I received this e-mail and want to know if any of it is true and to what 
extent?

What did Hoover, Truman, and Eisenhower have in common? Found it very 
interesting, but wonder why you never hear any discussion about it?

Three Presidents did it, yet we never hear about it.

 

What did Hoover, Truman, and Eisenhower have in common?

Here is something that should be of great interest for you to pass around. 
I didn’t know of this until it was pointed out to me.

Back during The Great Depression, President Herbert Hoover ordered the 
deportation of ALL illegal aliens in order to make jobs available to 
American citizens that desperately needed work..

Harry Truman deported over two million Illegal’s after WWII to create jobs 
for returning veterans.

And then again in 1954, President Dwight Eisenhower deported 13 million 
Mexican Nationals! The program was called ‘Operation Wetback’. It was done 
so WWII and Korean Veterans would have a better chance at jobs. It took 2 
Years, but they deported them!

Now….if they could deport the illegal’s back then – they could sure do it 
today..

FULL ANSWER

This distortion of history has been going around for some time, but has 
picked up momentum as the immigration debate has heated up again. So we 
contacted researchers at the Hoover, Truman and Eisenhower libraries to ask 
if the historical record backs up the claims that these presidents ordered 
mass deportations. It doesn’t. We also consulted the Office of the 
Historian of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, and a leading 
academic historian as well. We got the same answer. This e-mail message is 
bogus.

The true history of presidential policy toward illegal immigration, and of 
deportations, is neither as simple nor as successful as claimed.

   - Hoover did not use immigration policy to "create jobs" and never 
   "ordered the deportation of all illegal aliens." During his four-year 
   presidency, roughly 121,000 persons were officially deported or induced to 
   leave through threat of deportation, according to our analysis of official 
   statistics. (We explain our sources and analytical methods fully in the 
   "Where We Got The Numbers" section below.)
   - Truman did not try to "create jobs for returning veterans" by ordering 
   deportations. In fact, he signed legislation protecting the rights of 
   Mexican migrant laborers recruited legally to help harvest U.S. crops, and 
   was unable to win congressional approval of measures to crack down on 
   employers of illegal immigrants. During his nearly eight years in office, 
   about 3.4 million were deported or left "voluntarily" under threat of 
   deportation.
   - Eisenhower did not deport 13 million Mexicans. Only one-tenth that 
   number was ever claimed by the federal officials in charge of  "Operation 
   Wetback," and even that figure is criticized as inflated by guesswork. 
   Officially, just over 2.1 million were recorded as having been deported or 
   having departed under threat of deportation.

Historian Mae M. Ngai calls the message "a most interesting distortion of 
history," and our research backs that up. Ngai, now at Columbia University, 
told us that "none of these presidents presided over any general 
deportation campaign."

So this e-mail’s claim that a president could "sure do it today" — that is, 
easily deport all theestimated 12 million illegal immigrants 
<http://pewhispanic.org/reports/report.php?ReportID=107> now in the U.S. — 
is a conclusion based on false evidence. No relocation effort nearly so 
large has ever been attempted, let alone accomplished "in two years" as 
this e-mail states.

Hoover

According to Marian Smith at the USCIS Office of the Historian: "There is 
no evidence that Herbert Hoover ordered the deportation of all illegal 
aliens." And Matthew T. Schaefer, archivist at the Herbert Hoover 
Presidential Library in West Branch, Iowa, told us in an e-mail message: 
"President Hoover never issued a statement, executive order or proclamation 
ordering the deportation of all illegal immigrants."

Hoover took office in 1929, when the very concept of "illegal immigration" 
was fairly new. For most of its previous history, the U.S. had encouraged 
immigration and threw up few legal barriers. The first permanent quotas on 
immigration had been put in place by theImmigration Act of 1924 
<http://web.archive.org/web/20080210025205/http://www.historicaldocuments.com/ImmigrationActof1924.htm>.
 
And even that law did not apply to Mexico, or to any other country in the 
Western Hemisphere, because the U.S. didn’t want to alienate its neighbors, 
and needed Mexican laborers to help with the harvest. It did completely 
exclude immigrants from Asia 
<http://history.state.gov/milestones/1921-1936/ImmigrationAct>, however, 
and set limits on immigration from Europe.

The Hoover administration, then as now, struggled to enforce the law. His 
labor secretaries worked to deport criminal illegal immigrants and public 
charges. (The Immigration and Naturalization Service, predecessor to the 
present-day USCIS, was in the Department of Labor at the time.) But 
official statistics show that the total number of formal deportations was 
less than 72,000 during Hoover’s time in office, plus another roughly 
49,000 who were recorded as having left "voluntarily" rather than face 
official deportation proceedings. As nearly as we can gauge from the 
official record, 121,067 persons were deported or induced to leave during 
Hoover’s four-year term.

