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![]() The Delaware River ![]() Independence Hall |
![]() The Port at Philadelphia However, the Delaware is a winding, shallow river and it freezes over in the winter - two major factors leading to New York as a preferred port for immigrants. But between 1815 and 1873, a quarter of a million immigrants arrived in Philadelphia; a million more would follow by the mid-1920s. Immigrants in the Steamship Era Throughout the last 20 years of the 19th century, immigration to Philadelphia steadily climbed, although never matching New York's huddled masses. The 1880s saw the largest numbers of immigrants through Philadelphia yet - more than 275,000. The numbers dropped slightly in the 1890s and the first decade of the 20th century, only to climb dramatically between 1910 and 1914, when some 250,000 immigrants arrived at Philadelphia. Arrival at Philadelphia Most immigrants at Philadelphia were only passing through to settle in other locales, many settling in Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky. At the same time, most immigrants living in Philadelphia actually came into America through other ports. ![]() |
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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 |