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November 1905
Immigration and the South
by Robert DeCourcy Ward
The North finds itself greatly burdened with the many problems which have grown
out of, or have at least been greatly aggravated by, the enormous and very
indiscriminate immigration of the past few years, and is rapidly becoming
convinced of the impossibility, even with unlimited resources of men and money,
of properly assimilating this alien population so long as it is crowded into
the slums, and so long as the stream of new immigrants continues to pour in
with increasing volume. It is clear that the only remedies for existing
conditions are, first, a considerable restriction of immigration, and second,
the distribution of the present slum populations, as well as of the arriving
aliens, through the agricultural districts. The second of these remedies alone
is wholly inadequate, for to attempt to relieve the pressure in the crowded
cities by dispersing their inhabitants, without at the same time further
limiting the numbers of newcomers who pour in, is like trying to keep a boat
bailed out without stopping the leak. Distribution alone simply opens the way
for a still larger immigration; the overflowing populations of Europe can send
ten new immigrants to fill every opening that may thus be created.
While the North is thus preparing to unload some of its alien burdens upon
other parts of the country, and in this effort is naturally receiving every
possible assistance from the railroad companies, who see in this
distribution-scheme a large source of revenue to themselves, the South is
developing a new-born zeal for immigration. From many parts of the South there
comes a demand for laborers in the cotton fields and on the sugar plantations;
in mines, mills, and factories; on the farms and in the cities. Newspapers in
the North as well as in the South repeat the call, "more labor needed in the
South."
It is not difficult to perceive some of the reasons for this new enthusiasm on
the part of the South for the immigration which has thus far gone practically
altogether in the Northern states.
(1) The rapid growth of manufacturing interests has resulted in a demand for
thousands of workmen in mill and factory, which the native population has not
been able to meet.
(2) The old methods of working the land, such as "cropping" and renting, which
were adopted partly because of the antipathy of the negro to continuous daily
work under the wage system, and partly because of the necessities of the
planters, have impoverished the land and do not give the best return from it.
Diversified or intensive farming will greatly improve existing conditions, and
is developing rapidly. It will supply farm products for the growing needs of
the manufacturing community and of the plantation, as well as for the Northern
markets. It will preserve the fertility of the soil, and reduce the labor cost
of the crop. For this diversified farming the negro is by many considered
unfitted, while the northern European immigrant, with his skill in this
direction, can find good openings throughout the South.
(3) The South has thus far had on the whole an encouraging though somewhat
limited experience with aliens of several different nationalities, and
therefore naturally favors a larger immigration. In the matter of alien
immigration the South has hitherto experienced the benefits of very gentle,
scattered, and refreshing showers, without any of the serious consequences of
the alien cloudburst which has overwhelmed many northern communities. Small
Italian colonies, more or less successful in their outcome, have been
established at various points, as at Daphne and at Lambeth, Alabama, at
Tonitown, Arkansas, and elsewhere. In Texas, Italians have succeeded in cotton
and rice culture, in vine-growing and truck-farming. In Louisiana and in
Mississippi large number of them have proved valuable help on sugar and cotton
plantations and in truck-farming. In South Carolina a new Italian colony is to
undertake grape and silk culture.
The Italian seems to be well fitted to do much of the work which needs doing in
the South, and in many parts of the southern country where Italians have
settled they are praised as industrious, thrifty, frugal, good citizens, and as
having increased land values. On some railroads, also, they are reported as
being satisfactory laborers. On the other hand, it must be noted that the most
successful settlements have been those of northern Italians; that the greater
desirability of the northern Italian is recognized wherever experience has been
had with both northern and southern Italians, and that thus far the number of
Italians in the South has been small, and practically none of the less happy
consequences of their congestion have been noted. There are also many employers
who have found Italians unsatisfactory; have considered them no improvement
upon the negro, and regard them as an undesirable element in the community.
