

|
June 1896
Restriction of Immigration
by Francis A. Walker
When we speak of the restriction of immigration, at the present time, we have
not in mind measures undertaken for the purpose of straining out from the vast
throngs of foreigners arriving at our ports a few hundreds, or possibly
thousands of persons, deaf, dumb, blind, idiotic, insane, pauper, or criminal,
who might otherwise become a hopeless burden upon the country, perhaps even an
active source of mischief. The propriety, and even the necessity of adopting
such measures is now conceded by men of all shades of opinion concerning the
larger subject. There is even noticeable a rather severe public feeling
regarding the admission of persons of any of the classes named above; perhaps
one might say, a certain resentment at the attempt of such persons to impose
themselves upon us. We already have laws which cover a considerable part of
this ground; and so far as further legislation is needed, it will only be
necessary for the proper executive department of the government to call the
attention of Congress to the subject. There is a serious effort on the part of
our immigration officers to enforce the regulations prescribed, though when it
is said that more than five thousand persons have passed through the gates at
Ellis Island, in New York harbor, during the course of a single day, it will be
seen that no very careful scrutiny is practicable.
It is true that in the past there has been gross and scandalous neglect of this
matter on the part both of government and people, here in the United States.
For nearly two generations, great numbers of persons utterly unable to earn
their living, by reason of one or another form of physical or mental
disability, and others who were, from widely different causes, unfit to be
members of any decent community, were admitted to our ports without challenge
or question. It is a matter of official record that in many cases these persons
had been directly shipped to us by states or municipalities desiring to rid
themselves of a burden and a nuisance; while it could reasonably be believed
that the proportion of such instances was far greater than could be officially
ascertained. But all this is of thehe past. T question of the restriction of
immigration to-day does not deal with that phase of the subject. What is
proposed is, not to keep out some hundreds, or possibly thousands of persons,
against whom lie specific objections like those above indicated, but to exclude
perhaps hundreds of thousands, the great majority of whom would be subject to
no individual objections; who, on the contrary, might fairly be expected to
earn their living here in this new country, at least up to the standard known
to them at home, and probably much more. The question to-day is, not of
preventing the wards of our almshouses, our insane asylums, and our jails from
being stuffed to repletion by new arrivals from Europe; but of protecting the
American rate of wages, the American standard of living, and the quality of
American citizenship from degradation through the tumultuous access of vast
throngs of ignorant and brutalized peasantry from the countries of eastern and
southern Europe.
The first thing to be said respecting any serious proposition importantly to
restrict immigration into the United States is, that such a proposition
necessarily and properly encounters a high degree of incredulity, arising from
the traditions of our country. From the beginning, it has been the policy of
the United States, both officially and according to the prevailing sentiment of
our people, to tolerate, to welcome, and to encourage immigration, without
qualification and without discrimination. For generations, it was the settled
opinion of our people, which found no challenge anywhere, that immigration was
a source of both strength and wealth. Not only was it thought unnecessary
carefully to scrutinize foreign arrivals at our ports, but the figures of any
exceptionally large immigration were greeted with noisy gratulation. In those
days the American people did not doubt that they derived a great advantage from
this source. It is, therefore, natural to ask, Is it possible that our fathers
and our grandfathers were so far wrong in this matter? Is it not, the rather,
probable that the present anxiety and apprehension on the subject are due to
transient causes or to distinctly false opinions, prejudicing the public mind?
The challenge which current proposals for the restriction of immigration thus
encounter is a perfectly legitimate one, and creates a presumption which their
advocates are bound to deal with. Is it, however, necessarily true that if our
fathers and grandfathers were right in their view of immigration in their own
time, those who advocate the restriction of immigration to-day must be in the
wrong? Does it not sometimes happen, in the course of national development,
that great and permanent changes in condition require corresponding changes of
opinion and of policy?
We shall best answer this question by referring to an instance in an altogether
different department of public interest and activity. For nearly a hundred
years after the peace of 1783 opened to settlement the lands beyond the
Alleghanies, the cutting away of the primeval forest was regarded by our people
not only with toleration, but with the highest approval. No physical instrument
could have been chosen which was so fairly entitled to be called the emblem of
American civilization as the Axe of the Pioneer. As the forests of the Ohio
Valley bowed themselves before the unstaying enterprise of the adventurous
settlers of that region, all good citizens rejoiced. There are few chapters of
human history which recount a grander story of human achievement. Yet to-day
all intelligent men admit that the cutting down of our forests, the destruction
of the tree-covering of our soil, has already gone too far; and both individual
States and the nation have united in efforts to undo some of the mischief which
has been wrought to our agriculture and to our climate from carrying too far
the work of denudation. In precisely the same way, it may be true that our
fathers were right in their view of immigration; while yet the patriotic
American of to-day may properly shrink in terror from the contemplation of the
vast hordes of ignorant and brutalized peasantry thronging to our shores.
