THE RACIAL GROUPS ARE TYPICAL

Some of the important conclusions supported by these statistics naturally raise the question whether the petitions studied are, in respect of country of origin, really typical of the whole foreign-born population of the country. This question seems to be disposed of by a compilation showing the racial distribution of the petitioners studied, compared with the racial distribution of all unnaturalized foreign-born white aliens 21 years of age or older in the country as a whole, and in the nine large cities covered by this investigation.

TABLE XVI

Comparison by Races of (1) a Naturalization Petitioners Studied, (2) Unnaturalized Males Twenty-one Years or Over in Nine Cities{1} Where Petitions Were Filed, and in The Country as a Whole, in 1910{2}



Country of BirthPetitioners Studied 1913–14Unnaturalized{3} Foreign-born White Males Twenty-one Years of Age and Over in Nine Cities, in 1910Unnaturalized Foreign-born White Males Twenty-one Years of Age and Over In the United States in 1910

NumberPer CentNumberPer CentNumberPer Cent

All countries26,284100.0437,517100.02,837,307100.0
Russia7,86429.9107,39324.5481,53217.0
Austria3,87514.759,25213.5407,97714.4
Italy3,59113.798,59522.5523,96418.5
Hungary2,4439.331,1947.1200,2747.1
Germany2,3058.835,4258.1219,1337.7
Ireland1,7736.716,4533.8116,6134.1
England8313.214,8073.4112,3174.0
Sweden6162.38,6752.092,2893.3
Rumania5692.25,7781.317,4980.6
Norway3891.54,0840.966,8022.4
Canada3851.59,2292.1176,8686.2
Scotland2881.15,2991.238,9401.4
Denmark2000.81,8810.427,0451.0
Switzerland1970.84,0390.916,9421.6
Finland1440.62,3950.543,7371.5
Turkey in Asia1420.51,8830.422,7760.8
Holland1390.59300.218,1160.6
Turkey in Europe920.31,6500.419,5460.7
Greece900.35,3931.262,7582.2
France860.34,1160.921,4570.8
Wales320.12940.16,4240.2
Spain230.19320.210,0370.4
Portugal8 ....92 ....19,5570.7
No information23 .... .... .... .... ....
Other1790.817,7284.1114,7054.0


note 1: Cleveland, New York (Boroughs of Manhattan, Bronx, and Queens); Bridgeport, Connecticut; Cincinnati; Paterson, New Jersey; Portland, Oregon; Rochester, New York; Seattle, Washington; Worcester, Massachusetts.

note 2: United States Census, 1910, vol. 1, chap. xi.

note 3: Includes aliens and those holding first papers.

Considerable variations will be observed between the racial distribution of petitioners studied and that of the unnaturalized but potentially naturalizable males in the whole country in 1910. For instance, while 18.5 per cent of the unnaturalized persons in the United States were born in Italy, only 13.7 per cent of the petitioners studied were Italians; on the other hand, while 29.9 per cent of the petitioners studied were from Russia, only 17 per cent of the unnaturalized males in the United States in 1910 were Russians.

These discrepancies do not prove, however, that even in such cases the groups of petitioners studied are not representative of the foreign-born population, because racial distribution varies considerably from state to state. Fortunately, moreover, it is possible to compile from the census figures to show by country of origin the distribution of unnaturalized white males in the cities covered by the study, and these figures, also included in the last column of the table, show conclusively that the racial distribution in those cities is fairly typical. The percentages do not exactly agree, nor is that to be expected. In the first place, there is a difference of three years between the times represented respectively in the two sets of figures—years during which there was a heavy immigration. The figures given for the unnaturalized are not complete, inasmuch as for those cities the citizenship status of 9.8 per cent of the foreign-born males 21 years of age and over was not reported by the 1910 census. Furthermore, the petitions studied were not all from these nine cities, although nearly nine out of ten (86.8 per cent) of them were. On the whole, the nativity distribution in those nine cities of the petitioners studied coincides remarkably with that of the unnaturalized but naturalizable males.