Garibaldi's Migration To America

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At the beginning of the 1890’s, America saw immigration from the South of Italy. This was due to impoverished life in Italy. In 1860, Garibaldi drove a revolution in Italy to create a unified country. He fought to unify the country, freedom from the Austrians. The south of Italy was over taxed, poverty was ramp it, and people were in despair. These conditions created the exodus from Italy to America.

Once arriving in America, many Italians struggled to settle into their new country and life. They came to find jobs and start over. Yet they were not welcomed. They had to work as laborers, live in the slums. However, their cultures and family lives were impacted because many families were separated due to the conditions in Italy and lack of …show more content…

The Italians that migrate to America were uneducated, lacked the ability to own property because they were overtaxed and unable to buy land, and dire poverty.

As a Hispanic in American, I can relate not because I felt it but because my father is an immigrant from Mexico. He left his family behind to find a better job to send back home. He was not only responsible for his family but for his parents and brothers, and sisters. When he was 12 years old, he left his family in the middle of the night to fend for himself. His thought was that he leaving would be one less mouth to feed. Little did he know that his father went after him for almost an year until he found him. My dad was very lucky to meet someone that took him and save his money from working the fields. When he met up with my grandfather, he had enough money for the whole family to move to northern Mexico where there were more jobs.

Italian immigrants are not very different from what we have learned as the Irish, Native Americans, Jews, Mexicans, and the first settlers. Everyone who came to America was because they wanted a better life and their home country was in chaos, famine, religious persecution, and plain

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