Реферат: Immigrant Communities A Look At 4
took jobs as household servants and maids, and they often lived
at the residence they worked at. In these jobs they had no
expenses and were able to send the majority of their earnings
home to their struggling families. Some Irish women also took
jobs as factory workers. Men tended to work as manual laborers,
in jobs such as construction work, railroad builders, and canal
workers. Some Irish men also found jobs as firemen, policemen,
dockworkers, and cobblers. Irish men often joined unions and
became involved in politics through these groups.
These immigrants set up their homes in tenement houses and
formed large communities in Boston and Chicago. Families were
not as common, since women were working to support families in
Ireland and often married later in life. Men who were married
were sometimes in very mobile occupations which required them to
leave their families for months at a time. Religion and the
church was a very important part of life for Irish immigrants.
Most Irish were Catholic, although some were of the Protestant
faith. However, the Irish also found time for fun, and taverns
were a common fixture in most communities.
Another large immigrant group was the Germans. People of
this ethnic background came to America in search of jobs and
land, both of which were hard to come by in their native land.
Germans usually brought their families with them to the new
country, and took jobs as farmers, service or factory workers and
skilled artisans. Single men were often boarders with German
families, who took people into their homes as a source of income.
Unlike the Irish, the German women worked at home and sent the
children out to work as household servants. They were also able
to save some of their income, since they did not have to send it