GCU 113 timeline

  • Beginning of Colonial Immigration; English Settlers Arrive in America

    Beginning of Colonial Immigration; English Settlers Arrive in America
  • Importation of African Slaves Begins

    Importation of African Slaves Begins
  • Anti-Quaker Immigration Popular but Quakers still Immigrate

    Anti-Quaker Immigration Popular but Quakers still Immigrate
  • 1717-1769 - 36,000 British Convicts Transported to America after Passage of Transportation Act of 1717

    1717-1769 - 36,000 British Convicts Transported to America after Passage of Transportation Act of 1717
  • Pennsylvania’s Immigration Law Ignored by Ship Masters; New Tax and Health Inspections Imposed on Immigrants

    Pennsylvania’s Immigration Law Ignored by Ship Masters; New Tax and Health Inspections Imposed on Immigrants
  • Alien and Sedition Acts Enacted; US President Given Power to Punish and Deport Immigrants; Residency Requirement for Naturalization Increases to 14 Years

  • Foreign Slave Trade Becomes Illegal; 50,000 Slaves Become First "Illegal Aliens" in the US

    Foreign Slave Trade Becomes Illegal; 50,000 Slaves Become First "Illegal Aliens" in the US
  • Supreme Court Rules That Congress Alone Can Regulate Immigration

  • Chinese Immigration to the United States Increases During the Gold Rush

  • State Immigration Laws Become Unconstitutional; Congress Begins to Bring Immigration Under Direct Federal Control for the First Time

  • Mexican Revolution Drives Thousands of Mexicans across the US-Mexican Border

    Mexican Revolution Drives Thousands of Mexicans across the US-Mexican Border
  • US Labor Secretary Estimates That over 1,000,000 Mexicans Are in United States Illegally

  • Mexican “Repatriation Act” Forces Immigrants in the United States Back to Mexico

    Mexican “Repatriation Act” Forces Immigrants in the United States Back to Mexico
  • Secure Fence Act Authorizes Fencing along the US-Mexican Border

    Secure Fence Act Authorizes Fencing along the US-Mexican Border
  • President Obama Signs Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) to Allow Some Undocumented Immigrants Who Came to the United States as Children to Stay in the Country