Which event is the best example of the growing anti immigrant sentiment that spread throughout the United States in the 1920s?

During the Red Scare of 1919-1920, many in the United States feared recent immigrants and dissidents, particularly those who embraced communist, socialist, or anarchist ideology. The causes of the Red Scare included: 

  • Which event is the best example of the growing anti immigrant sentiment that spread throughout the United States in the 1920s?
    World War I, which led many to embrace strong nationalistic and anti-immigrant sympathies;
  • The Bolshevik Revolution in Russia, which led many to fear that immigrants, particularly from Russia, southern Europe, and eastern Europe, intended to overthrow the United States government;
  • The end of World War I, which caused production needs to decline and unemployment to rise.  Many workers joined labor unions.  Labor strikes, including the Boston Police Strike in September 1919, contributed to fears that radicals intended to spark a revolution;
  • Self-proclaimed anarchists' mailing bombs to prominent Americans, including United States Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer and United States Supreme Court Associate Justice (and former Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Chief Justice) Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

Enraged by the bombings, the United States government responded by raiding the headquarters of radical organizations and arresting thousands of suspected radicals. Several thousand who were aliens were deported. The largest raids occurred on January 2, 1920 when over 4000 suspected radicals were seized nationwide. Over 800 were arrested in New England from locations that included Boston, Brockton, Chelsea, Fitchburg, Lawrence, and Lynn.

On April 29, 1920, several days before the arrests of Sacco and Vanzetti, Attorney General Palmer warned the nation that the Department of Justice had uncovered plots against the lives of over twenty federal and state officials as part of planned May Day (May 1st) celebrations. May Day, also known as International Workers' Day, was celebrated by many socialists, communists, anarchists, and unionists.

The failure of these plots to materialize, coupled with increased criticism of the Palmer Raids, brought these raids to an end. 

Which event is the best example of the growing anti immigrant sentiment that spread throughout the United States in the 1920s?
Massachusetts prisoners seized during government raids awaiting transport to Deer Island on January 4, 1920
Which event is the best example of the growing anti immigrant sentiment that spread throughout the United States in the 1920s?
November 1919 photo of Boston police with seized radical literature

Which event is the best example of the growing anti immigrant sentiment that spread throughout the United States in the 1920s?
1917 poster encouraging immigrants to support the war effort

Library of Congress

The First World War brought an end to one of the biggest periods of immigration in American history. During the decade leading up to the war, an average of 1 million immigrants per year arrived in the United States, with about three-quarters of them entering through the Ellis Island immigration station in New York Harbor. The United States up to this point had an “open door” immigration policy, with no limit on the number of people who could enter the United States. Those arriving simply had to pass a medical and legal inspection to show that they would not pose a danger or burden to their new country — and 98% of those arriving at Ellis Island passed.

While many Americans appreciated the contributions immigrants made to the labor force and did not feel threatened by ethnic diversity, others were not happy about the large numbers of foreigners arriving on U.S. shores. The precursors to World War I led to an increase in immigration from some regions of Europe. Refugees from Bulgaria, Greece, Romania, Serbia, and Turkey fled the Balkan Wars; Russians fled the unrest that would culminate in the Russian Revolution; and Jews fled for their lives from anti-Semitic pogroms throughout eastern Europe. Others chose to emigrate because they feared the long mandatory military service that many European countries required of their male citizens.

With the outbreak of the First World War, transatlantic steamship travel became more limited and dangerous, even as additional refugees sought to escape the conflict. British, French, German, and Italian liners that had previously carried masses of immigrants were converted to wartime use as troop and cargo transports and as hospital ships. Those steamships that remained in commercial operation were threatened by the rise of submarine warfare, as German officials felt justified in attacking ships that might be transporting military supplies to Britain and France, such as the attack on the RMS Lusitania in 1915.

Immigration to the United States slowed to a trickle because of the war, down to a low of 110,618 people in 1918, from an average of nearly 1 million. Those immigrants who did arrive in the United States faced difficulties beyond just the risks of travel. Some people found themselves stuck in a kind of limbo when they failed to pass inspection upon arriving in the United States, but were unable to be sent back to their homelands because of the war. So many found themselves in this situation that immigration officials had to develop parole procedures so that such individuals would not have to be detained in federal facilities for the duration of the war.

Anti-immigrant sentiments in the United States were strengthened by the First World War, despite the fact that large numbers of immigrants served honorably in the U.S. armed forces. Stories of atrocities by German soldiers, both real and exaggerated, fed hostility toward persons of German descent and led many immigrants to hide their heritage. Irish immigrants also became suspect, because some Irish nationalists supported the German side in hopes that a British defeat would result in Ireland’s independence. Russian immigrants were feared as possible anarchists and communists, as the “Red Scare” took hold with the onset of the Russian Revolution.

Growing isolationist and nativist sentiments in the United States would eventually lead to the closing of America’s “golden door” following the end of the First World War.

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