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Dutch immigration
 

 


dutch immigration
Critics Want Dutch Lawmaker Deported 
AP via Yahoo! News - May 13 7:33 PM
Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali-born Dutch legislator who has championed the rights of Muslim women, is returning from a book tour to a firestorm for lying on her asylum application when she fled to the Netherlands in 1992 to escape an arranged marriage.


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The Middle East's Leading English Language Daily 
Arab News - May 13 4:12 PM
Urgently required: Waiters for a modern restaurant based in Jeddah. Indian/Philippines preferred. Transferable iqama is a must. Suitable candidates contact personal manager, Tel: 02-6655855, e-mail: sayeghyn@yahoo.com.

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Fox visit to focus on state ties 
Deseret Morning News - May 10 11:07 PM
Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. said Wednesday that the increasingly heated debate over immigration may well dominate Mexican President Vicente Fox's visit to Utah next month at least in the media.

economics of immigration
Gutknecht is keeping up pressure, volume in immigration debate 
Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune - May 13 8:45 PM
WASHINGTON - Shortly after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, Rep. Gil Gutknecht angrily walked out of a closed-door briefing when Immigration and Naturalization Service Commissioner James Ziglar said the service's main job was to help people get into the country. Gutknecht declared Ziglar "didn't get it" -- that his job was to protect the borders and enforce the immigration laws within them.

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Amnesty and Continued Low Skill Immigration Will Substantially Raise Welfare Costs and Poverty 
[Press Release] Heritage Foundation - May 12 3:36 PM
This paper focuses on the net fiscal effects of immigration with particular emphasis on the fiscal effects of low skill immigration. The fiscal effects of immigration are only one aspect of the impact of immigration. Immigration also has social, political, and economic effects.

effects of mexican immigration
Amnesty and Continued Low Skill Immigration Will Substantially Raise Welfare Costs and Poverty 
[Press Release] Heritage Foundation - May 12 3:36 PM
This paper focuses on the net fiscal effects of immigration with particular emphasis on the fiscal effects of low skill immigration. The fiscal effects of immigration are only one aspect of the impact of immigration. Immigration also has social, political, and economic effects.

effects of the immigration
Amnesty and Continued Low Skill Immigration Will Substantially Raise Welfare Costs and Poverty 
[Press Release] Heritage Foundation - May 12 3:36 PM
This paper focuses on the net fiscal effects of immigration with particular emphasis on the fiscal effects of low skill immigration. The fiscal effects of immigration are only one aspect of the impact of immigration. Immigration also has social, political, and economic effects.

ellis island immigration records
THE PRIMER 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram - May 12 9:47 AM
We've been hearing an awful lot about immigration in America lately. Reform laws, protests and political debates have been grabbing headlines. But most of our ancestors came here from other countries, and many passed through New York Harbor's Ellis Island. Let's look at the beginnings of mass immigration:

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Senators back singing anthem in English 
NorthJersey.com - May 13 11:42 PM
WASHINGTON -- In a warm-up for next week's immigration debate, senators flirted with the fringes of the issue with separate bills to crack down on border tunnel builders and insist that the national anthem be sung in English.

european immigration
European, African interior ministers step up talks on immigration, terrorism(Updated 05:15 p.m.) 
Chinapost.com.tw - May 12 2:19 AM
Interior ministers and other high-ranking envoys from 10 European and North African countries met Friday for talks on illegal immigration, drug trafficking and terrorism.

family immigration
Family Fights Immigration Hurdles 
WLBT 3 - 2 hours, 15 minutes ago
A Natchez woman and her sisters are fighting the deportation of their brother. Christopher Thomas, 33, was arrested in Natchez in December and has been held since that time in the Madison County jail on immigration charges.

federation for american immigration reform
TELL IT TO THE CHIEFTAIN: ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION 
The Pueblo Chieftain - 1 hour, 59 minutes ago
It is a sad day in American history when illegal immigrants are insisting on telling American citizens and the American government what they should and should not do. Watching the demonstrators on television carrying the Mexican flag and shouting about Mexican pride, we wonder, "If Mexico is so wonderful then why did yon come to the United States?" As an American citizen, I know that no nation

filipino immigration
Overseas workers drive down wages 
The Advertiser - May 13 10:03 AM
THE opposition says the government is driving wages down by approving temporary work visas. Labor's immigration spokesman Tony Burke has made the comment after revelations that Chinese and Filipino workers are being brought onto Perth building sites.

find immigration lawyer
Sen. Kennedy fighting for immigration reform 
Sentinel & Enterprise - 1 hour, 6 minutes ago
WASHINGTON -- Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., was fresh-faced and only a decade removed from playing Harvard football in 1965 when he dove into a major issue: Reshaping an immigration policy that favored northern Europeans and largely denied entry to everyone else.

finnish immigration
EU 'lacks means' to ease irregular migration burdens 
Times of Malta - May 11 1:36 AM
The European Union lacks a mechanism offering solidarity to alleviate irregular migration burdens placed on peripheral countries, Finnish Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen said, promising Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi to tackle the issue during his term as EU president.

florida immigration assistance attorneys
USA: Amnesty Breifing To UN Torture Committee 
Scoop.co.nz - May 04 4:47 PM
This briefing includes further information on the implementation by the United States of America (USA) of its obligations under the UN Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (Convention; UN Convention against Torture), with regard to the forthcoming consideration by the UN Committee Against Torture (the Committee) of the USA’s second periodic

florida immigration attorneys
Hispanic population booms in South Florida, nation, census shows 
Sun-Sentinel - May 09 10:23 PM
Hispanics continue to be the country's fastest-growing minority, accounting for almost half of the national population growth between 2004 and 2005, census figures released today show.

