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Ellis Island

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Ellis Island is an island in New York Harbor, within the U.S. states of New Jersey and New York. Owned by the U.S. government, Ellis Island was once the busiest immigrant inspection and processing station in the United States. From 1892 to 1954, nearly 12 million immigrants arriving at the Port of New York and New Jersey were processed there;[6] approximately 40% of Americans may be descended from these immigrants. It has been part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument since 1965 and is accessible to the public only by ferry. The north side of the island is a national museum of immigration, while the south side of the island, including the Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital, is open to the public through guided tours.

Key Information

The name derives from Samuel Ellis, a Welshman who bought the island in 1774. In the 19th century, Ellis Island was the site of Fort Gibson and later became a naval magazine. The first inspection station opened in 1892 and was destroyed by fire in 1897. The second station opened in 1900 and housed facilities for medical quarantines and processing immigrants. After 1924, Ellis Island was used primarily as a detention center for migrants. During both World War I and World War II, its facilities were also used by the U.S. military to detain prisoners of war. After the immigration station's closure, the buildings languished for several years until they were partially reopened in 1976. The main building and adjacent structures were completely renovated into a museum in 1990.

The 27.5-acre (11.1 ha) island was expanded by land reclamation between the late 1890s and the 1930s and, at one point, consisted of three islands numbered 1, 2, and 3. Jurisdictional disputes between the states of New Jersey and New York persisted until the 1998 U.S. Supreme Court ruling New Jersey v. New York. The Supreme Court ruled that, while most of the island is in New Jersey, the natural portion of the island (on the northern end) is an exclave of New York. The northern half of Ellis Island comprises the former Island 1 and includes the main building, several ancillary structures, and the Wall of Honor. The hospital structures on the island's southern half occupy the former sites of islands 2 and 3, and there is a ferry building between Ellis Island's northern and southern halves. Historically, immigrants were subjected to medical and primary inspections, and they could be detained or deported. The island is commemorated through the Ellis Island Medal of Honor, and it has received several federal, state, and municipal landmark designations.

Geography and access

[edit]
Aerial view (1976, before renovations)

Ellis Island is in New York Harbor, east of Liberty State Park and north of Liberty Island. While most of the island is in Jersey City, New Jersey, a small section is an exclave of New York City.[7][8] The island has a land area of 27.5 acres (11.1 ha), much of which is from land reclamation.[9] The natural island and contiguous areas comprise 4.68 acres (1.89 ha) within New York, and are located on the northern portion of the present-day island.[8] The artificial land is part of New Jersey.[10][8] The island has been owned and administered by the federal government of the United States since 1808 and operated by the National Park Service since 1965.[11][12]

Land expansion

[edit]
Ellis Island and Manhattan as seen from New Jersey shore in 2020

Initially, much of the Upper New York Bay's western shore consisted of large tidal flats with vast oyster beds, which were a major source of food for the Lenape. Ellis Island was one of three "Oyster Islands," the other two being Liberty Island and the now-subsumed Black Tom Island.[13][14][15] In the late 19th century, the federal government began expanding the island by land reclamation to accommodate its immigration station, and the expansions continued until 1934.[16]

The National Park Service cites the fill as supposedly having been acquired from the ballast of ships, as well as material excavated from the first line of the New York City Subway;[17] however, The New York Times writes that there is no evidence of subway fill being transported to the island.[18] It also may have come from the railyards of the Lehigh Valley Railroad and the Central Railroad of New Jersey. It eventually obliterated the oyster beds, engulfed one of the Oyster Islands, and brought the shoreline much closer to the others.[19]

The current island is shaped like a "C", with two landmasses of equal size on the northeastern and southwestern sides, separated by what was formerly a ferry pier.[20][21] It was originally three separate islands. The current north side, formerly called island 1, contains the original island and the fill around it. The current south side was composed of island 2, created in 1899, and island 3, created in 1906. Two eastward-facing ferry docks separated the three numbered landmasses.[20][21]

The fill was retained with a system of wood piles and cribbing, and later encased with more than 7,700 linear feet of concrete and granite sea wall. It was placed atop either wood piles, cribbing, or submerged bags of concrete. In the 1920s, the second ferry basin between islands 2 and 3 was infilled to create the great lawn, forming the current south side of Ellis Island. As part of the project, a concrete and granite seawall was built to connect the tip of these landmasses.[22]

State sovereignty dispute

[edit]
State border after New Jersey v. New York, 1998

The circumstances which led to an exclave of New York being located within New Jersey began in the colonial era, after the British takeover of New Netherland in 1664. A clause in the colonial land grant outlined the territory that the proprietors of New Jersey would receive as being "westward of Long Island, and Manhitas Island and bounded on the east part by the main sea, and part by Hudson's river."[23][24]

As early as 1804, attempts were made to resolve the status of the state line.[25] The government of New York City claimed the right to regulate trade on all waters. This was contested in Gibbons v. Ogden, which decided that the regulation of interstate commerce fell under the authority of the federal government, thus influencing competition in the newly developing steam ferry service in New York Harbor.[26] In 1830, New Jersey planned to bring suit to clarify the border, but the case was never heard.[27] The matter was resolved with a compact between the states, ratified by U.S. Congress in 1834.[27][28][29] This set the boundary line at the middle of the Hudson River and New York Harbor; however, New York was guaranteed "exclusive jurisdiction of and over all the waters of Hudson River lying west of Manhattan and to the south of the mouth of Spuytenduyvil Creek; and of and over the lands covered by the said waters, to the low-water mark on the New Jersey shore."[30] This was later confirmed in other cases by the U.S. Supreme Court.[19][25][31][32]

New Jersey contended that the artificial portions of the island were part of New Jersey, since they were outside New York's border. In 1956, after the closure of the U.S. immigration station two years prior, the Mayor of Jersey City Bernard J. Berry commandeered a U.S. Coast Guard cutter and led a contingent of New Jersey officials on an expedition to claim the island.[33]

Jurisdictional disputes reemerged in the 1980s with the renovation of Ellis Island,[34] and then again in the 1990s with the proposed redevelopment of the south side.[35] New Jersey sued in 1997.[35] The lawsuit was escalated to the Supreme Court, which ruled in New Jersey v. New York. 523 U.S. 767 (1998)[27][36][37] The border was redrawn using geographic information science data:[38] It was decided that 22.80 acres (9.23 ha) of the land fill area are territory of New Jersey and that 4.68 acres (1.89 ha), including the original island, are territory of New York.[8] This caused some initial confusion, as some buildings straddled the interstate border.[27] The ruling had no effect on the status of Liberty Island.[39]

Although the island remained under federal ownership after the lawsuit, New Jersey and New York agreed to share jurisdiction over the land itself. Neither state took any fiscal or physical responsibility for the maintenance, preservation, or improvement of any of the historic properties, and each state has jurisdiction over its respective land areas. Jersey City and New York City then gave separate tax lot numbers to their respective claims.[36][a]

Public access

[edit]

Two ferry slips are located on the northern side of the basin that bisects Ellis Island. No charge is made for entrance to the Statue of Liberty National Monument, but there is a cost for the ferry service.[45] A concession was granted in 2007 to Statue Cruises to operate the transportation and ticketing facilities, replacing Circle Line, which had operated the service since 1953.[46] The ferries travel from Liberty State Park in Jersey City and the Battery in Lower Manhattan.[47] Save Ellis Isand offers guided public tours of the south side as part of the "Hard Hat Tour".[48][49]

The bridge to Liberty State Park

A bridge to Liberty State Park was built in 1986 for transporting materials and personnel during the island's late-1980s restoration. Originally slated to be torn down in 1992,[50] it remained after construction was complete.[51] It is not open to the public. The city of New York and the island's private ferry operator have opposed proposals to use it or replace it with a pedestrian bridge,[52] and a 1995 proposal for a new pedestrian bridge to New Jersey was voted down in the United States House of Representatives.[51] The bridge is not strong enough to be classified as a permanent bridge, and any action to convert it into a pedestrian passageway would require renovations.[53]

History

[edit]

Precolonial and colonial use

[edit]

The present-day Ellis Island was created by retreating glaciers at the end of the Wisconsin glaciation about 15,000 years ago. The island was described as a "hummock along a plain fronting the west side of the Hudson River estuary,"[54] and when the glaciers melted, the water of the Upper New York Bay surrounded the mass.[54] The native Mohegan name for the island was "Kioshk", meaning "Gull Island",[55][56][57] in reference to Ellis Island's former large population of seagulls.[55] Kioshk was composed mostly of marshy, brackish lowlands that disappeared underwater at high tide.[54] The Native American tribes who lived nearby are presumed to have been hunter-gatherers who used the island to hunt for fish and oysters, as well as to build transient hunting and fishing communities there.[58][59] It is unlikely that the Native Americans established permanent settlements on Kioshk, since the island would have been submerged at high tide.[59]

In 1630, the Dutch bought Kioshk as a gift for Michael Reyniersz Pauw,[b] who had helped found New Netherland.[59][60][61] When the Dutch settled the area as part of New Netherland, the three islands in Upper New York Bay—Liberty, Black Tom, and Ellis Islands—were given the name Oyster Islands, alluding to the large oyster population nearby. The present-day Ellis Island was thus called "Little Oyster Island",[14][15][62] a name that persisted through at least the early 1700s.[63][c] During the early colonial period a sometime Maryland merchant named Isaac Bedloe purchased the island.[65][66] Little Oyster Island was then sold to Captain William Dyre c. 1674,[d] then to Thomas Lloyd on April 23, 1686.[67][59] The island was then sold several more times,[67] including to Enoch and Mary Story.[59] During colonial times, Little Oyster Island became a popular spot for hosting oyster roasts, picnics, and clambakes because of its rich oyster beds. Evidence of recreational uses on the island was visible by the mid-18th century with the addition of commercial buildings to the northeast shore.[59][68]

By the 1760s, Little Oyster Island became a public execution site for pirates, with executions occurring at one tree in particular, the "Gibbet Tree".[57][69][56] However, there is scant evidence that this was common practice.[59] Little Oyster Island was acquired by Samuel Ellis, a colonial New Yorker and merchant from Wrexham, Wales, in 1774; the island was ultimately named for him.[70] He unsuccessfully attempted to sell the island nine years later.[71][72] Ellis died in 1794,[70][72][73] and as per his will, the ownership of Ellis Island passed to his daughter Catherine Westervelt's unborn son, who was also named Samuel. When the junior Samuel died shortly after birth, ownership passed to the senior Samuel's other two daughters, Elizabeth Ryerson and Rachel Cooder.[72][73]

Military use and Fort Gibson

[edit]

Ellis Island was also used by the military for almost 80 years.[74] By the mid-1790s, as a result of the United States' increased military tensions with Britain and France, a U.S. congressional committee drew a map of possible locations for the First System of fortifications to protect major American urban centers such as New York Harbor.[75][76]A small part of Ellis Island from "the soil from high to low waters mark around Ellis's Island" was owned by the city. On April 21, 1794, the city deeded that land to the state for public defense purposes.[72][77] The following year, the state allotted $100,000 for fortifications on Bedloe's, Ellis, and Governors Islands,[72] as well as the construction of Castle Garden (now Castle Clinton[78]) along the Battery on Manhattan island.[72] Batteries and magazines were built on Ellis Island in preparation for a war.[79] A jetty was added to the northwestern extremity of the island, possibly from soil excavated from an inlet at the northeastern corner; the inlet was infilled by 1813.[72] Though the military threat never materialized, further preparations were made in the late 1790s, when the Quasi War sparked fears of war with France;[72][28] these new preparations were supervised by Ebenezer Stevens.[73][80] The military conflict also failed to occur, and by 1805, the fort had become rundown.[29]

Stevens, who observed that the Ellis family still owned most of the island, suggested selling off the land to the federal government.[73] Samuel Ryerson, one of Samuel Ellis's grandsons, deeded the island to John A. Berry in 1806.[73][81][77] The remaining portion of the island was acquired by condemnation the next year, and it was ceded to the United States on June 30, 1808, for $10,000.[74][73][28][33] Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan Williams, placed in charge of New York Harbor defenses in the early 1800s, proposed several new fortifications around the harbor as part of the Second System of fortifications. The new fortifications included increased firepower and improved weaponry.[82][28] The War Department established a circular stone 14-gun battery, a mortar battery (possibly of six mortars), magazine, and barracks.[83][84][85] The fort was initially called Crown Fort, but by the end of the War of 1812 the battery was named Fort Gibson, in honor of Colonel James Gibson of the 4th Regiment of Riflemen, who was killed in the war during the Siege of Fort Erie.[86][74] The fort was not used in combat during the war, and instead served as a barracks for the 11th Regiment, as well as a jail for British prisoners of war.[29]

Ellis Island buildings circa 1893

Immediately after the end of the War of 1812, Fort Gibson was largely used as a recruiting depot. The fort went into decline due to under-use, and it was being jointly administered by the U.S. Army and Navy by the mid-1830s.[29] Around this time, in 1834, the extant portions of Ellis Island was declared to be an exclave of New York within the waters of New Jersey.[27][28][29] The era of joint administration was short-lived: the Army took over the fort's administration in 1841, demoted the fort to an artillery battery, and stopped garrisoning the fort, leaving a small Navy guard outside the magazine. By 1854, Battery Gibson contained an 11-gun battery, three naval magazines, a short railroad line, and several auxiliary structures such as a cookhouse, gun carriage house, and officers' quarters.[87] The Army continued to maintain the fort until 1860, when it abandoned the weapons at Battery Gibson.[28][88] The artillery magazine was expanded in 1861, during the American Civil War, and part of the parapet was removed.[87]

At the end of the Civil War, the fort declined again, this time to an extent that the weaponry was rendered unusable.[87] Through the 1870s, the Navy built additional buildings for its artillery magazine on Ellis Island,[89] eventually constructing 11 buildings in total.[90] Complaints about the island's magazines started to form, and by the 1870s, The New York Sun was publishing "alarming reports" about the magazines.[73] The guns were ordered removed in 1881, and the island passed under the complete control of the Navy's Bureau of Ordnance.[88]

First immigration station

[edit]
Anti-immigrant cartoon expressing opposition to the construction of Ellis Island (Judge, March 22, 1890)
"Mr. Windom, if you are going to make this island a garbage heap, I am returning to France"

