How the 1924 Immigration Act Helped Build the Black Middle Class
Once the law took effect, Black Americans' standard of living improved almost immediately. By 1929, civil rights activist
"The so-called Great Wave of immigration allowed employers to discriminate against freed slaves and their descendants and hire white European immigrants instead," said
Contemporary Black activists and union leaders overwhelmingly supported the 1924 Immigration Act. "This country is suffering from immigrant indigestion," wrote Black union organizer
"The 1924 Immigration Act wasn't perfect -- far from it," admitted Barnes. "It imposed discriminatory national origins quotas that favored northern Europeans at the expense of Asians, Africans, and southern and eastern Europeans. But the law got immigration levels right -- and resulted in decades of upward mobility for Black Americans. Congress today can learn something from that history."
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SOURCE NumbersUSA
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