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Jewish Immigration to the United States from 1881 to 1910 / Studies in History, Economics and Public Law, Vol. LIX, No. 4, 1914 cover

Jewish Immigration to the United States from 1881 to 1910 / Studies in History, Economics and Public Law, Vol. LIX, No. 4, 1914

Chapter 47: TABLE V[1]
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About This Book

The study examines Jewish emigration from Eastern Europe between 1881 and 1910, analyzing economic, social, and political conditions in Russia, Romania, and Austria-Hungary that prompted departure. It surveys occupational and urban distribution of Jewish communities, legal restrictions, violent persecutions, and economic pressures such as land and trade exclusions. Statistical methods are deployed to estimate numbers and national origins of immigrants to the United States, including decade-by-decade and annual variation analyses. The work interprets how Eastern European policies and social structures shaped the character, skills, and settlement patterns of Jewish immigrants in the United States, and concludes with comparative summaries of causes and immigration trends.




FOOTNOTES:

[135] Cf. table LXVI, p. 195.

[136] Cf. table LXVII, p. 195.

[137] Cf. table LXVIII, p. 196.

[138] Cf. table LXIX, p. 196.

[139] Cf. reports of the United Hebrew Charities of New York City, 1886 to 1906.







CHAPTER VIToC

Summary and Conclusions


Some of the principal characteristics of the Jewish immigration to the United States have been presented in the preceding pages. The Jewish immigration has been shown to consist essentially of permanent settlers. Its family movement is incomparable in degree, and contains a larger relative proportion as well as absolute number of women and children, than any other immigrant people. This in turn is reflected in the greater relative proportion as well as absolute number of those classified as having "no occupation". The element of dependency thus predicated is another indication of the family composition of the Jewish immigration. Its return movement is the smallest of any, as compared both with its large immigration and the number of total emigrants. The Jewish immigrants are distinguished as well by a larger relative proportion and absolute number of skilled laborers, than any other immigrant people. In these four primary characteristics the Jewish immigrants stand apart from all the others.

It is with the neighboring Slavic races emigrating from the countries of Eastern Europe and with whom the Jewish immigrants are closely associated that the contrasts, in all these respects, are strongest. The Slavic immigrants are chiefly male adults. Their movement is largely composed of transients, as evidenced by a relatively large outward movement and emphasized by the fact that the vast majority of them are unskilled laborers. An exception, in large measure, must be made of the Bohemian and Moravian immigrants who present characteristics strongly similar to those of the Jewish immigrants.

The division into "old" and "new" immigration brings out even more clearly the exceptional position of the Jews in regard to these characteristics. Although the Jewish immigration has been contemporaneous with the "new" immigration from Eastern and Southeastern Europe, and is furthermore essentially East-European in origin, its characteristics place it altogether with the "old" immigration.[140] Most striking, however is the fact that in all of these respects—family composition, and small return movement (both indicating permanent settlement) and in the proportion of skilled laborers—the Jewish immigration stands apart even from the "old" immigration.

Further confirmation may be obtained, in the study of the characteristics of the Jewish immigration, of the principle established in the preceding sections that the rejective forces of governmental oppression are responsible for the largest part of this immigration. The large family movement of the Jewish immigration is a symptom of abnormal conditions and amounts almost to a reversal of the normal immigration, in which single or married men without families predominate. Even the family movement of the "old" immigrants may largely be attributed to the longer residence of their peoples in the United States as well as to their greater familiarity with the conditions and customs of the United States. That so large a part of the Jewish immigrants is composed of dependent females and children creates a situation of economic disadvantage for the Jewish immigrants, all the stronger because of their relative unfamiliarity with the language or the conditions facing them in this country.

Again, the Jews respond slowly and incompletely to the pressure of unfavorable economic conditions in this country. This was emphasized by the almost complete lack of response to the panic of 1907, as well as expressed in the small, practically unchanging return movement of the Jews to their European homes.