Where We Got The Numbers

We drew these figures from official statistics published by the INS for 
each fiscal year. The Hoover figures are drawn from table 24A on page 179 
of the "Annual Report of the Immigration and Naturalization Service 
<http://ia311203.us.archive.org/1/items/annualreportofim1952unit/annualreportofim1952unit.pdf>"
 
for fiscal year 1952. The historical table details numbers of "Aliens 
Deported and Aliens Departing Voluntarily Under Proceedings; Years ended 
June 30, 1892 to 1952."

The fiscal-year figures don’t match Hoover’s term exactly, because fiscal 
years ended on June 30 in those years, and Hoover served from March 4, 
1929, to March 4, 1933. So we added together totals for fiscal years 1930 
through 1932 — the full fiscal years that fell entirely within Hoover’s 
term, plus pro-rated portions of fiscal year 1929 and 1933. For example, 
since Hoover was in office for 118 days of fiscal year 1929, we assigned to 
him 32.3 percent of the fiscal year totals.

For Truman and Eisenhower, we used the corresponding table (Table 23, page 
55) from the INS annual report for 1961 
<http://www.archive.org/stream/annualreportofim1961unit#page/55/mode/1up>. 
We followed the same method for each to pro-rate figures for partial fiscal 
years. In the latter document "voluntary" departures are described instead 
as "Aliens required to depart," a somewhat more accurate term.

The ‘Mexican Repatriation’

It’s true that the years of the Great Depression saw an exodus of many 
persons of Mexican heritage — including some who were U.S. citizens. A report 
in *USA Today* 
<http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2006-04-04-1930s-deportees-cover_x.htm>, 
published in 2006, stated: "Tens of thousands, and possibly more than 
400,000, Mexicans and Mexican-Americans were pressured — through raids and 
job denials — to leave the USA during the Depression." That report echos 
the findings of a 2006 book, "Decade of betrayal: Mexican repatriation in 
the 1930s 
<http://books.google.com/books?id=1A6iBy_0qacC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Decade+of+Betrayal:+Mexican+Repatriation+in+the+1930s,+by+Francisco+Balderrama+and+Raymond+Rodriguez.&source=bl&ots=U-DNkPV0JQ&sig=uNsYtxFYETHjMv_c_bRph-9zIVg&hl=en&ei=ouMoTJ6ZFsP38Aap-IDZBA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CBgQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Decade%20of%20Betrayal%3A%20Mexican%20Repatriation%20in%20the%201930s%2C%20by%20Francisco%20Balderrama%20and%20Raymond%20Rodriguez.&f=false>,"
 
by Francisco E. Balderrama <http://www.calstatela.edu/faculty/fbalder/> and 
Raymond Rodríguez. Those authors described "a frenzy of anti-Mexican 
hysteria" that included "mass deportation roundups and repatriation drives."

It is also true that federal immigration officials sometimes used legally 
dubious tactics in those days. A report to the 1931 Wickersham Commission, 
taking note of some "objectionable features" of the deportation system 
<http://pds.lib.harvard.edu/pds/view/4673882?n=137&s=4>, described 
immigration officials "forcibly detaining groups of people many of whom are 
aliens lawfully in this country, or even United States citizens, without 
any warrant of arrest or search." The report added: "It is often customary 
for the immigrant inspectors to jail suspects, however apprehended, without 
a warrant of arrest or any other kind of a warrant."  And it concluded, 
"The apprehension and examination of supposed aliens are often 
characterized by methods unconstitutional, tyrannic, and oppressive."

But it should be noted that it was Hoover who appointed the commission that 
brought these abuses to light, and that the descriptions of a "Mexican 
repatriation" during the Depression don’t put the blame exclusively, or 
even predominately, on federal officials. They also cite actions by state 
and local officials, "job denials" by private employers, and pressure by 
labor unions. In fact, historian Ngai told us in an e-mail message that 
Mexicans who were sent back "were repatriated by local city and county 
welfare authorities (e.g. Los Angeles, Detroit), not the federal 
government."

Hoover archivist Schaefer backed that up in his message to us, saying that 
Hoover himself did not push for deportation:

Hoover archivist Schaefer: The push for deportation arose locally. Los 
Angeles and California are probably the best known cases. LA paid 
transportation costs to ‘encourage’ ‘voluntary repatriation’ succeeding in 
sending tens of thousands of people back to Mexico in 1930 and 1931.

Hoover thought the very idea of restricting immigration from Mexico was 
futile, Schaefer said. "Hoover saw quotas for immigrants from the Western 
Hemisphere as unenforceable, so he opposed efforts to secure such quotas."

