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Volume 20 • Number 3

Spring 2001



 


Poor Women, Proximate Border: Migrants from Ontario to Detroit in the Late Nineteenth Century

NORA FAIRES


IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY, thousands of immigrants arrived in Detroit from Canada by catching a ferry across the Saint Clair or Detroit rivers or a steamer across Lake Erie or Huron. This migration, episodically lamented in Ontario and generally ignored in Michigan, was a major component of the transnational Great Lakes economy before the automobile boom. As Bruno Ramirez reminds us, some of these immigrants, advantaged by ethnicity, race, language, religion, and class, rose rapidly in their new, nearby homeland. Indeed, in burgeoning Detroit Canadians comprised 10 percent of the leading manufacturers in 1900.


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