How did Croatians Immigrate to America?

in the early 1800's?

by boat?? what kind? contained by the bottom of a boat where it was smelly and dirty?


NEED ANSWERS ASAP!!!
Answers:   
They walked under your own steam
Croatian immigrants have settled all around the world, but nowhere contained by such vast numbers as in the United States. Similar to other immigrant groups that have come to the US, Croats, too, be attracted by the idea of a better future and new opportunity. Therefore, as many others, they left their home country and went to the New World probing for the American Dream.

Today, many of them proudly emphasize their Croatian origin, looking for ways to identify near everything Croatian. There is a vast number of Croatian Americans who are proud to assert their Croatian background. For example, United States Congressmen George Radanovich, Dennis Kuchinich, an John Kasich, United States Senate candidate Kathy Karpan, CNN Headline News Sports roadcaster Jerome Jurenovich, Movie Producer (Shindler’s List) Branko Lustig, Actor John Malkovich, Political Commentator Mary Matalin, and so on. Many other U.S. immigrant from Croatia have made their mark in their unsullied homeland through contributions in the fields of science, art, politics and business, including one of the most well-known such as Nikola Tesla, world-renown scientist and inventor, Ivan Mestrovi'c, one of the most prominent Croatian sculptors, and various writers such as Ivan Kresi'c, Josip Marohni'c, and Bartol Michael Phillips.


Immigration

Croatian immigration to America gains significance in 1880s when the Croats begin joining the great migration flap that launched itself in the first decades of the 19th century starting from Central and South Europe. It is estimated that roughly half a million of Croats immigrated to America formerly World War I. The reasons why Croatians left for America are mutually intertwined. Their immigration was cause by both political and economic factors at the same time. Economic underdevelopment of Croatia is directly coupled to its political situation in the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, as well as its situation in the first and second Yugoslavia, which make each immigrant both of political and economic nature.

America strongly mottled its Croatian immigrants. There was hardly a place contained by Croatia, which did not have its own Croatian American who returned to his country. This man was different from the rest of the community in his clothing and his attitude. Most of them only just ever returned to farming, but made their living out of renting houses or opening taverns or small town inns.

Main economic reasons are defined as agrarian overpopulation (too many population on a small piece of land), the abolition of servitude, falling apart of cooperative societies, bad years, agrarian crisis, plant diseases etc. The First Yugoslavian state did not put an end to any of these problems, and only the American restrictive immigration policy slowed down the massive exodus that started since WWI. Communist collectivism of the second Yugoslavia ruined the economy, and only the repression prevented mass emigration. However, during the 60s this repression was relatively alleviated and a great number of Croats not here Croatia. Many of them stayed in Europe, though.

Politics was only an indirect rationale of immigration until WWI. There were only a few people who immigrated to America strictly out of political reason. A certain number of young men immigrated to America in lay down to avoid drafting, and even more of them stayed there during recruitment. Furthermore, a great number of Croatian newspapers overseas accuse Austria for the mass immigration. Davorin Krpotic, a distinguished reverend in the USA, wrote to the Croatian Parliament in 1907 that the emigrants are outstandingly outraged and angry at those because of whom they had to leave their country. As a cause of immigration to America he does not individual mention foreign domination, but also the higher classes who, according to him, created a huge gap between the people and themselves.

National and political deprivation of one’s rights contained by the first Yugoslavian state created first real political emigrants. Some of these people immigrated to America, but most of them stayed in Europe. However, those who survived Bleiburg occupy the greatest majority of political immigrants to the United States. The first years after the war were characterized by a great political emigration, which rhythm be significantly accelerated after the mass political cleansing as for example during 1971/72.

The second Yugoslavia started its existence by enlarging the Croatian Diaspora. Emigration policy of that state was constantly driving Croats out of their country, thus empty whole regions, especially those where Croatians were most fundamental.


Settlements

The first Croatian settlements were in Mississippi estuary in Louisiana and surrounded by California. First Croatian immigrants to those places were sailors who left their ships out of monetary reasons and also because of the news and rumors about time of war in Europe, various contagious diseases on ships, bad Source(s): Adami'c Luj. A Nation of Nations. New York. 1945.



Bonutti, Karl. Selected Ethnic Communities of Cleveland: A Socio-Economic

Study. Cleveland: Cleveland State University, 1974.



Cordasco, ed. Dictionary of American Immigrants contained by America. New York: Philoophical

Library Inc., 1971.



Habenstein, R. W., & Wright, R., Jr. eds. Ethnic families in America:

Patterns and variations (3rd ed.). Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall., 1998.



Jamshid A. Momeni, ed., Race, Ethnicity, and Minority Housing within the United States. New

York: Greenwood Press, 1986



Ljubomir Anti'c, Hrvati I Amerika Zagreb: Hrvatska sveucilisna naklada, 1992.



Thernstrom, Stephen, ed. Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Cambridge:

Harvard University Press, 1980.

Adami'c Luj. A Nation of Nations. New York. 1945.



Bonutti, Karl. Selected Ethnic Communities of Cleveland: A Socio-Economic

Study. Cleveland: Cleveland State University, 1974.



Cordasco, ed. Dictionary of American Immigrants in America. New York: Philoophical

Library Inc., 1971.



Habenstein, R. W., & Wright, R., Jr. eds. Ethnic families in America:

Patterns and variation (3rd ed.). Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall., 1998.



Jamshid A. Momeni, ed., Race, Ethnicity, and Minority Housing in the United States. New

York: Greenwood Press, 1986



Ljubomir Anti'c, Hrvati I Amerika Zagreb: Hrvatska sveucilisna naklada, 1992.



Thernstrom, Stephen, ed. Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Cambridge:

Harvard University Press, 1980.







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