Skip to main content
U.S. flag
An official website of the United States government    Here's how you know
Español
Multilingual Resources
Official Government Website

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure Website

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( A locked padlock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

U.S. Department of Homeland Security Seal, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
 
Sign In  
Access USCIS online services.
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
Sign In
Create Account
  • Topics

    • Family

      • Family of Green Card Holders (Permanent Residents)
      • Family of Refugees and Asylees
      • Family of U.S. Citizens
    • Adoption

      • Before You Start
      • Immigration through Adoption
    • Military

      • Citizenship for Military Family Members
      • Naturalization Through Military Service
    • Humanitarian

      • Humanitarian Parole
      • Refugees and Asylum
      • Temporary Protected Status
    • Visit the U.S.

      • Change My Nonimmigrant Status
      • Extend Your Stay
    • Working in the United States

      • Permanent Workers
      • Temporary (Nonimmigrant) Workers
    • Avoid Scams

      • Common Scams
      • Find Legal Services
      • Report Immigration Scams
    • Careers at USCIS

      • Career Opportunities
      • Special Hiring Programs
  • Forms

    • Most Accessed Forms

      • I-485, Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status
      • I-765, Application for Employment Authorization
      • I-90, Application to Replace Permanent Resident Card (Green Card)
      • N-400, Application for Naturalization
    • All Forms

    • File Online

    • Family Based Forms

      • I-129F, Petition for Alien Fiancé(e)
      • I-130, Petition for Alien Relative
      • I-360, Petition for Amerasian, Widow(er), or Special Immigrant
      • I-600, Petition to Classify Orphan as an Immediate Relative
      • I-751, Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence
    • Employment Based Forms

      • I-9, Employment Eligibility Verification
      • I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker
      • I-140, Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers
      • I-526, Immigrant Petition by Standalone Investor
      • I-539, Application to Extend/Change Nonimmigrant Status
    • Humanitarian Based Forms

      • I-134A, Online Request to be a Supporter and Declaration of Financial Support
      • I-589, Application for Asylum and for Withholding of Removal
      • I-730, Refugee/Asylee Relative Petition
      • I-821, Application for Temporary Protected Status
  • Newsroom

    • All News

      • Alerts
      • Fact Sheets
      • News Releases
    • Media Contacts

    • Multimedia Gallery

    • Social Media Directory

    • Speeches, Statements, Testimony

  • Citizenship

    • Learners

      • Apply for Citizenship
      • Learn About Citizenship
      • Naturalization Test and Study Resources
    • Educators

      • Educational Products for Educators
      • Resources for Educational Programs
      • Teacher Training Sessions
    • Organizations

      • Outreach Tools
      • Civic Integration
      • Interagency Strategy for Promoting Naturalization
      • Naturalization-Related Data and Statistics
    • Grants

      • Learn About the Citizenship and Integration Grant Program
      • Success Stories from Grant Recipients
  • Green Card

    • Green Card Processes and Procedures

      • Adjustment of Status
      • After We Grant Your Green Card
      • Employment Authorization Document
      • Visa Availability and Priority Dates
    • Green Card Eligibility Categories

    • How to Apply for a Green Card

    • Replace Your Green Card

    • While Your Green Card Application Is Pending with USCIS

  • Laws

    • Legislation

      • Immigration and Nationality Act
    • Class Action, Settlement Notices and Agreements

    • Unlawful Presence and Inadmissibility

    • Policy Manual

    • Regulations

    • Administrative Appeals

  • Tools

    • Self-Help Tools

      • Check Case Processing Times
      • Case Status Online
      • Change of Address
      • E-Request
      • Password Resets and Technical Support
    • Website Resources

