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Immigration German
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Filling the Nation's Breadbasket

Threshing scene, Park River, North Dakota
Threshing scene, Park River, North Dakota
For more than a century, hundreds of thousands of the newest German immigrants made their way to America's farm country, where they helped form the backbone of the nation's agriculture. As previous generations of Germans had before them, these immigrants made their homes on the outskirts of European settlement, where land was affordable. Germans poured into the available lands in the center of the North American continent--the valleys of the Mississippi, Ohio, and Missouri Rivers--and began farming the fertile land around the Great Lakes. By the mid-19th century, over half of the German-born people in North America lived in this region.

A pioneer family with Conestoga wagons
A pioneer family with Conestoga wagons

Later in the century, many Germans would head even farther west to the open spaces of Texas and the Dakotas--often traveling in the Conestoga wagons that Pennsylvania German farmers had invented to carry their crops to market. In the late 1800s, Germans joined the early settlers in the Pacific Northwest and California, where they were among the first to cultivate oranges, now one of the trademark crops of the American West.


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Introduction | The Call of Tolerance | Building a New Nation | A New Surge of Growth | Filling the Nation's Breadbasket | Urban Germans | Building Institutions, Shaping Tastes | Shadows of War
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1790   The federal government requires two years of residency for naturalization.
1885   Congress bans the admission of contract laborers.
1929   Congress makes annual immigration quotas permanent.
1948   The United States admits persons fleeing persecution in their native lands; allowing 205,000 refugees to enter within two years.
1952  Immigration and Nationality Act: individuals of all races eligible for naturalization; reaffirms national origins quota system, limits immigration from Eastern Hemisphere; establishes preferences for skilled workers and relatives of U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens; and tightens security and screening standards and procedures
1953  Congress amends 1948 refugee policy to allow for the admission of 200,000 more refugees
1980   The Refugee Act redefines criteria and procedures for admitting refugees.
1986   Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) legalizes illegal aliens residing in the U.S. unlawfully since 1982
1917   U.S. enters World War I; anti-German sentiment swells at home; names of schools, foods, streets, towns, even some families, are changed to sound less Germanic.
1864   Congress legalizes the importation of contract laborers.
1819   Congress establishes reporting on immigration
Native American