Time
By Jason Steinhauer
March 12, 2015
This
post is in collaboration with The John W. Kluge Center at the Library
of Congress, which brings together scholars and researchers from around
the world to use the
Library’s rich collections. The article below was originally published
on the Kluge Center blog with the title The History of Mexican
Immigration to the U.S. in the Early 20th Century.
As
a Kluge Fellow at the Library of Congress, historian Julia Young is
currently researching a new book on Mexican immigration to the U.S.
during the 1920s. She sat down
with Jason Steinhauer to discuss the history of this migration and the
similarities and differences to immigration today.
Hi,
Julia. By way of background, could you provide an overview of the flow
of immigrants from Mexico into the United States during the 19th and
early 20th centuries?
For
almost a half-century after the annexation of Texas in 1845, the flow
was barely a trickle. In fact, there was a significant migration in the
other direction: Mexican
citizens who left the newly annexed U.S. territories and resettled in
Mexican territory.
Beginning
around the 1890s, new industries in the U.S. Southwest—especially
mining and agriculture—attracted Mexican migrant laborers. The Mexican
Revolution (1910-1920)
then increased the flow: war refugees and political exiles fled to the
United States to escape the violence. Mexicans also left rural areas in
search of stability and employment. As a result, Mexican migration to
the United States rose sharply. The number
of legal migrants grew from around 20,000 migrants per year during the
1910s to about 50,000–100,000 migrants per year during the 1920s.
This
same period saw massive numbers of immigrants arrive in the U.S. from
Asia and Eastern and Southern Europe. Were Mexican immigrants viewed
similarly or differently?
There
was concern among the U.S. public, as well as policymakers and the
press, that “new” immigrants from Eastern and Southern Europe as well as
Asia were somehow different
from previous generations of Western European immigrants to the United
States—and whether their supposed differences posed a threat to U.S.
society and culture. The so-called science of eugenics helped drive this
concern—the notion that ethnic groups had inherent
qualities (of intelligence, physical fitness, or a propensity towards
criminality) and that some ethnic groups had better qualities than
others. These beliefs tied in directly to concerns about immigration and
immigration policy.
However,
Mexicans were sometimes said to have certain positive qualities that
made them “better” labor immigrants than the other groups. They were
thought to be docile,
taciturn, physically strong, and able to put up with unhealthy and
demanding working conditions. Perhaps more importantly, they were
perceived as temporary migrants, who were far more likely to return to
Mexico than to settle permanently in the United States.
Does this explain why Mexico was exempted from the quotas in the Immigration Act of 1924?
Mexico
(and in fact, the entire Western hemisphere) was exempt from the quotas
in part because of the agricultural lobby: farmers in the U.S.
Southwest argued that without
Mexican migrants, they would be unable to find the laborers needed to
sow and harvest their crops. In addition, migration from the Western
Hemisphere made up less than one-third of the overall flow of migrants
to the United States at the time. Finally, the
perceptions of Mexicans as temporary migrants and docile laborers
contributed to the fact that they were never included in the quotas.
Soon after the quotas, the Cristero War erupted in Mexico. What impact did this have on immigration?
Between
1926 and 1929, Catholic partisans took up arms against the Mexican
federal government in protest against a series of laws that placed
strong restrictions on the
public role of the Catholic Church. In a country that was 98 percent
Catholic, this provoked a furious response. Many Mexican Catholics were
determined to go to war against their government until the laws were
overturned.
The
Cristero War had a twofold effect: first, it led to new waves of
emigrants, exiles and refugees who fled the violence and economic
disruption. Second, it politicized
Mexican migrants in the United States around the Cristero cause. While
not all Mexican migrants supported the Catholic side of the conflict,
thousands did. They organized mass protests of the Mexican government
from within their communities in the United States.
You’ve
found evidence of a court case in Arizona that sheds light on this
period. Could you tell us about it and why it’s significant to your
research?
While
researching my book I kept coming across mentions of a man named José
Gándara, a Mexican immigrant who tried to start a Catholic revolt from
the U.S.-side of the
U.S.-Mexico border in 1927. He was eventually caught in Tucson, where
he was subsequently put on trial. In the Library of Congress Newspaper
and Periodical collections, I found two Arizona newspapers that
documented the case: the Tucson Citizen and the Arizona
Daily Star. Both had extensive coverage of the Gándara trial, which was
quite dramatic — Gándara had plotted with an exiled Catholic bishop
from Mexico, along with numerous other Mexican migrants, and he had
enlisted the support of members of the local indigenous
Yaqui community. The plot was uncovered by agents working for the U.S.
Department of Justice.
During
the trial, Gándara’s lawyers — who were prominent Catholics from El
Paso — mocked the Mexican government and made eloquent arguments in his
defense. In the end,
though, Gándara was convicted of arms smuggling and fomenting
revolution. He served some time in jail, although he was eventually able
to get his sentence commuted, thanks to some powerful supporters within
the U.S. Catholic hierarchy. His story was important
because it demonstrated how far some Mexican immigrants were willing to
go in order to fight the Mexican government during the Cristero War
years.
Fascinating. And shortly after that, the Stock Market crashed and altered Mexican immigration once again.
Yes.
At the onset of the Depression in 1929, entire industries dried up, and
the need for immigrant labor decreased. Many Mexican migrants found
themselves suddenly impoverished
and tens of thousands of rural workers went back to Mexico. Hundreds of
thousands of Mexicans were also deported under unofficial
“repatriation” policies led by federal, municipal or city authorities.
As
you listen to immigration debates in the 21st century, what strikes you
as being similar and what strikes you as being different from debates
in the early 20th century?
I’m
often struck by the similarities. Some of the rhetoric and debate about
immigration, particularly immigration from Mexico and Latin America,
echoes that of the 1920s.
It’s not uncommon to hear people describe current migrants as “too
different” from the majority culture, as being unable to assimilate or
acculturate.
At
the same time, immigration today has features that are historically
unprecedented, and we shouldn’t make too many direct analogies. For
example, immigration is much
more diverse today. Migrants from Latin America during the early
twentieth century came almost exclusively from Mexico, Puerto Rico, and
(to a lesser extent) Cuba. Today, immigrants come from every country in
Latin America, and even migration from Mexico has
diversified: people come not only from the historical sending states in
the Mexican heartland, but also from Mexico’s gulf coast, from the
southern states, and from other areas that sent few migrants before the
1980s and 1990s. That means that Mexicans, and
Latin Americans more broadly, are creating truly new communities in the
United States – communities based around a pan-Latin American identity,
as opposed to a regional homeland identity. I think that will be one of
the most fascinating areas of research for
future historians.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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