By: Madison Horne

20 Ellis Island Immigration Photos That Capture the Hope and Diversity of New Arrivals

An Ellis Island clerk and amateur photographer captured the wide-ranging origins of immigrants entering the United States in the early 1900s.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library
Published: November 02, 2018Last Updated: February 13, 2026

During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, large numbers of people from northern and western Europe traveled in overcrowded ships to immigrate to the United States. They arrived to escape famine and religious discrimination, to buy farmland and cash in on the Gold Rush. This period also saw the beginning of immigration restrictions, starting with the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882.

Although Ellis Island had been open since 1892, arrivals at the immigration station reached a peak at the turn of the century. From 1900 to 1915, more than 15 million immigrants came to the United States, with an increasing number from non-English-speaking countries.

The Revolving Doors of Ellis Island

Ellis Island is known in history as a place that welcomed America's immigrants, but for a time, it also pushed them away.

1:00m watch

**It has been estimated that close to 40 percent of current U.S. citizens can trace at least one ancestor to Ellis island.**

A massive wave of immigrants came from Ireland, where a potato blight had contributed to widespread famine in the mid-19th century. Foreigners from southern and eastern Europe, including Poland, Hungary, Slovakia and Greece, left their homelands to escape political and economic oppression. People of Jewish descent fled antisemitism in czarist Russia, while poverty drove many Italians to seek better lives in America. Non-Europeans from Syria, Turkey and Armenia were also entering the United States in high numbers, seeking economic opportunity.

In the late 1800s–early 1900s, many Europeans immigrated to the U.S., documented by Ellis Island clerk Augustus Sherman.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

Though open since 1892, Ellis Island peaked in 1900–1915, as 15M+ immigrants arrived, many from non-English-speaking nations.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

Foreigners from southern and eastern Europe, including Poland, Hungary, Slovakia and Greece, came over to escape political and economic oppression.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

Many immigrants, including this Algerian man, wore their finest traditional clothing as they entered the country.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

Greek-Orthodox priest Rev. Joseph Vasilon.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

Wilhelm Schleich, a miner from Hohenpeissenberg, Bavaria.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

This woman arrived from the west coast of Norway.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

Three women from Guadeloupe stand outside the immigration station.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

A close-up of a Guadeloupean immigrant.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

A mother and her two daughters from the Netherlands pose for a photo.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

Thumbu Sammy, age 17, arrived from India.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

This tattooed German man got to the country as a stowaway and was eventually deported.Read more: When Germans Were Americas Undesirables

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

John Postantzis was a Turkish bank guard..

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

Peter Meyer, age 57, arrived from Denmark.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

A Roma family had come from Serbia.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

An Italian immigrant woman, photographed at Ellis Island.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

A soldier from Albania poses for the camera.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

This man had worked as shepherd in Romania.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

Three boys in traditional Scottish clothing pose at Ellis Island. Read more: The History Behind the Scottish Independence Vote

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

Russian Cossacks as they entered the United States to start new lives.

Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library

Augustus Sherman, an Ellis Island Chief Registry Clerk and amateur photographer, captured his unique view on the immigration influx by bringing his camera to work. Sherman's photos showcase the wide array of cultures represented in the people who passed through the station's doors from 1905 to 1914.

The onset of World War I in 1914 eventually slowed the flow of immigrants into the country and foreigners increasingly became targets of suspicion. In the 1920s, legislation set further limits on immigration, including a quota system that restricted entry to 2 percent of the total number of people of each nationality in America. By 1954, Ellis Island, the starting point for millions of immigrants who would contribute to a diverse nation, would finally close its doors.

Aidan Quinn narrates this special look at the epic 350-year struggle of Irish immigrants to the United States.

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Citation Information

Article Title
20 Ellis Island Immigration Photos That Capture the Hope and Diversity of New Arrivals
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
February 13, 2026
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
February 13, 2026
Original Published Date
November 02, 2018

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