Image of an Italian lady
Image of an African lady
Image of a German man
picture of an Irish man
Image of an Scandinavian lady
Image of a Japanese boy
Image of a Mexican woman
Image of a Chinese boy
Image of a Cuban man
Image of a Polish man
Picture of globe - clicking produces a Flash animated map showing the pattern of Italian immigration
Picture of clock - click to view global immigration timeline
Immigration Italian
Image of US map - piece 1 Home Immigration Introduction Vocabulary Potluck Interviews Resources Conclusion
Image of US map - piece 2

A Century in the Spotlight

Italian-American children, New York City.
Italian-American children, New York City.

As the 20th century moved forward, Italian immigrants moved steadily into the main currents of U.S. society. By the 1920s and 30s, the immigrant generation had begun to see their children grow up as Americans—a process that many immigrants viewed with some ambivalence. The U.S. public school system provided immigrant children with a new language, a new set of patriotic symbols, a school yard immersion in U.S. popular culture, and sometimes even a new Anglicized name. At the same time, though, this process often created a cultural gap between the second, Americanized, generation and their parents, who would always belong, at least in part, to the old country.

Campaign card for a Dyers’ Union election, 1933.
Campaign card for a Dyers’ Union election, 1933.

Over time, Italian Americans achieved advances in the U.S. workforce. The major labor unions soon opened their doors to immigrant workers, and Italians were able to continue their activism on a much larger scale. As they gained more experience, Italian Americans were able to move into a wider range of careers, and became business owners and managers in greater numbers. Works by Italian-American authors began appearing in bookstores, and the Neapolitan tenor Enrico Caruso became a best-selling artist among Italians and non-Italians alike. With prosperity came greater political clout, and candidates began currying favor with Italian-American associations as elections drew near.

“Rosie”, by Norman Rockwell.
“Rosie”, by Norman Rockwell.

The coming of World War II saw Italian Americans step permanently into the center of U.S. cultural life. Nearly one million Italian Americans served in the armed forces, about 5 percent of the Italian-American population, and millions more worked in war industries. As with many other immigrant groups, national service brought Italian Americans even greater social mobility, more access to education, and a higher profile in the nation’s popular imagination. According to one account, an Italian-American aircraft worker, Rose Bonavita, became the inspiration for a 20th-century icon, Rosie the Riveter.

Italian American police officer in Italian American grocery store, New York, 1943.
Italian American police officer in Italian American grocery store, New York, 1943.

From the 1940s on, the children of Italian immigrants could be found in all regions of the U.S., in almost every career and nearly every walk of life. This was especially true in New York City, where Italian American culture soon became a major component of the city’s personality. For many Americans, the city’s longtime mayor, Fiorello LaGuardia, served as an energetic and erudite ambassador both for his city and for his national heritage. For a comprehensive collection of photographs of Italian Americans in the war years, and particularly in New York City, visit the collection America from the Great Depression to World War II and search for “Italian American.”


Enrico Fermi, 1947.
Enrico Fermi, 1947.
With the explosion of mass media after the war, Italian Americans became ubiquitous. Every aspect of show business, politics, science, and art seemed to have a prominent Italian American in its vanguard. Marlon Brando became the face of a new school of naturalistic acting. Rocky Marciano revolutionized the sport of boxing. Diane Di Prima pioneered the rough poetry and prose of the Beat movement. Enrico Fermi continued his Nobel Prize-winning work on the mysteries of the atom, becoming arguably the greatest physicist alive.
Frank Sinatra.
Frank Sinatra.
Joe DiMaggio, the son of a San Francisco fisherman, led the New York Yankees to nine World Series championships. The crooners Perry Como and Dean Martin ruled the airwaves, and Hoboken, New Jersey’s Frank Sinatra was, for a time, the most popular entertainer in the United States.

Girls in a Columbus Day parade, San Francisco.
Girls in a Columbus Day parade, San Francisco.

Today, Italian Americans are represented throughout U.S. society, from the Supreme Court to the National Academy of Sciences to the National Basketball Association. More than one hundred years after the great era of Italian immigration began, the children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren of the original immigrants continue to celebrate the heritage that their forebears brought to their new home.




Previous Page
Introduction | Early Arrivals | The Great Arrival | L’Isola dell Lagrime
A City of Villages | Tenements and Toil | Working Across the Country
Under Attack
| A Century in the Spotlight
 
2005
2000
1995
1990
1985
1980
1975
1970
1965
1960
1955
1950
1945
1940
1935
1930
1925
1920
1915
1910
1905
1900
1895
1890
1885
1880
1875
1870
1865
1860
1855
1850
1845
1840
1835
1830
1825
1820
1815
1810
1805
1800
1795
1790
1785
1780
1775
1770

  last updated 06/02/04 view basic version
  The Library of Congress | American Memory | The Learning Page Contact us    
Irish
1790 The federal government requires two years of residency for naturalization
1864 Congress legalizes the importation of contract laborers
1819 Congress establishes reporting on immigration
1880   Italy’ troubled economy, crop failures, and political climate begin start of mass immigration; nearly four million Italian immigrants arrive in the United States.
1885   Congress bans the admission of contract laborers.
1929   Congress makes annual immigration quotas permanent.
1948   The United States admits persons fleeing persecution in their native lands; allowing 205,000 refugees to enter within two years
1952 Immigration and Nationality Act: individuals of all races eligible for naturalization; reaffirms national origins quota system, limits immigration from Eastern Hemisphere; establishes preferences for skilled workers and relatives of U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens; and tightens security and screening standards and procedures
1953 Congress amends 1948 refugee policy to allow for the admission of 200,000 more refugees
1980   The Refugee Act redefines criteria and procedures for admitting refugees
1986   Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) legalizes illegal aliens residing in the U.S. unlawfully since 1982.
Native American