- Galveston Movement
The Galveston Movement operated between 1907 and 1914 to divert
Jew s fleeingRussia andeastern Europe away from crowded East Coast cities. Ten thousand Jewishimmigrant s passed throughGalveston, Texas during this era, approximately one-third the number who migrated toPalestine during the same period. B'nai Israel'sRabbi Henry Cohen is credited with helping to found the Galveston Movement. [ [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/GG/umg1.html Texas State Historical Association, Handbook of Texas] ]Origin
Concerned that the addition of major waves of Jewish immigration to crowded urban centers on the East Coast might precipitate both an increase in
anti-Semitism and immigration restrictions, a Jewish Immigrants' Information Bureau attempted to find suitable alternative destinations for the influx of immigrants.Among the cities considered were
Charleston, South Carolina ,New Orleans, Louisiana , andGalveston, Texas . Charleston sought Anglo-Saxon immigrants, and New Orleans was threatened by outbreaks ofyellow fever .Galveston, already a destination of the German shipping company
Norddeutscher Lloyd , which operated out of Bremen, provided convenience and access to the growing economic opportunities of theAmerican West .Years and number of immigrants
"In 1909 a total of 773 Jews landed at Galveston, and by the following year 2,500 had sailed to the port, most originating in small towns. In 1911 some 1,400 arrived, only 2 % of the total Jewish
immigration to the United States in that year. By 1913 the situation had worsened; merchants became concerned about competition from immigrants, and an increasing number of immigratingPolish Jew s who would not work on Saturday reduced the waning enthusiasm ofAmerican Jew ish communities further. Three communities declined to take more; the representative fromCleburne, Texas , complained about the immigrants' "exactions, fault-finding, and refusal to abide by the labor conditions upon which they come.'" [ [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/GG/umg1.html Texas State Historical Association, Handbook of Texas] ] Still throughout many of thesmall town s in Texas thecourthouse square features stores founded in the early twentieth century by these immigrants who settled and becamemerchant s.ee also
*
Congregation B'nai Israel in Galveston, Texas
*Galveston, Texas
*Henry Cohen Community House
*History of the Jews in Galveston, Texas
*Jewish Texan
*Port of Galveston
*Rabbi Henry Cohen External links
*Handbook of Texas|id=GG/umg1|name=PAGENAME
References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.