with special emphasis upon standards of living in an industrial section of the United States.
Fairchild, Henry Pratt-Greek Immigration to the United States. Yale University Press, 1911. A careful study of Greek immigration to the United States. The first part deals with the conditions, causes, and sources of Greek immigration; the second part studies the Greeks in the United States with special attention to their economic and social conditions; the third part sums up the effects of immigration upon the immigrants, upon Greece, and upon the United States.
Lord, Eliot; Trevor, J. D.; Barrows, S. J.-The Italian in America. B. J. Buck and Company, 1906. Presents the contribution of the Italian to American development and citizenship.
Warne, Frank J.-The Slav Invasion. Lippincott Company, 1904. A study of the Slav with particular emphasis upon his life in the mining regions of Pennsylvania.
Many Government Reports contain excellent material regarding immigration such as:
The Report of the Commission of Immigration of California-1916 on Immigrants' Education.
New York State Immigration Commission Report for 1909. The University of the State of New York's Syllabus of Civics Education for Immigrants.
The Report of the Department of Education, New York City, Division of Reference and Research on the School and the Immigrant-Bulletin No. II.
Publications of the United States Bureau of Education and the United States Bureau of Naturalization.
The Cleveland Foundation has recently published an excellent report by Herbert A. Miller on the School and the Immigrant, based on a survey of Cleveland, Ohio.
Ability to speak English, the, 40, 183, 195, 224-225, 309, 314-317, 377-386, 413-415, 471-481. Accidents in coal mines, 202. Administration, difficulties of, 355- 356.
Age of immigrants, the, 30-31. Agriculture, recent immigrants in, 80-103.
Aid Societies (See Homes).
Immigrant
Alaska, 235, 241, 294. Alcoholism, 48, 389.
Alien colonies (see Immigrant com-
munities).
Alien land, holding in, Washington, Wisconsin, Idaho, 352.
Alien seamen, 28, 401, 446.
Alien societies, the work of, 278. Aliens debarred and deported by countries, 556.
Banks, immigrant, 23; extent of, 104; location of, 104; regulation of, 104; characteristics of, 106; origin of, 106; proprietors of, 106- 108; organization of, 109-110; branch banks, 110; functions of, 110; deposits of, 110-113; trans- mission of money abroad by, 113- 115; unsoundness of, 115,116; at- tempts at regulation of, 117-118. Baron de Hirsch Fund, the, 90, 278.
Bay City, Mich., 304. Bayonne, N. J., 72.
Belgians, the, 83, 96, 97, 98. Bellevue and Allied Hospitals, 47, 48.
Benefit organizations, 121, 122. Benefits, those to be derived from immigrants, 284.
Benevolent societies, 225. Bennet, William S., 3, 365. Birth-rate among immigrants, 60. "Black Belt," the, 86.
Boarders and lodgers, 133-134, 506- 507, 513.
Boarding Boss system, the, 140-141. Boards of Special Inquiry, 267, 361, 366-367, 400, 431.
Boaz, Prof. Franz, 287.
Bodily form, changes in, 286-288. Bohemians and Moravians, 61, 83, 130, 132, 134, 137, 138, 287, 293, 301, 304. Bohemians in Connecticut, 94; in Texas, 93, 94.
Borders, the Canadian and Mexican, 354, 355.
Boston, Mass., 128, 131, 133, 135, 136, 277, 303, 304, 311. Bravas, the, 95, 96, 98. Brownsville, N. Y., 193. Bryan, Texas, 85. Buddhists, 251.
Buffalo, N. Y., 128, 131, 136, 137, 176.
Europe, back to (see Return of the immigrant).
European countries, 49; immigra tion to the United States, 26. European and Mexican immigrants on the Pacific Coast, 214.
European workmen, displacement of Americans by, 205-207. Exclusion, what immigrants
it
should be applied to, 285-286; im- migrants excluded, 411. Exploitation, 368-369; protection from, 441, 443.
Face, width of the, 287. Fall River, Mass., 72.
