The Old World in the New. Edward Alsworth Ross

The Old World in the New - Edward Alsworth Ross


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       Edward Alsworth Ross

      The Old World in the New

      The Significance of Past and Present Immigration to the American People

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066233969

       PREFACE

       THE OLD WORLD IN THE NEW

       CHAPTER I

       THE ORIGINAL MAKE-UP OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE

       CHAPTER II

       THE CELTIC IRISH

       CHAPTER III

       THE GERMANS

       CHAPTER IV

       THE SCANDINAVIANS

       CHAPTER V

       THE ITALIANS

       CHAPTER VI

       THE SLAVS

       CHAPTER VII

       THE EAST EUROPEAN HEBREWS

       CHAPTER VIII

       THE LESSER IMMIGRANT GROUPS

       CHAPTER IX

       ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF IMMIGRATION

       CHAPTER X

       SOCIAL EFFECTS OF IMMIGRATION

       CHAPTER XI

       IMMIGRANTS IN POLITICS

       CHAPTER XII

       AMERICAN BLOOD AND IMMIGRANT BLOOD

       APPENDIX

       TABLE I

       TABLE II

       TABLE III

       TABLE IV

       TABLE V

       TABLE VI

       TABLE VII

       TABLE VIII

       TABLE IX

       INDEX

       Table of Contents

      "Immigration," said to me a distinguished social worker and idealist, "is a wind that blows democratic ideas throughout the world. In a Siberian hut from which four sons had gone forth to America to seek their fortune, I saw tacked up a portrait of Lincoln cut from a New York newspaper. Even there they knew what Lincoln stood for and loved him. The return flow of letters and people from this country is sending an electric thrill through dwarfed, despairing sections of humanity. The money and leaders that come back to these down-trodden peoples inspire in them a great impulse toward liberty and democracy and progress. Time-hallowed Old-World oppressions and exploitations that might have lasted for generations will perish in our time, thanks to the diffusion by immigrants of American ideas of freedom and opportunity."

      Rapt in these visions of benefit to belated humanity, my friend refused to consider any possible harm of immigration to this country. He did not doubt it so much as ignore it. How should the well-being of a nation be balanced against a blessing to humanity?

      "Think what American chances mean to these poor people!" urged a large-hearted woman in settlement work. "Thousands make shipwreck, other thousands are disappointed, but tens of thousands do realize something of the better, larger life they had dreamed of. Who would exclude any of them if he but knew what a land of promise America is to the poor of other lands?" Her sympathy with the visible alien at the gate was so keen that she had no feeling for the invisible children of our poor, who will find the chances gone, nor for those at the gate of the To-be, who might have been born, but will not be.

      I am not of those who consider humanity and forget the nation, who pity the living but not the unborn. To me, those who are to come after us stretch forth beseeching hands as well as the masses on the other side of the globe. Nor do I regard America as something to be spent quickly and cheerfully for the benefit of pent-up millions in the backward lands. What if we become crowded without their ceasing to be so? I regard it as a nation whose future may be of unspeakable value to the rest of mankind, provided that the easier conditions of life here be made permanent by high standards of living, institutions and ideals, which finally may be appropriated by all men. We could have helped the Chinese a little by letting their surplus millions swarm in upon us a generation ago; but we have helped them infinitely more


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