The Army had unsuccessfully attempted to use Ellis Island "for the convalescence for immigrants" as early as 1847.[73] Across New York Harbor, Castle Clinton had been used as an immigration station since 1855, processing more than eight million immigrants during that time.[91][92] The individual states had their own varying immigration laws until 1875, but the federal government regarded Castle Clinton as having "varied charges of mismanagement, abuse of immigrants, and evasion of the laws", and as such, wanted it to be completely replaced.[93] The federal government assumed control of immigration in early 1890 and commissioned a study to determine the best place for the new immigration station in New York Harbor.[93] Among members of the United States Congress, there were disputes about whether to build the station on Ellis, Governors, or Liberty Islands. Initially, Liberty Island was selected as the site for the immigration station,[93] but due to opposition for immigration stations on both Liberty and Governors Islands, the committee eventually decided to build the station on Ellis Island.[e][95] Since Castle Clinton's lease was about to expire, Congress approved a bill to build an immigration station on Ellis Island.[96]

On April 11, 1890, the federal government ordered the magazine at Ellis Island be torn down to make way for the U.S.'s first federal immigration station at the site.[60] The Department of the Treasury, which was in charge of constructing federal buildings in the U.S.,[97] officially took control of the island that May 24.[94] Congress initially allotted $75,000 (equivalent to $2,625,000 in 2024) to construct the station and later doubled that appropriation.[17][94] While the building was under construction, the Barge Office at the Battery was used for immigrant processing.[98] During construction, most of the old Battery Gibson buildings were demolished, and Ellis Island's land size was almost doubled to 6 acres (2.4 ha).[99][97] The main structure was a two-story structure of Georgia Pine,[98][20] which was described in Harper's Weekly as "a latterday watering place hotel" measuring 400 by 150 ft (122 by 46 m).[99] Its outbuildings included a hospital, detention building, laundry building, and utility plant that were all made of wood. Some of the former stone magazine structures were reused for utilities and offices. Additionally, a ferry slip with breakwater was built to the south of Ellis Island.[98][99][20] Following further expansion, the island measured 11 acres (4.5 ha) by the end of 1892.[94]

First Ellis Island Immigrant Station, built in 1892 and destroyed 1897

The station opened on January 1, 1892,[69][20][100][101] and its first immigrant was Annie Moore, a 17-year-old girl from Cork, Ireland, who was traveling with her two brothers to meet their parents in the U.S.[57][100][102][103] On the first day, almost 700 immigrants passed over the docks.[94] Over the next year, over 400,000 immigrants were processed at the station.[f][105][104] The processing procedure included a series of medical and mental inspection lines, and through this process, some 1% of potential immigrants were deported.[106] Additional building improvements took place throughout the mid-1890s,[107][108][109] and Ellis Island was expanded to 14 acres (5.7 ha) by 1896. The last improvements, which entailed the installation of underwater telephone and telegraph cables to Governors Island, were completed in early June 1897.[107] On June 15, 1897, the wooden structures on Ellis Island were razed in a fire of unknown origin. While there were no casualties, the wooden buildings had completely burned down after two hours, and all immigration records from 1855 had been destroyed.[73][105][107][110] Over five years of operation, the station had processed 1.5 million immigrants.[105][97]

Second immigration station

[edit]

Design and construction

[edit]

Following the fire, passenger arrivals were again processed at the Barge Office, which was soon unable to handle the large volume of immigrants.[91][111][112] Within three days of the fire, the federal government made plans to build a new, fireproof immigration station.[91][111] Legislation to rebuild the station was approved on June 30, 1897,[113] and appropriations were made in mid-July.[114] By September, the Treasury's Supervising Architect, James Knox Taylor, opened an architecture competition to rebuild the immigration station.[114] The competition was the second to be conducted under the Tarsney Act of 1893, which had permitted private architects to design federal buildings, rather than government architects in the Supervising Architect's office.[105][115][116] The contest rules specified that a "main building with annexes" and a "hospital building", both made of fireproof materials, should be part of each nomination.[115] Furthermore, the buildings had to be able to host a daily average of 1,000 and maximum of 4,000 immigrants.[117]

Second Ellis Island Immigration Station (opened 1900) as seen in 1905

Several prominent architectural firms filed proposals,[114][117][118] and by December, it was announced that Edward Lippincott Tilton and William A. Boring had won the competition.[105][119] Tilton and Boring's plan called for four new structures: a main building in the French Renaissance style, as well as the kitchen/laundry building, powerhouse, and the main hospital building.[114][118][120][121] The plan also included the creation of a new island called island 2, upon which the hospital would be built, south of the existing island (now Ellis Island's north side).[114][118] A construction contract was awarded to the R. H. Hood Company in August 1898, with the expectation that construction would be completed within a year,[122][123][124] but the project encountered delays because of various obstacles and disagreements between the federal government and the Hood Company.[122][125] A separate contract to build the 3.33-acre (1.35 ha) island 2 had to be approved by the War Department because it was in New Jersey's waters; that contract was completed in December 1898.[126] The construction costs ultimately totaled $1.5 million.[20]

Early expansions

[edit]
European immigrants arriving at Ellis Island, 1915

The new immigration station opened on December 17, 1900, without ceremony. On that day, 2,251 immigrants were processed.[105][127][128] Almost immediately, additional projects commenced to improve the main structure, including an entrance canopy, baggage conveyor, and railroad ticket office. The kitchen/laundry and powerhouse started construction in May 1900 and were completed by the end of 1901.[128][129] A ferry house was also built between islands 1 and 2 c. 1901.[130] The hospital, originally slated to be opened in 1899, was not completed until November 1901, mainly due to various funding delays and construction disputes.[131] The facilities proved barely able to handle the flood of immigrants that arrived, and as early as 1903, immigrants had to remain in their transatlantic boats for several days due to inspection backlogs.[132][133] Several wooden buildings were erected by 1903, including waiting rooms and a 700-bed barracks,[133] and by 1904, over a million dollars' worth of improvements were proposed.[134] The hospital was expanded from 125 to 250 beds in February 1907, and a new psychopathic ward debuted in November of the same year. Also constructed was an administration building adjacent to the hospital.[130][135]

Immigration commissioner William Williams made substantial changes to Ellis Island's operations, and during his tenure from 1902 to 1905 and 1909–1913, Ellis Island processed its peak number of immigrants.[132] Williams also made changes to the island's appearance, adding plants and grading paths upon the once-barren landscape of Ellis Island.[136][137] Under Williams's supervision, a 4.75-acre (1.92 ha) third island was built to accommodate a proposed contagious-diseases ward, separated from existing facilities by 200 ft (61 m) of water.[138][20][135] Island 3, as it was called, was located to the south of island 2 and separated from that island by a now-infilled ferry basin.[20] The government bought the underwater area for island 3 from New Jersey in 1904,[138][139] and a contract was awarded in April 1905.[138] The islands were all connected via a cribwalk on their western sides (later covered with wood canopy), giving Ellis Island an overall "E"-shape.[21][140] Upon the completion of island 3 in 1906, Ellis Island covered 20.25 acres (8.19 ha).[141] A baggage and dormitory building was completed c. 1908–1909,[132][135][142] and the main hospital was expanded in 1909.[143] Alterations were made to the registry building and dormitories as well, but even this was insufficient to accommodate the high volume of immigrants.[144] In 1911, Williams alleged that Congress had allocated too little for improvements to Ellis Island,[145] even though the improvement budget that year was $868,000.[146]

The main building's registry room

Additional improvements and routine maintenance work were completed in the early 1910s.[142][144] A greenhouse was built in 1910,[142][147] and the contagious-diseases ward on island 3 opened the following June.[148][144] In addition, the incinerator was replaced in 1911,[143][135] and a recreation center operated by the American Red Cross was also built on island 2 by 1915.[143][147] These facilities generally followed the design set by Tilton and Boring.[135] When the Black Tom explosion occurred on Black Tom Island in 1916, the complex suffered moderate damage; though all immigrants were evacuated safely, the main building's roof collapsed, and windows were broken. The main building's roof was replaced with a Guastavino-tiled arched ceiling by 1918.[149][150][151] The immigration station was temporarily closed during World War I in 1917–1919, during which the facilities were used as a jail for suspected enemy combatants, and later as a treatment center for wounded American soldiers. Immigration inspections were conducted aboard ships or at docks.[20][143][152][151] During the war, immigration processing at Ellis Island declined by 97%, from 878,000 immigrants per year in 1914 to 26,000 per year in 1919.[153]

Ellis Island's immigration station was reopened in 1920, and processing had rebounded to 560,000 immigrants per year by 1921.[20][154] There were still ample complaints about the inadequate condition of Ellis Island's facilities.[155][156] However, despite a request for $5.6 million in appropriations in 1921,[157] aid was slow to materialize, and initial improvement work was restricted to smaller projects such as the infilling of the basin between islands 2 and 3.[158][154] Other improvements included rearranging features such as staircases to improve pedestrian flow.[158] These projects were supported by president Calvin Coolidge, who in 1924 requested that Congress approve $300,000 in appropriations for the island.[158][159] The allocations were not received until the late 1920s.[158]

Conversion to detention center

[edit]
"Reds, anarchists, radicals" awaiting deportation, 1920

With the passing of the Emergency Quota Act of 1921, the number of immigrants being allowed into the United States declined greatly, ending the era of mass immigration.[160][20][161] Following the Immigration Act of 1924, strict immigration quotas were enacted, and Ellis Island was downgraded from a primary inspection center to an immigrant-detention center, hosting only those that were to be detained or deported (see § Mass detentions and deportations).[20][161][162] Final inspections were now instead conducted on board ships in New York Harbor. The Wall Street Crash of 1929 further decreased immigration, as people were now discouraged from immigrating to the U.S.[161] Because of the resulting decline in patient counts, the hospital closed in 1930.[163][164][165]

Edward Corsi, who himself was an immigrant, became Ellis Island commissioner in 1931 and commenced an improvement program for the island. The initial improvements were utilitarian, focusing on such aspects as sewage, incineration, and power generation.[166][167] In 1933, a federal committee led by the Secretary of Labor, Frances Perkins, was established to determine what operations and facilities needed improvement.[168] The committee's report, released in 1934, suggested the construction of a new class-segregated immigration building, recreation center, ferry house, verandas, and doctors/nurses' quarters, as well as the installation of a new seawall around the island.[169][170][171] These works were undertaken using Public Works Administration funding and Works Progress Administration labor, and were completed by the late 1930s. As part of the project, the surgeon's house and recreation center were demolished,[131][147] and Edward Laning commissioned some murals for the island's buildings.[172] Other improvements included the demolition of the greenhouse, the completion of the infilling of the basin between islands 2 and 3, and various landscaping activities such as the installation of walkways and plants.[173][171] However, because of the steep decline in immigration, the immigration building went underused for several years, and it started to deteriorate.[169][167]

With the start of World War II in 1939, Ellis Island was again used by the military, this time being used as a United States Coast Guard base.[174][175][176] As during World War I, the facilities were used to detain enemy soldiers in addition to immigrants, and the hospital was used for treating injured American soldiers.[176] So many combatants were detained at Ellis Island that administrative offices were moved to mainland Manhattan in 1943, and Ellis Island was used solely for detainment.[167][177]

Mug shot of Arne Pettersen, taken June 16, 1944[g]

By 1947, shortly after the end of World War II, there were proposals to close Ellis Island due to the massive expenses needed for the upkeep of a relatively small detention center.[178] The hospital was closed in 1950–1951 by the United States Public Health Service, and by the early 1950s, there were only 30 to 40 detainees left on the island.[20][179][180] The island's closure was announced in mid-1954, when the federal government announced that it would construct a replacement facility on Manhattan.[181][180] Ellis Island closed on November 12, 1954, with the departure of its last detainee, Norwegian merchant seaman Arne Pettersen, who had been arrested for overstaying his shore leave.[182] At the time, it was estimated that the government would save $900,000 a year from closing the island.[182] The ferryboat Ellis Island, which had operated since 1904, stopped operating two weeks later.[73][183]

Post-closure

[edit]

Initial redevelopment plans

[edit]
Seen from east. From left to right: contagious diseases ward; lawn; hospital; ferry basin; main building, kitchen, dormitory, and immigration building

After the immigration station closed, the buildings fell into disrepair and were abandoned,[184] and the General Services Administration (GSA) took over the island in March 1955.[73] The GSA wanted to sell off the island as "surplus property"[185] and contemplated several options, including selling the island back to the city of New York[186] or auctioning it to a private buyer.[187] In 1959, real estate developer Sol Atlas unsuccessfully bid for the island, with plans to turn it into a $55 million resort with a hotel, marina, music shell, tennis courts, swimming pools, and skating rinks.[188][189] The same year, Frank Lloyd Wright designed the $100 million "Key Project",[h] which included housing, hotels, and large domes along the edges. However, Wright died before presenting the project.[190][191] Other attempts at redeveloping the site, including a college,[192] a retirement home,[184] an alcoholics' rehabilitation center,[193] and a world trade center[194] were all unsuccessful.[184][195] In 1963, the Jersey City Council voted to rezone the island's area within New Jersey for high-rise residential, monument/museum, or recreational use, though the new zoning ordinance banned "Coney Island"-style amusement parks.[196][197]

In June 1964, the National Park Service published a report that proposed making Ellis Island part of a national monument.[198] This idea was approved by Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall in October 1964.[199] Ellis Island was added to the Statue of Liberty National Monument on May 11, 1965,[2][200][201] and that August, President Lyndon B. Johnson approved the redevelopment of the island as a museum and park.[201][202]

The initial master plan for the redevelopment of Ellis Island, designed by Philip Johnson, called for the construction of the Wall, a large "stadium"-shaped monument to replace the structures on the island's northwest side, while preserving the main building and hospital.[203][204] However, no appropriations were immediately made, other than a $250,000 allocation for emergency repairs in 1967. By the late 1960s, the abandoned buildings were deteriorating severely.[205][206][204] Johnson's plan was never implemented due to public opposition and a lack of funds.[204] Another master plan was proposed in 1968, which called for the rehabilitation of the island's northern side and the demolition of all buildings, including the hospital, on the southern side.[207] The Jersey City Jobs Corpsmen started rehabilitating part of Ellis Island the same year, in accordance with this plan.[208][207] This was soon halted indefinitely because of a lack of funding.[207] In 1970, a squatters' club called the National Economic Growth and Reconstruction Organization (NEGRO) started refurbishing buildings as part of a plan to turn the island into an addiction rehabilitation center,[209] but were evicted after less than two weeks.[210][211] NEGRO's permit to renovate the island were ultimately terminated in 1973.[211]

