Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_I - Immigration American History
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-100 of 180    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Immigration American History:     more books (100)
  1. Twentieth-Century Immigration to the United States (American History) by Stuart A. Kallen, 2007-07-27
  2. A Century of Immigration: 1820-1924 (Drama of American History) by Christopher Collier, James Lincoln Collier, 1999-10
  3. A Companion to American Immigration (Blackwell Companions to American History)
  4. East European Jews in America, 1880-1920: Immigration and Adaptation: American Jewish History (American Jewish History, 3) by Jeffrey Gurock, 1998-01-23
  5. Immigration and American Diversity: A Social and Cultural History.(Book Review): An article from: Canadian Journal of History by Jean Lamarre, 2005-04-01
  6. IMMIGRATION As A Factor In American History by Oscar - Editor Handlin, 1959
  7. Mexican Voices/American Dreams: An Oral History of Mexican Immigration to the United States by Marilyn P. Davis, 1990-10
  8. Eyewitnesses to American Jewish History Part II The German Immigration 1800-1875 by Azriel and Hannah Grad Goodman Eisenberg, 1977
  9. EYEWITNESSES TO AMERICAN JEWISH HISTORY PART II- THE GERMAN IMMIGRATION 1800-1875 by Azriel , Goodman, Hannah Grad Eisenberg, 1977
  10. Immigration (Social Issues in American History Series) by L. Edward Purcell, 1994-12-27
  11. Almost All Aliens: Immigration, Race, and Colonialismin American History and Identity by Paul Spickard, 2007-06-21
  12. The teaching of history: Ellis Island and American immigration, a curriculum work book for teachers by Henry Bischoff, 1985
  13. Coming to America:ahistory of immigration and ethnicity in American life.1990.soft cover. by Roger, DANIELS, 1990
  14. A century of American immigration, 1884-1984: History 3910 (4756-A285), an independent study course by Rudolph J Vecoli, 1985

81. 19th Century America
TIMELINE Chinese american history Chinese immigration to the United States Encyclopaedia of USA history immigration to the USA 18601960
http://www.teacheroz.com/19thcent.htm
19th Century America
Updated July 11, 2005
JUMP TO.....

Primary Documents - Timelines - Maps
1800 - 1850: From Jefferson to the coming of the Civil War Industrial Revolution Women's Rights ... Various Misc. Topics PRIMARY DOCUMENTS
The Avalon Project : 19th Century Documents

Chronological List of Primary Documents at the Library of Congress

The Avalon Project : Louisiana Purchase; 1803 and Associated Documents

The Avalon Project : Louisiana Purchase Treaty; April 30,1803
...
Frederick Jackson Turner: The Frontier In American History
- the "Father of Western History" - complete text! For a specific chapter, check Turner: Table of Contents
A Literary History of the American West

The Nineteenth Century in Print: the Making of America in Periodicals

1805 New England Primer Contents
... 1807 New England Primer Contents More Documents are listed below that relate to each topic. Also, check out my main General U.S.A. History . For Civil War documents, check out my Civil War Primary Documents webpage. TIMELINES OF THE 19TH CENTURY 19th Century American Culture Kingwood College Library SECTIONAL ISSUES 1815-1860 1815-1841: The Age of Jackson and Ante-Bellum Reform Timeline 1845-1916: Gilded Age: From Frontier to Factory Timeline ... Historical Timeline of Transcontinental Railroads For many more timelines, check out each topic below or visit the timeline section on my

