Prior to the passage of the
Commonwealth Immigrants Act of 1962, there were few restrictions on Maltese migration to the UK. Malta had experienced significant emigration, particularly as a result of the collapse of a construction boom in 1907 and after
World War II, when the
birth rate increased significantly. In the nineteenth century, most migration from Malta had been to
North Africa and the
Middle East, with high rates of
return migration, but in the twentieth century most emigrants went to destinations in the
New World, particularly the
United States and
Australia. Numbers opting for the UK were smaller, despite the colonial links. Indeed, prior to
World War I, there were very few Maltese in the UK, except for a community in
Cardiff. The UK was seen as a distant and cold country by most Maltese. Between 1919 and 1929, 3,354 Maltese were recorded as sailing to the UK, with 1,445 of these returning in later years. The remainder did not necessarily all stay in the UK, however, with many subsequently moving on to Australia. Nonetheless, by 1932, a street adjoining Commercial Road in London was home to a Maltese community. Many of these Maltese people worked in London's docks. Similar communities existed around the docks in
Chatham and
Portsmouth. After 1962, Maltese people required vouchers to migrate to the UK, but these were relatively easy to obtain from the Emigration Department until 1971. The Emigration Department would arrange for prospective migrants to be interviewed by British firms in order to allow their passage to the UK to fill
labour shortages. At this time, it was also common for Maltese women to marry British military servicemen, and for Maltese to join British
merchant ships. Migration statistics recorded in Malta and the UK differ in terms of the number of Maltese migrants recorded. Maltese statistics suggest that 8,282 people left Malta for the UK between 1963 and 1970 (inclusive), with 949 recorded as returning. British statistics, meanwhile, suggest that 8,110 Maltese migrants arrived in the same period, excluding students, diplomats, seamen, visitors and their families. Significant
seasonal migration to the UK started in 1962. This year saw 70 Maltese women recruited to work in British fruit and vegetable
canneries for six months. By 1967–69, 250 Maltese people per year were moving to the UK for seasonal work, mostly in the canning, ice cream manufacture and hotel and catering sectors. The seasonal migration of female workers was organised by the Emigrants' Commission of the
Catholic Church in Malta. According to the Malta Emigration Museum, between the end of World War Two and 1996, a total of 31,489 migrants left Malta for the UK. 12,659 subsequently returned to Malta. Net migration over the period was therefore 18,830. ==Demographics==