COMMUNITY EVENTS
Free or low cost Community Events and college courses are intended to provide background on the yearly topic and to touch on areas related to the February Conference that may not be covered in its three-day format. The views of our presenters are their own and may not represent those of the Camden Conference.

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“Immigration to America During the Industrial Age, 1800 – 1924”-talk by John Sutherland on ZOOM
January 10 @ 6:30 pm - 8:00 pm EST

The Camden Conference and Prince Memorial Library in Cumberland present John Sutherland on Tuesday, January 10 at 6:30 p.m. This is the first of two lectures on immigration’s impact on global trade and politics. Please register for the zoom HERE.
A direct cause of modern immigration to the U.S. is the Industrial Revolution and the mass-manufacturing of products, the need to get workers to produce those products, and their export to other nations. The competition from those relatively inexpensive goods meant that hand-craftsmen could not compete, causing more workers to emigrate to the industrialized countries. Immigration also has been a controversial political issue since the late 18th century and remains so. Fear of competition for jobs and bias against certain nationalities drives the controversy.
John Sutherland is Professor of History Emeritus and former Director of the Institute of Local History at Manchester (CT) Community College. He also taught at the University of Connecticut and Eastern and Central Connecticut State Universities. Currently an instructor at U.S.M’s Osher Life-Long Learning Institute, he co-authored with Bruce Stave of UCONN, From the Old Country: An Oral History of European Migration to America.