Family Income, the, 169, 170 (see under Income).
Family life of immigrants, the, 29. Farm labor, dearth of, 99-100. Farm operators, 80-103; in the United States, 568-571.
Farms, failure of to attract immi- grant, 101; movement to, 102; ownership of, 85.
Favus, 45.
Fayette County, Texas, 94. Fecundity, 60-64.
Fines, administrative, 398. Finnish, the, 11, 96, 97, 150, 220, 224, 225, 292, 302, 308, 315, 316. Floating immigrant labor supply, the, 175-193.
Foreign born, population of the, in the United States, 577-588. Forgery, conviction for, 56. Fraternal organizations, 121, 122. Fraud, convictions for, 56. French, the, 61, 63, 64, 65, 75, 148. French Canadians, the, 52, 62, 63, 148, 149, 308, 311, 315.
Gainful offenses, frequency of, 56. Galicia, ticket agents in, 21.
Gary, Indiana, 74.
Geneva, N. Y., 89. Genoa, Wis., 84.
Germans, 48, 50, 52, 56, 64, 65, 73, 75, 81, 82, 98, 126, 130, 132, 133, 135, 137, 138, 148, 150, 180, 220, 270, 293, 303, 304, 309, 310, 311, 313.
German-Hebrews, the, 307, 308. German-Russian farmers in Califor- nia, 226.
Glass industry, the, 75. Gonorrhea, 48.
Granite City, Ill., 75.
Greeks, the, 76, 96, 98, 126, 132.
133, 134, 135, 136, 143, 150, 181, 183, 184, 185, 222, 223, 236, 243, 302, 315.
Gulick, Sidney, 4; plan for restrict- ing immigration, 342, 451, 462.
Hair, the color of, 287. Hammonton, N. J., 96. Haverhill, Mass., 72. Head, length and width of, 287. Head Tax, the, 374,396, 409-410. Hebrews, 38, 47, 48, 52, 64, 65, 83,
90-92, 109, 130, 150, 195, 278, 287, 288, 297, 298, 303, 304, 311, 312, 313.
Hebrews, the Russian, 11, 27, 32, 38, 130-132, 134, 137, 138, 153, 309, 310.
Hebrews, other than Russian, 32, 38, 134, 153.
Hindus (see East Indians).
Hirsch, the fund of Baron de, 90, 278.
Holyoke, Mass., 72.
Home, care of the, 136-137; owner- ship of, 135-136, 299-302. Hospital investigation, 47-48. Households (see Industrial locali- ties).
Immigrants, characteristics of (see Characteristics); in agriculture, 80- 103; in industries the status of, 147-174.
Immigrants on the Pacific Coast, 214-230.
Immigration and Naturalization, the establishment of select committee on, 330.
Immigration, the bureau of, 49, 60, 278-280; old and new, 25, 81; causes of, 10-23, 43, 44; chief subjects in a study of, 6; inquiry into, 330, 332; laws of (see Legis- lation); movement in from the U. S. to Canada, 560-561. Immigration, the Commissioners of,
325.
Immigration, the countries of, origin of, 25.
Immigration Commission, establish- ment of the, 3, 336; nature of its work, 4; its membership, 3; conclusions and recommenda- tions of, 5, 359-365; minority re- port of, 364-365; the, of Massachu- setts, 279; the, of New York, 279; industrial investigation of, 149.
Immigration, law of 1917, 377-400; Appendix A, 408, 450. Immigration problem, the, statement
of, 1; the industrial phase of, 210- 211; the most difficult phase of, 69. Immigration, social effects of, 68. Immigration, statistics of, 551-554,
589-590.
Immigration, subjects treated in de- termining effects of, on American standards, 6; physical, mental and moral characteristics of, 6-7; political and social institutions of, 7-8; industrial conditions of, 8-9. Inclination return to Europe, 36-40. Incomes, 138; source of, 170-173,
542-544; the family, 169, 541. Independence, Louisiana, 36, 93. Industrial Commission, the, 332. Industrial communities, 140. Industrial depression, 20. Industrial distribution of immigrant wage-earners, the, 516.
