On this day in 1954, Ellis Island, the gateway to America,
shuts it doors after processing more than 12 million immigrants since opening
in 1892. Today, an estimated 40 percent of all Americans can trace their roots
through Ellis Island, located in New
York Harbor off
the New Jersey coast and named
for merchant Samuel Ellis, who owned the land in the 1770s.
On January 2, 1892,
15-year-old Annie Moore, from Ireland,
became the first person to pass through the newly opened Ellis
Island, which President Benjamin Harrison designated as America's
first federal immigration center in 1890. Before that time, the processing of
immigrants had been handled by individual states.
Not all immigrants who sailed into New York
had to go through Ellis Island. First- and second-class
passengers submitted to a brief shipboard inspection and then disembarked at
the piers in New York or New
Jersey, where they passed through customs. People in
third class, though, were transported to Ellis Island,
where they underwent medical and legal inspections to ensure they didn't have a
contagious disease or some condition that would make them a burden to the
government. Only two percent of all immigrants were denied entrance into the U.S.
Immigration to Ellis Island peaked between 1892 and
1924, during which time the 3.3-acre island was enlarged with landfill (by the 1930s
it reached its current 27.5-acre size) and additional buildings were
constructed to handle the massive influx of immigrants. During the busiest year
of operation, 1907, over 1 million people were processed at Ellis
Island.
With America's
entrance into World War I, immigration declined and Ellis Island
was used as a detention center for suspected enemies. Following the war,
Congress passed quota laws and the Immigration Act of 1924, which sharply
reduced the number of newcomers allowed into the country and also enabled
immigrants to be processed at U.S.
consulates abroad. After 1924, Ellis Island switched
from a processing center to serving other purposes, such as a detention and
deportation center for illegal immigrants, a hospital for wounded soldiers
during World War II and a Coast Guard training center. In November 1954, the
last detainee, a Norwegian merchant seaman, was released and Ellis
Island officially closed.
Beginning in 1984, Ellis Island underwent a $160
million renovation, the largest historic restoration project in U.S.
history. In September 1990, the Ellis Island
Immigration Museum
opened to the public and today is visited by almost 2 million people each year.
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also on this date:-
____________________________________________________________________
also on this date:-
American Revolution
Automotive
Civil War
Cold War
Crime
Scott
Peterson convicted, 2004
Disaster
General Interest
Hollywood
Literary
Music
Old West
Presidential
Sports
Vietnam War
World War I
World War II
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