When we say "the border" today we mean the southwestern border of the U.S. But in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, it was the northeastern border that generated headlines. Anxiety about the newcomers crossing this border gave rise to punditry, books, lecture tours, sermons from Protestant pulpits, and testimony in Congressional hearings and government reports. In this video, I introduce this tale of "the other border," the most important, forgotten episode in U.S. immigration history. Why the most important? Because it resembles current events like no other comparable episode.
Next Episode: Industrialization in New England
Why this immigration is so invisible? Yes, your "border" explanation is a good one. I have another one: It could be also because it is à "french" immigration. This english tradition country seems to have a hard time to admit their french héritage (french colonial era in the west and Louisiana, huguenot pionneers in the east, and, of course, french-canadians and acadiens in New England.
ReplyDeletePlease see a more complete treatment of the topic of invisibility in my article here:
Deletehttps://frenchnorthamerica.blogspot.com/2016/03/why-are-franco-americans-so-invisible.html