Before inquiring as to general changes in our national condition which may
justify a change of opinion and policy in this respect, let us deal briefly, as
we must, with two opinions regarding the immigration of the past, which stand
in the way of any fair consideration of the subject. These two opinions were,
first, that immigration constituted a net reinforcement of our population;
secondly, that, in addition to this, or irrespective of this, immigration was
necessary, in order to supply the laborers who should do certain kinds of work,
imperatively demanded for the building up of our industrial and social
structure, which natives of the soil were unwilling to undertake.
The former of these opinions was, so far as I am aware, held with absolute
unanimity by our people; yet no popular belief was ever more unfounded. Space
would not serve for the full statistical demonstration of the proposition that
immigration, during the period from 1830 to 1860, instead of constituting a net
reinforcement to the population, simply resulted in a replacement of native by
foreign elements; but I believe it would be practicable to prove this to the
satisfaction of every fair-minded man. Let it suffice to state a few matters
which are beyond controversy.
The population of 1790 was almost wholly a native and wholly an acclimated
population, and for forty years afterwards immigration remained at so low a
rate as to be practically of no account; yet the people of the United States
increased in numbers more rapidly than has ever elsewhere been known, in regard
to any considerable population, over any considerable area, through any
considerable period of time. Between 1790 and 1830 the nation grew from less
than four millions to nearly thirteen millions,--an increase, in fact, of two
hundred and twenty-seven per cent, a rate unparalleled in history. That
increase was wholly out of the loins of our own people. Each decade had seen a
growth of between thirty-three and thirty-eight percent, a doubling once in
twenty-two or twenty-three years. During the thirty years which followed 1830,
the conditions of life and reproduction in the United States were not less, but
more favorable than in the preceding period. Important changes relating to the
practice of medicine, the food and clothing of people, the general habits of
living, took place, which were of a nature to increase the vitality and
reproductive capability of the American people. Throughout this period, the
standard of height, of weight, and of chest measurement was steadily rising,
with the result that, of the men of all nationalities in the giant army formed
to suppress the slaveholders' rebellion, the native American bore off the palm
in respect to physical stature. The decline of this rate of increase among
Americans began at the very time when foreign immigration first assumed
considerable proportions; it showed itself first and in the highest degree in
those regions, in those States, and in the very counties into which the
foreigners most largely entered. It proceeded for a long time in such a way as
absolutely to offset the foreign arrivals, so that in 1850, in spite of the
incoming of two and a half millions of foreigners during thirty years, our
population differed by less than ten thousand from the population which would
have existed, according to the previous rate of increase, without reinforcement
from abroad. These three facts, which might be shown by tables and diagrams,
constitute a statistical demonstration such as is rarely attained in regard to
the operation of any social or economic force.
But it may be asked, Is the proposition that the arrival of foreigners brought
a check to the native increase a reasonable one? Is the cause thus suggested
one which has elsewhere appeared as competent to produce such an effect? I
answer, Yes. All human history shows that the principle of population is
intensely sensitive to social and economic changes. Let social and economic
conditions remain as they were, and population will go on increasing from year
to year, and from decade to decade, with a regularity little short of the
marvelous. Let social and economic conditions change, and population instantly
responds. The arrival in the United States, between 1830 and 1840, and
thereafter increasingly, of large numbers of degraded peasantry created for the
first time in this country distinct social classes, and produced an alteration
of economic relations which could not fail powerfully to affect population. The
appearance of vast numbers of men, foreign in birth and often in language, with
a poorer standard of living, with habits repellent to our native people, of an
industrial grade suited only to the lowest kind of manual labor, was exactly
such a cause as by any student of population would be expected to affect
profoundly the growth of the native population. Americans shrank alike from the
social contact and the economic competition thus created. They became
increasingly unwilling to bring forth sons and daughters who should be obliged
to compete in the market for labor and in the walks of life with those whom
they did not recognize as of their own grade and condition. It has been said by
some that during this time habits of luxury were entering, to reduce both the
disposition and the ability to increase among our own population. In some small
degree, in some restricted localities, this undoubtedly was the case; but prior
to 1860 there was no such general growth of luxury in the United States as is
competent to account for the effect seen. Indeed, I believe this was almost
wholly due to the cause which has been indicated,--a cause recognized by every
student of statistics and economics.
