An Interior Ellis Island (Print Version) Immigration, Ethnicity and the Peopling of the Copper Country:
The past does not speak for itself, it is spoken for, and there is little in the remains of mineshafts, rock piles or other physical evidence that exists today to tell the story of the peopling of the Michigan’s Copper Country. Nothing remains in the Copper Country to tell us that at the turn of the century, the Keweenaw Peninsula was the most ethnically diverse community in Michigan. Indeed, it was among the most ethnically diverse places in the United States. The 1870 Federal Census reveals that Houghton County, with 57% of its population foreign-born, had the third largest foreign-born population as a percent of the total population in the United States. While in that year 71% percent of Americans had native-born parents, fewer than 5 % of Houghton County residents could make such a claim. Again, for prospective, Houghton County with 96% of its population with at least one parent of foreign birth had the greatest such percentage in the entire United States. According to one child of immigrants, the claim of native-born parentage and Americanization held a negative connation for the residents of the Copper Country:
The people of the Copper Country were indeed different from the people of Michigan’s Lower Peninsula as pre-automobile Michigan had very little ethnic diversity. Due to the Erie Canal, New Englanders from western New York, or those migrating directly from New England, mainly settled the state. The agriculture-dominated economy of this “Yankee Michigan,” drew few immigrants and even fewer from eastern and southern Europe. The exception to this nineteenth-century Yankee Michigan was its Upper Peninsula and more specifically its Keweenaw Peninsula. Indeed, in 1900, Houghton County had the largest Chinese, Italian, Finnish, Slovenian and Croatian communities in Michigan. The Calumet public schools claimed to have enrolled children from forty different nationalities from around the world. The ethnic composition of the Copper Country dramatically changed over time. Initially, the Keweenaw Peninsula drew its labor chiefly from the British Isles, Western Europe and Canada then, after 1890, largely from southern and eastern Europe. In 1870, the Irish were the single largest immigrant group, accounting for nearly a third of the entire foreign-born population in Houghton County, followed by the Cornish, French Canadians and Germans. By 1880, the Cornish were the single largest immigrant group followed by the French Canadians, Irish and Germans. In 1890, the Finns emerged as the single largest immigrant group, a position they would never relinquish, followed by the French Canadians and the Cornish. By the turn of the century, the Finns accounted for a quarter of the entire foreign-born population in Houghton County, followed by the Cornish, French Canadians and the rapidly arriving Croatians and Slovenians, many of who were enumerated as “Austrians.” In 1910, the Finns accounted for a third of the entire foreign-born population, followed by the Cornish, “Austrians,” and Italians. The peopling of the Copper Country, like all migration, was an economic process driven by “push factors” and “pull factors,” that is, people were pushed out of areas that experienced high levels of surplus labor and pulled to areas that experienced labor shortages. With exception of the Cornish, Irish and some Germans who arrived with previous mining experience, most of those who peopled the Copper Country emigrated from rural parts of Europe that were experiencing and economic upheaval. During the last half of the nineteenth century, most of Europe underwent the capitalist transformation of agriculture. This shift toward market-oriented agriculture demanded greater mechanization and thus capital investment. This process placed tremendous economic pressure on small landholders, who, because they lacked capital, increasingly could not compete in a market with larger landowners. Simultaneously, mechanization reduced the need for their labor as well as the labor of their less fortunate neighbors who were landless peasants. As such, the capitalist transformation of agriculture in Europe produced large numbers of people who either became unemployed or underemployed (surplus units of labor) or small landholders with insufficient land to survive. In search of work, many peasants were forced to migrate to areas with labor shortages in Europe and the United States. Copper mining, of course, with its great demand for labor was the “pull factor” that drew these emigrants to the Keweenaw. Yet, this begs the question: why were the mine owners unable to attract sufficient native-born labor? During the last half of the nineteenth century and into the twentieth century, there existed a dual labor market in America, that is, a secondary labor market was created by the difficulty or danger of certain industrial occupations that few native-born or English speaking people from the British Isles would fill. Indeed, in 1910 the US Senate Committee on Immigration asked mine owners in the Copper Country why they needed so many foreign workers? Apologetically and remorsefully, they replied: “. . . the employment of these races [from southern and eastern Europe] is due principally to the fact the supply of English-speaking workingmen has not equaled the demand for labor and that it has been necessary, in order to operate the mines, to have recourse to this source of labor supply.” This remarkable influx of immigrants dramatically impacted the development of the Copper Country, but it also significantly impacted the sending communities from which they emigrated. Brinje, a small town in Croatia of around 5,000 people, sent over 700 young men to work for the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company. Emigration on such levels radically altered the lives of those who remained in Brinje. Excerpts from a 1905 letter from a Croatian schoolteacher offers glimpse in of the lives of those left behind:
This letter reminds us of the role that immigrants played in supporting their sending communities, the world they behind and the pain of emigration. Such heartbreak, of course, was not limited to Croatia. Many experienced the tears and sobs and kisses in places like Berehaven Ireland, Camborne Cornwall, Jolitte Quebec, Bramberg Germany, Pajala Sweden, Tronhiem Norway, San Gergio Italy, Wasalan Finland and in hundreds of towns and villages throughout the world.
In addition to the exceeding large foreign-born population in the Copper Country, the children and grandchildren of the foreign-born constituted much larger ethnic groups. In her examination of ethnicity among Americans of European descent in the years after the Second World War, sociologist Mary Waters has convincingly argued that their ethnicity has largely transformed itself into choice. That is to say, for present day Americans of European ancestry, their ethnicity is more a matter of consent than descent. This is an important point to our understanding of ethnicity in the United States in the years between 1870-1930; ethnicity was not a choice. This appears to have particularly true in the Copper Country where newspapers listed one’s ethnicity next to one’s name, or, quite frequently, did not bother to list one’s name at all and simply referred to an individual as an “Irishman,” a “Finnish trammer,” or a “Croatian laborer.” Documents such as the Houghton County Jail Records suggest that ethnicity had a pseudo-legal status into the twentieth century, as the ethnicity of inmates, not place of birth, was indicated next to their names. So to was the case with the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company and the Quincy Mining Company as both had their workers identified by ethnicity on their employment records. During the 1913-14 Strike, C & H produced bi-weekly reports that enumerated the ethnic differential of striking and non-striking workers. Even more extraordinary, C & H produced monthly reports on the ethnic composition of their workers into the 1950s. So, for instance, the head of C & H could know the exact number of Italian trammers, French Canadian mill workers or Finnish miners on May 1, 1950 and the increase or decrease of a given ethnic group from last month in a given job category. Needless to say, C & H had the forms specially printed, as these were not standard business forms in the 1950s. What such forms, and the worldview that they represented, could not account for, of course, was inter-ethnic marriage. There existed no column for someone who was part German and Irish, someone who was past Finnish part Slovenian, or perhaps someone who was part German, Irish, Finnish and Slovenian. Ruby Jo Kennedy, a sociologist who published in 1944 an article “Single or Triple Melting Pot? on intermarriage in New Haven, Connecticut observed a shift beginning in which people were moving away from marring within their ethnic group to marring within a religion, usually in the third generation. This process might have begun earlier in the Copper Country. A small study of 500 households in Calumet found that in 1910 twenty percent of all marriages were interethnic. The Irish (66%) were the most likely marry someone outside their ethnic group, followed by the French Canadians, Swedes and the Cornish. Conversely, the Croatians (4%) were the least likely marry someone outside their ethnic group, followed by Finns, Italians and Slovenes. The 1913 Copper Strike was the Keweenaw Range’s defining moment. The strike was in many ways an ethnic conflict as much as it was struggle between labor and capital, workers and mine owners. In general, the newly arrived ethnic groups from southern and eastern Europe were more likely to support the strike, while the established ethnic groups from northern and western Europe were less likely to support the strike. Croatian workers were the least likely to go back to work, followed by the Hungarians, Bulgarians and Finns. Conversely, the Cornish were the least likely to strike, followed by the Scots, Germans and Scandinavians. When the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company attempted to resume underground operations in September 1913, an astonishing 94% of Croatians continued to strike, compared to only 40% of the total workforce. Croatians and Finns, with 63%, were the only ethnic groups that had a majority of their workers who refused to return to work. By the middle of December, 86% of C&H’s Croatian workforce still remained on strike, and, as such, they were the only ethnic group that had a majority of their workers out on strike. By the end of February 1914, when the strike was clearly lost, 84% of the Croatians continued to strike; the Finns with 24% were the nearest ethnic group showing such solidarity. Mining on the Keweenaw, like all extractive industries, declined and ended. Just as the Copper Country saw tremendous immigration it also experienced tremendous out migration. As mining declined so did the need for labor and just as the Keweenaw began to experience high levels of surplus labor, the auto industry began to experience a near insatiable demand for labor. Most anecdotal evidence suggests that Detroit and southeastern Michigan were the main recipient of the Keweenaw’s out migration. Again, the “push-pull” mechanism of labor migration drove this process. The ethnic composition of the Copper Country not only resulted from in migration but out migration as well, as not all ethnic groups out migrated at the same rate. The Finns appeared the least likely to leave the Copper Country, while the Croatians and Italians were the most likely to out migrate. In general, the immigrants (the parents or their children) remained while their children or grandchildren left. Thus, the Keweenaw Peninsula served as an interior Ellis Island, that is, an entry point for tens of thousands immigrants and their children into American society. Back in the 1990s, an often-heated debate emerged within the pages in the Mining Journal regarding the placement of Finnish names on street signs in Hancock. The issue brought the question of the Copper Country’s ethnic identity into sharp focus as non-Finns wrote and expressed a sense that the Finns were expropriating the Copper Country, pointing out that they were not Finns and that their ancestors had arrive from a certain country at a certain date and worked hard in the mines. Finns often enough responded that such sentiments were anti-Finnish bigotry, which had long history in the Copper Country and generally had that such anti-Finnish bigotry had its origins in other ethnic groups envy over the achievements of the Finns. So whose Copper Country is it? Well, first and foremost, of course, it belongs to those who presently inhabit it, a third of whom are of Finnish ancestry. But secondary, perhaps, it also belongs to those whose roots are on that copper range. Perhaps the Copper Country also belongs on some small ancestral level to the hundreds of thousands of descendents whose ancestors spent a generation or two on that “Interior Ellis Island.” (Intro 1) Ninth Census
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