NJ -- Ellis Island Natl Monument -- Exhibit: Ellis Island Chronicles:
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ELLCHR_160914_002.JPG: Ellis Island Chronicles
ELLCHR_160914_005.JPG: A Harbor Fortress
ELLCHR_160914_017.JPG: Ellis Island Chronicles
ELLCHR_160914_019.JPG: 1854
ELLCHR_160914_024.JPG: Mr. Ellis' Island
ELLCHR_160914_028.JPG: Naming an Island
ELLCHR_160914_030.JPG: Beneath the Surface
ELLCHR_160914_037.JPG: 1897
ELLCHR_160914_041.JPG: Welcoming the Immigrant
ELLCHR_160914_049.JPG: 1903
ELLCHR_160914_055.JPG: Fire and Reconstruction
ELLCHR_160914_058.JPG: 1897. Ellis Island in ruins.
ELLCHR_160914_061.JPG: 1899
ELLCHR_160914_063.JPG: 1899. Front elevation of main building towers. Capped by four fanciful towers, Ellis Island was praised by one local newspaper as "an imposing as well as pleasing addition to the picturesque waterfront of the metropolis."
ELLCHR_160914_070.JPG: Boring & Tilton
ELLCHR_160914_087.JPG: Brick and Stone
ELLCHR_160914_088.JPG: July 21, 1899
ELLCHR_160914_091.JPG: April 2, 1900
ELLCHR_160914_095.JPG: June 30, 1900
ELLCHR_160914_096.JPG: April 20, 1899. Eight months after construction began, masons began building the granite and brick walls.
ELLCHR_160914_101.JPG: The Hospital
ELLCHR_160914_103.JPG: June 30, 1900
ELLCHR_160914_106.JPG: June 30, 1901
ELLCHR_160914_108.JPG: 1907. Addition to Ellis Island hospital. While the original hospital had space for 125 beds, the number of immigrants needing care sometimes exceeded 500. Extra patients had to be ferried across the bay to city hospitals. This new wing added more space for beds, but not enough for the growing number of immigrant patients.
ELLCHR_160914_111.JPG: 1910. The completed hospital on Island No. 2. Within nine years, the original hospital was extended twice. Offices for US Public Health Service administration and staff were eventually located in the center building, while hospital wards and services were housed in the adjacent wings.
ELLCHR_160914_122.JPG: Ellis Island's Tinderbox
ELLCHR_160914_129.JPG: Out of the Ruins
ELLCHR_160914_134.JPG: 1902. President Theodore Roosevelt vowed to clean up Ellis Island. His new commissioner of immigration, William Williams, won high praise from the press for disciplining the island's officers, some of whom had been accused of extorting bribes from immigrants.
ELLCHR_160914_137.JPG: A Clean Sweep
ELLCHR_160914_145.JPG: September 16, 1903. President Roosevelt landing at Ellis Island. When newspapers charged that immigrants were being treated harshly on Ellis Island, Williams asked the president to come see for himself. During this visit, Roosevelt called the island's management "admirable."
ELLCHR_160914_150.JPG: New Restrictions
ELLCHR_160914_153.JPG: A Man with a Heart
ELLCHR_160914_159.JPG: ca 1907. Fiorello H. LaGuardia stands in the back row (see arrow) in this group photo of Ellis Island interpreters. In 1910, LaGuardia left the immigration service for politics, and was elected to Congress in 1916. Later, as New York City's mayor (1933-45), the "Little Flower" won national renown for fighting corruption and fostering social reforms.
ELLCHR_160914_172.JPG: 1923
ELLCHR_160914_174.JPG: Years of Reform
ELLCHR_160914_179.JPG: Wartime Occupation
ELLCHR_160914_188.JPG: 1919. Alleged Bolsheviks being rounded up for transfer to Ellis Island. The Red Scare saw hundreds of aliens targeted for deportation.
ELLCHR_160914_191.JPG: The Red Scare
ELLCHR_160914_197.JPG: The Postwar Rush
ELLCHR_160914_207.JPG: The Quota Laws
ELLCHR_160914_211.JPG: 1924. As this article explains, the National Origins Act of 1924 further cut immigration by limiting admissions from any one nation to 2% of its figure in the 1890 US Census. The bill's sponsor felt no need to conceal the law's discriminatory intent -- to severely limit "less desirable" immigration from Italy, Greece, Poland, Russia, and other southern and eastern European countries. In addition, the law barred virtually all immigration from Asia.
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Wikipedia Description: Ellis Island
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ellis Island, at the mouth of the New York Harbor, was at one time the main entry facility for immigrants entering the United States from January 1, 1892 until November 12, 1954. It is wholly in the possession of the Federal government as a part of Statue of Liberty National Monument and is under the jurisdiction of the US National Park Service. It is situated in New York City and Jersey City, New Jersey.
Ellis Island was the subject of a border dispute between New York State and New Jersey (see below). According to the United States Census Bureau, the island, which was largely artificially created through the landfill process, has an official land area of 129,619 square meters, or 32 acres, more than 83 percent of which lies in the city of Jersey City. The natural portion of the island, lying in New York City, is 21,458 square meters (5.3 acres), and is completely surrounded by the artificially created portion. For New York State tax purposes it is assessed as Manhattan Block 1, Lot 201. Since 1998, it also has a tax number assigned by the state of New Jersey.
History:
See also: Immigration to the United States
Ellis Island acquired its name from Samuel Ellis, a colonial New Yorker, possibly from Wales.
TO BE SOLD
By Samuel Ellis, no. 1, Greenwich Street, at the north river near the Jewish Market, That pleasant situated Island called Oyster Island, lying in New Bay, near Powle’s Hook, together with all its improvements which are considerable; also, two lots of ground, one at the lower end of Queen street, joining Luke’s wharf, the other in Greenwich street, between Petition and Dey streets, and a parcel of spars for masts, yards, brooms, bowsprits, & c. and a parcel of timber fit for pumps and buildings of docks; and a few barrels of excellent shad and herrings, and others of an inferior quality fit for shipping; and a few thousand of red herring of his own curing, that he will warra ...More...
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2016 photos: Equipment this year: I continued to use my Fuji XS-1 cameras but, depending on the event, I also used a Nikon D7000.
Seven relatively short trips this year:
two Civil War Trust conference (Gettysburg, PA and West Point, NY, with a side-trip to New York City),
my 11th consecutive San Diego Comic-Con trip (including sites in Utah, Nevada, and California),
a quick trip to Michigan for Uncle Wayne's funeral,
two additional trips to New York City, and
a Civil Rights site trip to Alabama during the November elections. Being in places where people died to preserve the rights of minority voters made the Trumputin election even more depressing.
Number of photos taken this year: just over 610,000.
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