A breathtaking and astounding view of New York, represented the metallic, copper monument that stands out today while we cross to Elis Island to see the great tourist attraction that the European immigrants loved to see, the Statue of Liberty.
While entering New York Harbor by ship, immigrants saw the Statue of Liberty. Many of them were relieved to know that they had survived the trip. They also thought of it as a sign of freedom from the oppression they had experienced in their past countries.It brought tears to the eyes of many.It was a sight to behold.To see the sight of the Statue of Liberty meant that they were free from poverty and more.
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european
Charleston
James Cook (not yet a captain) was the first European to sight the east coast of New Zealand in 1769. Abel Tasman had only sailed south of New Zealand in 1642.
Staying within sight of land
The Statue of Liberty was the first sight for thousands of immigrants who came to the United States by boat across the Atlantic, especially from Europe in the later 1800s and early 1900s.
Staying within sight of land
USS Condor (AMc-14) was the minesweeper that first caught sight of a Japanese midget submarine trying to enter Pearl Harbor and alerted the destroyer USS Ward (DD-139). The Ward fired the first shots of the war, sinking the submarine before it was able to enter the harbor.
In the 1700s, immigrants were coming from all over the world. The second and third waves of Irish immigrants came after 1717. The potato famine in Ireland was making them want to come. Many immigrants thought that they would strike it rich in this new land. Ellis Island and Angel Island dealt with immigrants. Immigrants were inspected, but it was rare for one not to be accepted. If an immigrant was sick, they were sent to the Ellis Island hospital at Ellis Island. It was rare for one of the immigrants to get sent home. Angel Island was used mainly by Asians and Ellis Island by Europeans. Ellis Island was closed in 1954. It was expensive to maintain. Today, Ellis Island is a tourist sight. From Ellis Island, the Statue of Liberty can be seen. The Statue of Liberty was a significant sight for the immigrants crossing over to the U.S. Many of them cried on the boats. The boats treated the immigrants as cargo, and the immigrants were usually steerage. Depending on where the immigrants were traveling from, the journeys were long. Many people got sick and conditions were terrible.
the Dutch commander Abel Janszoon Tasman at 4pm on 24 November 1642