Truman

The claim about Truman is also not supported by the historical record. 
According to Tammy Kelly, archivist at the Harry S. Truman Presidential 
Library and Museum in Independence, Mo.: "We have not found evidence that 
President Truman deported over two million illegal immigrants to create 
jobs for Americans."

Truman struggled with the problem of migrant farm workers — both legal and 
illegal. On June 3, 1950, he set up a Presidential Commission 
<http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=78306> on Migratory Labor 
and asked it to look into (among other things) "the extent of illegal 
migration of foreign workers into the United States" and whether laws could 
be "strengthened and improved to eliminate such illegal migration." The 
commission ultimately recommended that the country should rely primarily on 
domestic farm workers, not immigrants, to perform farm labor. On July 13, 
1951, Truman approved legislation 
<http://www.trumanlibrary.org/publicpapers/index.php?pid=368&st=&st1> to 
facilitate the employment of legal migrants to harvest U.S. crops, but also 
expressed a desire to reduce illegal immigration from Mexico and said 
additional measures were needed. "These people are coming to our country in 
phenomenal numbers – and at an increasing rate," Truman said. "Everyone 
suffers from the presence of these illegal immigrants in the community."

But the legislation Truman signed had to do with keeping legal guest 
workers flowing across the border to harvest U.S. crops. According to 
Truman archivist Kelly, the new legislation established reception centers 
to house temporarily legal immigrants from Mexico while the government 
found employment for them. Truman said in signing it, "We must make sure 
that contract wages will in fact be paid, that transportation within this 
country and adequate reception centers for Mexican workers will in fact be 
provided." He said it was necessary that the U.S. government "stand behind 
all contracts and guarantee performance in the future, if any more Mexican 
citizens are to be legally recruited for work in the United States."

It’s true that many were deported or induced to return "voluntarily" during 
the Truman years. We figure, based on the official historical tables, that 
more than 127,000 were formally deported and more than 3.2 million left 
voluntarily rather than face deportation — a total of nearly 3.4 million.

But the deportations and quasi-voluntary departures had nothing to do with 
creating jobs for returning veterans, as claimed in the chain e-mail. As Truman 
noted in a news conference on Oct. 3, 1946 
<http://www.trumanlibrary.org/publicpapers/index.php?pid=1762&st=&st1=>, 
most returning WWII veterans were quickly absorbed into the booming postwar 
economy. "Ten million veterans are gainfully employed today, compared with 
only 2 million at work on V-J Day–a gain of 8 million jobs for veterans in 
a year," Truman boasted. He said 900,000 veterans remained unemployed, and 
that "is still higher than any of us like to see it." But he drew no 
connection with illegal immigration.

Truman actually wanted to do more than he was able to stem illegal 
immigration. He said the bill he signed didn’t go far enough 
<http://www.trumanlibrary.org/publicpapers/index.php?pid=368&st=&st1>. He 
said he would ask Congress for stricter sanctions against employers who 
harbor illegal aliens, and would also seek clear authority for INS 
inspectors to raid workplaces without search warrants. "Congress did not 
pass the legislation Truman wanted, however, and the illegal immigration 
problem was passed onto future generations," Kelly stated to us via e-mail.

Eisenhower

Truman’s successor pushed harder, presiding over what was officially called 
"Operation Wetback," a vigorous, federally led effort to remove illegal 
Mexican immigrants from the Southwest. (The term "wetback" is a disparaging 
term applied to Mexicans who swam or waded across the Rio Grande River — 
and today is considered an ethnic slur.)

But it’s simply not true that "Eisenhower deported 13 million." The actual 
number expelled by "Operation Wetback" is no more than one-tenth of that 
figure, even counting many who were not formally deported at all. "The 
claim that Eisenhower deported 13 million immigrants must be the result of 
a typo or some other error," USCIS historian Smith told us. Since the 
officially claimed figure was 1.3 million, it is possible that the e-mail’s 
author simply dropped a decimal point, inflating the figure ten-fold.

The "Handbook of Texas," sponsored by the Texas State Historical 
Association, says in its entry on "Operation Wetback" 
<http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/OO/pqo1.html> that the 
number forced to leave is "probably less than 1.3 million":

Handbook of Texas: The INS claimed as many as 1,300,000, though the number 
officially apprehended did not come anywhere near this total. The INS 
estimate rested on the claim that most aliens, fearing apprehension by the 
government, had voluntarily repatriated themselves before and during the 
operation. … Many commentators have considered these figure[s] to be 
exaggerated.