      • Archive
      • A-Z Index
      • Website Policies
    • Additional Resources

      • Explore my Options
      • Immigration and Citizenship Data
      • Multilingual Resource Center
      • USCIS Tools and Resources
  • Contact us
  • Multilingual Resources
Main navigation
Skip to main content
  • About Us
    • Mission and Core Values
      • What We Do
    • Organization
      • Leadership
      • Directorates and Program Offices
        • Administrative Appeals Office (AAO)
        • Office of Performance and Quality
        • External Affairs Directorate
        • Field Operations Directorate
        • Fraud Detection and National Security Directorate
        • Immigration Records and Identity Services Directorate
        • Management Directorate
        • Office of Equal Opportunity and Inclusion
        • Office of Investigations
        • Office of Privacy
        • Office of the Chief Counsel
        • Office of the Executive Secretariat
        • Refugee, Asylum, and International Operations Directorate
        • Service Center Operations Directorate
    • Our History
      • About the History Office and Library
      • Explore Agency History
        • History of Women in Federal Immigration and Naturalization Service
        • Organizational Timeline
        • Overview of Agency History
        • Commissioners and Directors
      • Stories from the Archives
      • Research Guides
        • Topics and Events
        • Individuals
      • History Office Webinars
    • Find a USCIS Office
      • Field Offices
      • USCIS Facilities Dedicated to the Memory of Immigrant Medal of Honor Recipients
      • If You Feel Sick, Do Not Come to Your USCIS Appointment; Please Cancel and Reschedule It
      • International Offices
        • Beijing
        • Guangzhou
        • Guatemala City
        • Havana
        • Mexico City
        • Nairobi
        • New Delhi
        • San Salvador
    • Budget, Planning and Performance
    • Contact Us
      • USCIS Contact Center
    • Disability Accommodations for the Public
    • Careers
      • Career Opportunities
      • How to Apply
      • Special Hiring Programs
      • Benefits
      • Training
    • New Employee Information and Forms
    • Equal Employment Opportunity
      • No FEAR Act
      • USCIS Notification of Violation
      • How Do I File An Equal Employment Opportunity Complaint?
    • USCIS Contracting
      • USCIS Contracting Opportunities
      • Vendor Engagement
Breadcrumb
  1. Home
  2. About Us
  3. Our History
  4. Stories from the Archives
  5. I'm an American

I'm an American

INS’s Foray into Radio Broadcasting

Among the most important of USCIS’s missions is promoting citizenship instruction and fostering civic integration. Today the agency accomplishes this mission through a variety of print, multimedia, and digital resources, such as the online Citizenship Resource Center. USCIS’s current efforts follow a long history of Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) citizenship awareness campaigns.

A reproduction of Guy Lombardo's Certificate of Naturalization
Bandleader Guy Lombardo’s Certificate of Naturalization (1938).
Lombardo appeared on I’M AN AMERICAN in 1941.

The INS gained authority to promote citizenship education in 1918 and over the course of the twentieth century it experimented with novel methods for making immigrants, as well as other Americans, aware of the advantages and duties of American citizenship. In 1940 these efforts took the shape of the I’M AN AMERICAN radio program presented by INS and broadcast over the NBC Radio Network. The USCIS Historical Library holds copies of several scripts from the show.

I’M AN AMERICAN debuted on May 4th, 1940 on NBC’s Red Network with the goal of promoting patriotism and citizenship through interviews with newly naturalized Americans. INS developed this format because, according to INS Commissioner James Houghteling, “the clear-seeing eye of some of our new citizens” would reinvigorate all Americans and remind them of the value of US citizenship, something the show’s announcer described each week as “a possession which we ourselves take for granted, but which is still new and thrilling to them” (new citizens).

The show’s first episode featured the Librarian of Congress, who read a lengthy poem about America. After that the episodes took on a standard format: To start the show, the announcer exclaimed “I’m an American!” and cued a sound effect of a cheering crowd. The announcer then read a short introduction and a Department of Labor or INS official would interview a well-known foreign-born American about his or her experiences in the United States. At the close of the show, the announcer returned and offered a free copy of the Constitution—supplied by the DAR—to any listener who sent a post card to I’M AN AMERICAN, care of the Department of Labor, Washington, DC. Starting in August 1940 the closing announcement also reminded aliens to register at their local post office under the terms of the Alien Registration Act. The show usually ran 15-20 minutes, first on Saturday afternoons and then on Sundays at noon, a time with relatively low listenership.

Despite its not-quite-primetime status, I’M AN AMERICAN attracted several well-known guests from a wide variety of fields including politicians, industrial leaders, academics, novelists, scientists, and performers. For example, episodes featured film director Frank Capra, musician Guy Lombardo, author Thomas Mann, and scientist Albert Einstein, who appeared on the same day that he passed his final citizenship examination. Interviewers from the INS and Department of Labor included

A reproduction of Thomas Mann's Identification Card from 1938.
Novelist Thomas Mann’s Immigrant Identification Card (1938).
Mann appeared on I’M AN AMERICAN in 1940.
He became a naturalized citizen in 1944.

Assistant Secretary of Labor Marshall Dimock, Deputy Commissioner of INS Edward J. Shaughnessy, and INS legal expert Henry B. Hazard, among others.