Numerous colonies of Germans and of many other nationalities have likewise
succeeded well; but thus far the foreign elements have been unimportant, except
locally, and data are not yet at hand for any exhaustive study of their effects
upon the development of the South.
(4) The southern railroads are another and an important factor in creating a
demand for more immigration. The inadequacy of the labor supply has stimulated
concerted movements on the part of mill-owners, planters, and other large
employers in many Southern states to attract immigration, and in these
movements the railroads are plying a very aggressive part, albeit their
influence is not always apparent on the surface. Efforts are everywhere being
made by the railroads to plant colonies of immigrants throughout the South.
This movement has already gained great headway. in some cases the new arrivals
are brought directly from Ellis Island; in some they are taken from one of the
large Northern cities; in most, from the farming districts of the West and
Northwest. The importation of Italian laborers into the Delta region has been
especially heavy, although it is stated that about sixty per cent of these have
already gone to the towns. Among other recent importations there have been
Germans, Swedes, Hungarians, Danes, Poles, French Canadians, and Mexicans. So
active are the railroads in this matter that it is often impossible to tell how
much of the "demand for more labor" is a bona fide one, and how much is
circulated by the railroads for their own ends. In order to increase the
immigration of Italians into the South, the Southern railroads recently
provided the Italian Ambassador with an extended tour through the South, from
which journey that gentleman returned full of enthusiasm for the courtesies
which were showered upon him, and determined to do all in his power to
encourage the immigration of his countrymen into the Southern states. At a
recent conference on immigration held in one of the Southern cities, the
influence of the railroads was so strong that a paper urging some reasonable
restriction of immigration was not allowed a public reading, and was not given
to the press. That a wholesale distribution of immigrants by transportation
companies is not so likely to be controlled by a desire to do what is best for
the community as by purely selfish interests, is a fact which has not escaped
the attention of observant persons in the South, some of whom have not been
afraid to express their views very plainly on the subject.
(5) Probably the most important factor in the Southern immigration situation is
the negro himself. There is in the South to-day a widespread and decided
reaction against the negro. Many of the white population are losing patience
with him. He is charged with being less efficient than before the war; with
incapacity, irresponsibility, and instability; with unfitness for and
dissatisfaction with his work; with demanding too much pay and requiring too
many holidays. Most of these complaints, it may be noted, are similar to those
which are heard in the North with regard to white laborers and servants.
Furthermore, many negroes, in common with the whites, are leaving the country
and flocking to the cities, often making it impossible to secure negro labor
for cotton picking or for work on the sugar plantations. Now, while the North
has no special interest in the difficulty which some sugar-grower in Louisiana
or some cotton-planter in Mississippi experiences in securing labor, it is
vitally interested in the effect which foreign immigration into the South is
having on the negro. It is perfectly clear that alien white immigrants are
displacing the negro. He is going to the Southern cities, and in increasing
numbers to the Northern cities. Italians are proving their ability and
willingness to do work at least equal to that of the negro in the cotton
fields. They have begun to displace the negro on the sugar plantations and
truck farms of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas. Mexicans are found cheaper
and more easily obtainable than negroes in parts of Mississippi. Hungarians,
Slavs, and Italians are being imported form New York into the Birmingham
district of Alabama to work in the furnaces and mines instead of the negroes.
Italians, Mexicans, and Bohemians are replacing negroes in Texas, in
Mississippi, in Georgia. On plantation and truck farms; in furnaces and mines;
in factories and mills; in the occupations of city and country; even in
domestic service, the black is steadily losing ground to the alien white. The
result is twofold: there is a tendency for the negro to leave the occupations
which require greater skill and intelligence, and to take refuge in those which
require less, or the negro gives up the struggle and goes to the city,
especially in the North. It is the latter tendency which must attract the
attention of thinking men and women in the North, who, already familiar with
the conditions of negro life in the cities, cannot fail to view with anxiety
the inevitable congestion of these Southern negroes in the slums of Northern
cities. Into one city of 100,000 inhabitants in Massachusetts there came during
the past winter 750 negroes from the South. This immigration has only just
begun; it will gain greater and greater headway as more aliens pour into the
South. What the result will be for the negro, time alone can tell, but those
who have the welfare of the negro at the heart may well ask themselves whether
the indiscriminate admission of hundreds of thousands of aliens will not
inevitably force the majority of the colored race down. This matter concerns
more persons that a few mine owners in Alabama, or a few cotton planters in
Mississippi or Louisiana. It is a national question.
