American Empire
Immigration
For Americans at the turn of the century, imperialism and immigration were two sides of the same coin. The involvement of American women with imperialist and anti-imperialist activity demonstrates how foreign policy concerns were brought home and became, in a sense, domesticated. It is also no coincidence that many of the women involved in both imperialist and anti-imperialist organizations were also concerned with the plight of new arrivals to the United States.
Industrialization, imperialism, and immigration were all
linked. Imperialism had at its core a desire for markets for American
goods, and those goods were increasingly manufactured by immigrant
labor. This sense of growing dependence on "others" as producers and
consumers, along with doubts about their capability of assimilation into
the mainstream of white, Protestant American society, caused a great
deal of anxiety among native-born Americans.
Between 1870 and
1920, over twenty-five million immigrants arrived in the United States.
This migration was largely a continuation of a process begun before the
Civil War, though by the turn of the twentieth century, new groups such
as Italians, Poles, and Eastern European Jews made up a larger
percentage of the arrivals while Irish and German numbers began to
dwindle.
Although the growing U.S. economy needed large numbers
of immigrant workers for its factories and mills, many Americans reacted
negatively to the arrival of so many immigrants. Nativists opposed mass
immigration for various reasons. Some felt that the new arrivals were
unfit for American democracy, and that Irish or Italian immigrants used
violence or bribery to corrupt municipal governments. Others (often
earlier immigrants themselves) worried that the arrival of even more
immigrants would result in fewer jobs and lower wages. Such fears
combined and resulted in anti-Chinese protests on the West Coast in the
1870s. Still others worried that immigrants brought with them radical
ideas such as socialism and communism. These fears multiplied after the
Chicago Haymarket affair in 1886, in which immigrants were accused of
killing police officers in a bomb blast.28

Nativist sentiment intensified in the late nineteenth century as immigrants streamed into American cities. Uncle Sam's Lodging House, published in 1882, conveys this anti-immigrant attitude, with caricatured representations of Europeans, Asians, and African Americans creating a chaotic scene.
In September 1876, Franklin Benjamin Sanborn, a member of the Massachusetts Board of State Charities, gave an address in support of the introduction of regulatory federal immigration legislation at an interstate conference of charity officials in Saratoga, New York. Immigration might bring some benefits, but "it also introduces disease, ignorance, crime, pauperism and idleness". Sanborn thus advocated federal action to stop "indiscriminate and unregulated immigration".29
Sanborn's address was aimed at restricting only the immigration of paupers from Europe to the East Coast, but the idea of immigration restrictions was common across the United States in the late nineteenth century, when many variously feared that the influx of foreigners would undermine the racial, economic, and moral integrity of American society. From the 1870s to the 1920s, the federal government passed a series of laws limiting or discontinuing the immigration of particular groups, and the United States remained committed to regulating the kind of immigrants who would join American society. To critics, regulations legitimized racism, class bias, and ethnic prejudice as formal national policy.
The first move for federal immigration control came from California, where racial hostility toward Chinese immigrants had mounted since the midnineteenth century. In addition to accusing Chinese immigrants of racial inferiority and unfitness for American citizenship, opponents claimed that they were also economically and morally corrupting American society with cheap labor and immoral practices, such as prostitution. Immigration restriction was necessary for the "Caucasian race of California," as one anti-Chinese politician declared, and for European Americans to "preserve and maintain their homes, their business, and their high social and moral position". In 1875, the anti-Chinese crusade in California moved Congress to pass the Page Act, which banned the entry of convicted criminals, Asian laborers brought involuntarily, and women imported "for the purposes of prostitution," a stricture designed chiefly to exclude Chinese women. Then, in May 1882, Congress suspended the immigration of all Chinese laborers with the Chinese Exclusion Act, making the Chinese the first immigrant group subject to admission restrictions on the basis of race. They became the first illegal immigrants.30

The idea of America as a "melting pot," a metaphor common in today's parlance, was a way of arguing for the ethnic assimilation of all immigrants into a nebulous "American" identity at the turn of the 20th century. A play of the same name premiered in 1908 to great acclaim, causing even the former president Theodore Roosevelt to tell the playwright, "That's a great play, Mr. Zangwill, that's a great play". Cover of Theater Programme for Israel Zangwill's play "The Melting Pot", 1916.
On the other side of the country, Atlantic Seaboard states also facilitated the formation of federal immigration policy. Since the colonial period, East Coast states had regulated immigration through their own passenger laws, which prohibited the landing of destitute foreigners unless shipmasters prepaid certain amounts of money in the support of those passengers. State-level control of pauper immigration developed into federal policy in the early 1880s. In August 1882, Congress passed the Immigration Act, denying admission to people who were not able to support themselves and those, such as paupers, people with mental illnesses, or convicted criminals, who might otherwise threaten the security of the nation.