82. CSRPC: Resources
In Asian american history Law, Politics, and Activism to affect three key elements in the history of Asian americans immigration and refugee laws,
http://csrpc.uchicago.edu/resources_newcourses.shtml
New Courses
Spring 2004
Identity in Contemporary Art
Bibiana Suárez, Visiting Associate Professor
COVA 24101
Course Description
Tuesdays, 12:30-3:20
Foundations of Asian American Women's History
Instructor: George Anthony Peffer
SOSC 28701/SOSC 38701/EALC 27205/GNDR 28701
Course Description
Tuesdays and Thursday, 12:00-1:20
Upper-Level Undergraduate/Graduate Course
Winter 2004
In Asian American History: Law, Politics, and Activism
Instructor: George Anthony Peffer SOSC 27001/HIST 27902/HIST 37902/MAPS 48500/GNDR 27001
Course Description This course explores, in a comparative context, the ways that ethnic identity and gender have combined to affect three key elements in the history of Asian Americans: immigration and refugee laws, the exploitation of political issues, and community activism. As unacceptable aliens, first the Chinese and then Asian Americans in general were subjected to the first U.S. legislation ever to restrict immigration on the basis of ethnic identity. As Asians were responding to the end of exclusion, Cold War conflicts like the Korean War and Vietnam War brought new waves of immigrants and refugees from the region. Throughout such changes, Asian Americans have engaged in both direct and indirect action to fight against discriminatory legislation and work for passage of more equitable replacements. Beyond the question of who could legally enter the country, Asian American have also faced myriad laws designed to restrict their freedom. From the foreign miners taxes and cubic air laws of the nineteenth century's second half to the prohibitions against land ownership and miscegenation that characterized the first half of the twentieth, Asian Americans sought judicial and legislative redress with great determination. Whether faced with Dennis Kearney's "The Chinese Must Go!" rhetoric, the hysteria that produced Japanese relocation camps, or the racism that imprisoned Dr. Wen Ho Lee, the Asian American community has established an extensive record of successful resistance.

83. Scott Wong, Williams History Dept.
Citizenship in immigration history Asian american history on the East Coast (Received the Carlton Qualey Award from the immigration history Society).
http://www.williams.edu/history/saf/faculty/wongk.html
K. Scott Wong
Professor of History Chair, American Studies
B.A. (1976) Rutgers University Ph.D. (1992) University of Michigan
Kevin.S.Wong@williams.edu Stetson H16 Courses
HIST 253 : The United States from Appomattox to AOL, 1865-Present HIST 284 : Topics in Asian American History HIST 301 : Remembering American History HIST 368 : Cultural Encounters in the American West HIST 380 : Comparative American Immigration History HIST 384 : Comparative Asian American History, 1850-1965 HIST 385 : Contemporary Issues in Recent Asian American History, 1965-Present HIST 469 : Notions of Race and Ethnicity in American Culture HIST 470 : The Chinese American Experience HIST 488T : The Politics and Rhetoric of Exclusion: Immigration and Its Discontents
Research
Impact of WWII on Chinese Americans The Meaning of Citizenship in Immigration History Asian American history on the East Coast
Thesis Students
Rebecca Kline '93 (American Studies) Stuart McLaughlin '94 Daisy Ha '96 Gillian Bazelon '98 Catherine Williams '00 Melina Evans '00 Heather Barney '01 Alison Swain '01 (American Studies) Geraldine Shen '01 (Asian Studies) Crystal Baik '02 Carisha Swanson '02 (American Studies)
Selected Publications
Books: Americans First: Chinese Americans and the Second World War (Harvard University Press, forthcoming)

84. CSULB History Oral History Archives
Asian/Asianamerican history The three series in this collection american/Chicano community deal with the Mexican revolution, immigration to the US,
http://www.csulb.edu/depts/history/relprm/oral03.html

85. ThinkQuest : Library : United States
For anyone interested in american history, this is a great resource covering the american From One Life to Another The history of European immigration
http://www.thinkquest.org/library/cat_show.html?cat_id=52