Restoration and reopening of north side

[edit]
Detail of ceiling of registry room

In the 1970s, the NPS started restoring the island by repairing seawalls, eliminating weeds, and building a new ferry dock.[212] Simultaneously, Peter Sammartino launched the Restore Ellis Island Committee to raise awareness and money for repairs.[73][213][214] The north side of the island, comprising the main building and surrounding structures, was rehabilitated and partially reopened for public tours in May 1976.[73][212][215][216] The plant was left unrepaired to show the visitors the extent of the deterioration.[216] The NPS limited visits to 130 visitors per boat, or less than 75,000 visitors a year.[212] Initially, only parts of three buildings were open to visitors. Further repairs were stymied by a lack of funding, and by 1982, the NPS was turning to private sources for funds.[217]

In May 1982, President Ronald Reagan announced the formation of the Statue of Liberty–Ellis Island Centennial Commission, led by Chrysler Corporation chair Lee Iacocca with former President Gerald Ford as honorary chairman, to raise the funds needed to complete the work.[73][218][219] The plan for Ellis Island was to cost $128 million,[220] and by the time work commenced in 1984, about $40 million had been raised.[221] Through its fundraising arm, the Statue of Liberty–Ellis Island Foundation, Inc., the group eventually raised more than $350 million in donations for the renovations of both the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island.[222] Initial restoration plans included renovating the main building, baggage and dormitory building, and the hospital, as well as possibly adding a bandshell, restaurant, and exhibits.[223] Two firms, Notter Finegold & Alexander and Beyer Blinder Belle, designed the renovation.[224] In advance of the renovation, public tours ceased in 1984, and work started the following year.[73][225] As part of the restoration, the powerhouse was renovated, while the incinerator, greenhouse, and water towers were removed.[226][147] The kitchen/laundry and baggage/dormitory buildings were restored to their original condition while the main building was restored to its 1918–1924 appearance.[225][227]

The main building opened as a museum on September 10, 1990.[228][229][230] Further improvements were made after the north side's renovation was completed. The Wall of Honor, a monument to raise money for the restoration, was completed in 1990 and reconstructed starting in 1993.[231][226] A research facility with online database, the American Family Immigration History Center, was opened in April 2001.[73][232] Subsequently, the ferry building was restored for $6.4 million and reopened in 2007.[233] The north side was temporarily closed after being damaged in Hurricane Sandy in October 2012,[234] though the island and part of the museum reopened exactly a year later, after major renovations.[235][236][237]

In March 2020, the island was closed temporarily due to the COVID-19 pandemic;[238] it reopened in August 2020, initially with strict capacity limits.[239] A$100 million renovation of the Ellis Island museum began in early 2024; the changes included a three-story exhibition space and a new "discovery center".[240][241] The NPS also announced plans to spend $17.7 million on renovating the museum buildings.[242] Save Ellis Island, a nonprofit organization based in New Jersey, concurrently advocated for the preservation of the hospital buildings on the island's southern end. By 2023, Save Ellis Island had raised $70 million toward the buildings' renovation.[243]

Structures

[edit]

Buildings and structures at Ellis Island
  1. Main building
  2. Kitchen-laundry
  3. Baggage-dormitory
  4. Bakery-carpentry shop
  5. Powerhouse
  6. Ferry building
  7. Laundry-hospital outbuilding
  8. Psychopathic ward
  9. Main hospital building
  10. Recreation building and pavilion
  11. Office building; morgue
  12. Powerhouse and laundry
  13. Measles wards (A, C, G, E)
  14. Administration building and kitchen
  15. Measles wards (B, D, F, H)
  16. Isolation wards (I, K, L)
  17. Staff House
  18. Wall of Honor

The current complex was designed by Edward Lippincott Tilton and William A. Boring, who performed the commission under the direction of the Supervising Architect for the U.S. Treasury, James Knox Taylor.[122][244] Boring was responsible for the majority of the buildings.[245] Tilton and Boring's plan, submitted in 1898, called for structures to be located on both the northern and southern portions of Ellis Island. The plan stipulated a large main building, a powerhouse, and a new baggage/dormitory and kitchen building on the north side of Ellis Island; a hospital on the south side; and a ferry dock with covered walkways at the head of the ferry basin, on the west side of the island.[121][246] The plan roughly corresponds to what was ultimately built.[21][247]

North side

[edit]

The northern half of Ellis Island is composed of the former island 1. Only the areas associated with the original island, including much of the main building, are in New York; the remaining area is in New Jersey.[20][21]

Main building

[edit]

The present three-story main structure was designed in French Renaissance style. It is made of a steel frame, with a facade of red brick in Flemish bond ornamented with limestone trim.[127][248][249] The structure is located 8 ft (2.4 m) above the mean waterline to prevent flooding.[122] The building was initially composed of a three-story center section with two-story east and west wings, though the third stories of each wing were completed in the early 1910s. Atop the corners of the building's central section are four towers capped by cupolas of copper cladding.[250][249] Some 160 rooms were included within the original design to separate the different functions of the building. Namely, the first floor was initially designed to handle baggage, detention, offices, storage and waiting rooms; the second floor, primary inspection; and the third floor, dormitories.[246] However, in practice, these spaces generally served multiple functions throughout the immigration station's operating history. At opening, it was estimated that the main building could inspect 5,000 immigrants per day.[251][252] The main building's design was highly acclaimed; at the 1900 Paris Exposition, it received a gold medal, and other architectural publications such as the Architectural Record lauded the design.[253]

Entrance to the Main Building, seen from the south. The entrance canopy can be seen in the foreground, and the three arches of the south facade, as well as two of the ornamental towers, can be seen in the background.
Entrance to the Main Building, seen from the south

The first floor contained detention rooms, social service offices, and waiting rooms on its west wing, a use that remained relatively unchanged.[254] The central space was initially a baggage room until 1907, but was subsequently subdivided and later re-combined into a single records room.[254] The first floor's east wing also contained a railroad waiting room and medical offices, though much of the wing was later converted to record rooms.[255] A railroad ticket office annex was added to the north side of the first floor in 1905–1906.[249] The south elevation of the first floor contains the current immigration museum's main entrance, approached by a slightly sloped passageway covered by a glass canopy. Though the canopy was added in the 1980s, it evokes the design of an earlier glass canopy on the site that existed from 1902 to 1932.[256][248]

Italian family in the baggage room, 1905. Original caption:
Lost baggage is the cause of their worried expressions. At the height of immigration the entire first floor of the administration building was used to store baggage.[257]

A 200 by 100 ft (61 by 30 m) registry room, with a 56 ft (17 m) ceiling, is located on the central section of the second floor.[251][258] The room was used for primary inspections.[259][255] Initially, there were handrails within the registry room that separated the primary inspection into several queues, but c. 1911 these were replaced with benches. A staircase from the first floor formerly rose into the middle of the registry room, but this was also removed around 1911.[244][144] When the room's roof collapsed during the Black Tom explosion of 1916, the current Guastavino-tiled arched ceiling was installed, and the asphalt floor was replaced with red Ludowici tile.[151][258] There are three large arched openings each on the northern and southern walls, filled-in with grilles of metal-and-glass. The southern elevation retains its original double-height arches, while the lower sections of the arches on the northern elevations were modified to make way for the railroad ticket office.[250][249] On all four sides of the room, above the level of the third floor, is a clerestory of semicircular windows.[258][250][249] The east wing of the second floor was used for administrative offices,[260] while the west wing housed the special inquiry and deportation divisions, as well as dormitories.[255]

On the third floor is a balcony surrounding the entire registry room.[244][246] There were also dormitories for 600 people on the third floor.[251] Between 1914 and 1918, several rooms were added to the third floor. These rooms included offices as well as an assembly room that were later converted to detention.[260]

The remnants of Fort Gibson still exist outside the main building. Two portions are visible to the public, including the remnants of the lower walls around the fort.[256]

Kitchen and laundry

[edit]
Undated photo of southern facade of kitchen and laundry

The kitchen and laundry structure is a 2+12-story structure located west of the main building.[21][247] It is made of a steel frame and terracotta blocks, with a granite base and a facade of brick in Flemish bond.[129] Originally designed as two separate structures, it was redesigned in 1899 as a single structure with kitchen-restaurant and laundry-bathhouse components,[261] and was subsequently completed in 1901.[128][129] A 1+12-story ice plant on the northern elevation was built between 1903 and 1908, and was converted into a ticket office in 1935. It has a facade of brick in English and stretcher bond.[129] Today, the kitchen and laundry contains NPS offices[262] as well as the museum's Peopling of America exhibit.[263]

The building has a central portion with a narrow gable roof, as well as pavilions on the western and eastern sides with hip roofs; the roof tiling was formerly of slate and currently of Ludowici terracotta. The larger eastern pavilion, which contained the laundry-bathhouse, had hipped dormers. The exterior-facing window and door openings contain limestone features on the facade, while the top of the building has a modillioned copper cornice. Formerly, there was also a two-story porch on the southern elevation. Multiple enclosed passageways connect the kitchen and laundry to adjacent structures.[129]

Bakery and carpentry shop

[edit]

The bakery and carpentry shop is a two-story structure located west of the kitchen and laundry building. It is roughly rectangular and oriented north–south.[21][247] It is made of a steel frame with a granite base, a flat roof, and a facade of brick in Flemish bond. The building was constructed in 1914–1915 to replace the separate wooden bakery and carpentry shop buildings, as well as two sheds and a frame waiting room. There are no exterior entrances, and the only access is via the kitchen and laundry.[264][265] The first floor generally contained oven rooms, baking areas and storage while the second floor contained the carpentry shop.[265]

Baggage and dormitory

[edit]
View from the southeast; the baggage and dormitory (right) is east of the main building (left)

The baggage and dormitory structure is a three-story structure located north of the main building.[21][247] It is made of a steel frame and terracotta blocks, with a limestone base and a facade of brick in Flemish bond.[266] Completed as a two-story structure c. 1908–1909,[132][135][142] the baggage and dormitory building replaced a 700-bed wooden barracks nearby that operated between 1903 and 1911.[266] The baggage and dormitory initially had baggage collection on its first floor, dormitories and detention rooms on its second floor, and a tiled garden on its roof.[266][267] The building received a third story, and a two-story annex to the north side, in 1913–1914.[266][267] Initially, the third floor included additional dormitory space while the annex provided detainees with outdoor porch space.[267] A detainee dining room on the first floor was expanded in 1951.[265]

The building is mostly rectangular except for its northern annex and contains an interior courtyard, skylighted at the second floor. On its facade the first story has rectangular windows in arched window openings while the second and third stories have rectangular windows and window openings. There are cornices below the second and third stories. The annex contains wide window openings with narrow brick piers outside them. The roof's northwest corner contains a one-story extension. Multiple wings connect the baggage and laundry to its adjacent buildings.[266]

Powerhouse

[edit]

The powerhouse of Ellis Island is a two-story structure located north of the kitchen and laundry building and west of the baggage and dormitory building. It is roughly rectangular and oriented north–south.[21][247] Like the kitchen and laundry, it was completed in 1901.[128][268][269] It is made of a steel frame with a granite base, a facade of brick in Flemish bond, and decorative bluestone and limestone elements. The hip roof contains dormers and is covered with terracotta tiling. A brick smokestack rises 111 ft (34 m) from ground level.[266]

Formerly, the powerhouse provided almost all power for Ellis Island. A coal trestle at the northwest end was used to transport coal for power generation from 1901 to 1932, when the powerhouse started using fuel oil.[266] The powerhouse also generated steam for the island.[270] After the immigration station closed, the powerhouse deteriorated[216] and was left unrepaired until the 1980s renovation.[226] The powerhouse is no longer operational; instead, the island receives power from 13,200-volt cables that lead from a Public Service Electric & Gas substation in Liberty State Park. The powerhouse contains sewage pumps that can dispose of up to 480 U.S. gal/min (1,800 L/min) to the Jersey City Sewage Authority sewage system. A central heating plant was installed during the 1980s renovation.[271]

South side

[edit]

The southern side of Ellis Island, located across the ferry basin from the northern side, is composed of island 2 (created in 1899) and island 3 (created in 1906).[141] The entire southern side of the island is in New Jersey, and the majority of the site is occupied by the hospital buildings. A central corridor runs southward from the ferry building on the west side of the island. Two additional corridors split eastward down the centers of islands 2 and 3.[20][21]

Island 2

[edit]

Island 2 comprises the northern part of Ellis Island's southern portion. The structures share the same design: a brick facade in Flemish bond, quoins, and limestone ornamentation.[272][273][274] All structures were internally connected via covered passageways.[20][21]

A Smith-Drum laundry machine in the outbuilding

The laundry-hospital outbuilding is south of the ferry terminal, and was constructed in 1900–1901 along with the now-demolished surgeon's house.[131][272] The structure is one and a half stories tall with a hip roof and skylights facing to the north and south.[272] Repaired repeatedly throughout its history,[275] the laundry-outbuilding was last restored in 2002.[276] It had linen, laundry, and disinfecting rooms; a boiler room; a morgue with autopsy room; and quarters for the laundry staff on the second floor.[275]

To the east is the psychopathic ward, a two-story building erected 1906–1907.[130][277][278] The building is the only structure in the hospital complex to have a flat roof, and formerly also had a porch to its south.[278][273] It housed 25 to 30 beds and was intended for the temporary treatment of immigrants suspected of being insane or having mental disorders, pending their deportation, hospitalization, or commitment to sanatoria. Male and female patients were segregated, and there were also a dayroom, veranda, nurse's office, and small pantry on each floor. In 1952 the psychopathic ward was converted into a Coast Guard brig.[273][279]

