Boston's Immigrants: 1840-1925

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· Arcadia Publishing
Ebook
128
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

Boston is a city rich in the history of residents from all walks of life, every country and every ethnicity imaginable. From 1840 to 1925, Boston's diversity created a city with a thriving nexus of people who wove together a community that reflected their own unique heritage. In this lavishly illustrated book with over 200 thought-provoking and evocative photographs, Anthony Mitchell Sammarco and Michael Price have created an important book chronicling the determination, strength, and often manifold successes of immigrants who arrived in Boston. From the mid-nineteenth century when Boston's burgeoning population included one out of every three as being foreign born, the immigrants' arrival at the East Boston docks increased greatly between 1840 and 1925, where they were to pass into the New World, and a new life. In chapters that deal with the immigrants before their arrival, their first perceptions, to where they went, worked, and played, this book outlines the ancestors of many present-day Bostonians in the evolving process of Americanization.

About the author

Anthony Mitchell Sammarco is a well-known Boston historian and author of over twenty-five books in Arcadia's Images of America series; Michael Price owns and operates MPG, an art gallery in Boston's Back Bay. Together, these authors take us on a journey to our immigrant beginnings.

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