When We Came to the United States

1536Spaniards begin to settle in California and in the Southwest.
1565Spaniards establish St. Augustine, oldest city in the United States.
1607English establish Jamestown, the oldest English settlement in North America.
1619Negroes are first brought in as slaves.
1620English Pilgrims land at Plymouth Rock.
1624Walloons, from Netherlands, settle Fort Orange, now Albany, New York.
1626Netherlanders establish New Amsterdam on Manhattan Island.
1628Persecuted Protestants establish the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
1634Lord Baltimore and a group of English Catholics arrive in Maryland.
1636Roger Williams and his followers establish Rhode Island.
1636Connecticut is founded by Thomas Hooker and his religious group.
1638Swedes and Finns settle along the Delaware River.
1639John Mason and his followers come to New Hampshire.
1654Twenty-three Portuguese Jews land at New Amsterdam from Brazil.
1662Huguenots settle in Massachusetts on the present site of Oxford.
1663English nobles, with grant from Charles II, establish North Carolina.
1664English capture New Amsterdam and rename it New York.
1664Berkeley, Carteret, and others establish New Jersey.
1670English make first permanent settlement in South Carolina.
1670French fur traders and missionaries come to the Mississippi Valley.
1679French Huguenots settle in South Carolina.
1681The Quakers, led by William Penn, settle Pennsylvania.
1682The first Germans come to Pennsylvania.
1690About 200 Scotch-Irish settle in Maryland.
1693English help to settle 600 German-Swiss in North Carolina.
1699The Acadians come to Louisiana and reach as far as Biloxi in present-day Mississippi.
1700The Scotch-Irish settle along the frontiers.
1710First German Protestants arrive in New York.
1719Acadians establish New Orleans, Louisiana.
1720Between 1720 and 1750, 60,000 Germans come to Pennsylvania.
1732Oglethorpe founds Georgia.
1733German Lutherans, Italian Protestants from Piedmont, Scots, Swiss, Portuguese Jews, and English arrive in Georgia.
1737Irish laborers come to South Carolina.
1749About 600 Scots settle near Fayetteville, North Carolina.
1750Over 4,300 Germans and 1,000 English and Irish arrive in Pennsylvania.
1790Between 1790 and 1820, around 234,000 newcomers arrive.
1807Slave trade is forbidden.
181720,000 people come from Europe.
1819First United States Passenger Act, marking beginning of systematic immigration statistics.
1842Annual immigration first reaches 100,000.
1847Annual immigration passes 200,000.
1845Large German influx begins as a result of political unrest.
1847Irish begin to come in large numbers because of famine and political oppression.
1851Annual immigration passes 300,000.
1853About 13,000 Chinese laborers arrive to work in the California gold mines.
1855Castle Garden, New York, established as principal immigrant station.
1860Slavs and southern Europeans begin to arrive.
1870More than 15,000 Chinese arrive to work on the railroads.
1880Because of militarism and overpopulation in Germany, Germans again begin to arrive in large numbers.
1880Between 1880 and 1900, large numbers of Scandinavians arrive because introduction of machinery takes place of men on Scandinavian farms.
1881For next 15 years, an average of nearly 500,000 arrive each year.
1882Idiots, lunatics, and persons likely to become public charges excluded.
1890For next 30 years, Italians, Austrians, Hungarians, and Slavs pour into United States to supply demand for unskilled labor.
1890Ellis Island replaces Castle Garden as chief immigrant station.
1891More than 1,000 Japanese arrive.
1891The office of Superintendent of Immigration is established in the Treasury Department.
1900More than 12,000 Japanese arrive.
1900Between 1900 and 1914, more than 3,000,000 Italians and about 6,000,000 people from Slavic countries enter.
1905Annual immigration first exceeds 1,000,000.
1907Immigration reaches all-time peak of 1,285,349.
1907Immigration Commission is set up.
1917During World War and afterwards thousands of Mexicans cross the border.
1919Flow of immigrants from Europe again gets under way.
1921Temporary Quota Law, restricting immigration.
1924Permanent Quota Law, restricting immigration to 150,000 annually.
1938Annual immigration drops to about 70,000.