View allAll Photos Tagged Immigration
Members of the National Socialist Party (American Nazi Party) organized a march against illegal immigration on April 21, 2007 on the Statehouse grounds in Columbia, SC. Photos by Sean Rayford
Bishop Felipe Ruiz Aguilar of the Methodist Church of Mexico (left) visits with migrants who have recently arrived from Honduras at Mariachi Plaza in Mexicali, Mexico. Photo by Mike DuBose, UMNS.
Police arrest United Methodist faith leaders, other faith groups, labor leaders and immigrants after a prayer vigil at the White House in support of progress on immigration reform and an end to deportations. Washington, DC, on Feb. 17. Photo by Jay Mallin, United Methodist News Service
NOGALES, Arizona (April 1, 2014) - Cardinal Seán O'Malley of Boston and 7 other bishops celebrate Mass on the US-Mexico border in Arizona to commemorate the deaths of migrants in the desert and to pray for immigration reform. More information is available at www.justiceforimmigrants.org
(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) All photos available under a Creative Commons license, Share-Alike, Attribution-required.
NOGALES, Arizona (April 1, 2014) - Cardinal Seán O'Malley of Boston and 7 other bishops celebrate Mass on the US-Mexico border in Arizona to commemorate the deaths of migrants in the desert and to pray for immigration reform. More information is available at www.justiceforimmigrants.org
(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) All photos available under a Creative Commons license, Share-Alike, Attribution-required.
NOGALES, Arizona (April 1, 2014) - Cardinal Seán O'Malley of Boston and 7 other bishops celebrate Mass on the US-Mexico border in Arizona to commemorate the deaths of migrants in the desert and to pray for immigration reform. More information is available at www.justiceforimmigrants.org
(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) All photos available under a Creative Commons license, Share-Alike, Attribution-required.
NOGALES, Arizona (April 1, 2014) - Cardinal Seán O'Malley of Boston and 7 other bishops celebrate Mass on the US-Mexico border in Arizona to commemorate the deaths of migrants in the desert and to pray for immigration reform.
Before the Mass, Cardinal Seán was taken on a tour of the border area by a local priest.
(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) All photos available under a Creative Commons license, Share-Alike, Attribution-required.
NOGALES, Arizona (April 1, 2014) - Cardinal Seán O'Malley of Boston and 7 other bishops celebrate Mass on the US-Mexico border in Arizona to commemorate the deaths of migrants in the desert and to pray for immigration reform.
Before the Mass, Cardinal Seán was taken on a tour of the border area by a local priest.
(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) All photos available under a Creative Commons license, Share-Alike, Attribution-required.
Musee de l'histoire de l'immigration
The Cité nationale de l'histoire de l'immigration is a museum of immigration history located in the 12th arrondissement of Paris at 293, avenue Daumesnil, Paris, France. The nearest métro station is Porte Dorée. It is open daily except Monday; an admission fee is charged.
Museum is housed in former The Paris Colonial Exhibition (or "Exposition coloniale internationale", International Colonial Exhibition) was a six-month colonial exhibition held in Paris, France in 1931 that attempted to display the diverse cultures and immense resources of France's colonial possessions.
The new museum was conceived in 1989 by Algerian immigrant Zaïr Kedadouche, supported initially by historians including Pierre Milza and Gérard Noiriel, and established by President Jacques Chirac with a mission to "contribute to the recognition of the integration of immigrants into French society and advance the views and attitudes on immigration in France". It opened without public ceremony in late 2007 under his successor, President Nicolas Sarkozy, amid political controversy in which eight of the twelve academics involved in the project resigned.
The museum occupies the Palais de la Porte Dorée, formerly the home of the Musée national des Arts d'Afrique et d'Océanie, on the edge of the Bois de Vincennes. It contains over 1100 m² of exhibition space devoted primarily to the history and culture of immigration in France from the early nineteenth century to the present. A permanent installation, "Benchmarks", contains interactive exhibits presenting immigrant stories in multimedia form. The museum's collections are organized by three main themes: images including photography by Eugène Atget, Gérald Bloncourt, Robert Capa, Yves Jackson, Jean Jacques Pottier, etc., as well as prints, posters, drawings press, cartoons, comic books, audiovisual materials; objects of daily life; and works of art concerning immigration, territory, borders, and roots.