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Dutch immigration

According to the 2000 United States Census, more than 4.5 million Americans claim total or partial Dutch heritage.

Contents

  • 1 Immigration
  • 2 Numbers
  • 3 Famous Dutch-Americans
  • 4 References
    • 4.1 Primary sources

Immigration

The Dutch first came to America in 1609 and explored the Hudson River on the ship De Halve Maen. They came looking for a way to Asia, but found many furs and good farm land. In 1614 Fort Nassau was built where present day Albany, New York is. In 1624 Fort Nassau was replaced with Fort Orange, the first permanent settlement in the New Netherlands. One year later Fort Amsterdam was built on Manhattan Island. The next year the Dutch purchased the island from the local Indians for the equivalent of $24. By this time there were about 1500 Dutch settlers in America. By 1664, the New Netherlands' population was over 6000. Although the New Netherlands was Dutch, only about half the settlers were ethnic Dutch and Manhattan grew increasingly multicultural. The rural areas however remained overwhelmingly Dutch for two centuries. In 1664, the English seized the colony and it became New York. The beginnings of the Reformed Church in America date to 1628. By 1740, it had 65 congregations in New York and New Jersey, served by ministers trained in Europe. Schools were few but to obtain their own ministers they formed "Queens College" (now Rutgers University) in 1766. In 1771, there were 34 ministers for over 100 churches. Until 1764, in at least three Dutch churches in New York City, all sermons were in Dutch; Theodore Roosevelt reports his grandfather's church used Dutch as late as 1810. Up and down the Hudson River were Dutch settlements. A Hessian in 1777 wrote: "The inhabited parts . . . are built up with the most beautiful houses, situated on the most agreeable sites. Their furniture would satisfy the finest tastes, and is of a quality that we cannot boast of at home. At the same time, everything is so clean and shining that I can hardly describe it." The Dutch introduced their own folklore, most famously Sinterklaas ("Santa Claus") and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.

A bitter theological split in the Dutch Reform church in the 1770s affected New Jersey and New York. A dissident minority of ministers calling itself the "conferentie" set up separate churches. They were traditionalists who looked to the old country as a model and strongly opposed the recently introduced revivals and prayer meetings. Domine John Henry Goetschius, a highly influential pastor and teacher, and his mentor, Theodorus J. Frelinghuysen of New Brunswick, were the organizers of the Great Awakening, which won the support of the majority of the ministers (and people). They supported revivals, wanted to break ties with Holland, and fought the conferentie. They came to be known as the "coetus" party. When war came in 1775, most of the conferentie party, in the Hackensack valley of New Jersey at least, became Tories; the coetus party mostly Whigs. (Leiby)

The land tenure of the Hudson River region was based on vast estates controlled by patroons and worked by tenant farmers. Stephen Van Rensselaer III (1764-1839) was the largest landholder in America, with 3000 tenants on 7.7 million acres (31,000 km²) of rich farmland. In 1824 he founded Rensselaer School (now known as Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, or RPI.) Political power was in the hands of the landed aristocracy until well after the Revolution. Van Rensselaer, Abraham Van Vechten, Johan Jost Dietz, Dirck Ten Broeck, Hermanns Bleecker, James Van Schoonhoven, and others were all Federalists who collaborated with New York merchants. Rents on the large estates were often paid in products, and in other respects as well, a quasi-feudal relationship prevailed. Anti-Rent Wars and near rebellion led to the collapse of the estates, which were purchased by the tenants in the 1840s.

After 1700 there were few immigrants until the 19th century, when - mostly - farmers, forced by high taxes and low wages, started immigrating to America. They went to the Midwest, especially Michigan, Chicago and Iowa. In the 1840s came Christian Reformed immigrants fleeing religious persecution of their minority version of Calvinism. Large numbers of Catholics also immigrated; some forming communities in Wisconsin. By 1900, the number of U.S. residents born in the Netherlands exceeded 105,000. Of these, over 50,000 were in Michigan, about 22,000 in Illinois, and 10,000 in Iowa. In the next decade, all these settlements grew, thanks to the arrival of another 30,000 immigrants, and of course, the growing numbers of American-born children and grandchildren.