86. American Immigration
The american immigration Home Page was started as a part of a school project for a 10th grade What did/do immigrants find distinctive about America?
http://www.bergen.org/AAST/Projects/Immigration/
Here is not merely a nation, but a teeming nation of nations.
Walt Whitman
Introduction:
The American Immigration Home Page was started as a part of a school project for a 10th grade American History Class. The project was meant to give information as to how immigrants not only were treated, but also why they decided to come to America. Feel free to explore the rest of the site.
A very crude WWW animation can be viewed with a much better animation on the way. Statistics of this page can also be viewed.
Other projects made by AAST students can be found at the Academy Projects Home Page
Immigration Information:
Other Information:
This page has been accessed:
Over 2500 times before its move. (exact number unknown)
1030 times from its move on October 17, 1995 - October 31, 1995.
2226 times from November 1, 1995 - November 30, 1995
1503 times from December 1, 1995 - December 31, 1995
2459 times from January 1, 1996 - January 31, 1996

87. Federation For American Immigration Reform: FAIR's Homepage
Working to help the american public convince Congress that United States immigration must be reduced. Information and links on a wide variety of immigrationrelated topics.
http://www.fairus.org/
Member Login:
Username Password
Forgot Your Username or Password?
Not a registered user? Join Today
Select an Immigration Issue Legal Immigration Reform Illegal Immigration National Security Labor and Economics Environment Immigration and Society
New Report from FAIR
Code Orange: Diminishing the Terrorist Threat to America On this fourth anniversary of the tragic September 11, 2001 attacks on our country, we offer in the memory of the innocent victims of those attacks, our recommendations for lessening the threat of further attacks. Support FAIR's efforts Help Katrina Victims: List of Relief Organizations New Study The Cost of Illegal Immigration to Floridians FAIR Proposes: 7 Principles of Real Immigration Reform Issue Brief: Mexico's Defense of Illegal Immigration Report: Breaking the Piggy Bank: How Illegal Immigration is Sending Schools Into the Red Your help is needed today! Please visit the MyFAIR PLAN action center to take action on your priority alerts this week. View immigration information about your state
Find More Information About Your Elected Officials
Federation for American Immigration Reform
1666 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 400

88. Central American Refugee Center CARECEN-N.Y.
Updates on human rights in Central America and immigration laws in the United States.
http://www.icomm.ca/carecen/

89. Aawstess.com
Provides immigration visa processing assistance. Sacramento, CA
http://www.aawstess.com/

90. Asian Pacific American Heritage Month
Features Asian american entertainment news, history articles, interactive forums and quizzes.
http://www.infoplease.com/spot/asianhistory1.html
var zflag_nid="350"; var zflag_cid="44/43"; var zflag_sid="11"; var zflag_width="728"; var zflag_height="90"; var zflag_sz="14"; in All Infoplease Almanacs Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia
Daily Almanac for
Sep 22, 2005

91. American Immigration Center - US Immigration, Green Card & Citizenship Informati
Vendor of doit-yourself kits, forms and Green Card lottery service.
http://www.us-immigration.com/
HOME DO-IT-YOURSELF
IMMIGRATION
DO-IT-YOURSELF ... AIC SPECIALS Translate Page: Choose One... Spanish French Italian German Portuguese
Search
US Do-it-Yourself U.S. Citizenship Preparation DVD Fiancé Visa Kit - Updated! How to Get your Fiancé a K-1 US Entry Visa? This year we c elebrate our 10th Year Anniversary US Immigration Updates - Updated Daily What's New? Replacement of Lost or damaged United States immigration documents? F orm I-90 - Application to Replace Permanent Resident Card ("Green Cards") Form I-102 - Application for Replacement/Initial Nonimmigrant Arrival/Departure Record Form N-565 - Application for Replacement Naturalization Citizenship Document AR-11 - Change of Address Form. To report the change of address of an alien in the United States. Filing Fees Filing fee increase as of April 30th, 2004 New Requirements for Travelers Between the United States and the Western Hemisphere
H-1B
AIC Affiliate Program Affiliate Program
More >>
HOME SITE MAP AFFILIATES ... ABOUT
(Not related to or affiliated with any government agency or resource. A private, non-official website.)