Musee de l'histoire de l'immigration
The Cité nationale de l'histoire de l'immigration is a museum of immigration history located in the 12th arrondissement of Paris at 293, avenue Daumesnil, Paris, France. The nearest métro station is Porte Dorée. It is open daily except Monday; an admission fee is charged.
Museum is housed in former The Paris Colonial Exhibition (or "Exposition coloniale internationale", International Colonial Exhibition) was a six-month colonial exhibition held in Paris, France in 1931 that attempted to display the diverse cultures and immense resources of France's colonial possessions.
The new museum was conceived in 1989 by Algerian immigrant Zaïr Kedadouche, supported initially by historians including Pierre Milza and Gérard Noiriel, and established by President Jacques Chirac with a mission to "contribute to the recognition of the integration of immigrants into French society and advance the views and attitudes on immigration in France". It opened without public ceremony in late 2007 under his successor, President Nicolas Sarkozy, amid political controversy in which eight of the twelve academics involved in the project resigned.
The museum occupies the Palais de la Porte Dorée, formerly the home of the Musée national des Arts d'Afrique et d'Océanie, on the edge of the Bois de Vincennes. It contains over 1100 m² of exhibition space devoted primarily to the history and culture of immigration in France from the early nineteenth century to the present. A permanent installation, "Benchmarks", contains interactive exhibits presenting immigrant stories in multimedia form. The museum's collections are organized by three main themes: images including photography by Eugène Atget, Gérald Bloncourt, Robert Capa, Yves Jackson, Jean Jacques Pottier, etc., as well as prints, posters, drawings press, cartoons, comic books, audiovisual materials; objects of daily life; and works of art concerning immigration, territory, borders, and roots.
Every new Chinese immigrant received a tax certificate, which was to be kept by the immigrant. This tax certificate required all immigrants to pay a mandatory fine in order to be allowed entry; numbers could range from a ninety to two hundred dollars. Source: www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/022/022-905.002-e.html
NOGALES, Arizona (April 1, 2014) - Cardinal Seán O'Malley of Boston and 7 other bishops celebrate Mass on the US-Mexico border in Arizona to commemorate the deaths of migrants in the desert and to pray for immigration reform. More information is available at www.justiceforimmigrants.org
(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) All photos available under a Creative Commons license, Share-Alike, Attribution-required.
NOGALES, Arizona (April 1, 2014) - Cardinal Seán O'Malley of Boston and 7 other bishops celebrate Mass on the US-Mexico border in Arizona to commemorate the deaths of migrants in the desert and to pray for immigration reform. More information is available at www.justiceforimmigrants.org
(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) All photos available under a Creative Commons license, Share-Alike, Attribution-required.
The City of Bellevue joined the Bellevue Downtown Association in hosting a naturalization ceremony on Friday, September 23 at Bellevue City Hall. This was the first naturalization ceremony held in Bellevue, and 51 new citizens were welcomed by representatives from United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, keynote speaker Debadutta Dash, and Deputy Mayor Conrad Lee. The new citizens represented 21 countries.
Campaign Meeting held on Valentines Day to discuss the right to family life and the new immigration rules.
Photos courtesy of Jason Wen www.jasonwenphoto.net/
Mayor Garcetti and Secretary of Homeland Secretary Jeh Johnson discuss implementation of President Obama's Executive Actions on immigration.
Musee de l'histoire de l'immigration
The Cité nationale de l'histoire de l'immigration is a museum of immigration history located in the 12th arrondissement of Paris at 293, avenue Daumesnil, Paris, France. The nearest métro station is Porte Dorée. It is open daily except Monday; an admission fee is charged.
Museum is housed in former The Paris Colonial Exhibition (or "Exposition coloniale internationale", International Colonial Exhibition) was a six-month colonial exhibition held in Paris, France in 1931 that attempted to display the diverse cultures and immense resources of France's colonial possessions.