The Southern negro is now engaged in a life and death struggle. A Southern
editor writes: "The negro must now fight for his very existence. All along the
line the battle is on."..."The white races...are disputing the negro's
usefulness in those strongholds heretofore deemed impregnable to white attack."
It cannot be denied that there is a distinct feeling of satisfaction in the
South that the North is soon to have its share of the negro burden brought to
its own doors, and a hope that actual contact with the negro will modify some
of the sentimental ideas which have not altogether commended themselves to many
Southerners. There is also the feeling that the best thing that could happen to
the South, as well as to the colored race, would be the dispersion of the negro
by the incoming of alien whites. A Baltimore paper has recently congratulated
the South on the fact that the coming of large numbers of white immigrants will
supplant the negro, driving him North; will relieve the negro question of its
sectional aspect; and may check the negro's rate of advance. Such statements
represent some of the best Southern opinion. In spite of his shortcomings, the
larger, although the least aggressive, portion of the Southern population
prefers the negro to the alien white as tenant, laborer, or domestic servant.
This class is represented in the following communication from West Virginia:
"We wish peaceful, law-abiding citizens for the South, not with the idea of
superseding negro labor, which must remain the best labor for the South. What
we most need is to improve that labor by fair and proper education." Or again,
in an Alabama letter, as follows: "The door of opportunity is open to the negro
as long as he will enter and occupy it, but when he abandons it, and then finds
an alien foe coming in and taking his place, his mouth will be closed against
making complaint....This is a critical time for the negroes of the South, and
we feel deeply for them."
In the South, as in the North, there is the capitalist, mill owner, or railroad
manager who wants "cheap labor;" who cares not whether the community or the
immigrant himself is benefited so long as dividends are increased. It is a
matter of indifference to such a man whether the labor of wife and child is
necessary in order to eke out the low wages of the husband and father, nor does
he concern himself about the increasing burdens of hospitals and almshouses
which inevitably result from the breaking down in health of the overworked men,
women, and children of the "cheap labor" class. Upon this class of employers
there is no use in urging that American character is of more importance to
preserve and develop than American wealth, and that only such immigration is
desirable as adds to the moral and intellectual welfare of the country, as well
as to its material wealth. The propaganda for the wholesale importation of
ignorant aliens into the South as a means of satisfying the present perfectly
natural demand for more labor comes from this comparatively limited number of
capitalists, and from the Southern railroads. That plans for importing
thousands of "cheap laborers" are being carried out, is clear. It remains for
the rest of the South to say how much farther these schemes shall be allowed to
go. There is also an increasing demand for Chinese and Japanese laborers in the
South, because many employers think that they would be more docile and more
servile than either the negro or the European.
In the South, as in the North, there is a class of persons who are ignorant of
the conditions which have resulted from the wholesale immigration of aliens of
low standards of living and of morals, and who therefore have no opinion
regarding desirable or undesirable immigration.