The second opinion regarding the immigration of the past, with which it seems
well to deal before proceeding to the positive argument of the case, is that,
whether desirable on other accounts or not, foreign immigration prior to 1860
was necessary in order to supply the country with a laboring class which should
be able and willing to perform the lowest kind of work required in the
upbuilding of our industrial and social structure, especially the making of
railroads and canals. The opinion which has been cited constitutes, perhaps,
the best example known to me of that putting the cart before the horse which is
so commonly seen in sociological inquiry. When was it that native Americans
first refused to do the lowest kinds of manual labor? I answer, When the
foreigner came. Did the foreigner come because the native American refused
longer to perform any kind of manual labor? No; the American refused because
the foreigner came. Through all our early history, Americans, from Governor
Winthrop, through Jonathan Edwards, to Ralph Waldo Emerson, had done every sort
of work which was required for the comfort of their families and for the
upbuilding of the state, and had not been ashamed. They called nothing common
or unclean which needed to be done for their own good or for the good of all.
But when the country was flooded with ignorant and unskilled foreigners, who
could do nothing but the lowest kind of labor, Americans instinctively shrank
from the contact and the competition thus offered to them. So long as manual
labor, in whatever field, was to be done by all, each in his place, there was
no revolt at it; but when working on railroads and canals became the sign of a
want of education and of a low social condition, our own people gave it up, and
left it to those who were able to do that, and nothing better.
We have of late had a very curious demonstration of the entire fallacy of the
popular mode of reasoning on this subject, due to the arrival of a still lower
laboring class. Within a few years Harper's Weekly had an article in which the
editor, after admitting that the Italians who have recently come in such vast
numbers to our shores do not constitute a desirable element of the population,
either socially or politically, yet claimed that it was a highly providential
arrangement, since the Irish, who formerly did all the work of the country in
the way of ditching and trenching, were now standing aside. We have only to
meet the argument thus in its second generation, so to speak, to see the
complete fallacy of such reasoning. Does the Italian come because the Irishman
refuses to work in ditches and trenches, in gangs; or has the Irishman taken
this position because the Italian has come? The latter is undoubtedly the
truth; and if the administrators of Baron Hirsch's estate send to us two
millions of Russian Jews, we shall soon find the Italians standing on their
dignity, and deeming themselves too good to work on streets and sewers and
railroads. But meanwhile, what of the republic? what of the American standard
of living? what of the American rate of wages?
All that sort of reasoning about the necessity of having a mean kind of man to
do a mean kind of work is greatly to be suspected. It is not possible to have a
man who is too good to do any kind of work which the welfare of his family and
of the community requires to be done. So long as we were left to increase out
of the loins of our people such a sentiment as that we are now commenting upon
made no appearance in American life. It is much to be doubted whether any
material growth which is to be secured only by the degradation of our
citizenship is a national gain, even from the most materialistic point of
view.
Let us now inquire what are the changes in our general conditions which seem to
demand a revision of the opinion and policy heretofore held regarding
immigration. Three of these are subjective, affecting our capability of easily
and safely taking care of a large and tumultuous access of foreigners; the
fourth is objective, and concerns the character of the immigration now directed
upon our shores. Time will serve for only a rapid characterization.
First, we have the important fact of the complete exhaustion of the free public
lands of the United States. Fifty years ago, thirty years ago, vast tracts of
arable laud were open to every person arriving on our shores, under the
Preemption Act, or later, the Homestead Act. A good farm of one hundred and
sixty acres could be had at the minimum price of $1.25 an acre, or for merely
the fees of registration. Under these circumstances it was a very simple matter
to dispose of a large immigration. To-day there is not a good farm within the
limits of the United States which is to be had under either of these acts. The
wild and tumultuous scenes which attended the opening to settlement of the
Territory of Oklahoma, a few years ago, and, a little later, of the so-called
Cherokee Strip, testify eloquently to the vast change in our national
conditions in this respect. This is not to say that more people cannot and will
not, sooner or later, with more or less of care and pains and effort, be placed
upon the land of the United States; but it does of itself alone show how vastly
the difficulty of providing for immigration has increased. The immigrant must
now buy his farm from a second hand, and he must pay the price which the value
of the land for agricultural purposes determines. In the case of ninety-five
out of a hundred immigrants, this necessity puts an immediate occupation of the
soil out of the question.
