Immigration Timeline
From 1776 to the Present
A series of events, acts, and laws passed that offer an explanation to the various changes in the levels of immigrants in the United States.
First 100 Years: 1776 - 1875
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In
principal there was an open door policy for all immigrants, with due process
for all those incoming to become naturalized citizens. Congress encouraged the
entry of more immigrants and the Supreme Court even declared state laws
regulating immigration unconstitutional.
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Naturalization
Act of 1790 - stipulated that "any alien, being a free white person, may be
admitted to become a citizen of the United States"
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1875
Supreme Court declared that regulation of US immigration is the responsibility
of the Federal Government
First Immigration Restrictions: 1875 - 1917
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The first
statutes excluding prostitutes and convicts were made. They were followed by general federal
immigration laws that included head taxes, exclusion of the handicapped and
ill, and the first exclusion act due to race or ethnicity.
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1885 &
1887 - Alien Contract Labor laws which prohibited certain laborers from
immigrating to the United States
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1891 - The
Federal Government assumed the task of inspecting, admitting, rejecting and
processing all immigrants seeking admission to the U.S.
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1892 - On
Jan 2nd, a new federal US immigration station opened on Ellis Island
in New York Harbor
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1903 - This
Act restated the 1891 provisions concerning land borders and called for rules
covering entry as well as inspection of aliens crossing the Mexican border
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1907 - The
US immigration Act of 1907 reorganized the states bordering Mexico (Arizona,
New Mexico, and a large part of Texas) into Mexican Border District to stem the
flow of immigrants into the U.S.
First Quota System: 1917 - 1951
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Asian
exclusion acts were still upheld and further enforced. Along with the previously mentioned exclusion
acts, the first quota act - in response to a fear of European inundation - was
enforced. The National Origin Quota
System established a permanent national origin quota system, restricting
permissible immigration, and establishing the system of issuing visas abroad.
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1917 - 1924 - A series of laws were enacted to further limit the number
of new immigrants. These laws established the quota system and imposed
passport requirements. They expanded the categories of excludable
aliens and banned all Asians except the Japanese.
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1924 Act -
Reduced the number of US immigration visas and allocated them on the
basis of national origin.
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1940 - The Alien Registration Act
required all aliens (non-U.S. citizens) within the United States to register
with the Government and receive an Alien Registration Receipt Card (the
predecessor of the "green card").
- 1950 - Passage of the Internal Security
Act which rendered the Alien Registration Receipt Card even more
valuable. Immigrants with legal status had their cards replaced with what
generally became known as the "green card" (Form I-151).
1952 - 1964
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The
McCarran-Walter Act was established in 1952 and enforced special racial quotes
for Asians, established preferences within quotas for aliens with special
skills (today's first, second, and third employment-based preference),
established the first procedures for denaturalization and deportation. Established the modern day US immigration
system. It created a quota system which imposes limits on a per-country basis.
It also established the preference system that gave priority to family members
and people with special skills.
1965 - 1985
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Amendments
to the McCarran-Walter Act were made: the elimination of racial and national
origin quotas - in response to the Civil Rights Movement that had begun to take
place in the ‘50's and ‘60's - established hemispheric quotas, established
labor certifications and conditional refugee status, and changed in priority
status for skilled workers/families.
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1968 Act -
Eliminated US immigration discrimination based on race, place of birth,
sex and residence. It also officially abolished restrictions on Oriental US
immigration.
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1976 Act - Eliminated preferential treatment for
residents of the Western Hemisphere.
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1980 Act - Established a general policy
governing the admission of refugees.
1986 - 1995
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During
this time period 13 different acts were established to control and adjust
issues surrounding immigration, their habits, and the outcome of their
interaction with society. Issues
addressed ranged from sanctions against
employers for hiring aliens not authorized to work in the U.S, marriage
amendments, drug abuse, nursing relief, armed forces exceptions, technological
and scientists exemptions, and crime control.
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1986 Act -
Focused on curtailing illegal US immigration. It legalized hundreds of
thousands of illegal immigrants. It also introduced the employer sanctions
program which fines employers for hiring illegal workers. It also passed tough
laws to prevent bogus marriage fraud.
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1990 Act - Established an annual limit for
certain categories of immigrants. It was aimed at helping U.S. businesses
attract skilled foreign workers; thus, it expanded the business class
categories to favor persons who can make educational, professional or financial
contributions. It created the Immigrant Investor Program.
1996 - 2000
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During the
next four years, 20 acts, statutes, and amendments were passed to address, limit,
extend, and protect the rights of immigrants.
Among many other articles established, the first special deportation
provision for persons deemed terrorists was completed. Other subjects addressed covered effective
death penalty, illegal immigration, immigrant responsibility, relief from
deportation, detention, judicial review, conviction/sentencing, aggravated
felonies, judicial deportation, employer sanctions, further employment
sanctions, extension of stay for some nurses, elimination of visas for certain
crime-related groups, international religious freedom, definition of adopted
child, victims of trafficking, violence protection, children citizenship,
disability waivers for persons seeking naturalization, and legal immigration
family equity.
Post September 11, 2001........301,139,947 people
(July 2007 est.)
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The U.S.
was subject to 19 additional acts and statutes, the most important being the
USA Patriot Act, generally tightening the extent of control over incoming and
outgoing persons. The Patriot Act
tripled the number of Border Patrol and INS inspectors, permitted the release
of summaries of information from FBI's National Crime Information Center
Database, increased the identity verification abilities of the INS, expanded
the definition of terrorism to further curtail possible entry of terrorist
immigrants, increased information flow in general to extend services and tools
to more thoroughly capture problems within the immigrant system, and provided
special benefits for family members of persons who were victims of the
September 11 attacks.
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Other acts
that followed covered issues like the extension of work authorization for
nonimmigrant spouses, work authorization
for spouses of intracompany transfers, family sponsor, enhanced border
security, visa entry reform, child status protection, foreign relations
authorization, homeland security, national defense authorization, torture victim
relief, trafficking victim protection, intelligence reform, violence against
women and further terrorism prevention.
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Creation of the USCIS 2003 - As of March 1, 2003, the US
immigration and Naturalization Service becomes part of the Department of Homeland
Security (DHS). The department's new U.S. Citizenship and US immigration
Services (USCIS) function is to handle US immigration
services and benefits, including citizenship, applications for permanent
residence, non-immigrant applications, asylum, and refugee services. US
immigration enforcement functions are now under the Department's Border and
Transportation Security Directorate, known as the Bureau of US immigration and
Customs Enforcement (BICE)