Thirdly in by far the largest class of all, are found the great majority of the
intelligent and patriotic citizens of the South, who say: The South does not
want the "derelicts" and the "chronic discontents" of Europe. It does not wish
to burden itself with vast expenditures for the support of pauper, criminal,
diseased, insane, and physically defective aliens. It knows of the sweat-shops
and gorged tenements of the alien colonies in the North, and would have none of
them. It realizes that a great many of our present immigrants are too poor, too
ignorant, too weak and too sickly to be fitted for a successful agricultural
life. It is opposed to the incoming of persons of such poor physique that they
cannot support themselves by a good day's work. The influential citizens who
hold such views as these are making themselves felt in the South. They are
forcing their convictions upon the railroads. At the recent Immigration
Conference at Birmingham, Alabama (June 13), they carried a resolution calling
for the exclusion of the criminal, the pauper, and the illiterate alien. They
believe that the South should think twice before it allows its capitalists and
its railroads to flood the country with "cheap" and ignorant alien laborers.
They are convinced that while such an importation might give a temporary relief
where labor is now scarce, it would bring in its wake, in the future, many vast
and complex problems which the South has not yet had to face. It would soon add
another race problem.
What the South most wants to-day is not the newly arrived, ignorant, and
penniless alien, but the settler with means of purchase, preferably one who has
already resided in the United States for some years and who is familiar with
American customs, or else the immigrant with money, coming from northern
Europe, skilled in intensive and diversified farming, and who can depend on his
own exertions, manage his own business, market his own products, and save
money. As the large plantations are cut up into small farms, thrifty tenants,
not ignorant and pauper laborers are needed. The newer farms throughout the
South have been purchased very largely by farmers form the West and Northwest,
either native Americans who have sold their old farms to recent immigrants, or
foreigners who have lived in the country for a good many years--"predigested"
immigrants, as one correspondent called them. Thousands of immigrants of these
most desirable classes have recently been brought into the South from the
Western and Northwestern states, and from northern Europe, showing in a most
striking manner how easy a matter it is to secure desirable immigrants if the
effort is made. Intelligent, industrious, strong, thrifty, skilled, independent
farmers, with some money, are the classes most desired, and can look forward to
the greatest success. With the exception of the demand made by certain large
employers, already referred to, there is a distinct feeling that hordes of poor
and ignorant laborers are not desirable, and many Southern editors have
emphatically stated that the South would forego all the benefits to be gained
form first-class foreign immigration rather than have thousands o aliens who
are purely of the laboring class sent there.
As Italians constitute so large a proportion of the present alien immigration
to the South it is worth while to note what Baron Gustavo Tosti, Italian Consul
at Boston, has to say regarding his own countrymen:--
"There is a misleading idea in certain quarters that 'the agricultural
distribution of Italian immigrants' should be obtained simply through the
employment of a large number of Italians as farm workers and farm hands. This
would be only a palliative measure. The character of agricultural work is, by
its very nature, precarious. The Italian immigrants would thus find employment
during a few months of the year, when for instance at harvest time, there is an
enormous demand for labor....But after a comparatively short period of
occupation they would lapse into enforced idleness which would undoubtedly
drive them back to the industrial centres. The only way to get at the root of
the question is to transform a large portion of our immigrants into land-owners
or farmers." It must be remembered that to transform ignorant laborers, with
but a few dollars in their possession, into landowners, is not a matter of a
day or a year. It involves an expenditure of time and money. It is a matter of
the assimilation of the immigrant and of the elevation of his standard of
living. Thus neither the interests of those states which desire immigrants who
shall at once buy their land, nor the best interests of the Italian immigrants
themselves, as set forth by Baron Tosti, are met in a wholesale distribution of
ignorant farm laborers. Further, while about 80 per cent of our Italian
arrivals were farm laborers in Italy, they are unfamiliar with country life as
we know it, for although they worked in the fields by day, their actual
residence was in the crowded towns. Their natural tendency is city-ward.
