It might seem like America’s massive immigration system has always been around. But it hasn’t. Indeed, up until the early 20th century, our immigration system would have been barely recognizable from a modern perspective.
Katherine Benton-Cohen, author of "
Inventing the Immigration Problem: The Dillingham Commission and Its Legacy"
There were some exceptions; criminals, paupers, ‘insane persons,’ and the diseased could be
turned away
“My husband’s grandfather was ill when he arrived from Eastern Europe,” Benton-Cohen says. “And he stayed in a hospital on Ellis Island until he recovered, and then he was released to his family.”
She says that even though there was intense anxiety among immigrants about getting into America, the examination was about a minute long, and “something like 98 percent of people passed.”
All of this changed in the early 20th century. And one of the main reasons it changed, says Benton-Cohen, was something called The Dillingham Commission.
The commission, formed in 1907 by Congress, was tasked with investigating the state of immigration and coming up with recommendations on how to improve the government’s approach.
It included
“I like to say that The [Dillingham] Commission was one of the most successful commissions ever convened,” Benton-Cohen says. “Because almost all of its recommendations were turned into law, eventually.”
The Dillingham Commission had two major recommendations: A literacy test and a quota system. The quota system was a huge departure from previous policy. And though it took a while for the commission’s recommendations to become law, with the
Emergency Quota Act of 1921
As to why The Dillingham Commission was so successful, it’s important to look at the context of the time. Benton-Cohen makes the point that, in the early 20th century, almost 15 percent of the American population was foreign born.
These immigrants settled in large metropolitan cities like New York and Chicago, but also in smaller communities, from West Virginia mining towns to factory villages in the Hudson Valley.
"Old stock Americans were confronting new kinds of neighbors,” Benton-Cohen says. Communities were changing, immigration was expanding, and that has some parallels to today.
After the quota system was established, followed by the Great Depression, the number of foreign-born Americans dropped drastically. It was around 5 percent by 1960. But by 2015, with the easing of the quota system and
the Hart-Celler act of 1965
However, there are differences between immigration in the early 20th century and today. For one, immigrants aren’t mostly coming by steamship from Europe; instead, they’re crossing our Southern border.
Also, a century ago, presidents were wary of publicly decrying immigration. “Presidents understood it was bad diplomacy to call immigration a problem, to target certain national groups that might anger our diplomatic allies or stir up trouble,” says Benton-Cohen. “Presidents also did not want to anger constituents, many millions of whom were immigrants or their children.”
It’s a marked difference from where we are now, she says. “If you want to contrast 2018 presidential rhetoric on immigration, you don’t have to go back to Obama or Bush or Carter, you can go to Grover Cleveland and what he said about this being a nation of immigrants … it’s really quite moving.”