Credits For All Images
The Rules Have Changed
Background Image
Image: Agents check Mexican border crossers for physical or psychological maladies.
Credit: National Archives and Records Administration, United States Public Health Service, College Park, Maryland.
Small Icons
-
Image: The High Tide of Immigration: A National Menace.
Credit:Judge Magazine, 1903.
-
Image: Soldiers on a transport ship at Galveston.
Credit: Galveston Country Historical Museum, Galveston.
-
Image: Federal Immigration Station, Pelican Island, Galveston.
Credit: The Rosenberg Library, Galveston.
-
Image: States Public Health Service Mexican Border Quarantine card, ca. 1917.
Credit: Archives and Records Administration, United States Public Health Service, College Park, Maryland.
-
Image: America for Americans, Published by the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, ca. 1922.
Credit: Oviatt Library, California State University, Northridge, California.
-
Image:Uncle Sam’s Quota.
Credit: Providence Evening Bulletin, ca. 1921.
Exhibit Windows
- Introduction
-
Image:The Menace of Modern Immigration, Published by the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, ca. 1924.
Credit: Michigan State University Library, East Lansing, Michigan.
- World War I
-
Image: Chava and Esrael Danziger in Houston, Texas, ca. 1920s; Color postcard with verse.
Credit: Elaine Heller, Houston.
- Close the Station
-
Image: After Galveston Storm, ca. 1915.
Credit: Library of Congress, LC–DIG-ggbain—19846, Washington, DC.
- Patrol the Border
-
Image: Agents check Mexican border crossers for physical or psychological maladies.
Credit: National Archives and Records Administration, United States Public Health Service, College Park, Maryland.
- America for Americans
-
Image: Ku Klux Klan women’s hood, ca. 1920s.
Credit: The Women’s Museum, Dallas.
- Limit the Numbers
-
Image: Immigration Act of 1924, May 26, 1924.
Credit: National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC.