European immigrants struggled to find housing and good-paying jobs, most settling in densely crowded, racially segregated urban neighborhoods. While some Americans worked to feed impoverished immigrants, many others relied on pseudo-scientific arguments about racial purity to argue that hunger in immigrant neighborhoods proved the new arrivals were “unfit” for citizenship. Fears that the number of immigrants threatened to overwhelm the capacity of the U.S. to feed its citizens resulted in the 1924 National Origins Act, which imposed strict quotas that sharply curtailed immigration from Europe and effectively banned immigration from Asia.
“Street Arabs in Sleeping Quarters,” Jacob A. Riis Museum of the City of New York.
Museum Map
WISHING
TREE
The Proof is in Our History
- 1.Welcome
- 2.Museum Lobby
- 3.The Age of Mass Migration - Landing
- 4.The Age of Mass Migration - Main
- 5.Immigration from Europe – for tours
- 6.Jane Addams and Hull House
- 7.On the Breadline
- 8.Beginnings
- 9.Farm Family Portraits
- 10.An Unequal Recovery
- 11.How did the Food Stamp Program work?
- 12.Hunger, Justice, and Civil Rights - Landing
- 13.Hunger, Justice, and Civil Rights - Main
- 14.Walk for Decent Welfare (Columbus, OH)
- 15.Televising the War on Hunger - Landing
- 16.Televising the War on Hunger - Main
- 17.CBS’s “Hunger in America”
- 18.President Lyndon B. Johnson
- 19.Senator George McGovern and Senator Robert Dole
- 20.Dr. Jean Mayer and the White House Conference
- 21.1975-1996: The Unmaking of the Great Society
- 22.Government Cheese
- 23.The Welfare Queen
- 24.The Return of the Welfare Queen
- 25.Crises of New Proportions - Landing
- 26.Crises of New Proportions - Main
- 27.COVID-19
- 28.COVID-19 – 2nd photo for tours
- 29.Wishing Tree
- 30.End tour
MAZON: A Jewish Response to Hunger