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over those of all other nations in that the main fields of modern immigration are controlled by English-speaking peoples. An Englishman or an Irishman is equally at home in the United States, in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. The recent development of those countries has naturally attracted a part of the emigration from Great Britain and Ireland. Furthermore, the policy of restriction adopted in Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa has conferred a special privilege upon immigrants of British nationality.

On the other hand, the governments of Canada and Australia are making systematic efforts to induce immigration from the mother country. Contract laborers may be freely imported into Canada, as well as into Australia. Salaried agents of the Dominion government are stationed in the large cities of Great Britain to promote emigration to Canada. A bonus of £i is paid to the booking agent on each ticket to Canada sold to a British subject who is engaged in the occupation of farmer, farm laborer, gardener, stableman, carter, railway surface man, navvy, or miner, and who signifies his intention to follow farming or railway construction work in Canada. Not content with the work of regular immigration agents, Canada has been sending agricultural delegates to Great Britain. The Salvation Army is also utilized as an agency to promote emigration to Canada, and grants of money are made to the Army for that purpose. Canada annually receives a considerable number of English immigrants, who have been sent by private or state aid from the mother country.3 Canada also encourages the immigration of poor and homeless British children to her borders. This immigration is chiefly recruited from the orphan or industrial homes of the British Isles.4

1 Reports of the Immigration Commission, vol. 2, pp. 607-631. 2 Ibid., pp. 607-608.

In 1907, 12,336 persons were sent to Canada by London charitable societies alone.

It is officially estimated that during the last 50 years nearly 60,000

The Australian government furnishes land to settlers at a nominal price payable in small installments. Moreover, in all the states except Tasmania, allowances are made to settlers for improving their holdings. By way of further inducements, the states pay the passage, wholly or in part, of immigrants from the United Kingdom whose purpose it is to settle on the land or to engage in farming or other work of a similar nature. Assistance is also offered to domestic servants and other persons who can satisfy the Australian agent in London that they would make desirable settlers in Australia. The policy of assisting immigration has been pursued by the several states of Australia for a greater part of the time since their settlement. According to official information 653,698 state-aided immigrants have been admitted to the Australian states. 1

That all these efforts should have diverted from the United States a part of the British emigration was inevitable, irrespective of any causes originating in the United States. As shown in a preceding chapter, the rise of land values in the United States and the agricultural opportunities of the Canadian Northwest have, during the past decade, resulted in an emigration of American farmers to Canada. Withal, it is a noteworthy fact that the movement to the United States has been affected less than is generally imagined.

Compared with the annual average for the period 18801889, emigration from Great Britain and Ireland to the United States has considerably declined. But as appears from Table 64 the decade 1880-1889 cannot be taken as a standard for comparison. The only period approaching it was the decade 1850-1859, when over a million people emigrated from Ireland. Eliminating the two exceptional

juvenile immigrants have been transported from the British Isles to Canada. From 1901 to 1909, inclusive, 19,034 of this class were sent to Canada.

1 Ibid., pp. 631-635.

* Census of Ireland, 1901, p. 168, Table 41.

decades, we find that during the twenty-year period 1890– 1909, 2,425,000 immigrants came from Great Britain and Ireland to the United States as against 2,254,000 in 18601879.1

TABLE 64.

NUMBER OF EMIGRANTS FROM THE UNITED KINGDOM, BY DESTINATION

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The number of English and Irish immigrants since 1890 who found the conditions in the United States attractive was 8500 in excess of the annual average for the period 1860-1879 preceding the "new immigration.

To be sure, the figures of gross immigration alone are not conclusive, as they conceal many unsuccessful ventures ending in a return movement to the home country. In Table 65 are therefore presented the figures of net emigration from the British Isles by countries of destination since 1895, when immigration from Southern and Eastern Europe to the United States for the first time outran the "old immigration."

'The Civil War reduced emigration from the United Kingdom to the United States only in 1861 and 1862. During the next three years the number of emigrants bound for the United States rose to a higher level than that of 1855-1860 or 1874-1879. See Appendix, Table XV.

2 See Appendix, Table XV.

TABLE 65.

NET EMIGRATION OF BRITISH SUBJECTS FROM THE UNITED KINGDOM BY COUNTRIES OF DESTINATION (THOUSANDS), 1895-1909.

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As appears from Diagram XVI, where the same figures are shown graphically, the curves representing net emigration to the United States and to British possessions exhibit a tendency to rise and fall together. From 1898 to 1907 the net immigration to the United States was steadily rising with slight deviations in the years ended March 31, 1901, and 1905, i. e., in the two presidential years. Since the latter year, the immigration countries of the British Empire have drawn and held more immigrants than the United

I

Computed from Statistical Abstract of the United Kingdom, No. 57, pp. 363-364, Tables 117, 118, 119.

'Includes 22,719 passengers from 1895 to 1907 whose nationality is not specified.

States, but the net immigration to the United States also increased. The drop in 1908 affected the net immigration to Canada as much as that to the United States. In 1909 the net immigration to the United States exhibited a greater increase, both absolute and relative, than the net immigra

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XVI. Net emigration from the United Kingdom by destination, 1895-1909.

tion to all British possessions. Obviously, conditions in the United States, notwithstanding immigration from Southern and Eastern Europe, compared favorably with those in other immigration countries.

Another factor determining the volume of emigration, that must not be lost sight of, is the improvement of living conditions in Great Britain. In the first place, there has

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