The main building is directly east of the psychopathic ward. It is composed of three similarly designed structures: from west to east, they are Hospital Building No. 1 (built 1900–1901), the Administration Building (1905–1907), and Hospital Building No. 2 (1908–1909).[131][274] The 3.5-story building no. 1 is shaped like an inverted "C" with two 2.5-story rectangular wings facing southward; the wings contain two-story-tall porches. The administration building is smaller but also 3.5 stories. The 3.5-story building no. 2 is similar to building no. 1, but also has a three-story porch at the south elevation of the central pavilion. All three buildings have stone-stoop entrances on their north facades and courtyards on their south.[274]

Recreation hall

[edit]

The recreation hall and one of the island's two recreation shelters are located between islands 2 and 3 on the western side of Ellis Island, at the head of the former ferry basin between the two landmasses.[20][21] Built in 1937 in the Colonial Revival style, the structures replaced an earlier recreation building at the northeast corner of island 2.[280][281][282]

The recreation hall is a two-story building with a limestone base, a facade of brick in Flemish bond, a gable roof, and terracotta ornamentation. The first floor contained recreational facilities, while the second floor was used mostly for offices. It contains wings on the north, south, and west. The recreation shelter, a one-story brick pavilion, is located directly to the east.[282][283] A second shelter of similar design was located adjacent to the power plant on the island's north side.[281][283]

Island 3

[edit]
Isolation ward on island 3

As part of the Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital, the contagious disease hospital comprised 17 pavilions, connected with a central connecting corridor. Each pavilion contained separate hospital functions that could be sealed off from each other.[20][21] Most of the structures were completed in 1911.[148][144][284] The pavilions included eight measles wards, three isolation wards, a power house/sterilizer/autopsy theater, mortuary, laboratory, administration building, kitchen, and staff house. All structures were designed by James Knox Taylor in the Italian Renaissance style and are distinguished by red-tiled Ludowici hip roofs, roughcast walls of stucco, and ornamentation of brick and limestone.[284]

The office building and laboratory is a 2.5-story structure located at the west end of island 3.[285] It housed doctors' offices and a dispensary on the first floor, along with a laboratory and pharmacists' quarters on the second floor.[285][286] In 1924, the first floor offices were converted into male nurses' quarters.[287] A one-story morgue is located east of the office building, and was converted to the "Animal House" circa 1919.[288][289]

An L-shaped powerhouse and laundry building, built in 1908, is also located on the west side of island 3. It has a square north wing with boiler, coal, and pump rooms, as well as a rectangular south wing with laundry and disinfection rooms, staff kitchen, and staff pantry.[286][290] The powerhouse and laundry also had a distinctive yellow-brick smokestack. Part of the building was converted into a morgue and autopsy room in the 1930s.[290][291]

To the east are the eight measles pavilions (also known as wards A-H), built in phases from 1906 to 1909 and located near the center of island 3. There are four pavilions each to the west and east of island 3's administration building. All of the pavilions are identical, two-story rectangular structures.[286][292][293] Each pavilion floor had a spacious open ward with large windows on three sides and independent ventilation ducts. A hall leading to the connecting corridor was flanked by bathrooms, nurses' duty room, offices, and a serving kitchen.[293]

Immigrants on a ferry, c. 1910s

The administration building is a 3.5-story structure located on the north side of island 3's connecting corridor, in the center of the landmass.[294] It included reception rooms, offices, and a staff kitchen on the first floor; nurses' quarters and operating rooms on the second floor; and additional staff quarters on the third floor.[295] A one-story kitchen with a smokestack is located opposite the administration building to the south.[296][297]

The eastern end of island 3 contained three isolation pavilions (wards I-K) and a staff building.[286] The isolation pavilions were intended for patients for more serious diseases, including scarlet fever, diphtheria, and a combination of either of these diseases with measles and whooping cough. Each pavilion is a 1.5-story rectangular structure. Wards I and K are located to the south of the connecting corridor while ward J is located to the north; originally, all three pavilions were freestanding structures, but covered ways were built between wards I and K and the center corridor in 1914. There were also nurses' quarters in each attic.[286][298][299] The staff building. located at the extreme east end of island 3's connecting corridor, is a 2.5-story building for high-ranking hospital staff. Living and dining rooms, a kitchen, and a library were located on the first floor while bedrooms were located on the second floor.[286][300]

Ferry building

[edit]
Ellis Island Ferry Building

The ferry building is at the western end of the ferry basin, within New Jersey.[21][301] The current structure was built in 1936[302] and is the third ferry landing to occupy the site.[301] It is made of a steel-and-concrete frame with a facade of red brick in Flemish bond, and limestone and terracotta ornamentation, in the Moderne architectural style. The building's central pavilion is mostly one story tall, except for a two-story central section that is covered by a hip roof with cupola. Two rectangular wings are located to the north and south and are oriented east–west.[301][302][303] The south wing was originally reserved for U.S. Customs while the north wing contained a lunchroom and restrooms. A wooden dock extends east from the ferry building.[303] The ferry building is connected to the kitchen and laundry to the north, and the hospital to the south, via covered walkways.[301][303] The structure was completely restored in 2007.[233]

Immigration procedures

[edit]
December 2014 aerial view of the area; in the foreground is Ellis Island, and behind it is Liberty State Park and Downtown Jersey City
Exhausted Slavic immigrant, 1907.

By the time Ellis Island's immigration station closed, almost 12 million immigrants had been processed by the U.S. Bureau of Immigration.[91] It is estimated that 10.5 million immigrants departed for points across the United States from the Central Railroad of New Jersey Terminal nearby.[304][305] Others would have used one of the other terminals along the North River/Hudson River at that time.[306] At the time of closure, it was estimated that closer to 20 million immigrants had been processed or detained at Ellis Island.[307][182]

Immigrants did not need a passport, visa, or any other document to enter the country. Transportation companies were in charge of all checks; if the entry was denied, the company was fined $100 per each deported passenger, and covered the costs of their deportation.[308] Initial immigration policy provided for the admission of most immigrants to the United States, other than those with mental or physical disabilities, or a moral, racial, religious, or economic reason for exclusion.[309] At first, the majority of immigrants arriving were Northern and Western Europeans, with the largest numbers coming from the German Empire, the Russian Empire and Finland, the United Kingdom, and Italy.[310] Eventually, these groups of peoples slowed in the rates that they were coming in, and immigrants came in from Southern Europe, Eastern Europe, The Middle East, and North Africa, including Jews. These people immigrated for a variety of reasons including escaping political and economic oppression, as well as persecution, destitution, and violence. Often among these groups were Swedes, Poles, Hungarians, Czechs, Croats, Serbs, Slovaks, Italians, Greeks, Turks, Armenians, Syrians, Lebanese, and Egyptians.[160]

Italo-Albanian woman at Ellis Island, 1905. Original caption:
This woman is wearing her native costume. At times the Island looked like a costume ball with the multicolored, many-styled national costumes.[311]

Immigration through Ellis Island peaked in the first decade of the 20th century.[132][312] Between 1905 and 1914, an average of one million immigrants per year arrived in the United States.[312] Immigration officials reviewed about 5,000 immigrants per day during peak times at Ellis Island.[313] Two-thirds of those individuals emigrated from Eastern Europe, Southern Europe, Central Europe, The Middle East, and North Africa.[314] The peak year for immigration at Ellis Island was 1907, with 1,004,756 immigrants processed,[69] and the all-time daily high occurred on April 17 of that year, when 11,747 immigrants arrived.[315][316] Following the Immigration Act of 1924, which both greatly reduced immigration and allowed processing overseas, Ellis Island was only used by those who had problems with their immigration paperwork, as well as displaced persons and war refugees.[161][162][317] This affected both nationwide and regional immigration processing: only 2.34 million immigrants passed through the Port of New York from 1925 to 1954, compared to the 12 million immigrants processed from 1900 to 1924.[i][312] Average annual immigration through the Port of New York from 1892 to 1924 typically numbered in the hundreds of thousands, though after 1924, annual immigration through the port was usually in the tens of thousands.[312]

According to a 2025 estimate from Reason magazine, two out of every five Americans may be descended from someone who passed through Ellis Island.[318] Other estimates posit that as many as 100 million Americans, as of 2019, are descendants of an immigrant who passed through Ellis Island moving to the United States from another country.[319][308]

Inspections

[edit]

Medical inspection

[edit]
Physicians examining a group of Jewish immigrants, eye chart written in Hebrew hangs on wall (c. 1907)
Immigrant children being examined by city health officer upon arrival at the battery from Ellis Island during Typhus Scare
"1905. Here is a Slavic group waiting to get through entrance gate. Many lines like these were prevalent in the early days. There was no room to keep personal belongings, so the immigrants had to carry their baggage with them all the time." (photo by Lewis Hine)[320]

Beginning in the 1890s, initial medical inspections were conducted by steamship companies at the European ports of embarkation; further examinations and vaccinations occurred on board ship during the voyage to New York.[321] On arrival at the port of New York, ships halted at the New York state quarantine station near the Narrows. Those with serious contagious diseases (such as cholera and typhus) were quarantined at Hoffman Island or Swinburne Island, two artificial islands off the shore of Staten Island to the south.[322][323][324] The islands ceased to be used for quarantine by the 1920s due to the decline in inspections at Ellis Island.[321] For the vast majority of passengers, since most transatlantic ships could not dock at Ellis Island due to shallow water, the ships unloaded at Manhattan first, and steerage passengers were then taken to Ellis Island for processing. First- and second-class passengers, and American passengers of any class, typically bypassed the Ellis Island processing altogether.[325]

To support the activities of the United States Bureau of Immigration, the United States Public Health Service operated an extensive medical service. The medical force at Ellis Island started operating when the first immigration station opened in 1892, and was suspended when the station burned down in 1897.[326] Between 1897 and 1902, medical inspections took place both at other facilities in New York City and on ships in the New York Harbor.[327] A second hospital called U.S. Marine Hospital Number 43 or the Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital was built in 1902 and operated through 1930.[163][164][165] Uniformed military surgeons staffed the medical division, which was active in the hospital wards, the Battery's Barge Office, and Ellis Island's Main Building.[328][329] Immigrants were brought to the island via barge from their transatlantic ships.[330][331]

A "line inspection" was conducted in the main building. In the line inspection, the immigrants were split into several single-file lines, and inspectors first checked for any visible physical disabilities.[329][331][332] Each immigrant was inspected by two inspectors: one to catch any initial physical disabilities, and another to check for any other ailments that the first inspector did not notice.[332] The doctors then observed immigrants as they walked, to determine any irregularities in their gait. Immigrants were asked to drop their baggage and walk up the stairs to the second floor.[333][331][332]

The line inspection at Ellis Island was unique because of the volume of people it processed, and as such, used several unconventional methods of medical examination.[329][334] For example, after an initial check for physical disabilities, inspectors used special forceps or the buttonhook to examine immigrants for signs of eye diseases such as trachoma.[335] Following each examination, inspectors used chalk to draw symbols on immigrants who were suspected to be sick.[336][330][334] Some immigrants supposedly wiped the chalk marks off surreptitiously or inverted their clothes to avoid medical detention.[333] Chalk-marked immigrants and those with suspected mental disabilities were then sent to rooms for further inspection, according to a 1917 account.[330]

The symbols used for chalk markings were:[336][330]

Primary inspection

[edit]
A Finnish stowaway, 1926. Original caption: The desire to come to America must have been very strong for this young man to face all sorts of uncertainties.[320]

Once immigrants had completed and passed the medical examination, they were sent to the Registry Room to undergo what was called primary inspection. This consisted of interrogations conducted by U.S. Immigrant Inspectors to determine if each newcomer was eligible for admission. In addition, any medical certificates issued by physicians were taken into account. Aside from the U.S. immigrant inspectors, the Bureau of Immigration work force included interpreters, watchmen, matrons, clerks and stenographers.[337] According to a reconstruction of immigration processes in 1907, immigrants who passed the initial inspections spent two to five hours at Ellis Island to do these interviews. Arrivals were asked a couple dozen questions, including name, occupation, and the amount of money they carried. The government wanted to determine whether new arrivals would be self-sufficient upon arrival, and on average, wanted the immigrants to have between $18 and $25 (worth between $607 and $844 as of 2024[j]).[338] Some immigrants were also given literacy tests in their native languages, though children under 16 were exempt. The determination of admissibility was relatively arbitrary and determined by the individual inspector.[337]

U.S. Immigrant Inspectors used some other symbols or marks as they interrogated immigrants in the Registry Room to determine whether to admit or detain them, including:[336]

Those who were cleared were given a medical certificate or an affidavit.[331] According to a 1912 account by physician Alfred C. Reed, immigrants were medically cleared only after three on-duty physicians signed an affidavit.[334] Those with visible illnesses were deported or held in the island's hospital.[338] Those who were admitted often met with relatives and friends at the Kissing Post, a wooden column outside the registry room.[339]

Between 1891 and 1930, Ellis Island reviewed over 25 million attempted immigrants, of which 700,000 were given certificates of disability or disease and of these 79,000 were barred from entry. Approximately 4.4% of immigrants between 1909 and 1930 were classified as disabled or diseased, and one percent of immigrants were deported yearly due to medical causes. The proportion of "diseased" increased to 8.0% during the Spanish flu of 1918–1919.[340] More than 3,000 attempted immigrants died in the island's hospital.[338] Some unskilled workers were deemed "likely to become a public charge" and so were rejected; about 2% of immigrants were deported.[338] Immigrants could also be excluded if they were disabled and previously rejected; if they were Chinese, regardless of their citizenship status; or if they were contract laborers, stowaways, and workaways.[337] However, immigrants were exempt from deportation if they had close family ties to a U.S. permanent resident or citizen, or if they were seamen.[341] Ellis Island was sometimes known as the "Island of Tears" or "Heartbreak Island" for these deportees.[342] If immigrants were rejected, appeals could be made to a three-member board of inquiry.[343]

Mass detentions and deportations

[edit]
Immigrants being inspected, 1904

Ellis Island's use as a detention center dates from World War I, when it was used to house those who were suspected of being enemy soldiers.[143][152][151][344] During the war, six classes of "enemy aliens" were established, including officers and crewmen from interned ships; three classes of Germans; and suspected spies.[345] After the American entry into World War I, about 1,100 German and Austrian naval officers and crewmen in the Ports of New York and New London were seized and held in Ellis Island's baggage and dormitory building.[344] A commodious stockade was built for the seized officers.[346] A 1917 New York Times article depicted the conditions of the detention center as being relatively hospitable.[347]