We also contacted the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum 
in Abilene, Kansas. Director Karl Weissenbach told us his staff had 
researched the library’s holdings to determine the veracity of the 13 
million claim and could find nothing to support it. Indeed, the staff 
turned up a report to Cabinet dated Jan. 26, 1955, that suggests a much 
lower total:

Report to the Cabinet, Jan. 26, 1955: [A] year ago the Border Patrol was 
faced with the disheartening task of apprenhending and expelling some 3,000 
‘wetbacks’ each day, apprehensions now are running slightly less than 300 
daily.

"Operation Wetback" lasted only a few months. It was announced June 9, 
1954, and focused initially on California and Arizona. According to the 1954 
Annual Report of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 
<http://www.archive.org/stream/annualreportofim1954unit#page/31/mode/1up/search/operation>
 (page 
31) federal officials set up roadblocks and stopped trains at points at 
some distance north of the border. Some 800 Border Patrol agents, using 
jeeps, trucks, automobiles and spotter airplanes, used a system described 
officially as "blocking it off and mopping it up." Agents quickly expanded 
the operation to the entire state of California, including industrial areas 
as well as agricultural areas. By mid-July, 1954, the operation was extended 
to Texas <http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/OO/pqo1.html>. 
And it eventually encompassed "mopping up" activities in northern cities as 
well, according to the 1955 Annual Report of the Immigration and 
Naturalization Service 
<http://www.archive.org/stream/annualreportofim1955unit#page/14/mode/1up>:

INS, 1955: These activities were followed by mopping up operations in the 
interior and special mobile force units are continuing to discover illegal 
aliens who have eluded initial sweeps through such cities as Spokane, 
Chicago, Kansas City and St. Louis, which removed 20,174 illegal Mexican 
aliens from industrial jobs.

Mexican nationals were shipped back using trucks, buses, planes and ships. 
According to theTexas State Historical Society, 
<http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/OO/pqo1.html> the use 
of ships was discontinued after some drownings caused a public outcry in 
Mexico.

Handbook of Texas: Ships were a preferred mode of transport because they 
carried the illegal workers farther away from the border than did buses, 
trucks, or trains. The boat lift continued until the drowning of seven 
deportees who jumped ship from the Mercurio provoked a mutiny and led to a 
public outcry against the practice in Mexico. Other aliens, particularly 
those apprehended in the Midwest states, were flown to Brownsville and sent 
into Mexico from there.

The ‘Problem No Longer Exists’

As we said, the operation lasted only a few months, not the "two years" 
claimed in the e-mail message. "The operation trailed off in the fall of 
1954 as INS funding began to run out," according to the Texas State 
Historical Society. Nevertheless, INS officials later claimed the operation 
had been a complete success 
<http://www.archive.org/stream/annualreportofim1955unit#page/15/mode/1up/search/secured>
 and 
that the U.S.-Mexico border "has been secured."

INS, 1955: The so-called ‘wetback’ problem no longer exists. … [T]his is no 
longer, as in the past, a problem in border control. The border has been 
secured.

More than half a century later, history has shown that official claim to be 
a fantasy, just like nearly all the claims made by this chain e-mail. In 
fact, about the only true statement in it is that "we never hear about" the 
events it describes. That’s because they never happened.

On Monday, March 14, 2016 at 2:37:45 AM UTC-5, Bill wrote:
>
>
>  
>
>
>
>
>
>   
>  
> I recall during Ike's term that all aliens had to report their addresses 
> once a year and they did this through the Post Offices located through out 
> the Country. It was mandatory and what happened to that system? Does anyone 
> out there know? I recall radio ads reminding Aliens to file the proper 
> document and I believe it was  in late winter or very early spring each 
> year when they had to do this.....
>
>   
> *What did Presidents Hoover , Truman, and Eisenhower have in common?    *
>
>   
> *This is something that should be of great interest for you to pass 
> around. I didn't know of this until it was pointed out to me.* 
>
> *Back during the great depression, Herbert Hoover ordered the deportation 
> of ALL illegal aliens in order to make jobs available to American citizens 
> that  desperately needed work.* 
>
> *Harry Truman deported over two million illegal aliens after WWII to 
> create jobs for returning veterans.* 
>
> *In 1954 Dwight Eisenhower deported 13 million Mexicans. The program was 
> called Operation Wetback. It was done so WWII and Korean War veterans would 
> have a better chance at jobs. It took two years, but they deported them!* 
>
> *Now, if they could deport the illegal aliens back then, they could surely 
> do it today. If you have doubts about the veracity of this information, and 
> confirm it for yourself.*
>
>   *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Wetback 
> <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Wetback>* 
>
> *Why, you might ask, can't they do this today?Actually the answer is quite 
> simple. Hoover, Truman, and Eisenhower were **men of honor**, **not 
> self-serving politicians looking for votes**!*
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>

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