92. Home Page
Advocacy on behalf of Haitian Nationals for immigration relief.
http://hagcoalition.freehosting.net

Home Page
Contact Us Page Contact Page Favorite Links Page ... Report of the U.S State Department on Haitian Refugees WELCOME TO THE HOME OF THE HAITIAN-AMERICAN GRASSROOTS COALITION Wanting to get involved in the struggle to free Haitian Refugees indefinitely detained by the Bush Administration? Yes, you can help by volunteering in our local and national efforts. THe Haitian-American Grassroots Coalition in Florida and other sympathizers around the nation are coordinating a national rally in Washington DC during the month of May in order to bring the plight of Haitian Refugees at forefront in the national debate. Although the Aristide Government and the State Department maintained that the Refugees are just fleeing for harsh economic conditions in Haiti, evidence of Haitian Refugees persecution by the Lavalas Government suggest otherwise.
For more information, you may reach the Coalition at: 305-785-4248 or click on at the site bar: Bush Administration and Haitian Containment Policy
THE HAITIAN-AMERICAN EXPERIENCE CONTINUES - 50,000 Down, 250,000 More Haitian Refugees To Go -
The Terrorist Attack on the Pentagone and the World Trade Center in New York has open a flood gate of anti-immigrant sentiments in America!

93. H102 Lecture 08: Foreign Immigrants In Industrial America
american history 102. Immigrants from Europe were not the only new faces to arrive on the urban and industrial scene around the turn of the century.
http://us.history.wisc.edu/hist102/lectures/lecture08.html
Stanley K. Schultz, Professor of History
William P. Tishler, Producer
Lecture 08
Foreign Immigrants in Industrial America
While conditions in nineteenth-century Europe worsened for millions of its inhabitants, the United States entered a period of incredible prosperity. Millions of Europeans who suffered through the Industrial Revolution, economic depressions, and crushing famines, began to envision America as a land of unbounded opportunity. Unfortunately, the unprecedented economic turmoil that periodically swept the United States during the second half of the nineteenth century often dashed European dreams of gold-paved streets and free land. Furthermore, many Americans who sought scapegoats for the nation's festering economic and social problems pointed to the immigrants as the source of their problems. Some questions to keep in mind:
  • Why did so many Europeans choose to migrate to the United States during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries? How did immigration transform American society and culture? How did Americans react to immigration?
  • 94. American Expats In The UK - Bringing The American Community Together Around The
    Dedicated to assisting americans living in or planning a move to the United Kingdom. Provides information on immigration and visas, transportation, pets, utilities, moving tips, driving, britishisms and what they mean to the american, clubs and organizations with descriptions and contact numbers.
    http://www.americanexpats.co.uk
    Expatriate to withdraw (oneself) from residence in one's
    native country. American Expats In The UK was launched in February 2001. This site is dedicated to assisting Americans living in or planning a move to the United Kingdom.

    British Thangs
    Britspeak
    A short language dictionary to get you
    acquainted with some Britishisms.
    Very British

    An American Expat perspective on
    things of Brit origin.
    Recommended Expat Books Books to aid current or impending American expatriates: relocation, UK driving test materials, American cooking conversion guides and more.
    The FORUM is an online community to ask questions and receive answers on
    immigration, health care and many

    95. Canadian Immigration Adventure
    Personal story of an american immigrating to marry a Canadian.
    http://hometown.aol.com/mommybaddest

    96. American Memory From The Library Of Congress
    Consists of primary source and archival materials relating to american culture and history. These historical collections are the key contribution of the
    http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/
    @import url(/ammem/css/am15_global_ss.css); @import url(/ammem/css/index_ss.css);
    • Search all collections
    The Library of Congress American Memory Home
    Browse Collections by Topic

