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How the origins of America's immigrants have changed since 1850

16 points| Nevin1901 | 1 year ago |pewresearch.org

4 comments

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woodruffw|1 year ago

This is the first percentage-over-decade overview I’ve seen; it’s interesting to learn that the US’s immigrant makeup was higher for over 50 years (1870s-1920s) than it is currently.

Demographically, it’s worth noting that Pew is dealing with a pretty limited source of data: “German” was a generic bucket for all kinds of nations and ethnic groups that we now consider distinct, but were bucketed together because of Prussia, Austria-Hungary, etc. By modern standards this would be like the US identifying Guatemalans as “Mexican” due to the former’s proximity to the latter.

drewcoo|1 year ago

Not at all like Guatamala and Mexico. At the time there was no united Germany though there were people who wanted that. There was German language. There was German culture. There were German settlements in different places. There were lots of differences and variety because of all of that, but there was something German about them all. And some people even wanted (and fought for) unification.

Instead compare 19th century German-speaking and cultured people with today's Sioux. The Sioux are split into two main language groups and many subgroups within those in different locations.

We can never quite decide the "correct" place to draw ethnic, cultural, linguistic, and geographic boundaries.

tharmas|1 year ago

Mexican immigration slowed because the economy there has improved. And the economy has improved partly because of US investment there.