There are at present before the writer the results of a somewhat extended
private correspondence, undertaken within a few weeks, in order to ascertain
the views of representative Southerners regarding the immigration problem as it
affects the South. Letters of inquiry were sent to the Governors of all the
Southern states; to Commissioners of Agriculture, Labor, and Immigration; to
other public officials, and to prominent citizens, asking for an explicit
statement regarding the particular nationalities and the classes of immigrants
most desired in the South, as well as the views of the person address
concerning any desired changes in the United States immigration laws as a
whole. The results of this inquiry, which have not before been made public,
show an extraordinary unanimity of sentiment. Taking the replies of public
officials alone, which represent every Southern state, 100 per cent prefer
native Americans and northern Europeans who are skilled workmen with money, and
who come with their families, intending permanent settlement. Between 90 per
cent and 100 per cent of the Southern state officials protest against the
immigration of Asiatics, of illiterates, and of aliens who desire to settle in
cities; 84 per cent do not wish any immigrants from southern and eastern
Europe, and 88 per cent are opposed to receiving aliens distributed from
northern cities. As to further amendments to the general immigration laws of
the United States, the southern officials who have been heard from, in every
case but one, want the exclusion of aliens of poor physique; 92 per cent favor
a head-tax of $25 or more; nearly 90 per cent with to have "assisted"
immigrants debarred, and between 90 per cent and 100 per cent want no
illiterates. The Governor of one state in the heart of the industrial South,
who reports his state as being in great need of labor, favors the exclusion of
aliens of poor physique, and a head-tax of $25.
He writes as follows:--
"While we are inviting such people as we can use in our industrial districts
and farms, I, as Governor of the State, am particularly anxious to avoid a too
great influx of people whom it will be impossible to assimilate. We prefer very
greatly the northern Europeans, but could use handsomely to their profit and to
the profit of our people, some from northern Italy, say those raised on farms
and desirous of a similar life here....I am certain that we do not want and we
should insist that we do not get, people from the southern parts of Italy and
the southern and eastern parts of Europe."
A correspondent in Alabama writes: "The craze for more labor is overreaching
the bounds of prudence and the good of the country."
The Commissioner of Agriculture of one state says: "Our people will forego
whatever advantage might come from immigration of the better class, if this is
to be coupled with that of the slums of the cities."
The Secretary of the Board of Agriculture of another state writes: "We have far
too many illiterate natives, many of them of course of the colored race, in
this state already." And so on, in letter after letter. The replies of persons
other than state officials, included in this correspondence, agree entirely
with the results above given, and it may be noted that two previous official
canvasses of the South, one made in 1896 by the Immigration Investigating
Commission and the other made in 1901-02, by the Industrial Commission, as well
as another private canvass made two years ago, led to precisely the same
conclusions. Finally, within a very few weeks, a canvass made by Manufacturers'
Record of Baltimore, among the large employers of all kinds of skilled and
partly skilled labor, other than agricultural, throughout the South, showed
very strong preferences for native and north-European workmen, and on the whole
a dissatisfaction with Italians where these have been tried.
The best interests of the South, future as well as present; the best interest
of the immigrants themselves; the best interests of the American negro; the
best judgment of representative Southern officials and of unprejudiced private
citizens,--all give the same answer to the question, What kind of immigrants
does the South want? It is clear that the south can have the best, and none but
the best, if it insists on having them. Recent experience with the incoming
settlers from the Northwestern states and from northern Europe has shown this.
It is clear, from Northern experience, that immigration of the less desirable
classes crowds out the more desirable. It is clear that the great advantages
which the South should gain in the future from the incoming of honest,
industrious, intelligent, thrifty and physically fit aliens can only be secured
by making a careful selection of these immigrants, and by preventing the
inflowing stream from becoming a vast and destructive flood. Where unskilled
labor is needed, it should be sparingly introduced, under careful supervision
by the State.
The South may well take to heart the lesson which the North has been learning
regarding undesirable immigration. The North would be glad to have many of its
city slums emptied into the South, and would rejoice, selfishly, if the South
would take it full share of the incoming tide of aliens who are illiterate, who
could not pay their own passages, and who are of such poor physique that they
are unfitted to support themselves by a good day's work.
"Immigration and the South" by Robert DeCourcy Ward,
The Atlantic Monthly; November 1905; Volume 96, No.
5;
pages 611-617.
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