The pressure upon the Jewish artisans, or skilled laborers, in Eastern Europe is reflected in the predominance of this class among the Jewish immigrants to this country. That so useful an element in Eastern Europe with its still relatively backward industrial development—a fact that was given express recognition by the permission accorded the Jewish artisans in Alexander II's time to live in the interior of Russia—should have been compelled to emigrate indicates that the voyage across the Atlantic was easier for them than the trip into the interior of Russia, access to which is still legally accorded to them.

That the oppressive conditions created particularly in Russia and Roumania and operating as a pressure equivalent to an expulsive force does not explain the entire Jewish immigration to this country is evident from the preceding pages. In a great measure, the immigration of Jews from Austria-Hungary is an economic movement. The existence, however, of a certain degree of pressure created by economic and political antisemitism has however been recognized. The Jewish movement from Austria-Hungary shares largely with the movement from Russia and Roumania the social and economic characteristics of the Jewish immigration which we have described. A strong family movement and a relative permanence of settlement, especially as compared with the Poles, and a movement of skilled laborers must be predicated of the Jewish immigrants from Austria-Hungary, though undoubtedly not to the same degree as in the case of the Jewish movements from Russia and Roumania.

It is also clear that the forces of economic attraction in the United States do not play an altogether passive part in the Jewish immigration. The very fact of an immigrant-nucleus formed in this country and serving as a center of attraction to relatives and friends abroad—a force which increases in direct and multiple proportion to the growth of immigration—is an active and positive force in strengthening the immigration current. This was early understood by the Alliance Israélite Universelle which had acted upon this principle in the seventies and had prophetically sought to direct a healthy movement of Jewish immigrants to this country in the hope of thereby laying a foundation for future Jewish immigration to this country. This current, however, once started and growing only by the force of its increasing attraction, would reflect in its movement almost wholly the economic conditions in this country. That so large a part of the Jewish immigration, and so many of the phenomena peculiar to it, find their explanation, for the largest part of the thirty years, in the situation and the course of events in the countries of Eastern Europe leads to the inevitable conclusion that the key to the Jewish immigration is to be found not in the force of economic attraction exercised in the United States but rather in the exceptional economic, social and legal conditions in Eastern Europe which have been created as a result of governmental persecution.

Reviewing the various phases of the history of Jewish immigration for these thirty years, we are enabled to see more closely its nature. The study of the immigration, its movement and its social and economic characteristics, in comparison with those of other immigrant peoples, has revealed in it a number of distinguishing traits. In the causes of the emigration of the Jews, in the pressure exerted upon their movement as reflected in their rate of immigration, in their family movement, in the permanence of their settlement, and in their occupational distribution have been found characteristics which mark them off from the rest of the immigrant peoples. The number of these characteristics and the degree in which they are found in the Jewish immigration, put it in a class by itself.

The facts of governmental pressure amounting to an expulsive force, and reflected in an extraordinary rate of immigration, in a movement of families unsurpassed in the American immigration, the largest part economically dependent, in an occupational grouping of skilled artisans, able to earn their livelihood under normal conditions, and in a permanence of settlement in this country incomparable in degree and indicating that practically all who come stay—all these facts lead irresistibly to the conclusion that in the Jewish movement we are dealing, not with an immigration, but with a migration. What we are witnessing to-day and for these thirty years, is a Jewish migration of a kind and degree almost without a parallel in the history of the Jewish people. When speaking of the beginnings of Russian Jewish immigration to Philadelphia, David Sulzberger said: "In thirty years the movement of Jews from Russia to the United States has almost reached the dignity of the migration of a people," he used no literary phrase. In view of the facts that have developed, this statement is true without any qualification.

This migration-process explains the remarkable growth of the Jewish population in the United States, within a relatively short period of time. In this transplantation, the spirit of social solidarity and communal responsibility prevalent among the Jews has played a vital part.

The family rather than the individual thus becomes the unit for the social life of the Jewish immigrant population in the United States. In this respect the latter approaches more nearly the native American population than does the foreign white or immigrant population. One of the greatest evils incident to and characteristic of the general immigration to this country is thereby minimized.

