Ellis Island, ca. 1907.
Ellis Island served as an immigration station from 1892 until 1954. Following the Immigration Act of 1891, which created the Office of Immigration (later the Bureau of Immigration), the federal government took control of regulating immigration from the individual states. The first immigration building on Ellis Island opened on January 1, 1892. In 1897 the original wooden building was destroyed by fire. The replacement building, designed by the firm of Boring and Tilton, is a French Renaissance Revival style structure of red brick with limestone trim. It opened in December of 1900 and was soon followed by a number of related buildings, including kitchen, laundry, power, and hospital facilities.
When the station opened in 1892, fewer than 20,000 people passed through the island a year, the result of an economic depression. By 1905 nearly a million people a year were immigrating to the United States. During its peak years (1905-1914) more than 5000 immigrants were seen every day, and it is estimated that more than 12 million people were processed through the immigration station at Ellis Island during its tenure.
By 1924 the number of immigrants passing through the island had dramatically decreased due to restrictive legislation. In November 1954, the Immigration and Naturalization Service shut down their offices on Ellis Island and moved to a new location in Manhattan.