The Dutch villages of Michigan, Illinois and Iowa rested on a stern Calvinistic foundation, and the Christian Reformed Church remained ultraconservative. Dancing, cards, whiskey and the theater were anathema to the early settlers; religion and the Bible were their major concern. They set up their own parochial schools, which still exist. The Holland Academy in Holland, Michigan, was founded as a preparatory school for boys planning to become ministers. In the 1860s, it became Hope College; by 1920, its 900 alumni included 300 ministers. A number of other historically Dutch-American colleges were also founded. After 1917, the forces of Americanization proved irresistible, as the youth all spoke English, but relished their Edam cheese, banket, rusks, rye bread, and currant bread, washed down with cold water. Even as late as the 2000s, Dutch language could occasionally be heard and several Dutch-founded communities still held heritage events such as Tulip Festivals.

Numbers

Between 1820 and 1900, 340,000 Dutch immigrated from the Netherlands to the United States of America. In the aftermath of World War II, several tens of thousands of Dutch joined them, mainly moving to California and Washington state. In several counties in Michigan and Iowa, Dutch-Americans remain the largest ethnic group. Nowadays, most Dutch-Americans (27%) live in California, followed by New York, Michigan and Pennsylvania. The term Pennsylvania Dutch refers to German-Americans who settled in Pennsylvania in the colonial era, not to the Dutch.Probably between 4 and 8 million Americans come from Dutch origin today.

Famous Dutch-Americans

Main article: List of Dutch Americans
  • Marlon Brando (actor)
  • Walter Cronkite (CBS news commentator)
  • Richard DeVos (founder of Amway)
  • Thomas Alva Edison (scientist)
  • Frederick Frelinghuysen (U.S. statesman)
  • Pete Hoekstra (7-term U.S. Representative)
  • H. Wayne Huizenga (businessman)
  • A. J. Muste (pacifist)
  • Rebecca Romijn (actress)
  • Eleanor Roosevelt (First Lady)
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt (American president)
  • Theodore Roosevelt (American president)
  • Robert H. Schuller (televangelist)
  • Philip Schuyler (Revolutionary War general)
  • Bruce Springsteen (musician)
  • Jay Van Andel (founder of Amway)
  • Martin Van Buren (American president)
  • Gilbert Van Camp (business tycoon)
  • Cornelius Vanderbilt (business tycoon)
  • Guy Vander Jagt (13-term U.S. Representative)
  • Walt Whitman (poet)

References

  • Bratt, James H. Dutch Calvinism in Modern America: A History of a Conservative Subculture. Eerdmans, 1984.
  • Corwin, S. T. History of the Dutch Reformed Church in the United States (1895).
  • De Gerald, F. Jong The Dutch in America, 1609-1974. Twayne, 1975.
  • Doezema, Linda Pegman. Dutch Americans: A Guide to Information Sources. Gale Research, 1979.
  • Ganzevoort, Herman, and Mark Boekelman, eds. Dutch Immigration to North America. Toronto: Multicultural History Society of Ontario, 1983.
  • Kim, Sung Bok. Landlord and Tenant in Colonial New York: Manorial Society, 1664-1775 (1987)
  • Kirk, Gordon W. The Promise of American Life: Social Mobility in a Ninetenth-Century Immigrant Community, Holland, Michigan, 1847-1894. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1978.
  • Kroes, Rob. The Persistence of Ethnicity: Dutch Calvinist Pioneers in Amsterdam, Montana. University of Illinois Press, 1992.
  • Kroes, Rob, and Henk-Otto Neuschafer, eds. The Dutch in North America: Their Immigration and Cultural Continuity. Amsterdam: Free University Press, 1991.
  • Kromminga, John. The Christian Reformed Church: A Study in Orthodoxy. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Books, 1949.
  • Adrian C. Leiby; The Revolutionary War in the Hackensack Valley: The Jersey Dutch and the Neutral Ground, 1775-1783 Rutgers University Press. 1962.
  • Lucas, Henry. Netherlanders in America: Dutch Immigration to the United States and Canada, 1789-1950. University of Michigan Press, 1955.
  • Nissenson, S. G. The Patroon's Domain 1937
  • Schreuder, Yda. Dutch Catholic Immigrant Settlement in Wisconsin, 1850-1905. New York: Garland, 1989.
  • Swierenga, Robert P. The Forerunners: Dutch Jewry in the North American Diaspora. Wayne State University Press, 1994.
  • Swierenga, Robert P. ed. The Dutch in America: Immigration, Settlement, and Cultural Change. Rutgers University Press, 1985.
  • Taylor, Lawrence J. Dutchmen on the Bay: The Ethnohistory of a Contractual Community. University of Pennsylvania Press, 1983.
  • Thernstrom, Stephen, ed. Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Harvard University Press, 1980.
  • Van Jacob Hinte. Netherlanders in America: A Study of Emigration and Settlement in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries of the of America. Ed. Robert P. Swierenga . Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Book House, 1985. translation of a 1928 Dutch-language book
  • Carl Wittke, We Who Built America: The Saga of the Immigrant (1939), ch 2, 11

Primary sources

  • Herbert J. Brinks, Dutch American Voices: Letters from the United States, 1850-1930 (1995)
  • Lucas, Henry, ed. Dutch Immigrant Memoirs and Related Writings. 2 vols. Assen, The Netherlands: Van Gorcum, 1955.
Search Term: "Dutch-Americans"

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