A second change in our national condition, which importantly affects our
capability of taking care of large numbers of ignorant and unskilled
foreigners, is the fall of agricultural prices which has gone on steadily since
1873. It is not of the slightest consequence to inquire into the causes of this
fall, whether we refer it to the competition of Argentina and of India or the
appreciation of gold. We are interested only in the fact. There has been a
great reduction in the cost of producing crops in some favored regions where
steam-ploughs and steam-reaping, steam-threshing, and steam-sacking machines
can be employed; but there has been no reduction in the cost of producing crops
upon the ordinary American farm at all corresponding to the reduction in the
price of the produce. It is a necessary consequence of this that the ability to
employ a large number of uneducated and unskilled hands in agriculture has
greatly diminished.
Still a third cause which may be indicated, perhaps more important than either
of those thus far mentioned, is found in the fact that we have now a labor
problem. We in the United States have been wont to pride ourselves greatly upon
our so easily maintaining peace and keeping the social order unimpaired. We
have, partly from a reasonable patriotic pride, partly also from something like
Phariseeism, been much given to pointing at our European cousins, and boasting
superiority over them in this respect. Our self-gratulation has been largely
due to overlooking social differences between us and them. That boasted
superiority has been owing mainly, not to our institutions, but to our more
favorable conditions. There is no country of Europe which has not for a long
time had a labor problem; that is, which has not so largely exploited its own
natural resources, and which has not a labor supply so nearly meeting the
demands of the market at their fullest, that hard times and periods of
industrial depression have brought a serious strain through extensive
non-employment of labor. From this evil condition we have, until recently,
happily been free. During the last few years, however, we have ourselves come
under the shadow of this evil, in spite of our magnificent natural resources.
We know what it is to have even intelligent and skilled labor unemployed
through considerable periods of time. This change of conditions is likely to
bring some abatement to our national pride. No longer is it a matter of course
that every industrious and temperate man can find work in the United States.
And it is to be remembered that, of all nations, we are the one which is least
qualified to deal with a labor problem. We have not the machinery, we have not
the army, we have not the police, we have not the traditions and instincts, for
dealing with such a matter, as the great railroad and other strikes of the last
few years have shown.
I have spoken of three changes in the national condition, all subjective, which
greatly affect our capability of dealing with a large and tumultuous
immigration. There is a fourth, which is objective. It concerns the character
of the foreigners now resorting to our shores. Fifty, even thirty years ago,
there was a rightful presumption regarding the average immigrant that he was
among the most enterprising, thrifty, alert, adventurous, and courageous of the
community from which he came. It required no small energy, prudence,
forethought, and pains to conduct the inquiries relating to his migration, to
accumulate the necessary means, and to find his way across the Atlantic. To-day
the presumption is completely reversed. So thoroughly has the continent of
Europe been crossed by railways, so effectively has the business of emigration
there been exploited, so much have the rates of railroad fares and ocean
passage been reduced, that it is now among the least thrifty and prosperous
members of any European community that the emigration agent finds his best
recruiting-ground. The care and pains required have been reduced to a minimum;
while the agent of the Red Star Line or the White Star Line is everywhere at
hand, to suggest migration to those who are not getting on well at home. The
intending emigrants are looked after from the moment they are locked into the
cars in their native villages until they stretch themselves upon the floors of
the buildings on Ellis Island, in New York. Illustrations of the ease and
facility with which this Pipe Line Immigration is now carried on might be given
in profusion. So broad and smooth is the channel, there is no reason why every
foul and stagnant pool of population in Europe, which no breath of intellectual
or industrial life has stirred for ages, should not be decanted upon our soil.
Hard times here may momentarily check the flow; but it will not be permanently
stopped so long as any difference of economic level exists between our
population and that of the most degraded communities abroad.
But it is not alone that the presumption regarding the immigrant of today is so
widely different from that which existed regarding the immigrant of thirty or
fifty years ago. The immigrant of the former time came almost exclusively from
western and northern Europe. We have now tapped great reservoirs of population
then almost unknown to the passenger lists of our arriving vessels. Only a
short time ago, the immigrants from southern Italy, Hungary, Austria, and
Russia together made up hardly more than one per cent of our immigration.
