Take an Immigration Vacation for Labor Day

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The Irish Hunger Memorial in Manhattan reminds us that immigrants often come to the United States fleeing war, famine, or natural disaster.

Labor Day weekend is a good time to honor the immigrant workers who helped build America by visiting a historic site telling their story. The Immigration Vacation series on Long Island Wins takes you to places around the New York area where you can explore our region’s rich immigrant heritage. Each Immigration Vacation installment features images and video, directions to the site, and links to ticket prices and hours.

Battery Park and Castle Clinton
If your family came to New York before 1892, this is likely where they landed.

Ellis Island
America’s best immigration museum.

The New York State Museum in Albany
Italian and Chinese immigrant life in New York City and the Jewish refugee experience on view in one of the best free museums in the Northeast.

Lowell National Historical Park
Great way for kids to learn the vital role of immigrants in industrialization and labor protection.

Lackawanna Coal Mine and Steamtown

Kids from ages four and up can learn about the tough jobs our immigrant ancestors did.

Old Croton Aqueduct
Nature, exercise, and immigrant history in a park 100 feet wide and 26 miles long.

Irish Hunger Memorial
Some of our ancestors came here for freedom, and some came simply to be able to eat. Some came for both.

Fort Schuyler-Picnic Where the Irish Brigade Trained

The Tenement Museum
Great for teens and ‘tweens. Irish, German, and Jewish life on the Lower East Side.

Long Island Monument to Immigrants Who Died Coming to America

Image courtesy of rikomatic via Flickr.

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Patrick Young blogs daily for Long Island Wins. He is the Downstate Advocacy Director of the New York Immigration Coalition and Special Professor of Immigration Law at Hofstra School of Law. He served as the Director of Legal Services and Program at Central American Refugee Center (CARECEN) for three decades before retiring in 2019. Pat is also a student of immigration history and the author of The Immigrants' Civil War.

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