The new museum was conceived in 1989 by Algerian immigrant Zaïr Kedadouche, supported initially by historians including Pierre Milza and Gérard Noiriel, and established by President Jacques Chirac with a mission to "contribute to the recognition of the integration of immigrants into French society and advance the views and attitudes on immigration in France". It opened without public ceremony in late 2007 under his successor, President Nicolas Sarkozy, amid political controversy in which eight of the twelve academics involved in the project resigned.
The museum occupies the Palais de la Porte Dorée, formerly the home of the Musée national des Arts d'Afrique et d'Océanie, on the edge of the Bois de Vincennes. It contains over 1100 m² of exhibition space devoted primarily to the history and culture of immigration in France from the early nineteenth century to the present. A permanent installation, "Benchmarks", contains interactive exhibits presenting immigrant stories in multimedia form. The museum's collections are organized by three main themes: images including photography by Eugène Atget, Gérald Bloncourt, Robert Capa, Yves Jackson, Jean Jacques Pottier, etc., as well as prints, posters, drawings press, cartoons, comic books, audiovisual materials; objects of daily life; and works of art concerning immigration, territory, borders, and roots.
NOGALES, Arizona (April 1, 2014) - Cardinal Seán O'Malley of Boston and 7 other bishops celebrate Mass on the US-Mexico border in Arizona to commemorate the deaths of migrants in the desert and to pray for immigration reform.
Before the Mass, Cardinal Seán was taken on a tour of the border area by a local priest.
(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) All photos available under a Creative Commons license, Share-Alike, Attribution-required.
Images from the anti-Trump, anti-immigration ban march on 4 February 2017 in central London. The protest assembled outside the US Embassy in Grosvenor Square and marched down Park Lane, Piccadilly, Haymarket and on to Whitehall and Downing Street.
The march was organised by Stop the War Coalition, Stand Up to Racism, Muslim Association of Britain, Muslim Engagement and Development, the Muslim Council of Britain, CND and Friends of Al-Aqsa.
It was a very good-natured, if passionately-felt, event, and as far as I saw there was no bad troublesome behaviour, aside from calling the Government to account of course.
Campaign Meeting held on Valentines Day to discuss the right to family life and the new immigration rules.
Photos courtesy of Jason Wen www.jasonwenphoto.net/
Campaign Meeting held on Valentines Day to discuss the right to family life and the new immigration rules.
Photos courtesy of Jason Wen www.jasonwenphoto.net/
Taking in the photos about Latin American immigration on display at the Mission Cultural Center, Mission Street, San Francisco
Title: [Illus. for article "an alien anti-dumping bill" in The Literary Digest, May 7, 1921, p. 13, reprinting a cartoon by Hallahan for Providence Evening Bulletin, showing funnel bridging Atlantic with top at Europe crammed with emigrants and bottom at U.S. with Uncle Sam permitting immigrants to trickle through]
Other Title: The only way to handle it
Date Created/Published: [New York] : [Funk & Wagnalls], 1921.
Medium: 1 print : offset photomechanical.
Reproduction Number: LC-USZ62-44049 (b&w film copy neg.)
Rights Advisory: No known restrictions on publication.
Call Number: Illus. in AP2.L58 [item] [General Collections]
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA
Notes:
Title devised by Library staff.
Alternate title as published in Providence Evening Bulletin.
Reference copy available in LOT 7010.
This record contains unverified, old data from caption card, with subsequent revisions.
Subjects:
Emigration & immigration--United States--1920-1930.
Funnels--1920-1930.
Social policy--United States--1920-1930.
Uncle Sam (Symbolic character)--1920-1930.
Format:
Offset photomechanical prints--1920-1930.
Periodical illustrations--1920-1930.
Political cartoons--1920-1930.
Collections:
Miscellaneous Items in High Demand
Bookmark This Record:
www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2007680185/
View the MARC Record for this item.
Rights assessment is your responsibility.
NOGALES, Arizona (April 1, 2014) - Cardinal Seán O'Malley of Boston and 7 other bishops celebrate Mass on the US-Mexico border in Arizona to commemorate the deaths of migrants in the desert and to pray for immigration reform. More information is available at www.justiceforimmigrants.org
(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) All photos available under a Creative Commons license, Share-Alike, Attribution-required.
We get off, and immigration is now mostly automated, and we were through in ten minutes.
