people who did not come to America to settle permanently, but to make some $ and go back ; also, the treatment of immigrants was not always equal > during the first wave, the Irish were highly discriminated against signs on a lot of windows; * the Irish/Chinese are famous for having provided the labor for building the transcontinental railroad, which was very dangerous!) while the 2nd wave immigrants had it tougher than the 1st wave (because they were more different to the Americans) one could say in general, the Asians had it the worst ] while European immigrants could at least get by with their looks the Asian immigrants were clearly different, and prejudice was a factor from the beginning.
oh and the second wave also had one extra difficulty since the poor were multiplying (and most immigrants were poor) it's generalized that immigrants made a large part of the slums
All in all, life as an immigrant was TOUGH! hope that gives you an idea of what our ancestors had to endure in order to give their kids a better life filled with opportunity - aka the American Dream.
differences-the first wave was mainly from Western Europe, most of these people spoke English, and were able to assimilate (blend in) with Americans; the second wave had very different languages and did not know English; the Italians and Chinese were the two groups of people who did not come to America to settle permanently, but to make some $ and go back ; also, the treatment of immigrants was not always equal > during the first wave, the Irish were highly discriminated against signs on a lot of windows; * the Irish/Chinese are famous for having provided the labor for building the transcontinental railroad, which was very dangerous!) while the 2nd wave immigrants had it tougher than the 1st wave (because they were more different to the Americans) one could say in general, the Asians had it the worst ] while European immigrants could at least get by with their looks the Asian immigrants were clearly different, and prejudice was a factor from the beginning.
oh and the second wave also had one extra difficulty since the poor were multiplying (and most immigrants were poor) it's generalized that immigrants made a large part of the slums
All in all, life as an immigrant was TOUGH! hope that gives you an idea of what our ancestors had to endure in order to give their kids a better life filled with opportunity - aka the American Dream.
Quests for adventure, flights from religious persecution, and hopes for brighter economic futures induced almost one-half million Europeans to leave their homeland and come to America between 1609 and 1775. Many of these new arrivals were indentured servants, under contract to work for masters from four to seven years merely to pay the costs of their transatlantic passage. The first black Africans to come to America during this period also came as indentured servants. However, almost all the Africans who followed came as chattel slaves.
Most immigrants who came during the seventeenth century were from England, with smaller numbers fromFrance, Germany, Ireland, Italy, and other countries. By the turn of the eighteenth century, they had raised the population of Great Britain’s North American colonies to 250,000. After 1700, the numbers of immigrants from Ireland, Scotland, and Germany increased dramatically, while those from England decreased. Between 1700 and the start of the American Revolution in 1775, the colonial population almost doubled, to 450,000. During that period, the principal port of entry was Philadelphia, but immigrants also entered through Baltimore, Maryland, and Charleston, South Carolina.