Anti-immigrant sentiments developed in the U.S. during and after World War I, especially toward Southern and Eastern Europeans who were entering the country in large numbers.[348][349] Following the Immigration Act of 1924, primary inspection was moved to New York Harbor, and Ellis Island only hosted immigrants that were to be detained or deported.[161][162] After the passage of the 1924 act, the Immigration Service established multiple classes of people who were said to be "deportable". This included immigrants who entered in violation of previous exclusion acts; Chinese immigrants in violation of the 1924 act; those convicted of felonies or other "crimes of moral turpitude"; and those involved in prostitution.[350]

During and immediately following World War II, Ellis Island was used to hold German merchant mariners and "enemy aliens"—Axis nationals detained for fear of spying, sabotage, and other fifth column activity.[351] When the U.S. entered the war in December 1941, Ellis Island held 279 Japanese, 248 Germans, and 81 Italians removed from the East Coast.[352] Unlike other wartime immigration detention stations, Ellis Island was designated as a permanent holding facility and was used to hold foreign nationals throughout the war.[353] A total of 7,000 Germans, Italians and Japanese were ultimately detained at Ellis Island.[69]

The Internal Security Act of 1950 barred members of communist or fascist organizations from immigrating to the United States. Two notable communists known to have been imprisoned on Ellis Island include Billy Strachan, a pioneer of black civil rights in Britain, and Ferdinand Smith who co-founded the first desegregated union in the history of the United States.[354] Ellis Island saw detention peak at 1,500, but by 1952, after changes to immigration laws and policies, only 30 to 40 detainees remained.[20][69] One of the last detainees was the Indonesian Aceh separatist Hasan di Tiro who declared himself the leader of the rebellious Darul Islam movement, lost his Indonesian citizenship, and was held on Ellis Island for illegal immigration.[355]

Eugenic influence

[edit]
Film by Edison Studios showing immigrants disembarking from the steam ferryboat William Myers, July 9, 1903
Dormitory room for detained immigrants

When immigration through Ellis Island peaked, eugenic ideals gained broad popularity, making a heavy impact on immigration to the United States by way of exclusion of disabled and "morally defective" people. Eugenicists of the late 19th and early 20th century believed human reproductive selection should be carried out by the state as a collective decision.[356] For many eugenicists, this was considered a patriotic duty as they held an interest in creating a greater national race. Henry Fairfield Osborn's opening words to the New York Evening Journal in 1911 were, "As a biologist as well as a patriot...," on the subject on advocating for tighter inspections of immigrants of the United States.[357]

Eugenic selection occurred on two distinguishable levels:

  • State/Local levels which handles institutionalization and sterilization of those considered defective as well as the education of the public; marriage laws; and social pressures such as fitter-family and better-baby contests.[358]
  • Immigration control, the screening of immigrants for defects, was notably supported by Harry Laughlin, superintendent of the Eugenics Record Office from 1910 to 1939, who stated that this was where the "federal government must cooperate."[359]

At the time, it was a broadly popular idea that immigration policies had ought to be based on eugenics principles in order to help create a "superior race" in America. To do this, defective persons needed to be screened by immigration officials and denied entry on the basis of their disability.[331]

During the line inspection process, ailments were marked using chalk.[336][330] There were three types of illness that were screened for:

A tattooed German stowaway who was later deported. May 1, 1911.
A Serbian Gypsy family who were later deported. 1905.

The people with moral or mental disability, who were of higher concern to officials and under the law, were required to be excluded from entry to the United States. Persons with a physical disability were under higher inspection and could be turned away on the basis of their defect. This exlcusionary practice of admission came in part from the eugenicist belief that defects are hereditary, especially those of a moral and mental nature, though these are often outwardly signified by physical deformity as well.[356] As Chicago surgeon Eugene S. Talbot wrote in 1898, "crime is hereditary, a tendency which is, in most cases, associated with bodily defects."[362] Likewise, George Lydston, a medicine and criminal anthropology professor, wrote in 1906 that people with "defective physique" were not just criminally associated but that defectiveness was a primary factor "in the causation of crime."[363]

Leadership

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Within the U.S. Bureau of Immigration, there were fifteen commissioners assigned to oversee immigration procedures at the Port of New York, and thus, operations at Ellis Island. The twelve commissioners through 1940 were political appointees selected by the U.S. president; the political parties listed are those of the president who appointed each commissioner. One man, William Williams, served twice as commissioner.[73][364]

  1. 1890–1893 John B. Weber (Republican)[73][364][365]
  2. 1893–1897 Joseph H. Senner (Democrat)[73][364]
  3. 1898–1902 Thomas Fitchie (Republican)[73][364]
  4. 1902–1905 William Williams (Republican)[73][364][366]
  5. 1905–1909 Robert Watchorn (Republican)[73][364]
  6. 1909–1913 William Williams (Republican)[73][364]
  7. 1914–1919 Frederic C. Howe (Democrat)[73][364]
  8. 1920–1921 Frederick A. Wallis (Democrat)[73][364]
  9. 1921–1923 Robert E. Tod (Republican)[73][364]
  10. 1923–1926 Henry H. Curran (Republican)[73][364]
  11. 1926–1931 Benjamin M. Day (Republican)[364][367]
  12. 1931–1934 Edward Corsi (Republican)[73][364]
  13. 1934–1940 Rudolph Reimer (Democrat)[73][364]

The final three commissioners held a non-partisan position of "district director". The district directors were:[368]

  1. 1933–1942 Byron H. Uhl[369][368]
  2. 1942–1949 W. Frank Watkins[370][371][368]
  3. 1949–1954 Edward J. Shaughnessy[73][368][371]

Name-change myth

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Scenes at the Immigration Depot and a nearby dock on Ellis Island, 1906

According to popular legend, immigrants were unwillingly or unknowingly given new names (especially last names or surnames), though this claim is not supported by substantive evidence.[372][373] Rather, immigration officials simply used the names from the manifests of steamship companies, which served as the only immigration records for those entering the United States. Records show that immigration officials often actually corrected mistakes in immigrants' names, since inspectors knew three languages on average and each worker was usually assigned to process immigrants who spoke the same languages.[372][373][374][375]

Many immigrant families Americanized their surnames afterward, either immediately following the immigration process or gradually after assimilating into American culture.[373] Because the average family changed their surname five years after immigration, the Naturalization Act of 1906 required documentation of name changes.[373][374] The myth of name changes at Ellis Island still persists, likely because of the perception of the immigration center as a formidable port of arrival,[373] and because it is used in popular books and movies such as The Godfather Part II.[375]

Current use

[edit]

The island is administered by the National Park Service,[376] though fire protection and medical services are also provided by the Jersey City Fire Department.[262] In extreme medical emergencies, there is also a helicopter for medical evacuations.[377]

Ellis Island National Museum of Immigration

[edit]
Entrance to the Ellis Island National Museum of Immigration

The Ellis Island National Museum of Immigration opened on September 10, 1990,[228] replacing the American Museum of Immigration on Liberty Island, which closed in 1991.[378] The museum contains several exhibits across three floors of the main building, with a first-floor expansion into the kitchen-laundry building.[379] The first floor houses the main lobby within the baggage room, the Family Immigration History Center, Peopling of America, and New Eras of Immigration.[380] The second floor includes the registry room, the hearing room, Through America's Gate, and Peak Immigration Years.[381] The third floor contains a dormitory room, Restoring a Landmark, Silent Voices, Treasures from Home, and Ellis Island Chronicles, as well as rotating exhibits.[382] There are also three theaters used for film and live performances.[379] The third floor contains a library, reading room, and "oral history center", while the theaters are located on the first and second floors. There are auditoriums on all floors.[229][383] On the ground floor is a gift shop and bookstore, as well as a booth for audio tours.[229][380][383]

In 2008, by act of Congress and despite opposition from the NPS, the museum's library was officially renamed the Bob Hope Memorial Library in honor of one of the station's most famous immigrants, comedian Bob Hope.[384] On May 20, 2015, the Ellis Island Immigration Museum was officially renamed the Ellis Island National Museum of Immigration, coinciding with the opening of the new Peopling of America galleries in the first floor of the kitchen-laundry building.[385] The expansion tells the entire story of American immigration, including before and after the periods that Ellis Island processed immigrants.[385][386][263]

Wall of Honor

[edit]
Wall of Honor

The Wall of Honor outside the main building contains a list of 775,000 names inscribed on 770 panels, including slaves, Native Americans, and immigrants that were not processed on the island.[387][231] The Wall of Honor originated in the late 1980s as a means to pay for Ellis Island's renovation, and initially included 75,000 names.[387][388] The wall originally opened in 1990 and consisted of copper panels.[231][226] Shortly afterward it was reconstructed in two phases: a circular portion that started in 1993, and a linear portion that was built between 1998 and 2001.[226] The Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation requires potential honorees to pay a fee for inscription.[389] By 2019, the wall was mostly full and only five panels remained to be inscribed.[231]

NPS provides several educational opportunities, including self-guided tours and immersive, role-playing activities.[390][391] These educational programs and resources cater to over 650,000 students per year and aim to promote discussion while fostering a climate of tolerance and understanding.[391]

South side

[edit]
Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital

The south side of the island, home to the Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital, is abandoned and remains unrenovated.[392][393] Disagreements over its proposed use have precluded any development on the south side for several decades.[225] The NPS held a competition for proposals to redevelop the south side in 1981 and ultimately selected a plan for a conference center and a 250-to-300-room Sheraton hotel on the site of the hospital.[220][394] In 1985, while restoration of the north side of Ellis Island was underway, Interior Secretary Donald P. Hodel convened a long-inactive federal commission to determine how the south side of Ellis Island should be used.[395] Though the hotel proposal was dropped in 1986 for lack of funds,[396] the NPS allowed developer William Hubbard to redevelop the south side as a convention center, though Hubbard was not able to find investors.[397] The south side was proposed for possible future development even through the late 1990s.[35][398]

Save Ellis Island led preservation efforts of the south side of the island. The ferry building remains only partially accessible to the general public.[399] As part of the National Park Service's Centennial Initiative, the south side of the island was to be the target of a project to restore the 28 buildings that have not yet been rehabilitated.[400]

In 2014, Save Ellis Island started offering guided public tours of the south side as part of the "Hard Hat Tour", which charges an additional fee that is used to support the organization's preservation efforts.[48] The south side also includes "Unframed – Ellis Island", an art installation by the French street artist JR, which includes murals of figures who would have occupied each of the respective hospital buildings.[401][402]

Cultural impact

[edit]

Commemorations

[edit]
Immigrants arriving at Ellis Island, 1902

The Ellis Island Medal of Honor is awarded annually to American citizens, both native-born and naturalized. According to the award's sponsors, the medal is given to those who "have distinguished themselves within their own ethnic groups while exemplifying the values of the American way of life."[403] Past medalists include seven U.S. presidents, several world leaders,[404] several Nobel Prize winners, and other leaders and pioneers.[403][405] The USPS issued an Ellis Island commemorative stamp on February 3, 1998, as part of the Celebrate the Century stamp sheet series.[406]

Historical designations

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Ellis Island has been part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument, which also includes the Statue of Liberty and Liberty Island, since 1965.[73][200][2] It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1966.[3] Ellis Island has also been on the New Jersey Register of Historic Places since 1971.[4] The main building's interior was made a New York City designated landmark in 1993,[5] and the entire island was made a New York City historic district at the same time.[407] In addition, it was placed on UNESCO's list of tentative World Heritage Sites in 2017.[408]

See also

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References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Ellis Island is a small island in Upper New York Bay, within New York Harbor, that operated as the United States' primary federal immigration inspection station from January 1, 1892, until November 1954.[1][2] During its 62 years of active use, the station processed over 12 million immigrants arriving primarily by ship, subjecting them to medical inspections, legal interrogations, and background checks to assess admissibility under federal laws.[2][3] Originally under New York jurisdiction but ceded to federal control in 1890, the island's facilities expanded after a 1897 fire destroyed the initial wooden structures, with the new fireproof main building opening in 1900 to handle peak annual arrivals exceeding 1 million in years like 1907.[4] Immigration volumes declined sharply after 1924 due to national origin quotas, shifting Ellis Island's role to processing deportees, detaining suspected radicals and anarchists during the Red Scare, and serving as a U.S. Coast Guard training site and internment facility for enemy aliens during World War II.[2][5] Today, administered by the National Park Service as part of Statue of Liberty National Monument, Ellis Island preserves the site's hospital complex and hosts the National Museum of Immigration, drawing millions of visitors annually to examine original records and artifacts from the era.[6]

Geography and Site Characteristics

Location and Land Reclamation

Ellis Island is located in Upper New York Bay, within New York Harbor, approximately one-quarter mile north of Liberty Island and one-fifth mile east of Jersey City, New Jersey.[7] The island sits about one mile southwest of the southern tip of Manhattan Island, New York City, at coordinates 40°41′58″N 74°02′23″W.[8] Originally measuring 3.3 acres (1.3 hectares), Ellis Island was a small, naturally formed outcrop that underwent extensive land reclamation to accommodate growing immigration processing needs. Between 1890 and 1906, the island was expanded three times through the deposition of landfill material, retained by wooden crib bulkheads, increasing its size to over 27 acres (11 hectares).[9] Further reclamation efforts continued until 1934, resulting in a total area of 27.5 acres (11.1 hectares), with more than 90 percent of the landmass derived from fill placed on previously submerged areas.[10] These expansions involved hydraulic filling and the use of dredged materials from the harbor, transforming the modest island into a functional complex capable of handling peak immigration volumes.[9]

