The Finns
For the people of Finland,
mass emigration to the United States did not begin until very
late in the 19th century, and the number of Finnish
immigrants does not compare with those of Sweden, Denmark, and
Norway. Emigration had a tremendous effect on the Finnish homeland,
however, which in a few decades lost roughly ten percent of
its population.
Early Finnish immigration to North America
is very difficult to track, as the land that is now independent
Finland was claimed by several competing countries over much
of its history. Although it seems certain that Finnish explorers
and colonists joined the Dutch and Scandinavian expeditions
to eastern shores of the New World, they were often classified
on ship's rosters as citizens of Sweden or Russia. It is known,
however, that Finns were among the first Europeans to settle
in Alaska, during the early 19th century, and even
served as the territory's governors.
By the middle of the 19th century,
Finns had begun arriving in the U.S. in significant numbers,
many fleeing the increasingly anti-Finnish policies of the Russian
government. Recruiters for U.S. companies and governments traveled
to Finland to encourage emigration, as did some of the successful
earlier emigrants. As a result of these recruiting efforts,
many early Finnish immigrants were guided to very specific locations
in the U.S., and small Finnish communities sprang up in locales
as far-flung as Calumet, Michigan; Gloucester, Massachusetts;
and Montgomery, Alabama.
At the turn of the 20th century,
Finnish immigration exploded. The decades of struggle for Finnish
independence from Russia were at a boiling point, and Finns
fled the instability in their homeland at a breathtaking rate.
Between 1890 and 1914, more than 200,000 Finns arrived, two-thirds
of total Finnish immigration to that point, and more than 30,000
followed before immigration was curtailed in 1924.
The new Finnish immigrants poured into the
farms and lumber mills of the Great Lakes states, the mines
of the western mountains, the factories of New York City, and,
later, into the auto plants of Detroit. In 1900 the Finnish
population of Detroit was 15; in 1938 it was 15,000. Michigan
became, and remains, the heart of Finnish America, and is the
home of the only Finnish institution of higher education in
the U.S., Suomi College in Hancock.
Finns faced greater challenges than many of
the Scandinavian immigrants that preceded them. The Finnish
language is radically different from all other European languages,
and Finnish-speaking immigrants had greater difficulty learning
English than those who spoke Swedish or Norwegian. As a result,
many Finnish immigrants were relegated to low-paying unskilled
jobs that did not require English-language skills, such as factory
work and manual labor. At the same time, the decades of high
Finnish immigration coincided with a period of increased public
hostility towards immigrants, and Finns were often subjected
to discrimination in housing and jobs, as well as public insults
and physical attacks.
Despite these challenges, the Finnish communities
of the U.S. grew and thrived, and continued to do so. In the
2000 census, 623,000 people identified themselves as Finnish
Americans.
To hear the Finnish language spoken and sung,
search the collection California
Gold: Northern California Folk Music from the Thirties.
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