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Inventing Immigration Crises in 19th-Century Missouri with Dr. Luke Ritter In-Person

Who counts as an American? It was a question that plagued nineteenth-century politics, as German and Irish immigrants arrived in unprecedented numbers. On an election day in 1854, St. Louis witnessed one of the nation’s largest anti-immigrant riots. Rioters sabotaged an election and murdered at least ten people. Historian Luke Ritter explains how American-immigrant tensions in Missouri manifested deeply felt anxieties about American identity and democracy amid rapid demographic change. He identifies patterns of behavior that have persisted across time and analyzes U.S. immigration policies, both past and present.

Dr. Luke Ritter is Assistant Professor of American History at St. Louis Community College – Forest Park. He is the author of Inventing America’s First Immigration Crisis: Political Nativism in the Antebellum West (Fordham, 2021) and the editor of American Conspiracism: An Interdisciplinary Exploration (Routledge, 2024). 

This program is co-hosted with Missouri Humanities - mohumanities.org

 

Date:
Tuesday, April 15, 2025
Time:
6:00pm - 7:30pm
Time Zone:
Central Time - US & Canada (change)
Location:
Northwest Meeting Room
Branch:
Northwest Branch
Audience:
  Adult  
Categories:
  Genealogy  

Registration is required. There are 30 seats available.

Event Organizer

Ginger Brickey

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