Jurisdictional Disputes and Access

Ellis Island's jurisdictional status has long been contested between New York and New Jersey due to its position in New York Harbor and subsequent land reclamation efforts. Originally comprising approximately 3.3 acres above the mean high water line as of 1834, the island fell under New York's sovereignty pursuant to an interstate compact ratified that year, which delineated boundaries and affirmed New York's control despite the site's location within New Jersey's maritime jurisdiction.[11] In 1800, New York had ceded federal jurisdiction over the island to the United States while retaining rights to serve process there, but the 1834 agreement preserved New York's territorial claim over the existing landmass.[12] Significant expansions occurred between 1890 and 1934 through hydraulic fill and dredging, increasing the island's size to about 27.5 acres by the mid-20th century, with further additions until 1954.[4] New York maintained that these accretions remained under its sovereignty, citing continuous exercise of authority and federal acquiescence, while New Jersey argued that the compact applied only to the original shoreline, rendering submerged and filled lands extending into its waters subject to its jurisdiction.[11] The dispute intensified after immigration processing ceased in 1954, prompting New Jersey to file suit in the U.S. Supreme Court in 1993 under its original jurisdiction to resolve the boundary.[13] In New Jersey v. New York (1998), the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that the 1834 compact's boundary followed the original mean high water line around the island's pre-expansion footprint, placing roughly 83% of the current land area—including most reclaimed sections—within New Jersey's sovereignty, while the original core remained New York's.[12] The decision rejected New York's claims of prescriptive rights over the fills, deeming evidence of exclusive control insufficient to alter the compact's terms, and emphasized that federal ownership did not extinguish underlying state sovereignty disputes.[11] This delineation affects state taxation, law enforcement, and signage, with the main immigration building and hospital complex straddling the line, though the federal government retains title as part of Statue of Liberty National Monument.[4] Public access to Ellis Island is restricted to ferries operated exclusively by Statue Cruises, the authorized National Park Service concessionaire, departing from Battery Park in New York City and Liberty State Park in Jersey City, New Jersey.[1] Private vessels are prohibited from docking, ensuring controlled entry to preserve the site's integrity and comply with security protocols; ferries operate seasonally from 8:30 a.m. to at least 3:30 p.m., with the last departure from Ellis Island around 5:00 p.m. in peak periods.[14] The jurisdictional split necessitates dual state considerations for emergency services and utilities, but federal oversight unifies visitor management, with no direct land access from either state due to surrounding waters.[1]

Pre-Immigration History

Indigenous and Colonial Periods

Archaeological investigations have uncovered pre-historic shell middens on Ellis Island, indicating Native American use for shellfish gathering and processing, along with human remains repatriated in 2003 to Lenape descendant nations under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act.[15] The Lenape (also known as Delaware Indians), indigenous to the Hudson River estuary, inhabited the broader region encompassing the island, relying on its coastal resources for subsistence through fishing, hunting, and foraging.[15] During the colonial era, European settlers recognized the island's value for its oyster beds, renaming it Little Oyster Island and using it for oyster roasts, picnics, and clambakes.[4] Between 1674 and 1679, English colonial governor Sir Edmund Andros granted the approximately 3-acre island to Captain William Dyre, the port's customs collector.[4] Dyre sold it in 1686 to Thomas and Patience Lloyd, after which it became known as Dyre’s Island and was incorporated into New York County boundaries by 1691.[4] Subsequent name changes reflected ownership and events: in 1730, Governor John Montgomerie redesignated it Bucking Island in the New York City charter; city officials eyed it in 1757 for a pest house to isolate contagious patients; and in 1765, it was dubbed Gibbet Island or Anderson’s Island following the hanging of pirate Anderson there.[4] By January 20, 1785, New York merchant Samuel Ellis had acquired the island and advertised it for sale, citing its tavern potential and views, but found no buyers.[4] Ellis died in 1794, leaving it to his heirs, who retained private control amid growing federal interest in harbor defense.[4]

Military Fortification and Early Federal Use

On February 15, 1800, the State of New York ceded control of Ellis Island—along with Governors Island and Bedloe's Island—to the federal government specifically for constructing fortifications, reflecting heightened concerns over maritime security amid ongoing tensions with Britain.[4] Initial earthwork fortifications were begun around 1800-1801 by the U.S. Army as part of defenses to protect New York Harbor from potential naval threats. These initially comprised earthworks, a barracks for a small garrison, a powder magazine for ammunition storage, and a battery of artillery guns positioned along the island's eastern edge to command the Upper New York Bay, developed progressively in the early 1800s.[4] During the War of 1812, the fortifications served as a barracks and detention facility for British prisoners of war, underscoring their role in active coastal defense operations.[16] Post-war, the island functioned as a recruiting depot for the U.S. Army until the 1830s, after which it reverted to fortification duties, including expanded use as a naval magazine for storing gunpowder and munitions to support harbor artillery.[17] The powder magazine was further enlarged during the Civil War to accommodate increased military needs, though the island saw no major combat engagements.[16] Federal military control persisted through the late 19th century, with the War Department maintaining the site until 1890, when the structures were partially demolished to prepare for its redesignation as the nation's first federal immigration station.[4] This transition marked the end of Ellis Island's primary role in national defense, shifting federal priorities from fortification to managing influxes of European migrants.

Establishment and Operations as Immigration Station

Inauguration and Initial Facility (1892)

The Immigration Act of March 3, 1891, signed by President Benjamin Harrison, established the Office of the Superintendent of Immigration under the Treasury Department, centralizing federal authority over immigration inspection and exclusion, which directly facilitated the creation of a dedicated station at Ellis Island.[18] The island itself had been transferred to Treasury control on May 24, 1890, following the closure of the state-run Castle Garden facility in New York, with site preparation involving dredging and basic construction to accommodate immigrant processing.[19] These developments marked a shift from decentralized, often corrupt state-level operations to standardized federal oversight, aimed at enforcing exclusions for criminals, paupers, and those with contagious diseases as outlined in the act.[18] Ellis Island's immigration station opened without ceremony on January 1, 1892, as the nation's primary federal entry point for transatlantic arrivals, supplanting temporary processing at Manhattan's Barge Office.[4] The initial facilities consisted of temporary wooden structures, including a main inspection building, dormitories for detainees, basic administrative offices, hearing and detention rooms, cafeterias, and rudimentary medical and hospital areas to conduct health screenings and legal reviews.[18] [20] These modest accommodations, designed for efficiency rather than permanence, supported initial daily capacities of several hundred immigrants, with operations focused on manifest reviews, physical examinations by physicians, and interviews by inspectors to verify admissibility under federal criteria.[18] The Barge Office served as the temporary federal immigration processing station in New York Harbor from 1890 to January 1, 1892, while Ellis Island was under construction following the closure of Castle Garden in 1890. A rare collection of over 130 photographs, taken primarily in late 1890 (with some into 1892) by E.W. Austin (operator of the money exchange concession at the Barge Office), documents arriving immigrants. These images capture groups, families, and individuals from diverse origins including Swiss, Syrian, Italian, Belgian, Indian, Dutch, Slovak, Algerian, Swedish, Russian, English, German, Prussian, Danish, Finnish, Norwegian, Hungarian, Romanian, and various Jewish communities (e.g., Russian, Polish, Austrian Jews). Many show people posing with belongings or detained for examination. Considered among the earliest known photographs depicting mass immigration processing in the United States, predating Ellis Island's opening and the more famous Ellis Island portraits by Augustus Sherman or Lewis Hine. The album was gifted to Commissioner John B. Weber and is preserved at the National Park Service’s Ellis Island library, viewable by appointment. These represent a key visual record of the transition period in U.S. immigration history before federal facilities expanded at Ellis Island. On its first day, the station processed approximately 700 immigrants arriving primarily via the steamship Nevada from Queenstown (now Cobh), Ireland, establishing immediate operational tempo.[21] Among them, 17-year-old Annie Moore, traveling with her two younger brothers Anthony and Phillip, became the first individual officially inspected and admitted, receiving a $10 gold coin from Superintendent Ivan Hylan as a symbolic gesture.[22] Most early arrivals cleared inspections within hours, reflecting the station's emphasis on rapid throughput for healthy, self-supporting entrants, though a small fraction faced detention for further evaluation of health, finances, or moral character.[4] By 1893, Ellis Island housed 119 of the Immigration Service's 180 personnel, underscoring its quick centrality to national immigration enforcement.[18]

Peak Processing Years and Capacity Expansions

The peak processing years at Ellis Island occurred primarily between 1900 and 1914, coinciding with a massive wave of European immigration to the United States. During this period, the station handled the bulk of arrivals at the Port of New York, with annual volumes exceeding 800,000 immigrants in several years. The absolute peak came in 1907, when 1,004,756 immigrants were processed, representing a daily average of about 2,750 individuals, though surges reached up to 5,000 per day. On April 17, 1907, Ellis Island set a single-day record by examining 11,747 arrivals.[23] These figures reflected broader economic opportunities in industrial America drawing laborers from Italy, Eastern Europe, and the Russian Empire, with over 70% of U.S. immigrants passing through the facility by 1924.[2] To manage the escalating volumes, Ellis Island underwent substantial capacity expansions starting in the late 1890s. The original wooden immigration depot, destroyed by fire on June 15, 1897, was replaced by a larger fireproof structure designed for high throughput, opening on December 17, 1900.[4] Land reclamation efforts doubled the island's size from 3.3 acres to approximately 14 acres by 1896 and further to 27.5 acres over subsequent years through infilling with soil and debris, enabling construction of additional dormitories, kitchens, and support buildings that boosted detainee housing to around 1,800 beds.[24] Commissioner William Williams, serving from 1902 to 1905 and again from 1909 to 1913, implemented operational reforms including streamlined inspection protocols, staff training for humane treatment, and facility upgrades like landscaping to improve efficiency and reduce processing times to a few hours for most arrivals.[25][26] These enhancements allowed Ellis Island to operate near its limits during peak demand, with medical and administrative infrastructure expanding to include a dedicated hospital complex on the island's south side by 1902, capable of isolating and treating thousands annually for communicable diseases.[27] By 1910, the station's infrastructure supported processing over a million immigrants yearly without widespread breakdowns, though overcrowding persisted during seasonal spikes.[25] The expansions reflected pragmatic responses to demographic pressures rather than ideological shifts, prioritizing throughput while maintaining exclusion criteria for the approximately 2% rejected on health, moral, or legal grounds.[22]

World Wars and Policy Shifts

During World War I, Ellis Island's role as an immigration processing center diminished sharply as transatlantic travel became hazardous due to German U-boat attacks, reducing annual immigrant arrivals from over 1 million pre-war to fewer than 150,000 by 1917.[28] The facility shifted toward detaining suspicious individuals, including enemy aliens and radicals deemed threats under the 1917 Espionage Act and 1918 Sedition Act, with operations focusing on security screenings rather than routine entries.[28] German sabotage attempts, such as the 1916 Black Tom explosion nearby, heightened vigilance, leading to the internment of hundreds of German nationals and suspected saboteurs on the island.[29] Post-war policy changes marked a pivotal shift toward restrictionism, driven by concerns over national security, economic pressures, and cultural assimilation amid the 1919-1920 Red Scare. The Emergency Quota Act of 1921 capped annual immigration at 3% of each nationality's U.S. population as of 1910, slashing Ellis Island's processing volume from peaks of nearly 2 million in 1907 to under 500,000 by 1921.[30] This was followed by the Immigration Act of 1924, which reduced quotas to 2% based on the 1890 census—favoring Northern and Western Europeans while severely limiting Southern and Eastern Europeans, Asians, and others—resulting in a 80% drop in overall immigration and transforming Ellis Island into a primarily deportation site by the late 1920s.[30][31] These laws reflected congressional intent to preserve demographic composition, with processing increasingly handled via consular visas abroad, bypassing Ellis Island for most entrants.[30] In World War II, Ellis Island again pivoted from immigration to military and detention uses, with the U.S. Coast Guard establishing a training base there from 1939 to 1946 that prepared over 60,000 personnel for maritime operations.[5] The island housed up to 7,000 detainees, including German, Italian, and Japanese nationals classified as enemy aliens under proclamations like FDR's 1941 orders, with around 1,000 interned at peak for suspected sympathies or espionage risks.[32][4] Japanese internment affected about 440 East Coast Issei and others, often transferred from Ellis Island to inland camps, amid broader Alien Enemy Act enforcement that prioritized coastal threats.[33] Post-war, tightened quotas and Cold War deportations of subversives further eroded Ellis Island's immigration function, culminating in its 1954 closure as a station.[22]

Physical Infrastructure

Core Buildings and Layout

The Ellis Island immigration complex encompassed three interconnected man-made islands totaling 27.5 acres, formed through phased landfill expansions starting from an original footprint of approximately 3.5 acres in the late 19th century; initial post-1897 reconstruction doubled the size via seawalls and fill to support fireproof structures, with further enlargements by 1911 reaching over 20 acres to accommodate processing demands.[34][35] Island 1 served as the primary hub for arrivals and examinations, featuring a central arrangement of processing buildings oriented toward ferry slips on the west and east sides, connected by covered corridors, gangways, and utility tunnels; Islands 2 and 3, added via landfill southwest of Island 1, primarily housed medical facilities separated by 800 feet for isolation purposes.[35] The layout emphasized functional segregation, with administrative and inspection areas in the north, support services like power and kitchens to the northwest and northeast, and recreational greenswards elevated 8 feet above high tide, enclosed by granite-faced seawalls completed between 1920 and 1921.[35] At the core of Island 1 stood the Main Building, constructed from 1897 to 1900 at a cost of $419,298 after a fire on June 15, 1897, razed the prior wooden facilities; designed by the firm Boring & Tilton in a Beaux-Arts style with red brick, gray limestone trim, and green copper roofs, it spanned 385 feet in length, 152 to 166 feet in width, and rose to 62 feet in body height with towers reaching 100 to 120 feet.[22][35] This fireproof edifice, mandated by U.S. Treasury specifications using iron, steel, brick, and concrete, integrated multiple functions including the Registry Room (Great Hall) for manifest reviews and initial screenings—covering a vast open space with a red tile floor installed in 1918—a dining hall, dormitories accommodating 600 to 1,500 detainees, administrative offices, a post office, custom house, and telegraph station.[22][35] The Registry Room's signature vaulted ceiling, executed in interlocking Guastavino tiles by Rafael Guastavino and rebuilt by his son between 1917 and 1918 following damage from the 1916 Black Tom explosion, provided acoustic and aesthetic utility amid daily crowds of up to 5,000.[35][36] Flanking the Main Building were essential ancillary structures forming the operational core: the Baggage and Dormitory Building (1908–1909, expanded with a third story in 1913–1914 at base cost $352,670), used for luggage storage, temporary housing, and later naval quarters during World War I; the Kitchen and Laundry Building (1900–1901), handling meal preparation and clothing disinfection adjacent to a connected restaurant pavilion; and the Powerhouse (1900–1901, upgraded to 1,400 horsepower by 1908 with oil conversion in 1932), supplying electricity, heat, and water via a dedicated tunnel to the Main Building.[22][35] These elements, linked by enclosed passages for weather-protected movement, supported peak throughput of over 11,000 immigrants daily by prioritizing durability, segregation of flows (e.g., separate arrivals for steerage versus cabin passengers), and rapid utility access amid the station's role in processing 12 million entrants from 1892 to 1954.[35]