Industries, conclusions regarding the influx of immigrants into, 209-210; reasons for employing southern and eastern Europeans in, 152-153; status of immigrants in, 147. Inefficiency, the, of the immigrant, 198; effect of, on the use of ma- chinery, 198-199. Information, the bureau of, 280-283, 445; data collected by, 281-282; success of, 281; bulletin of, 282- 283; conference called by, 283. Insanity, 49, 388-390, 411, 429. Inspection abroad, 28, 440-442; medical, 45; on land borders, 354- 355; on ships, 397. Investments, 293-299.
Industrial employees, racial classifi- cation of, 147-152; residence in the United States of, 152. Industrial organization, effect of im- migration on, 199-200. Industrial progress, 289-290.
Irish, the, 38, 47, 48, 50, 52, 56, 61, 73, 75, 130, 134, 135, 137, 138, 148, 180, 182, 220, 270, 292, 293, 303, 304, 311-313.
Italian government, made by the, 15.
investigation
Italians, the, 47, 55, 56, 63, 83-90, 97-98, 100, 105, 108, 109, 178, 184, 187, 189, 191, 192, 214, 220, 223, 224, 225, 226, 236, 243, 259, 291, 295, 298, 303.
Italians, the North, 38, 70, 73, 75, 83-90, 133, 137, 138, 148, 150, 180, 181, 182, 183, 221, 295, 302, 308. Italians, the South, 38, 50, 52, 70, 73, 75, 83-90, 96, 99, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 136, 138, 148, 150, 175, 180, 181, 183, 287, 295, 302, 304, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 315, 316. Italy, returned immigrant in, 20.
Japan, government action of, 217- 218, 386.
Japanese Association, statistics of the, 247.
Japanese, the, 237-252; number of, 237-238; picture brides and proxy marriages among, 238; attitude of their government, 238-240, 386; Canada and Japan, 240; occupa- tions, 240-241; strikebreakers, 242; contractors, 242; wages, 242-243; efficiency of, 243-244; race feeling among, 244; agriculture among, 244-246; wages, 246-247; as farm owners and leaseholders, 247-249; domestic service and merchandiz- ing among, 249-250; societies and guilds among, 250; assimilation of, 251; anti-Japanese feeling, 252; statistics of, 565-567, 459.
Japanese, in agriculture east of the Rockies, 94 (see also Japanese). Japanese, the land-holding by, 217- 218, 240.
Japanese, the, legislation regarding, 350-352, 386-389, 413; passport provision of 1907, 350-351; land- holding of, in California, 351; land- holding of, in Arizona, 351; in other states, 352.
Jenks, Jeremiah W., 3. Jewish Agricultural and Industrial Aid Society, the, 90, 91. Johnstown, Pa., 72, 73; fraternal organizations in, 122, 123; immi- grant churches in, 121.
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370, 386-389; contract labor, 370- 371, 391, 415; general restriction, 371-372; as to assimilation and distribution, 372-373; the literacy test, 373, 377, 380, 414; discrim inating the head tax, 374, 396; re- striction to fixt numbers, 374-375, 454. Legislation and administration, 319- 352; four periods of, 319; the na tive American and Know-Nothing movement, 319, 320-324; state legislation abandoned, 325-328; New York legislation, 326; Massa- chusetts legislation, 327; passenger cases, 328; control by the federal government, 328-337; law of 1888, 329; contract labor, 330, 415; law of 1891, 331-332; investigation of 1892, 332; the educational test, 332-333, 379, 414; the law of 1903, 333; the law of 1907, 334-337; the white slave traffic, 337-338; the Dillingham-Burnett bill, 338-339; the second Dillingham bill, 339- 343; law of 1917, 377-400, 408- 451; Chinese legislation, 343-350 (see Appendix A, 408-450, for legislation of 1917); Japanese legislation, 350-352, 386-389. Law, the first federal immigration, 44.
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