Immigration History

Savannah of 1819
Irish & Quaker
clipper David Crockett
Castle Garden

Third Wave 1815-75

1815 - a third wave of immigration began with the end of the Napoleonic Wars, with 9 million arriving in the U.S. by 1875, including 3 million from Ireland, 2.5 million from Germany, 1.5 million from Britain. From 1815 to1850, 1/3 of the total immigration to America came from Catholic Ireland due to poverty, industrialization, evictions of tenant farmers. Another 1 million came as a result of the Great Blight and famine that started in 1845 due to a fungus infection of the potato plant. One result of this influx of poor, non-Protestant people was the rise of nativism in America.

1819 - The Steerage Act of March 2, 1819 (3 Stat. 489) required the captain or master of a vessel arriving at a port in the United States or any of its territories from a foreign country to submit a list of passengers to the collector of customs, beginning January 1, 1820. The act also required that the collector submit a quarterly report or abstract, consisting of copies of these passenger lists, to the Secretary of State, who was required to submit such information at each session of Congress. After 1874, collectors forwarded only statistical reports to the Treasury Department. The lists themselves were retained by the collector of customs. Customs records were maintained primarily for statistical purposes. (text from NARA Immigration Records)

1819 - SS Savannah was built at the Speedwell Ironworks of Stephen Vail in New Jersey in 1818, left New York on May 22 of 1819 and reached Liverpool in 29 days, was the 1st steamship to cross from New York to Liverpool.

1833 - Mar. 22 Maryland passed a state Passenger Act, effective from September 1833 until October 1866, that required the masters of vessels to submit lists of passengers arriving at Baltimore to the mayor of that city. The law required that these "city lists'' report the age and occupation of the passengers, and that the lists be sworn to by the master of the vessel in the presence of the mayor. It also required a fee of $1.50 per immigrant passenger collected by the master of each ship.

1840 - July 4 the steamship Britannica, built by Canadian Samuel Cunard sailed from Liverpool to Boston and inaugurated regular transatlantic steamship passenger service. He was followed by the rival steamship lines of White Star Line in 1845, the Collins Line in 1847, Cornelius Vanderbilt in 1855, and Thomas Henry Ismay's Oceanic Steam Navigation Company in 1869 (Cunard would build the Lusitania in 1907 with new steam turbine engines and Ismay would follow with the Titanic in 1912).

1848 - Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and Ferment of the Fifties

1855 - Feb. 10 Congress passed a naturalization act for immigrant women.

1855 - Aug. 1 Castle Garden became official entry point for steamship lines bringing passengers from Europe to New York; immigrants were required to bathe with soap.

1866 - Castle Garden described in newspaper account in the New York Times Marine Intelligence Column, December 23, 1866

Castle Garden interior by Charles Ulrich
Castle Garden and Battery by Currier and Ives, ca. 1855, before immigration depot
In this 1868 cartoon of Castle Garden landing in New York City, a group of newly arrived emigrants from different countries is being buttonholed by several "runners' or swindlers. On the right a thief is seen rifling through a woman's handbag. The labor exchange shown in the background was another scene of various swindles that involved employment.


Federal system 1862-1924
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