STATUS OF IMMIGRANTS IN INDUSTRIES 153
ply, can not be definitely stated. It is a matter of
speculation and controversy, without any data at pres
ent upon which to base an approximate determination.
Whatever may have been the opinion of employers as
to the desirability of this class of labor, they found
it necessary either to employ immigrant labor or de
lay industrial advancement. They chose the former
course; and the present industrial situation is the re
sult.
Occupations of Immigrants
It may be said, in general, that the recent immi
grant wage-earners from the south and east of Europe
are found on the lowest level of the industrial scale.
Many members of the different races of recent arrival
in the United States have advanced in the order of
- occupations, but these are rather cases of individual
than of racial progress. Most of the newcomers have
been without any training or experience abroad in
manufacturing or mining, and have been employed in
the common or unskilled labor of the different branches
of industry in this country, or they have been given
work to do in connection with machine processes
which are largely automatic and which require no
special training or apprenticeship. The one notable
exception in this respect is furnished by the Russian
and other Hebrews, the majority of whom have had
some industrial or technical training before coming
to the United States. As a consequence, they find
employment chiefly in the hand trades, or enter into
business in a small way after reaching this country.
The only branches of manufacturing in which Russian
and other Hebrews are extensively engaged are cloth
ing, silk goods, boots and shoes, and gloves.