Again, the concentration of the Jewish immigrants in certain trades explains in great measure the peculiarities of the occupational and the urban distribution of the Jews in the United States. The development of the garment trades through Jewish agencies is largely explained by the recruiting of the material for this development through these laborers.

These primary characteristics of the Jewish immigration of the last thirty years will serve to explain some of the most important phases of the economic and social life of the Jews in the United States, three-fourths of whom are immigrants of this period.

Of all the features of this historic movement of the Jews from Eastern Europe to the United States, not the least interesting is their passing from civilizations whose bonds with their medieval past are still strong to a civilization which began its course unhampered by tradition and unyoked to the forms and institutions of the past. The contrast between the broad freedom of this democracy and the intolerable despotism from whose yoke most of them fled, has given them a sense of appreciation of American political and social institutions that is felt in every movement of their mental life.




FOOTNOTES:

[140] So strongly was this the case that the Immigration Commission in discussing these characteristics was compelled to separate the Jewish from the "new" immigration, in order to bring out the essential differences of the latter from the "old" immigration.







STATISTICAL TABLESToC


TABLE IA

PARTICIPATION OF JEWS IN OCCUPATIONS IN THE RUSSIAN EMPIRE, 1897[1]ToT

Group of occupation Total Jews Per cent of total
Agricultural pursuits 18245287 40611 .2
Professional service 988813 71950 7.5
Personal service[2] 5150012 277466 5.4
Manufacturing and mechanical pursuits 5169919 542563 10.5
Transportation 714745 45944 6.4
Commerce[2] 1256330 452193 36.0
Total 31525106 1430727 4.5
[1] Compiled from Rubinow, p. 500.
[2] Cf. Rubinow, note, p. 500.

TABLE IB

PARTICIPATION OF JEWS IN OCCUPATIONS IN THE PALE OF JEWISH SETTLEMENT, 1897[1]ToT

Group of occupation Total Jews Per cent of total
Agricultural pursuits 6071413 38538 .6
Professional service 317710 67238 21.1
Personal service[2] 2139981 250078 11.6
Manufacturing and mechanical pursuits 1573519 504844 32.1
Transportation 211983 44177 20.8
Commerce[2] 556086 426628 76.7
Total 10870692 1331503 12.2
[1] Compiled from Rubinow, p. 500.
[2] Cf. Rubinow, note, p. 500.

TABLE II

JEWISH IMMIGRATION AT THE PORTS OF NEW YORK, PHILADELPHIA AND BALTIMORE, JULY TO JUNE, 1886 to 1898[1]ToT

Year New York Philadelphia Baltimore Total
1886 19548 1625 21173
1887 30866 2178 33044
1888 26946 1935 28881
1889 23958 1394 25352
1890 26963 1676 28639
1891 47098 2719 1581[2] 51398
1892 66544 4677 5152 76373
1893 29059 4322[3] 1941 35322
1894 23444 3833 1902 29179
1895 21422 3672 1097 26191
1896 27846 3016 1986 32848
1897 17362 1613 1397 20372
1898 19222 2121 2311 23654
Total 380278 34781 17367 432426
[1] Table II and all succeeding tables are arranged from July 1st to June 30th, the fiscal year.
[2] Baltimore statistics begin October.
[3] Philadelphia figures for August missing.

TABLE III

JEWISH IMMIGRATION AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK, JULY, 1885, TO JUNE, 1886, BY MONTH AND COUNTRY OF NATIVITY[1]ToT

Month Russia Austria-Hungary Roumania Others Total
July 1130 354 58 107 1649
August 1512 448 33 121 2114
September 945 185 20 119 1269
October 785 236 12 216 1249
November 1347 589 21 80 2037
December 574 249 17 62 902
January 565 202 4 26 797
February 492 228 16 44 780
March 1077 444 35 66 1622
April 639 309 28 55 1031
May 791 521 31 70 1413
June 3017 1365 210 93 4685
Total 12874 5130 485 1059 19548
[1] Compiled from reports of the United Hebrew Charities of New York.


