The Age of Mass Migration

We start with a spoiler: in the 1960s and 70s, the US nearly solved hunger, reducing it to 3% of the population. Our tour today looks at the major turning points in our history to understand how we did that. We’re also going to look at why we dismantled that system, and where we are today.

We’ll set a little context here in our first exhibit, The Age of Mass Migration.

 

In the late 1800s and early 20th century, some 24 million migrants traveled to and through the United States. 70% of these shifting populations settled in segregated, poor, working class enclaves in major industrializing cities.

You can roll over the hotspots on this map if you’d like a quick view of who was moving where.

The Age of Mass Migration map

The Age of Mass Migration

Indigenous dispossession
and displacement

Jane, Elizabeth. “The Trail of Tears.” 1938. Oklahoma Historical Society.

The Indian Removal Act of 1830 authorized the president to negotiate (and/or coerce) treaties that forcibly transferred Cherokee, Muskogee (Creek), Seminole, Chickasaw, and Choctaw nations to territories west of the Mississippi River, known as reservations. Resistance efforts failed, resulting in the “Trail of Tears” in 1838, during which thousands of Cherokees died. Many other tribes faced similar displacements and loss of life. 

In 1887, the Dawes General Allotment Act upended centuries-old Indigenous systems of communal land stewardship by opening 100 million acres of “surplus” lands to private sale. These policies disrupted Indigenous communities’ relationship to traditional food sources, replacing fishing, hunting, and gathering with distributions of food rations that forced reliance on government-provided food.

The Age of Mass Migration

In the nineteenth century, a variety of global developments converged, sending millions of people on the move. The Industrial Revolution transformed economies across the world. That industrialization unleashed widespread social and political unrest and upheaval. Around the world, centuries-old dynasties faced revolution and sustained movements for emancipation and democratic reform. At the same time, European empires expanded their colonial realms, incorporating more territories into systems of extraction, plunder, and subjugation. 

Many of those displaced by this widespread instability left their homes, ushering in a period of mass migration, during which about 24 million people migrated to the United States. This fundamentally reshaped how Americans understood hunger and poverty. Poverty became more widespread and more visible than ever before. Hungry migrants, particularly children, became symbols of the inequalities of the age and catalysts of debates about how (or whether) to address those inequalities.



The Age of Mass Migration

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