Along the Waterfront

Along the Waterfront

Andrea Doria and Other Recent Liner Disasters

Andrea Doria and Other Recent Liner Disasters

The Ships of Ellis Island

Publication Date15th March 2016

Book FormatPaperback

pages128

Illustrations150

Height168

Width246

An illustrated guide to the ships that carried the many millions of migrants from Europe to Ellis Island, New York.
Regular Price £19.99 Online Price: £17.99
Availability: Out of stock
ISBN
9781445651620

The federal immigration station on Ellis Island, in Upper New York Bay, opened on 1 January 1892. In the peak years of immigration to the United States, between 1905 and 1914, an average of 1 million people were processed each year at Ellis Island, the peak coming in 1907, when on 17 April alone over 11,000 migrants passed through the station on their way to a new life. After the First World War, a series of Immigration Acts, especially that of 1924, dramatically reduced the numbers passing through Ellis Island.


During the peak years of immigration, migrants constituted the main source of revenue for transatlantic steamship companies sailing to New York from ports across Europe, from Trieste in the Adriatic to Queenstown on the coast of Ireland (now Cobh). They travelled in ships of all sizes, from the massive prestige liners of Cunard and the White Star Line down to much smaller vessels. In this book, ocean liner expert William H. Miller looks at the ships of Ellis Island.

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