American History – June 2019

(John Hannent) #1

36 AMERICAN HISTORY


excluded “children born on our soil to temporary sojourners,”


a remote issue, since owing to travel cost and time, most who


came to America came to stay.


The outcome was never in doubt. Republicans enjoyed a


healthy majority in both houses, and the former Confederate


states had not yet regained representation in Congress. On


February 2, 1866, the Senate passed the bill 33-12. On March


13, 1866, the House approved 111-38. The Civil Rights Bill of


1866 went to President Johnson for his signature.


Trumbull, who had met with the president while the bill


was pending, believed he had Johnson’s support. He felt


betrayed on March 27, 1866, when the president vetoed the


bill. Johnson claimed that since a European immigrant had to


undergo a five-year wait to seek citizenship but a former slave


would not, the bill discriminated “against large numbers of


intelligent, worthy, and patriotic foreigners, and in favor of


the Negro.” Reaction to Johnson’s veto was mixed. The Nation


attacked its logic as “that of a stump speech, and its law would


hardly pass current in a college moot court.” The New York


Times praised Johnson for rejecting the bill’s favoritism for the


“black freedman” over the “white immigrant.”


Counterattacking on April 6, 1866, the Senate overrode


Johnson’s veto 33-15. The vote drew applause in galleries that


included “some hundreds of men of color...whose dusky but


earnest faces were bent upon the fate of the bill.” Three days


later, the House overrode the veto


122-41, with the ensuing applause


“especially strong from the ‘colored


galleries.’”


Birthright citizenship was now


the law, but supporters were uneasy.


If one Congress could adopt jus soli by legislation, a later


Congress could reverse that action just as easily. A constitu-


tional amendment, Republican leaders felt, would give


greater permanence. They tacked citizenship onto the 14th


Amendment, pending in the Senate.


On May 30, 1866, Senator Jacob M. Howard (R-Michigan)


added language to the amendment granting citizenship to


“all persons born in the United States, and subject to the


jurisdiction thereof.” This provision was, Howard said,


“simply declaratory of what I regard as the law of the land


already.” Making that change, he said, would remove “all


doubt as to what persons are or are not citizens of the United


States,” an issue Howard called “a great desideratum in the


jurisprudence and legislation of this country.” The “subject


to” clause, he explained, would exclude children born to


foreign ambassadors in America and those born to members


of Indian tribes Congress treated as sovereign. Neither for-


eign diplomats nor these Native American tribes were con-


sidered subject to the jurisdiction of the United States. Native


Americans had to wait until 1924 for citizenship.


Pennsylvania Senator Cowan, jus soli’s most vocal foe, trot-


ted out the bogeymen of the day: Gypsies and the Chinese.


The Republican said he opposed citizenship for Gypsies,


who, he said, “wander in gangs in my State...(and) follow


no ostensible pursuit for a livelihood.” This was too much for


Senator John Conness (R-California), who knew firsthand


about immigration and bigotry. Born in Ireland in 1821,


he had come to America in 1836 and had lived through


the Know-Nothing era. “I have heard more about Gypsies


within the last two or three months than I have heard before


Huddled Masses


An 1892 lithograph


pictures European


immigrants arriving


in New York harbor.


Eating on Ellis Island


Arriving immigrants


could get a free meal


and buy packaged food


at the reception facility.


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