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![]() Bridget O'Donnell and her two children during the famine |
![]() Irish Potato Famine Refugees Coming to Boston A ticket cost $17 to $20, which was all too often every dime the immigrants had. By 1850, 25% of Boston's population was Irish. Immigration After the Famine At the turn of the century, immigration through Boston mirrored the boom in immigration across the country. Like Ellis Island, Boston immigration peaked in 1907, when more than 70,000 immigrants landed at the Massachusetts port. Immigrants went through medical and legal examinations similar to those experienced by immigrants at Ellis Island. As the 20th century progressed, Boston's immigration followed national trends, decreasing during WWI, increasing in the 1920s (when Boston saw many Portuguese and Finnish immigrants) and then decreasing during the Depression and WWII. ![]() Source: Lawrence H. Fuchs, "Immigration through the Port of Boston," in Forgotten Doors: The Other Ports of Entry to the United States, ed. M. Mark Stolarik (Philadelphia: Balch Institute Press, 1988). |
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Almost half of all Americans have at least one ancestor who
entered the United States through Ellis Island, also known as
"America's Gateway." In Ellis Island, leading family history
author and researcher Loretto Dennis Szucs explains how you
can find out if your relatives were among the millions who were
processed for entry at this historic landmark. LEARN MORE |
Narrated by Mandy Patinkin, this moving program uses hundreds
of interviews from the Ellis Island Oral History Project to
tell the incredible stories of immigration to America. Historians
explore Ellis Island's sometimes insensitive policies. Rare
photographs and films tell the true stories of those who passed
through the "Golden Door." 150 minutes LEARN MORE |