[Great Britain and the American Civil War by Ephraim Douglass Adams]@TWC D-Link book
Great Britain and the American Civil War

CHAPTER XV
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563, states that great efforts were made by the Government to stimulate immigration both to secure a labour supply and to fill up the armies.

Throughout and even since the war the charge has been made by the South that the foreign element, after 1862, preponderated in Northern armies.

There is no way of determining the exact facts in regard to this for no statistics were kept.

A Memorandum prepared by the U.S.War Department, dated July 15, 1898, states that of the men examined for physical fitness by the several boards of enrolment, subsequent to September 1, 1864 (at which time, if ever, the foreign element should have shown preponderance), the figures of nativity stood: United States, 341,569; Germany, 54,944; Ireland, 50,537; British-America, 21,645; England, 16,196; and various other countries no one of which reached the 3,500 mark.

These statistics really mean little as regards war-time immigration since they do not show _when_ the foreign-born came to America; further, from the very first days of the war there had been a large element of American citizens of German and Irish birth in the Northern armies.


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