Immigration to America reminds me of many immigrants, especially Korean immigrants. My city from Orange County, California has a large population in Asia, so I decided to focus on Korean immigrants. I have some friends from other countries, and I will hear comments on green cards, immigration behavior, their home country and citizenship. My hometown is the hometown that influenced my research on the history of Korean immigrants. On January 13, 1903, the first Korean immigrant worked in Hawaii or came to school.
In 2003, Korean Americans - the American community celebrated the 100th anniversary of immigration to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. However, the history of American Korean migrants actually started in the late nineteenth century. In 1882, Korea and the United States signed a Friendship Treaty and a Commercial Treaty that allow Koreans to immigrate to America. Since then, the close political, military and economic relations between the two countries helped immigrate to the country into Korea. Following the 1882 treaty, Korean diplomats, political asylum seekers, students and businessmen began to visit, but they did not settle in that country. In 1903, the first batch of important Korean immigrants came to the US territory of Hawaii to become a sugarcane plantation worker.
After Japan annexed South Korea in 1910, North Korea 's entry into the United States was almost canceled. The 1924 Immigration Control Act, also known as the Eastern Rejection Law, is part of the actual system that does not involve the entry of Koreans into the United States. According to the Immigration Nationality Act of 1952 and 1952, opportunities for Asian Americans were opened more and Korean Americans were able to enter the middle class from the enclave. At the end of the Korean War in 1953, a small number of students and experts entered the United States of America. A large group of immigrants includes women marrying American soldiers. By the establishment of the Immigration Nationality Act of 1965, Koreans became one of the fastest growing Asian groups in the United States, second only to the Filipino.