Leilão 98 Auction of Fine Judaica
Por Kestenbaum & Company
16.6.22
The Brooklyn Navy Yard Building 77, 141 Flushing Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205, Estados Unidos
O leilão terminou

LOTE 84:

(AMERICAN-JUDAICA).
Despatch from H.M. Ambassador at Washington ...


Preço inicial:
$ 450
Preço estimado :
$500 - $700
Comissão da leiloeira: 25%
IVA: 8.875% Sobre o preço e comissão do lote inteiro
Utilizadores de países estrangeiros podem estar isentos de pagamento de impostos, de acordo com as respectivas leis de imposto
identificações:

(AMERICAN-JUDAICA).
Despatch from H.M. Ambassador at Washington Reporting on Conditions at Ellis Island Immigration Station. Presented to Parliament by Command of His Majesty.


Seal of British Crown.
pp. 12. Unbound. 8vo.


London: His Majesty's Stationery Office 1923

At the invitation of the American Secretary of Labor, the British Ambassador was given a tour of the facilities at Ellis Island by Robert E. Tod, Commissioner of Immigration, Port of New York. Ambassador Geddes reports on the deplorable conditions he witnessed, and goes on to make practical recommendations towards the future, including the construction of separate stations for Jews and non-Jews: “After considering the matter with some care, I have come to think that it might be feasible to divide the stream into its Jewish and non-Jewish parts. Persons of the Jewish faith require special food and utensils, and their being mixed with Christians on the island undoubtedly creates considerable administrative difficulty” (p.9).


Ambassador Geddes goes on to suggest that the United States Government “build a relief station and supply it with…food prepared in accordance with the Jewish ritual and send all immigrant Jews to that station and all non-Jews to the other” (ibid). Earlier, Geddes observes how distasteful it was for “a clean-looking Irish lad” to be thrown in with “a very unpleasant-looking individual…from some Eastern European district” (p.7).


In 1924 the McCarran-Walter Immigration Act imposed severe quotas limiting immigration, effectively closed the doors of the United States to Jewish immigrants. The clear aim of this legislation was to restrict the entry of immigrants from Eastern Europe, while welcoming large numbers of newcomers from Britain and Ireland.