British and Canadian Immigration to the United States since 1920

Dublin Core

Title

British and Canadian Immigration to the United States since 1920

Description

Dissertation on the "invisible immigrants" to the United States from Britain and Canada between the 1920s and 1960s. From the author: "Always among the most numerous groups of immigrants to the United States, until 1969, the British and Canadians seldom claimed the attention of historians, just as they caused little discussion among the American people generally. Sharing a common language and closeness of culture with the Americans, the British and Canadians remained unhyphenated--they were America's 'invisible immigrants.'...A number of important studies on the British immigrant, if not the Canadian, do exist, but they are concerned with the Britons' experiences and their contribution to the American mosaic during America's 'century of immigration,' the one hundred years from 1815 to 1914. The purpose of this study was to extend the record of British and Canadian immigration beyond the statistical reports of government departments since the hiatus of World War I and to present an interpretive commentary on the significance of these two streams of immigration--to the sending countries; to the receiving country; and to a sample of individual immigrants themselves."

Creator

Lines, Kenneth

Source

Date

1977

Language

en

Type

Thesis/Dissertation

Identifier

Coverage

1920-1970; Canada; Great Britain; United States

Contribution Form

Online Submission

No

Zotero

Num Pages

234

Place

Manoa, Hawaii

Thesis Type

Ph. D., History

University

University of Hawaii

URL

<a href="http://scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10125/9870/1/uhm_phd_7723488_r.pdf">British and Canadian Immigration...</a> @ University of Hawai'i at Manoa

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