The category of excludable people expanded continuously after 1882. In 1885, in response to American workers' complaints about cheap immigrant labor, Congress added foreign workers migrating under labor contracts with American employers to the list of excludable people. Six years later, the federal government included people who seemed likely to become wards of the state, people with contagious diseases, and polygamists, and made all groups of excludable people deportable. In 1903, those who would pose ideological threats to American republican democracy, such as anarchists and socialists, also became the subject of new immigration restrictions.
Many immigration critics were responding to the shifting demographics of American immigration. The center of immigrant-sending regions shifted from northern and western Europe to southern and eastern Europe and Asia. These "new immigrants" were poorer, spoke languages other than English, and were likely Catholic or Jewish. White Protestant Americans typically regarded them as inferior, and American immigration policy began to reflect more explicit prejudice than ever before. One restrictionist declared that these immigrants were "races with which the English-speaking people have never hitherto assimilated, and who are most alien to the great body of the people of the United States".
The increased immigration of people from southern
and eastern Europe, such as Italians, Jews, Slavs, and Greeks, led
directly to calls for tighter restrictive measures. In 1907, the
immigration of Japanese laborers was practically suspended when the
American and Japanese governments reached the so-called Gentlemen's
Agreement, according to which Japan would stop issuing passports to
working-class emigrants. In its forty-two-volume report of 1911, the
U.S. Immigration Commission highlighted the impossibility of
incorporating these new immigrants into American society. The report
highlighted their supposed innate inferiority, asserting that they were
the causes of rising social problems in America, such as poverty, crime,
prostitution, and political radicalism.31
The assault against
immigrants' Catholicism provides an excellent example of the challenges
immigrant groups faced in the United States. By 1900, Catholicism in the
United States had grown dramatically in size and diversity, from 1
percent of the population a century earlier to the largest religious
denomination in America (though still outnumbered by Protestants as a
whole). As a result, Catholics in America faced two intertwined
challenges: one external, related to Protestant anti-Catholicism, and
the other internal, having to do with the challenges of assimilation.
Externally,
the Church and its members remained an "outsider" religion in a nation
that continued to see itself as culturally and religiously Protestant.
Torrents of anti-Catholic literature and scandalous rumors maligned
Catholics. Many Protestants doubted whether Catholics could ever make
loyal Americans because they supposedly owed primary allegiance to the
pope.
Internally, Catholics in America faced the question every
immigrant group has had to answer: to what extent should they become
more like native-born Americans? This question was particularly acute,
as Catholics encompassed a variety of languages and customs. Beginning
in the 1830s, Catholic immigration to the United States had exploded
with the increasing arrival of Irish and German immigrants. Subsequent
Catholic arrivals from Italy, Poland, and other Eastern European
countries chafed at Irish dominance over the Church hierarchy. Mexican
and Mexican American Catholics, whether recent immigrants or
incorporated into the nation after the Mexican-American War, expressed
similar frustrations. Could all these different Catholics remain part of
the same Church?
Catholic clergy approached this situation from a
variety of perspectives. Some bishops advocated rapid assimilation into
the English-speaking mainstream. These "Americanists" advocated an end
to "ethnic parishes" - the unofficial practice of permitting separate
congregations for Poles, Italians, Germans, and so on - in the belief
that such isolation only delayed immigrants' entry into the American
mainstream. They anticipated that the Catholic Church could thrive in a
nation that espoused religious freedom, if only they assimilated.
Meanwhile, however, more conservative clergy cautioned against
assimilation. While they conceded that the United States had no official
religion, they felt that Protestant notions of the separation of church
and state and of licentious individual liberty posed a threat to the
Catholic faith.
They further saw ethnic parishes as an effective
strategy protecting immigrant communities and worried that Protestants
would use public schools to attack the Catholic faith. Eventually, the
head of the Catholic Church, Pope Leo XIII, weighed in on the
controversy. In 1899, he sent a special letter (an encyclical) to an
archbishop in the United States. Leo reminded the Americanists that the
Catholic Church was a unified global body and that American liberties
did not give Catholics the freedom to alter church teachings. The
Americanists denied any such intention, but the conservative clergy
claimed that the pope had sided with them. Tension between Catholicism
and American life, however, would continue well into the twentieth
century.32
The American encounter with Catholicism – and
Catholicism's encounter with America – testified to the tense
relationship between native-born and foreign-born Americans, and to the
larger ideas Americans used to situate themselves in a larger world, a
world of empire and immigrants.