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John Higham and Immigration History
LEONARD DINNERSTEIN AND DAVID M. REIMERS
JOHN HIGHAM BURST onto the intellectual scene in 1955 with the
publication of Strangers in the Land: Patterns of American Nativism,
1860¨1925, a tale of a nation that held out the possibilities of assimilation
and equality for all white men. Unfortunately, he argued, as David
Hollinger has so aptly observed, they lost their way after the Civil War
as the "tension between the nation and its demographic parts splintered
the country."2 No longer did WASPS believe that all white immigrants
could be assimilated into our society and, gradually, we began not only
to castigate foreigners but by the 1920s, to exclude them as well. Higham
regarded the Immigration Restriction Acts of 1921 and 1924 as indications
that the principles which guided the United States in the past had
been subverted by Americans who were unwilling to share their largesse
or values with non-Protestants.
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