The United States is considered the world’s foremost refuge for foreigners, and no place in the nation symbolizes this better than Ellis Island. Through Ellis Island’s halls and corridors more
than twelve million immigrants-of nearly every nationality and race-entered the country on their way to new experiences in North America. With an astonishing array of nineteenth- and
twentieth-century photographs, Ellis Island leads the reader through the fascinating history of this small island in New York harbor from its pre-immigration days as one of the harbor’s oyster
islands to its spectacular years as the flagship station of the U.S. Bureau of Immigration to its current incarnation as the National Park Service’s largest museum.