Medical and Support Facilities

The medical facilities at Ellis Island formed a dedicated hospital complex on the island's southern side, encompassing Islands 2 and 3, which were connected by fill and ferries to the main immigration structures. Initially, wooden hospitals established in 1892 for treating arriving immigrants were destroyed by fire on June 15, 1897, prompting reconstruction in fire-resistant brick and limestone starting in 1899.[27] The core components included the three-story Main Hospital Building (completed 1902, capacity for 125 patients), a Contagious Disease Hospital with 17 isolated pavilions for diseases like tuberculosis and trachoma (built 1906-1911), and a Psychopathic Ward for mental evaluations (added 1911).[37][27] These facilities, operated by U.S. Public Health Service physicians, treated over 10,000 immigrants annually at peak, providing care for acute illnesses, surgeries, and quarantine rather than mere detention, with mortality rates reflecting era standards for infectious cases.[38][39] Medical inspections occurred primarily in the main building's second-floor registry room, where six to twenty doctors initially assessed up to 2,000 arrivals daily for visible signs of contagious diseases, using methods like the "six-second physical" for gait, breathing, and expression.[40] Suspects underwent chalk markings (e.g., "H" for heart issues) and further exams, including eye eversions for trachoma, leading to hospitalization if needed; only about 2% were certified for diseases warranting exclusion.[39][41] The complex featured advanced features for the time, such as X-ray machines by 1913 and separate utilities to prevent cross-contamination.[42] Support facilities underpinned operations, including the Kitchen and Laundry Building (1901-1903), which prepared meals for thousands and laundered over 3,000 linen items daily using industrial equipment like centrifugal extractors.[43][42] The Baggage and Dormitory Building (1907-1908) stored immigrants' luggage and provided bunk-style dormitories for detainees, accommodating hundreds in gender-separated areas with basic cots and minimal furnishings.[5] Additional structures like the Powerhouse (1902-1903) supplied electricity and steam for heating and sterilization, while a bakery and carpentry shop maintained self-sufficiency amid peak daily processing of 5,000 immigrants.[5][44] These amenities ensured logistical support but prioritized efficiency over comfort, reflecting the station's role in rapid health-based triage.[27]

Immigration Examination Procedures

Arrival Screening and Manifest Reviews

Upon arrival at Ellis Island via ferry from Manhattan or the arriving steamship, steerage and third-class passengers underwent primary legal screening in the Registry Room, where U.S. immigration inspectors reviewed pre-arrival ship manifests submitted by steamship companies. These manifests, required under U.S. law since 1820 and standardized by the Immigration Act of 1882, listed each passenger's name, age, sex, occupation, nationality, last residence, destination, and other details to facilitate verification and detect inadmissibility grounds such as criminality or likelihood of becoming a public charge.[45][46] Inspectors organized immigrants into groups corresponding to manifest line numbers, issuing tags for quick reference, and called them forward to long desks in the Great Hall. There, a single inspector—often with interpreter assistance—cross-examined each individual for approximately two minutes, posing questions drawn directly from the manifest entry, such as name, hometown, occupation, who paid for passage, intended U.S. residence, amount of money carried (typically required to show at least $25–$50 to avoid public charge status), and prior U.S. visits or criminal convictions.[47][48] Discrepancies between oral responses and manifest data, suspicious answers, or failure to satisfy exclusion criteria under statutes like the Immigration Act of 1891 (e.g., paupers, convicts, or those with contagious diseases noted on manifests) triggered further scrutiny, detention for board review, or referral to secondary medical or legal exams; otherwise, the manifest was stamped "Admitted," allowing release within 3–5 hours for the vast majority.[49][46] This manifest-centric process handled peaks of over 2,000 arrivals daily in the early 1900s, with rejection rates under 2% overall, prioritizing efficiency while enforcing federal entry restrictions.[45][22]

Health and Mental Inspections

Health inspections at Ellis Island were conducted by physicians from the U.S. Public Health Service (PHS), beginning with the station's opening in 1892, to identify immigrants with contagious diseases or physical defects that could pose public health risks or render them dependent on public aid.[41] These exams emphasized rapid screening, often termed "six-second physicals," where immigrants passed in lines before doctors who visually assessed gait, posture, breathing, and visible signs of illness during the ascent of the station's main stairs.[39] Suspected cases received chalk marks on their clothing, such as "H" for heart issues, "L" for lameness, "E" for eye problems, "Ct" for trachoma, or "Pg" for pregnancy, signaling 15 to 20 percent of arrivals for detailed secondary examinations in separate rooms.[38] By 1903, conditions were classified into Class A (loathsome or dangerous contagious diseases like tuberculosis and trachoma) and Class B (other defects including chronic conditions or deformities).[38] Mental inspections formed an integral part of the medical process, with PHS doctors screening for idiocy, insanity, or feeblemindedness through observation and simple tests during the line review.[41] Indicators of mental deficiency prompted a chalk "X" mark, directing individuals to further evaluation, which might involve tasks assessing comprehension, memory, or coordination, such as following instructions to button clothing or respond to basic queries via interpreters. These assessments aimed to exclude those deemed likely to become public charges due to incapacity, though empirical rejection rates for mental reasons remained low, contributing to the overall medical exclusion rate of under 2 percent across the station's peak years from 1892 to 1924.[50] In high-volume periods, such as 1905 when 1,026,499 immigrants were processed by 16 physicians, the system's efficiency prioritized contagious threats over exhaustive psychological probes, reflecting causal priorities of preventing epidemics amid massive influxes.[40] Detained cases underwent board reviews, where certified defects like active tuberculosis led to exclusion or treatment and re-inspection, while treatable conditions such as favus or minor hernias often allowed passage after quarantine.[38] Medical rejections never exceeded 1 percent in most years, underscoring the inspections' selectivity rather than blanket restrictiveness, with data from PHS records confirming that visible, verifiable pathologies drove decisions over speculative diagnoses.[51] The immigration examination procedures at Ellis Island operated under the plenary power doctrine, whereby Congress held broad authority to regulate entry without affording arriving aliens the full scope of constitutional due process rights extended to citizens or lawful residents. This framework, rooted in statutes such as the Immigration Act of 1891, empowered inspectors to exclude individuals based on criteria including contagious diseases, likelihood of becoming a public charge, or moral turpitude, with decisions largely insulated from judicial review.[52][45] In cases like Turner v. Williams (1904), the Supreme Court affirmed that deporting entrants deemed inadmissible did not violate due process, as such actions fell within sovereign immigration control rather than criminal punishment.[53] Subsequent rulings, such as Shaughnessy v. United States ex rel. Mezei (1953), reinforced this by upholding indefinite exclusion and detention without hearing for non-admitted aliens, even on Ellis Island itself, on grounds that entry seekers lack procedural protections against denial at the border.[54][55] Critics of these procedures have argued they enabled arbitrary power, with federal inspectors wielding quasi-judicial authority subject to minimal oversight, though empirical records indicate appeals boards overturned about 10-15% of initial exclusion orders, providing some internal checks.[56] Morally, the inspections have been evaluated as a pragmatic response to public health imperatives, excluding fewer than 2% of the approximately 12 million arrivals from 1892 to 1954, primarily for verifiable threats like tuberculosis or idiocy, which aligned with causal necessities of preventing disease outbreaks in dense urban centers.[38][57] However, historians influenced by progressive lenses have critiqued the process for embedding eugenic biases, such as heightened scrutiny of Southern and Eastern Europeans or the disabled as "undesirables," potentially conflating nativist prejudice with objective risk assessment despite low overall rejection rates that suggest selectivity rather than systemic cruelty.[51][58] From a first-principles standpoint, the moral calculus favored societal self-preservation through border sovereignty, as unrestricted entry could impose uncompensated costs on host populations, though isolated accounts of family separations or hasty judgments highlight tensions between efficiency and individual dignity.

Policy Context and Controversies

Influence of Eugenics and Restrictionism

The eugenics movement, which sought to improve human heredity by restricting reproduction and immigration of those deemed genetically inferior, profoundly shaped Ellis Island's medical and legal screening processes in the early 20th century. Public Health Service physicians at the station conducted examinations for hereditary conditions, mental deficiencies, and physical "defects" such as epilepsy or insanity, often using rudimentary intelligence tests and observations aligned with eugenic principles to identify and exclude potential carriers of undesirable traits.[51][59] These protocols reflected broader fears that unchecked immigration from Southern and Eastern Europe would dilute the Anglo-Saxon gene pool, with data from Ellis Island inspections cited by eugenicists to quantify rates of "imbecility" among arrivals—estimated at up to 83% for certain groups in flawed psychological tests, such as the Binet-Simon scale adapted for use there.[60][61] Restrictionist advocates, including figures like Harry H. Laughlin of the Eugenics Record Office, leveraged Ellis Island records to lobby Congress, testifying in 1920 that immigrants exhibited higher rates of pauperism, insanity, and crime, thereby justifying quotas to favor Northern Europeans.[62] Laughlin's 1923 report to the House Committee on Immigration analyzed over 22,000 Ellis Island cases, claiming disproportionate "defectives" from non-Nordic regions, which directly informed the numerical limits and national origins formula of the Immigration Act of 1924.[60][63] This legislation, rooted in eugenic pseudoscience positing fixed racial hierarchies, slashed annual admissions from over 800,000 in the 1920s peak to approximately 294,000 by 1925, with quotas further limiting it to about 164,000 annually starting in 1927, transforming Ellis Island from a high-volume processor to a diminished facility focused on enforcement and deportations.[63][61] While eugenics provided a purported scientific veneer for restrictionism—emphasizing biological determinism over environmental factors—empirical critiques later revealed methodological flaws, such as cultural biases in testing and overreliance on family histories without genetic validation.[59] Nonetheless, these influences entrenched selective criteria at Ellis Island until its closure, prioritizing hereditary fitness amid concurrent economic and assimilation concerns, though the former's causal role in policy design remains evident in congressional records and contemporary eugenic literature.[62][63]

Rejection Rates and Detention Practices

Approximately 2 percent of the roughly 12 million immigrants processed at Ellis Island from 1892 to 1954 were ultimately excluded from entry into the United States.[22][50] Exclusions were primarily based on medical findings of contagious diseases such as tuberculosis or trachoma, mental incapacity, criminal history, or likelihood of becoming a public charge, with legal grounds expanding after 1903 to bar anarchists.[22][64] Rejection rates remained consistently low, rarely exceeding 2 to 3 percent even during peak arrival years like 1907, when over 1 million immigrants passed through the station.[65] This selectivity reflected pre-arrival screening by steamship lines, which bore financial responsibility for returning inadmissible passengers, incentivizing companies to reject unfit applicants at European ports.[59] Detention affected about 20 percent of arrivals temporarily, split evenly between health-related holds for observation or treatment and legal inquiries into documents, finances, or moral character.[32] Most detainees were held in the station's dormitory barracks for periods ranging from hours to several days, with the full inspection process typically concluding in 3 to 5 hours for those without complications.[22] Cases requiring deeper review were forwarded to a Board of Special Inquiry, comprising immigration inspectors who conducted hearings; appellants could present witnesses or affidavits from U.S. sponsors, and roughly 75 percent of challenged exclusions were overturned on appeal.[59] Conditions in detention areas improved after fires and expansions, but overcrowding during surges strained facilities, leading to temporary use of nearby hospitals or ships.[65] Post-1924, following national origin quotas under the Immigration Act, Ellis Island shifted toward functioning more as a detention and deportation center for visa overstays, undocumented entrants, and deportees, with exclusions rising as overall arrivals declined sharply.[66] During World War I and II, the site additionally housed enemy aliens and political radicals pending deportation, such as Bolshevik sympathizers in 1919, extending average detention durations beyond routine immigration processing.[4] Empirical data indicate that while detention practices enforced statutory exclusions, the low overall rejection rate underscores the station's role as a high-volume facilitator of entry rather than a stringent barrier, countering narratives of widespread harshness unsupported by processing statistics.[50][65]

Myths and Empirical Realities (e.g., Name Changes)

A persistent myth holds that U.S. immigration officials at Ellis Island routinely altered immigrants' surnames to make them sound more "American," such as shortening "Schwarzenegger" to "Schwartz" or anglicizing foreign spellings on the spot.[67][68] In reality, Ellis Island inspectors lacked the authority, time, or procedure to modify names; they verified identities against pre-existing ship manifests created by steamship companies at European ports of embarkation, which listed passengers' names as provided by the travelers themselves or their agents.[69][70] Primary inspections occurred aboard arriving vessels, where a boarding officer checked manifests against passengers; only those flagged for secondary review proceeded to the island, where officials cross-checked names verbally or via documents without recording new ones.[68] No systematic records exist of Ellis Island-induced changes, and empirical analysis of manifests versus later U.S. census or naturalization documents shows discrepancies typically arose from voluntary post-arrival alterations by immigrants seeking assimilation, transcription errors in manifests, or inconsistent self-reporting—not official fiat.[67][69] This myth likely originated from anecdotal family lore amplified by mid-20th-century media, including films like the 1962 TV special The Ellis Island Special, which dramatized name changes despite lacking historical basis, and persists due to confirmation bias in genealogy research where users retroactively attribute name variations to Ellis Island without manifest verification.[67] Immigrants who did alter names—estimated at a minority, often Jews or others facing discrimination—did so later through informal adoption, court petitions (requiring legal processes unavailable at the island), or consistent use in daily life, driven by practical needs like employment rather than coercion.[68][70] Another common misconception portrays Ellis Island as a near-universal gateway with negligible rejections, implying lax enforcement; empirically, while about 98% of the 12 million immigrants processed from 1892 to 1954 were admitted, the 2% rejection rate—roughly 250,000 cases—stemmed from verifiable causes like contagious diseases (e.g., trachoma or tuberculosis), pauperism, or criminal records, substantiated by medical logs and appeal records showing rigorous, evidence-based exclusions rather than arbitrary leniency.[70] These realities underscore a system prioritizing public health and economic self-sufficiency over indiscriminate welcome, with detentions averaging days but extending to weeks for the infirm, countering romanticized narratives of effortless entry.[70]