To-day the proportion has risen to something like forty per cent, and threatens
soon to become fifty or sixty per cent, or even more. The entrance into our
political, social, and industrial life of such vast masses of peasantry,
degraded below our utmost conceptions, is a matter which no intelligent patriot
can look upon without the gravest apprehension and alarm. These people have no
history behind them which is of a nature to give encouragement. They have none
of the inherited instincts and tendencies which made it comparatively easy to
deal with the immigration of the olden time. They are beaten men from beaten
races; representing the worst failures in the struggle for existence. Centuries
are against them, as centuries were on the side of those who formerly came to
us. They have none of the ideas and aptitudes which fit men to take up readily
and easily the problem of self-care and self-government, such as belong to
those who are descended from the tribes that met under the oak-trees of old
Germany to make laws and choose chieftains.
Their habits of life, again, are of the most revolting kind. Read the
description given by Mr. Riis of the police driving from the garbage dumps the
miserable beings who try to burrow in those depths of unutterable filth and
slime in order that they may eat and sleep there! Was it in cement like this
that the foundations of our republic were laid? What effects must be produced
upon our social standards, and upon the ambitions and aspirations of our
people, by a contact so foul and loathsome? The influence upon the American
rate of wages of a competition like this cannot fail to be injurious and even
disastrous. Already it has been seriously felt in the tobacco manufacture, in
the clothing trade, and in many forms of mining industry; and unless this
access of vast numbers of unskilled workmen of the lowest type, in a market
already fully supplied with labor, shall be checked, it cannot fail to go on
from bad to worse, in breaking down the standard which has been maintained with
so much care and at so much cost. The competition of paupers is far more
telling and more killing than the competition of pauper-made goods. Degraded
labor in the slums of foreign cities may be prejudicial to intelligent,
ambitious, self-respecting labor here; but it does not threaten half so much
evil as does degraded labor in the garrets of our native cities.
Finally, the present situation is most menacing to our peace and political,
safety. In all the social and industrial disorders of this country since 1877,
the foreign elements have proved themselves the ready tools of demagogues in
defying the law, in destroying property, and in working violence. A learned
clergyman who mingled with the socialistic mob which, two years ago, threatened
the State House and the governor of Massachusetts, told me that during the
entire disturbance he heard no word spoken in any language which he
knew,--either in English, in German, or in French. There may be those who can
contemplate the addition to our population of vast numbers of persons having no
inherited instincts of self-government and respect for law; knowing no
restraint upon their own passions but the club of the policeman or the bayonet
of the soldier; forming communities, by the tens of thousands, in which only
foreign tongues are spoken, and into which can steal no influence from our free
institutions and from popular discussion. But I confess to being far less
optimistic. I have conversed with one of the highest officers of the United
States army and with one of the highest officers of the civil government
regarding the state of affairs which existed during the summer of 1894; and the
revelations they made of facts not generally known, going to show how the ship
of state grazed along its whole side upon the rocks, were enough to appall the
most sanguine American, the most hearty believer in free government. Have we
the right to expose the republic to any increase of the dangers from this
source which now so manifestly threaten our peace and safety?
For it is never to be forgotten that self-defense is the first law of nature
and of nations. If that man who careth not for his own household is worse than
an infidel, the nation which permits its institutions to be endangered by any
cause which can fairly be removed is guilty not less in Christian than in
natural law. Charity begins at home; and while the people of the United States
have gladly offered an asylum to millions upon millions of the distressed and
unfortunate of other lands and climes, they have no right to carry their
hospitality one step beyond the line where American institutions, the American
rate of wages, the American standard of living, are brought into serious peril.
All the good the United States could do by offering indiscriminate hospitality
to a few millions more of European peasants, whose places at home will, within
another generation, be filled by others as miserable as themselves, would not
compensate for any permanent injury done to our republic. Our highest duty to
charity and to humanity is to make this great experiment, here, of free laws
and educated labor, the most triumphant success that can possibly be attained.
In this way we shall do far more for Europe than by allowing its city slums and
its vast stagnant reservoirs of degraded peasantry to be drained off upon our
soil. Within the decade between 1880 and 1890 five and a quarter millions of
foreigners entered our ports! No nation in human history ever undertook to deal
with such masses of alien population. That man must be a sentimentalist and an
optimist beyond all bounds of reason who believes that we can take such a load
upon the national stomach without a failure of assimilation, and without great
danger to the health and life of the nation. For one, I believe it is time that
we should take a rest, and give our social, political, and industrial system
some chance to recuperate. The problems which so sternly confront us to-day are
serious enough without being complicated and aggravated by the addition of some
millions of Hungarians, Bohemians, Poles, south Italians, and Russian Jews.
"Restriction of Immigration" by Francis A. Walker, The Atlantic Monthly,June, 1896; Volume 77,
No. 464;
pages 822-829.
|