Exhibitions

Hart-Celler Act

October 2, 2015 – May 5, 2016

National Museum of American History
1300 Constitution Ave., NW
Washington, DC

2nd Floor, Artifact Walls, Of Note Case

See on Map Floor Plan

The Hart-Celler Act had far-reaching effects upon immigration to the United States by opening the possibility of coming to this nation for many people from around the world. Passage of the Act in 1965 was a water-shed event in configuring contemporary America—through the significant demographic shifts and cultural changes that resulted from it. The display marks the 50th anniversary of the Act and among the selection of Latino-related artifacts are a child’s purse brought from Cuba in the early 1960s by a girl who immigrated with her parents and a child’s shirt worn by a Cuban boy who was part of the Operation Pedro Pan that brought minors to the U.S. after Fidel Castro came to power; a United Farm Workers pin; and a 1960s record album by the first meringue band, “Primitivo y Su Combo” to release a U.S. record marketed to immigrants from the Dominican Republic.