Baggage took somewhat longer, as Jools' bright yellow case was last off. We just had to find the driver for our transfer. But he wasn't there.
90 minutes passed, and still no driver. Jools was beginning to feel unwell, which made matters seem worse.
I was then going out to the taxi rank, when a black guy asked us if we needed a cab.
We did.
He would charge us %68, which was the going rate, but it was clear he wasn't a licensed driver. We shouldn't have gone with him, but we did.
He took us to the freeway, then towards the commercial district, down the ever more crowded freeway, with the massive scrapers making a solid skyline to the left.
But they got us to the hotel, in one piece, and they didn't murder us. Which was nice.
As we walked into the hotel, Jools had to hold back a barf, and so we were quickly checked in, and poor Jools is asleep now, but has colour returning to her cheeks.
But we are here, and later, I meet a friend.
Jools went straight to bed once we were checked in.
She soon fell fast asleep, and I pottered around in the room, catching up on things and writing the previous blog post.
In a further twist, as it being in Chicago wasn't exciting enough, I had managed to arrange to meet a long time Flickr friend of mine, Mark aka Photons Fail Me.
Jools had spent the time since arriving, when not being sick, trying to get her phone to be able to call Mark, but it failed. But once in the hotel room, I had the internet working, and so we swapped messages on Twitter, and arranged to meet at six.
Jools wasn't well enough to come out, so I got ready, and just before six I got a call, it was Mark; they had arrived.
I went down.
Its hard to state how odd it is to meet someone for the first time, and yet you also meet as longtime friends, knowing what each other likes, their backstory and so on.
So we hug, and I say, I need a coffee.
Mark does a Google search and finds there is a Starbucks 160 feet away. It is in the base of the John Hancock tower, which is beside the hotel, the second tallest building in the city.
I have a large spiced pumpkin latte with an extra shot, and soon beginning to feel human again, we walk down the street and the big question is do we want to eat? What do we want to eat?
The area around the hotel is all designer shops and decent food seems impossible, but just of Michigan Avenue is a great piza place, Gino's East, home of the world famous deep pan pizza.
It was two blocks away.
We walk there, wait in line to get a table, the 15 minute wait turned out to be two. We get shown to a booth.
Mark and I order a medium deep dish, meat lovers or something for me. Abbey orders burger and fries, which I think will be actual burgers and fries. But when it comes, it is ground beef, pickles and fries. On a pizza.
The medium pizzas are huge.
I do eat two thirds of mine, but the crusts and last two slices went uneaten. I could have taken the leftovers in a goddy bag, but not sure if it would have made Jools ill just smelling it, so I left it.
We walk back up Michigan, past two young black children sleeping under cardboard on the side of the sidewalk. This is Trump's America. I was the only one who looked at them.
Shocked.
I went back to the five star hotel, took the elevator to our floor, and after talking with Jools for a while, we went to bed.
NOGALES, Arizona (April 1, 2014) - Cardinal Seán O'Malley of Boston and 7 other bishops celebrate Mass on the US-Mexico border in Arizona to commemorate the deaths of migrants in the desert and to pray for immigration reform. More information is available at www.justiceforimmigrants.org
(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) All photos available under a Creative Commons license, Share-Alike, Attribution-required.
NOGALES, Arizona (April 1, 2014) - Cardinal Seán O'Malley of Boston and 7 other bishops celebrate Mass on the US-Mexico border in Arizona to commemorate the deaths of migrants in the desert and to pray for immigration reform.
Before the Mass, Cardinal Seán was taken on a tour of the border area by a local priest.
(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) All photos available under a Creative Commons license, Share-Alike, Attribution-required.
Jim Jones' registration at São Paulo Immigration Police Station, dated from April 11, 1962. It's from the Arquivo Público do Estado de São Paulo (São Paulo State Public Archives).
Copyright unknown.
NOGALES, Arizona (April 1, 2014) - Cardinal Seán O'Malley of Boston and 7 other bishops celebrate Mass on the US-Mexico border in Arizona to commemorate the deaths of migrants in the desert and to pray for immigration reform. More information is available at www.justiceforimmigrants.org
(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) All photos available under a Creative Commons license, Share-Alike, Attribution-required.