Usually 40 days, but it depended from the results of the medical checkups and if you have the right amount of money, revenue to guarantee the right sustainbility of yourself and even of your family, if there were relatives with you.
In the 1850's during the Great Migration, a trip from Ireland to Ellis Island would take about 2 to 3 weeks. In the modern day, though, a direct flight from Belfast to La Guardia in NYC would take about 7 hours.
1 week to 1 month or sometimes if things went bad, 1 year!
It took at least three months.
penis
2 weeks
That's where immigrants would end up after a long journey to the U.S.A. And they would get processed there and then they were taken to NYC and let go to be free from there horrible life from where they came.
All passengers who came to America from 1855 to 1890 had to go through Ellis Island. Passengers were inspected for contagious disease.
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.
Ellis Island officially opened as an immigration station on January 1, 1892.http://www.nps.gov/elis/faqs.htmIn November 1954, Ellis Island closed its doors.http://www.nowpublic.com/world/ellis-island-why-did-it-close
The immigrants had to work as slaves for almost as long as they shall live. And many of them had to be a slave for the rest of their life in order to be on Ellis Island.
Ellis Island, which is on the coast of New York, I believe, near Liberty Island
two to three acres
HOW long as you want because when u need to go to Ellis island you could take any boat that takes you to Ellis island.
Ellis Island has no aviation facilities.
That's where immigrants would end up after a long journey to the U.S.A. And they would get processed there and then they were taken to NYC and let go to be free from there horrible life from where they came.
most people say it took up to 3 to 5 weeks. [from Europe to Ellis Island]
about a month
2-3 weeks
All passengers who came to America from 1855 to 1890 had to go through Ellis Island. Passengers were inspected for contagious disease.
Immigrants had to go to Ellis Island because they had to take a test, check if their sick, and get the papers this usually took a really long time.
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.
Ellis Island officially opened as an immigration station on January 1, 1892.http://www.nps.gov/elis/faqs.htmIn November 1954, Ellis Island closed its doors.http://www.nowpublic.com/world/ellis-island-why-did-it-close