TABLE IVA

JEWISH IMMIGRATION AT THE PORT OF PHILADELPHIA, 1886 TO 1898, BY COUNTRY OF NATIVITYToT

Year Russia Per cent Austria-Hungary Per cent Roumania Per cent Others Per cent Total
1886 1218 75 196 12 33 2 178 11 1625
1887 1699 78 262 12 86 4 131 6 2178
1888 1432 74 232 12 97 5 174 9 1935
1889 1129 81 125 9 42 3 98 7 1394
1890 1424 85 184 11 34 2 34 2 1676
1891 2447 90 [1] [1] 272 10 2719
1892 3929 84 561 12 47 1 140 3 4677
1893 3025 70 519 12 43 1 735 17 4322
1894 2951 77 422 11 77 2 383 10 3833
1895 1983 54 624 17 73 2 992 27 3672
1896 1538 51 875 29 60 2 543 18 3016
1897 1049 65 355 22 32 2 177 11 1613
1898 1611 76 382 18 64 3 64 3 2121
Total 25435 73 4737 14 688 2 3921 11 34781
[1] Immigrants from Austria-Hungary and Roumania were this year grouped under "all others" in the original tables.

TABLE IVB

JEWISH IMMIGRATION AT THE PORT OF BALTIMORE, 1891 TO 1898, BY COUNTRY OF NATIVITYToT

Year Russia Per cent Austria-Hungary Per cent Roumania Per cent Others Per cent Total
1891 1423 90 [1] [1] 158 10 1581
1892 4328 84 618 12 52 1 154 3 5152
1893 1388 70 232 12 19 1 302 17 1941
1894 1465 77 209 11 38 2 190 10 1902
1895 592 54 187 17 22 2 296 27 1097
1896 1013 51 576 29 40 2 357 18 1986
1897 908 65 307 22 28 2 154 11 1397
1898 1757 76 416 18 69 3 69 3 2311
Total 12874 74 2545 15 268 2 1680 9 17367
[1] Immigrants from Austria-Hungary and Roumania were this year grouped under "all others" in the original tables.


TABLE V[1]

JEWISH IMMIGRATION AT THE PORTS OF NEW YORK, PHILADELPHIA AND BALTIMORE, 1886 TO 1898, BY COUNTRY OF NATIVITYToT

Year Country of nativity Ports Total
New York Philadelphia Baltimore
1886 Russia 12874 1218 14092
  Austria-Hungary 5130 196 5326
  Roumania 485 33 518
1887 Russia 21404 1699 23103
  Austria-Hungary 6636 262 6898
  Roumania 1977 86 2063
1888 Russia 18784 1432 20216
  Austria-Hungary 5753 232 5985
  Roumania 1556 97 1653
1889 Russia 17209 1129 18338
  Austria-Hungary 4873 125 4998
  Roumania 1016 42 1058
1890 Russia 19557 1424 20981
  Austria-Hungary 6255 184 6439
  Roumania 428 34 462
1891 Russia 39587 2447 1423 43457
  Austria-Hungary 5890 [1] [1] 5890
  Roumania 854 [1] [1] 854
1892 Russia 55996 3929 4328 64253
  Austria-Hungary 7464 561 618 8643
  Roumania 641 47 52 740
1893 Russia 20748 3025 1388 25161
  Austria-Hungary 5612 519 232 6363
  Roumania 493 43 19 555
1894 Russia 16331 2951 1465 20747
  Austria-Hungary 5285 422 209 5916
  Roumania 501 77 38 616
1895 Russia 14152 1983 592 16727
  Austria-Hungary 5236 624 187 6047
  Roumania 423 73 22 518
1896 Russia 17617 1538 1013 20168
  Austria-Hungary 8380 875 576 9831
  Roumania 644 60 40 744
1897 Russia 11106 1049 908 13063
  Austria-Hungary 5010 355 307 5672
  Roumania 456 32 28 516
1898 Russia 11581 1611 1757 14949
  Austria-Hungary 6569 382 416 7367
  Roumania 587 64 69 720
Total ——— 380278 34781 17367 432426
[1] See note to Tables IVa and IVb. For Tables VI and VII, see pp. 93 and 94.