Given the United Kingdom’s special relationship with the United States, and the sheer number of Americans who were stationed there during the war, it is unsurprising that the first group of “War Brides” to arrive in the United States hailed from that country. Similar to the planners of Operation Magic Carpet’s inability to keep their promises of returning all American service personnel home by the end of 1945, due to the logistics and distances involved, many “War Brides” and their families languished months and sometimes even years before coming to America. The Immigration Act of 1924 was finally replaced with the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, which eliminated the National Origins Formula altogether. “The War Brides Act” was bolstered by the subsequent Alien Fiancées and Fiancés Act of 19 while the restrictions of the Immigration Act of 1924 were further weakened by the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952. ![]() 659,” but more widely known as “The War Brides Act.,” this legislation, enacted on December 28, 1945, aimed “To expedite the admission to the United States of alien spouses and alien minor children of citizen members of the United States armed forces.” Through this act, “War Brides” and their dependents were exempted from the quota systems of the Immigration Act of 1924 and granted free passage to journey to their new homes. However, it was not until two years later that the US leadership fully bowed to the insurmountable volume of American public opinion and established a pathway forward for GI brides and sweethearts. The initial blows against these restrictions had been first struck in December 1943 with the passage of the Magnuson Act, which, for the first time in 60 years, allowed a small number of Chinese immigrants’ legal entry into the United States in recognition of China’s fight against the Japanese. Robert Ames and Norah McMullen have just met and are clearly very happy together." Courtesy of the Imperial War Museums. ![]() "American Boy Meets British Girl- Love and Romance on the Home Front, Bournemouth, England, 1941 A head and shoulders portrait of the smiling happy couple. GIs also increased their demands to bring over their new wives and sweethearts, many hailing from countries proscribed by the 1924 Act. The 1924 Act was only one of many such pieces of legislation, dating back to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which offered a racially-construed solution to preserve both the ideal of American homogeneity and to bar so-called “undesirable elements.” Nevertheless, for military and political leaders in Washington DC, by 1945, the pressure to bring America’s fighting men home was immense. For two decades, the 1924 Act had slowed immigration to a trickle with all Asians, other than Filipinos, barred and strict quotas set for specific countries based on two percent of the US population made up by that country as represented in the 1890 census. However, for these “War Brides,” restrictive American immigration policies posed a major challenge.įor WWII “War Brides” and their dependents, the greatest hurdle for legal entry into the United States was the quota system, the National Origins Formula, established by the Immigration Act of 1924. The Immigration Act of 1924 all but cut off entry for many hopeful migrants from Europe and all would-be immigrants from Asia. The logistics planners behind Operation Magic Carpet, the largest combined air and sealift ever organized, worked tirelessly to bring the more than eight million men and women from every service branch, scattered across 55 theaters of war and spanning four continents, “Home Alive By ‘45.” Home was not only on the minds of millions of Americans in uniforms in 1945 it was also on the minds of between 60,000 to 70,000 women wed by American servicemen during and immediately after World War II who hoped to leave their old homes behind and rejoin their husbands for a new life in the United States. ![]() By the winter of 1945, millions of American military personnel were on the move.
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