26 the immigration problem
came from Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, Greece, Italy,
Montenegro, Poland, Portugal Roumania, Russia,
Servia, Spain, Syria and Turkey. The brief table
for the years 1882 and 1907 puts the matter tersely.
TOTAL EUROPEAN IMMIGRATION TO THE UNITED STATES
In years specified, by class of immigrants
Class
Year
Per cent, of total
immigration
1882
1907
1882
1907
Old immigration
563,175
84,973
38
227,851
971,608
107
86.9
13.1
(a)
19.0
81.0
(a)
Not specified
648,186
1,199,566
100.0
100.0
a Less than 0.C5 per cent.
The change in the character of the immigration is
especially marked by the fact that during the last few
years more immigrants have come from any one of
the three countries of Austria-Hungary, Italy or Russia
than from all of the North European countries taken
together that formerly furnished the bulk of Euro
pean immigrants.
The rapidly rising post-war tide of immigration
shows no change in this tendency. Southern and east
ern European peoples predominate. The enactment
of the recent legislation which limits the number
entering the United States to a percentage basis
of those already here was passed in order to modify
this tendency. The figures for 1914 are very strik
ing. In that year only 10 per cent, of the entire im
migration came from northern and western Europe.
Certain characteristics of the immigrants exhibited
in the period since 1900 also emphasized the fact that
the new immigration differed more radically in type