Events related to immigration issues from U.S. and Arizona History

By emoten
  • 1607 - Beginning of Colonial Immigration; English Settlers Arrive in America

    1607 - Beginning of Colonial Immigration; English Settlers Arrive in America
    Settlement began on the James River in 1607 and foreigners started to merge into the colonies. In the eighteenth century the numbers of foreigners began to grow.
  • First Alien Naturalization Act Enacted by the Newly Created US Government

    First Alien Naturalization Act Enacted by the Newly Created US Government
    This Act allowed the first rules to be followed by all of the U.S. This Act was limited to naturalization of a person who had good character, which a law required that immigrants had to live two years in the country and one year in the state to pass the mandatory requirements.
  • Naturalization Act of 1795 Adds Rules to the Citizenship Process

    Naturalization Act of 1795 Adds Rules to the Citizenship Process
    Immigrants who had 'borne any innate title, or been of the request of honorability were additionally required to deny that status. Also Immigrants was required citizenship of two-5 years.
  • The Steerange Act

    The Steerange Act
    To begin with noteworthy government enactment on immigration. Incorporates reporting of immigration and standards for travelers from US ports headed for Europe. Among its arrangements, it: set up the keeping reporting of immigration to the United States; and set particular sustenance rules for travelers of boats departing U.S. ports for Europe.
  • Mexico Abolished Slavery

    Mexico Abolished Slavery
    President of Mexico Vincent Guerrero, with blended African, Spanish and Native American Ancestry, abrogated . Subsequently, a gathering of reactionaries double-crossed him and executed him. Guerrero's battled politically for social equality for all.
  • United States & Mexican War

    United States & Mexican War
    A war (1846-1848) between the United States and Mexico, bringing about the cession by Mexico of grounds now constituting all or the majority of the conditions of California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah, and Colorado.
  • California Gold Rush

    California Gold Rush
    The disclosure of gold in 1848 brought a huge surge of foreigners from around the world. One of the biggest gatherings to land in California was the Chinese. 20,000 Chinese mineworkers touched base in California in 1852 alone.
  • The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

    The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
    This treaty finished the war between the United States and Mexico. By its terms, Mexico surrendered 55 percent of its region, including parts of present-day Arizona, California, New Mexico, Texas, Colorado, Nevada, and Utah, to the United States.
  • The Great Compromise

    The Great Compromise
    Its objective was to manage the spread of servitude to regions so as to keep northern and southern interests in adjust.
  • Dred Scott v. Standord

    Dred Scott v. Standord
    Supreme Court's Dred Scott Decision pronounces blacks are not apart of the U.S. ans are not considered a citizen ; rules 1820 Missouri Compromise's prohibition on bondage in the regions illegal.
  • The Homestead Act

    The Homestead Act
    The Homestead Act gives free plots of up to 160 acres of land of western land to settlers who consent to create and live on it for no less than five years, consequently prodding a deluge of immigrants from overpopulated nations in Europe looking for place that is known for their own.
  • The Chinese Exclusion Act

    The Chinese Exclusion Act
    The Chinese Exclusion Act limits all Chinese immigration to the United States for a time of ten years.
  • Immigration Act

    Immigration Act
    An act in which the State Commission and officers were accountable for checking the travelers after approaching vessels touching base in the U.S. The travelers were inspected by an arrangement of exclusionary criteria. Upon examination travelers who gave off an impression of being convicts, crazy people, boneheads or not able to deal with themselves were not allowed onto arrive.
  • The Dillingham Commission

    The Dillingham Commission
    The Dillingham Commission distinguishes Mexican workers as the best answer for the Southwest work lack. Mexicans are exempted from immigrant "head taxes" set in 1903 and 1907.
  • Emergency Quota Act

    Emergency Quota Act
    The demonstration significantly confined the quantity of immigrants permitted to enter the country by a share framework in light of their nation of origin. The Act confined the quantity of outsiders permitted into the nation from any nation every year to 3% of the quantity of inhabitants from that same nation living in the United States as of the U.S. Census of 1910.