Various groups, including the
Immigration Restriction League had supported literacy as a prerequisite for immigration from its formation in 1894. In 1895,
Henry Cabot Lodge had introduced a bill to the
United States Senate to impose a mandate for literacy for immigrants, using a test requiring them to read five lines from the Constitution. Though the bill passed, it was vetoed by President
Grover Cleveland in 1897. In 1901, President
Theodore Roosevelt lent support for the idea in his first address but the resulting proposal was defeated in 1903. A literacy test was included in a US Senate immigration bill of 1906, but the House of Representatives did not agree to this, and the test was dropped in the conference committee finalizing what became the
Immigration Act of 1907. Literacy was introduced again in 1912 and though it passed, it was vetoed by President
William Howard Taft. By 1915, yet another bill with a literacy requirement was passed. It was vetoed by President
Woodrow Wilson because he felt that literacy tests denied equal opportunity to those who had not been educated. As early as 1882, previous immigration acts had levied
head taxes on aliens entering the country to offset the cost of their care if they became indigent. These acts excluded immigrants from Canada or Mexico, as did subsequent amendments to the amount of the head tax. The
Immigration Act of 1882 prohibited entry to the US for
convicts,
indigent people who could not provide for their own care,
prostitutes, and lunatics or idiots. The
Alien Contract Labor Law of 1885 prohibited employers from contracting with foreign laborers and bringing them into the US, though US employers continued to recruit Mexican contract laborers assuming they would just return home. After the assassination of President
William McKinley by the
anarchist Leon Czolgosz on September 6, 1901, several immigration Acts were passed which broadened the defined categories of "undesireables." The
Immigration Act of 1903 expanded barred categories to include anarchists,
epileptics and those who had had episodes of
insanity. Those who had
infectious diseases and those who had
physical or
mental disabilities which would hamper their ability to work were added to the list of excluded immigrants in the
Immigration Act of 1907. Anxiety over the fragmentation of American cultural identity led to many laws aimed at stemming the "
Yellow Peril," the perceived threat of Asian societies replacing the American identity. Laws restricting
Asian immigration to the United States had first appeared in California as state laws. With the enactment of the
Naturalization Act of 1870, which denied citizenship to
Chinese immigrants and forbade all Chinese women, exclusionary policies moved into the federal sphere. Exclusion of women aimed to cement a bachelor society, making Chinese men unable to form families and thus, transient, temporary immigrants. Barred categories expanded with the
Page Act of 1875, which established that Chinese,
Japanese, and
oriental
bonded labor, convicts, and prostitutes were forbidden entry to the US. The
Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 barred Chinese people from entering the US and the
Gentlemen's Agreement of 1907 was made with
Japan to cease Japanese immigration to the US. ==Provisions==