Closure and Immediate Aftermath

Ellis Island ceased operations as the principal federal immigration processing station on November 12, 1954, after facilitating the entry of over 12 million immigrants since its opening in 1892.[71] [72] The closure reflected a sharp decline in transatlantic immigration volumes, primarily attributable to the Immigration Act of 1924, which imposed national origins quotas that reduced annual arrivals from peaks exceeding 1 million in the early 1900s to under 150,000 by the 1950s.[73] This legislative shift, combined with post-World War II geopolitical changes—including the displacement of processing to other ports and the obsolescence of Ellis Island's aging infrastructure—rendered the facility economically unviable for routine immigration inspections.[66] The final individual processed was Arne Peterssen, a Norwegian seaman detained for overstaying his shore leave, underscoring the station's diminished role by mid-century.[74] Prior to full closure, Ellis Island had transitioned from a primary entry point to a detention and deportation facility following the 1924 quotas, with activities increasingly centered on holding and repatriating non-citizens deemed inadmissible or violative of immigration laws.[27] From 1924 onward, the site processed special inquiries, hospitalizations, and deportations rather than mass arrivals, accommodating enemy aliens interned during World Wars I and II, as well as individuals targeted in enforcement actions against suspected radicals and subversives.[71] Deportation volumes at Ellis Island peaked in the interwar period amid nativist policies and economic pressures, but by the 1950s, national deportation figures—totaling around 20,000 to 30,000 annually under the Immigration and Naturalization Service—reflected broader enforcement priorities like Operation Wetback (1954–1956), which focused on unauthorized Mexican border crossers rather than East Coast detainees.[75] Ellis Island's deportation caseload dwindled accordingly, handling primarily residual cases of overstays, criminal deportees, and those flagged under anti-communist statutes, with the Eisenhower administration citing facility inefficiencies as justification for shuttering it alongside five other detention sites.[66] This evolution highlights a causal shift from Ellis Island's foundational role in unrestricted influxes to a mechanism for exclusionary enforcement, driven by empirical pressures of quota-induced scarcity and rising domestic concerns over security and labor competition.[59] While overall U.S. deportation rates remained modest relative to entry volumes—averaging less than 1% of the foreign-born population—the facility's final years underscored its adaptation to a policy regime prioritizing repatriation of non-conforming entrants over expansive admission.[32] Post-closure, the island stood vacant until 1965, marking the end of its operational era amid evolving federal immigration administration.[32]

Early Reuse Attempts and Deterioration

Following its closure on November 12, 1954, Ellis Island was declared surplus federal property on March 4, 1955, and placed under the jurisdiction of the General Services Administration (GSA).[4] The GSA sought to dispose of the island through sale or lease, soliciting proposals from state and local governments as well as private entities, but received no viable offers due to the site's remote location, high maintenance costs, and limited accessibility.[76] Among the unadopted ideas was a 1950s proposal by Senator Jacob Javits to convert portions into a hospital for narcotics addicts, reflecting broader federal interest in repurposing underutilized properties amid postwar fiscal constraints, though logistical and funding barriers prevented implementation.[77] Without successful reuse, the island entered a phase of neglect, with the GSA curtailing utilities and maintenance, leading to rapid structural decay across its 33 buildings.[78] Vegetation overgrew paths and structures unchecked, invasive plants proliferated, and exposure to harsh harbor conditions accelerated deterioration of wooden elements, roofs, and masonry, while vandalism and weathering further compromised interiors.[25] By the mid-1960s, the site's obscurity had fostered such advanced disrepair that federal intervention became necessary, culminating in President Lyndon B. Johnson's Proclamation 3656 on September 13, 1965, which incorporated Ellis Island into the Statue of Liberty National Monument, shifting oversight to the National Park Service but initially prioritizing only minimal stabilization over full rehabilitation.[4][79]

Societal and Economic Impacts

Demographic Contributions and Assimilation Outcomes

Between 1892 and 1954, Ellis Island processed approximately 12 million immigrants, accounting for about 40 percent of all U.S. immigrants during that period and representing a pivotal influx that expanded the foreign-born population from roughly 9 percent of the total U.S. population in 1890 to a peak of 14.7 percent in 1910.[72][64] Early arrivals (1892–1900) were predominantly from Northern and Western Europe, including Ireland, Germany, and Scandinavia, while post-1900 waves shifted toward Southern and Eastern Europe, with Italians comprising about 16 percent, Russians (including many Jewish refugees) 19 percent, and significant numbers from Austria-Hungary, Poland, and the Ottoman Empire in peak years like 1907, when over 1 million entered nationwide.[80] This demographic shift diversified the U.S. ethnic composition, introducing large Catholic, Jewish, and Orthodox Christian populations that contrasted with the Protestant-majority earlier stock.[81] These immigrants provided essential unskilled and semi-skilled labor for America's rapid industrialization, comprising up to 50 percent of the manufacturing workforce by 1910 and fueling urban growth in cities like New York, Chicago, and Pittsburgh through roles in steel mills, textiles, mining, and railroads.[82] Their contributions extended to agricultural expansion and innovation, with immigrant-heavy regions showing higher patent rates and productivity gains that lowered consumer goods costs and boosted overall GDP growth, as evidenced by econometric analyses of county-level data from 1880–1920.[82] Despite initial concentrations in low-wage sectors, first-generation immigrants exhibited no substantial occupation-based earnings penalty upon arrival compared to natives, enabling quick economic footholds amid high demand for labor during the Second Industrial Revolution.[83] Assimilation outcomes were marked by rapid integration, particularly among the second generation. By 1930, over two-thirds of immigrants had applied for naturalization, and nearly all reported some English proficiency, with historical data indicating 86 percent of those arriving between 1900 and 1930 acquiring conversational English within decades.[84][85] Second-generation descendants from these groups achieved significant socioeconomic mobility, advancing into professional occupations at rates surpassing earlier immigrant cohorts and often exceeding native-born peers in upward income transitions, as tracked in census panels from 1900–1940.[86] Factors such as selective migration—favoring healthier, motivated individuals via medical screenings—and access to public education facilitated this convergence, with studies confirming convergence in earnings and homeownership by the grandchildren's generation, underscoring causal links between unrestricted European inflows and long-term human capital accumulation.[86][87]

Criticisms of Overburden and Cultural Shifts

The unprecedented volume of immigrants processed at Ellis Island strained the station's infrastructure, leading to overcrowding and harsh conditions that prompted contemporary criticisms of mismanagement and inadequate preparation. Peak years saw over 1 million arrivals in 1907 alone, overwhelming facilities originally designed for smaller influxes.[22] By 1920, Ellis Island held up to 2,000 detainees daily despite capacity for only 1,800, forcing over 1,000 to sleep on blankets spread across floors and benches in inspection halls.[88] Investigators labeled the treatment "criminal," while Commissioner Frederick H. Wallis conceded the facilities' inadequacy amid the rush, though standards for medical and legal inspections were upheld.[88] Such episodes highlighted systemic overburden from immigration surges, including delayed ship departures and improvised use of quarantine stations for housing.[88] Critics extended concerns beyond the island to broader economic pressures on receiving cities, arguing that mass arrivals depressed wages and burdened public resources. Nativist advocate Prescott Hall of the Immigration Restriction League contended in 1912 that unchecked immigration imposed a "hopeless burden" by flooding the labor market with unskilled workers, displacing native-born Americans and lowering social standards.[89] He described entrants as "vast throngs of ignorant and brutalized peasantry," primarily from Southern and Eastern Europe—comprising 69% of over 1 million Ellis Island arrivals by 1896—who competed directly for low-wage jobs and strained urban housing and welfare systems.[89] These views, echoed by groups like the Immigration Restriction League, linked high volumes to fears of pauperism, with policies excluding those likely to become public charges reflecting empirical worries over fiscal dependency.[90] On cultural fronts, detractors faulted the scale and demographics of Ellis Island immigration for eroding traditional American identity and hindering assimilation. The shift toward predominantly non-Anglo-Saxon sources after the 1880s intensified nativist alarms, as Southern and Eastern Europeans formed insular urban enclaves that preserved old-world customs and languages, slowing integration into Protestant-dominated society.[91] The Immigration Restriction League promoted literacy tests and quotas to curb "unassimilable" inflows, citing high illiteracy rates—such as 50% among Italians entering between 1899 and 1910—as evidence of cultural incompatibility and potential for social discord.[86][90] Hall and allies warned that demographic transformation threatened core values, fostering fragmentation visible in ethnic ghettos and labor unrest, though long-term data later showed generational adaptation.[89][84]

Modern Preservation and Use

Restoration Efforts and Museum Conversion

Following its closure in November 1954, Ellis Island remained largely abandoned and under federal control, with structures deteriorating due to neglect and exposure to the elements.[79] On October 15, 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson issued a proclamation incorporating the island into the Statue of Liberty National Monument, placing it under National Park Service administration and enabling initial planning for preservation.[79] Limited "hard-hat" tours were offered from 1976 to 1984, attracting public interest and highlighting the site's historical significance, which spurred further action.[92] Rehabilitation efforts intensified in the 1980s through a public-private partnership, with the National Park Service overseeing the project in collaboration with the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, which raised funds for the work.[92] Focus centered on the Main Building, originally constructed in 1900 after a fire destroyed the prior wooden structure, converting it into an immigration museum while preserving its Beaux-Arts architecture and original features like the Registry Room.[79] Artifacts, including immigrant possessions, textiles, and luggage, were collected starting in the mid-1980s, alongside oral histories from former immigrants, to authenticate exhibits.[79] The initiative, driven by preparations for the site's 1992 centennial, marked the largest historic restoration project in U.S. history at the time, costing approximately $156 million. The restored Main Building opened as the Ellis Island Immigration Museum on September 10, 1990, two years ahead of the centennial schedule, with exhibits themed "Ellis Island: Isle of Hope, Isle of Tears" documenting the processing of over 12 million immigrants from 1892 to 1954.[79] This conversion transformed the site from a derelict facility into a permanent educational venue under National Park Service management, emphasizing empirical records of inspection, detention, and admission practices rather than romanticized narratives.[79] Subsequent phases addressed adjacent structures, though many hospital buildings remained unrestored and off-limits initially due to safety concerns.[25]

Recent Renovations and Digital Expansions (2024-2025)

In March 2024, the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation announced the Ellis Island Museum Reimagined campaign, a $100 million initiative to overhaul the National Museum of Immigration on Ellis Island.[93][94] The project aims to update over 100,000 square feet of exhibits with immersive, interactive displays that connect immigrant stories across six centuries, while improving accessibility through enhanced wayfinding, a new sustainable staircase replacing escalators, additional restrooms, and upgrades to heating, ventilation, air conditioning, and electrical systems.[95][96] The first phase commenced in spring 2024, focusing on expanding the American Immigrant Wall of Honor to incorporate a broader representation of immigrant contributions, with dedications completed in June 2024 during National Immigrant Heritage Month.[97][96] Construction continued into 2025, involving a $117 million total makeover that includes new temporary exhibit galleries, flexible programming spaces, and people-centered storytelling installations, such as recreations of immigrant ship cross-sections and interactive Hester Street pushcart scenes.[97][98] The museum remained open to visitors throughout, though with rolling closures of specific exhibits like "Journeys" on the first floor and "Silent Voices" on the third floor to facilitate work.[95] Digital expansions form a core component, with the project's Records Discovery Center set to more than double the searchable immigration database from approximately 65 million to 154 million records by incorporating manifests from other U.S. ports of entry beyond Ellis Island.[99][96] This enhancement, funded through private donations, enables broader public access to digitized passenger lists, ship manifests, and related documents via online platforms, supporting genealogical research and historical analysis.[100] Completion of major renovations is projected for 2026, preserving the site's role as an educational hub while adapting to contemporary interpretive standards.[101][102]

Visitor Access and Educational Role

Ellis Island is accessible to the public exclusively via ferry service operated by Statue City Cruises, with departures from Battery Park in New York City or Liberty State Park in New Jersey.[103] A single round-trip ferry ticket grants entry to both Ellis Island and Liberty Island, including access to the museums on each, though the ferry fee covers transportation rather than an entrance charge.[104] Ferries run every 20 to 30 minutes, with the first departure around 9:00 AM and the last return from Ellis Island at 6:00 PM, extending into evenings during summer months and peak seasons.[14] Advance online reservations are strongly recommended, particularly for general admission during high-demand periods, as tickets are not sold on-site and special access options like pedestal or crown tours at the Statue of Liberty may sell out.[105] The Ellis Island National Museum of Immigration, housed in the restored Main Building, operates daily with exhibits open from approximately 9:45 AM to 4:45 PM, allowing visitors 2 to 3 hours for self-guided exploration of immigration records, artifacts, and interactive displays tracing the processing of over 12 million immigrants from 1892 to 1954.[106] Visitors can access the American Family Immigration History Center for genealogical research, enabling searches of passenger manifests and oral histories from actual arrivals.[106] Accessibility features include ramps and elevators in key areas, though some historical structures retain original layouts with stairs.[103] In its educational capacity, the museum emphasizes the empirical mechanics of early 20th-century U.S. immigration policy, including medical inspections, legal screenings, and detention experiences, through three floors of exhibits featuring primary documents, photographs, and recreated facilities like the Great Hall.[106] School groups participate in field trips with self-guided activities simulating immigrant inspections and Junior Ranger programs that award badges for completing tasks on historical accuracy and personal heritage.[107][108] Additional resources include curriculum-aligned videos produced in partnership with the National Park Service, covering pre-Ellis Island migration waves and post-1924 quota restrictions, available for classroom use to foster understanding of demographic inflows without narrative overlay.[109] Virtual tours and digital archives extend access beyond physical visits, supporting research into verifiable passenger data rather than generalized narratives.[106]

References

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