Immigration to the United States
September 28, 2010
During the last century, the United States experienced two waves of immigration. The first peaked in 1910 and the second rose from immigration reform in 1965 and continues today. In 1910, immigrants composed 15 percent of the population, but two world wars, the Great Depression, and nationality quota laws caused the percentage of foreigners living in the United States to steadily decline. The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 lifted national origin quotas on immigration and prioritized family reunification, setting off a second wave of immigration that continues today. (Sources: U.S. Census.)

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