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pdf, 817.53 KB
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Search - BBC teach - Class Clips - History KS3 / GCSE: Jewish migration to Manchester in the late 1800s

BBC Teach > Secondary Resources > KS3 / GCSE History > Migration

In this short film for secondary schools historian David Olusoga visits Manchester which, along with the other industrial manufacturing towns surrounding it, acted as a magnet for waves of economic migrants from all over the world.

In the late 1800’s and early 1900’s, 30,000 Jewish migrants from Russia and Eastern Europe settled in Manchester.

David Olusoga meets Janice Haber and her family, the descendents of Jewish migrants, and talks to historian Ruth Percy who describes how Conservative politicians and right wing newspapers of the time exploited economic concerns associated with the new migrants, stoking up racist xenophobia against migrants like the Jews, which would become familiar throughout the 1900’s.

The arrival of the Jews and other migrants led to changes in the law, and to the emergence of modern immigration legislation – laws that persist to this day.

This short film is from the BBC series, Migration.

Written in Publisher and formatted to A3 the resource can be saved as a PDF for A4 printing

Including 15 multiple choice questions for reviewing / HW

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