    97. American West - European Emigration
    The history of Swedish emigration to America goes further back in time than that THE JOURNEY THROUGH AMERICA. For most immigrants New York was just the
    http://www.americanwest.com/swedemigr/pages/emigra.htm
    EUROPEAN EMIGRATION
    Swedish emigration to America is rather typical for European emigration westward to America during the 19th century. Therefore, we have elected to present the background of the Swedish emigration at that time. Painting "The Emigrants" by Swedish artist Knut Ekwall, (1843-1912). This painting depicts the artist's vision of what the Atlantic crossings could be like for the immigrants. Courtesy by Lena Björk Kaplan, President of the American Scandinavian Foundation in New York, owner of this beautiful work.
    A Review of Swedish Emigration to America The history of Swedish emigration to America goes further back in time than that of the United States. Swedes started to come in 1638, just eighteen years after the landing of the "MAYFLOWER." The tidal wave of Swedish emigration began in the mid 1840s, when the first organized emigrant groups started to arrive in New York. These farmers destined to Iowa and Illinois were followed during the period up to 1930 by almost 1.3 million countrymen. The Swedes still rank number seven among the European immigrant groups. In proportion to the population of their home countries, only the British Isles and Norway surpassed Sweden in the number of immigrants. The effect of this exodus from Sweden reached its climax around 1910, when 1.4 million Swedish first and second generation immigrants were listed as living in the U.S. Compare this to Sweden's population at the time: 5.5 million. Roughly one fifth of all Swedes had their homes in America right before World War I !

    98. American Nationalist Union
    Includes platform, issues of the Nationalist Times, a news service and bookstore. Organization opposes free trade, immigration and the United Nations. Founded in 1995.
    http://www.anu.org
    Not a Subscriber, Subscribe Today ! - Already a Subscriber, Sign In Tell A Friend Site Search Site Map ... Articles Subscribe to The Nationalist Times, America's best political newspaper, for just $19, less than half the regular subscription price! Click the Subscribe link on the left. Rita May be the Coup de Grace for the U.S. Economy
    Fully 30% of all US refining capacity is in the target zone. Perhaps most importantly, almost every refinery capable of producing diesel fuel is in immediate danger. This promises (especially in the wake of Katrina) a devastating and irreplaceable shortage of the diesel fuel needed to power America’... Models Show 'Massive Devastation' by Hurricane of Houston
    A landfall here would allow its powerful upper-right quadrant, where the waves move in the same direction as the storm, to overflow Galveston Bay. Within an hour or two, a storm surge, topping out at 20 feet or more, would flood the homes of 600,000 people in Harris County.... Rita Becomes Category 5 Storm, Surpassing Katrina in Strength
    pictured: Houston residents evacuate the city
    Hurricane Rita strengthened into a Category 5 storm as it moved across the Gulf of Mexico toward Texas and Louisiana, surpassing the power Katrina had when it swept ashore three weeks ago and became the most expensive natural disaster in U.S. hist...

    99. AILA - The Professional Organization For Immigration Lawyers
    National association of attorneys who practice and teach immigration law.
    http://www.aila.org
    @import "/styles/generic/aila_custom.css";
    AILA Home

    100. From Revolution To Reconstruction: Outlines: Outline Of American History (1994):
    USAproject, outlines-area, An outline of american history by the United american history (1994) Chapter Thirteen A Nation of Immigrants (15/16)
    http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/H/1994/ch13_p15.htm
    FRtR Outlines American History (1994) Chapter Thirteen A Nation of Immigrants (15/16)
    An Outline of American History (1994)
    Chapter Thirteen
    A Nation of Immigrants (15/16)
    Previous Page Next Page By the time American independence was declared in 1776, two-fifths of all settlers were of non-English origin. The first U.S. census, taken in 1790, revealed a population of just under four million people, with about 10,000 new settlers arriving each year. When the U.S. government began keeping records of arriving passengers in 1820, the majority of immigrants were from Northern Europe; by the end of the 19th century, they came largely from Southern and Eastern Europe. Today, the majority arrive from Latin America and Asia. Their reasons for coming, however opportunity and freedom remain unchanged. Previous Page Next Page

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 5     81-100 of 180    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | Next 20

    free hit counter