The INS called the I’M AN AMERICAN interviews “informal discussions” of Americanism, but the very existence of the scripts belies that claim. INS thoroughly pre-planned each interview. Some of the scripts even show the interviewer’s revision marks, including changes to both questions and the guest’s answers. In one interview, Historian Hendrik Willem Van Loon lampooned the show’s faux spontaneity by threatening to spill water on the scripts to “wash out the letters” so he and his interviewer wouldn’t “know what to say next.” The illusion of informality, according the Van Loon, insulted the listeners, most of who knew that the two of them were reading from “passages heavily underlined in blue pencil” and had planned each pause and laugh beforehand. Ironically, because Van Loon’s interview depended on a choreographed argument it appears even more elaborately scripted than others.

Though it’s not clear from the scripts how much content the guests supplied, it is clear that the show attempted to convey specific messages about citizenship. The show featured naturalized citizens but it did not focus narrowly on naturalization or citizenship education. Instead, I’M AN AMERICAN presented messages about citizenship that applied to both US born citizens and immigrants alike.

The show’s foremost theme was America’s role as a beacon of freedom, equality, and tolerance. Though the show debuted before the U.S.’s entry into WWII, by May 1940 it had become apparent to many that the U.S. would eventually join the fighting. I’M AN AMERICAN became part of a government-wide effort to mobilize national morale behind the cause of national defense. The show presented the American way of life as superior to the alternatives offered by European regimes and used immigrants who fled those countries to make the point. For example, when asked why he left Germany and settled in the U.S., Einstein explained, “as long as I have any choice I will only stay in a country where political liberty, toleration, and equality of all citizens before the law is the rule.”

The interviews often addressed the war in Europe directly in order to highlight the differences between life there and in the US. In one remarkable example, cartoonist and puppeteer Tony Sarg had his marionette “Punch” remark, “I heard them say that in some countries of the world they were making puppets out of men and women nowadays instead of wood. I heard they could make them march and salute with their arms out stiff and straight-so, the way a puppet would do it… It sets me a shaking in every joint and string to think of it! Puppets of flesh and blood!”



Detail from Albert Einstein’s Declaration of Intention (1936). Einstein appeared on I’M AN AMERICAN on the day he became a U.S. Citizen, October 1, 1940.
Click image for detail

I’M AN AMERICAN promoted national unity but it did so in a pluralistic way, avoiding the idea of strict assimilation for a vision of America as a collection of peoples who contributed their own strengths and traditions to the greater good. For example, guest Eleanor Roosevelt reminded immigrants “never to forget your own cultural background and use whatever skills and culture that background gives you to enrich what you acquire in the United States.” This celebration of ethnic difference, however, was accompanied by the warning that “totalitarian” countries could take advantage of those differences and divide America against itself. Thus, the interviews also highlighted the importance of shared unity among America’s ethnic groups.

Because I’M AN AMERICAN debuted during the Great Depression, the show also portrayed the U.S. as a continuing land of opportunity. Several interviewees mentioned that their successes depended on a freedom to pursue their dreams in ways not possible in their homelands. Others focused on the social mobility afforded by hard work. William Knudsen, the auto executive and naturalized citizen Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed to head the National Defense Commission’s production planning, succinctly summed up this attitude by saying, “if you want work and will hustle out and take what you can get and not sit around and wait for a fancy job to be brought to you, you can find plenty of opportunities.”

I’M AN AMERICAN remained on the air until December of 1941 and in 1942 and 1943 returned for shorts stints focused around “I am an American Day” (a precursor to Citizenship Day). A unique mix of pre-war propaganda and engaging interviews, it remains one of INS ’s most interesting attempts to raise the public’s awareness of naturalization and citizenship. Scripts for many of the interviews mentioned here, and others, are available in the USCIS History Library .

*Note: Sound recordings of I’M AN AMERICAN are available from the NBC Radio Collection in the Library of Congress.

Last Reviewed/Updated:
01/06/2020
Was this page helpful?
0 / 2000
To protect your privacy, please do not include any personal information in your feedback. Review our Privacy Policy.
Return to top
  • Topics
  • Forms
  • Newsroom
  • Citizenship
  • Green Card
  • Laws
  • Tools
U.S. Department of Homeland Security Seal, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Instagram
LinkedIn
Email
Contact USCIS
U.S. Department of Homeland Security Seal
Agency description

USCIS.gov

An official website of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security

Important links
  • About USCIS
  • Accessibility
  • Budget and Performance
  • DHS Components
  • Freedom of Information Act
  • No FEAR Act Data
  • Privacy and Legal Disclaimers
  • Site Map
  • Office of the Inspector General
  • The White House
  • USA.gov
Looking for U.S. government information and services?
Visit USA.gov