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I. Early Emigrants to Colonial and Revolutionary America

Starting with the founding of Germantown, in 1683, examines German settlements in Pennsylvania and elsewhere, and the German role in the Revolutionary War. It corrects the view that “sect Germans” such as Amish and Mennonites made up the bulk of colonial immigration, and also explodes and explains the myth that German nearly became the official language of the United States. It concludes by showing how the forces of assimilation eroded ethnicity until mass immigration resumed after 1830.

II. The Push—Sources and Causes of 19th Century Emigration

This chapter examines the push factors operating in the three regional cultures of Germany, the “dwarf agriculture” of the Southwest where equal inheritance prevailed; the bimodal structures of Northwest Germany, divided between a prosperous peasantry upheld by indivisible inheritance and a growing tenant farmer class; and the great estates of Eastern Germany where agricultural laborers were poorest and most oppressed. Investigating the occupational structure and selectivity of emigration, it contradicts the view that emigrants were “people who had something to lose, and were losing it,” stressing instead the relative poverty of those leaving. Also exposes the German practice of providing free or subsidized passage to convicts and other undesirables such as poor relief recipients, and demonstrates that the mortality rates of passengers, even in the days of sail, were lower than often believed.

III. 19th Century Immigration: Organized vs. Individual

This chapter seeks to correct the overemphasis on emigrant guidebooks and organized emigration societies, emphasizing instead the role of immigrant letters and chain migration as the major influence on immigrant destinations. It does, however, examine the fate of several of the most important immigration societies, particularly the “Adelsverein” in Texas and some religiously motivated societies. It shows that economic factors were the main motivator, though economic disadvantages and political powerlessness were interrelated. It also examines the Forty-eighter political refugees and their contrasts and commonalities with other emigrants.

IV. Where They Settled

This chapter examines the German avoidance of the South and New England, and their concentration in the urban and rural Midwest and the reasons behind it. It also examines their overrepresentation in urban areas, and how Germans from different regions were concentrated in different states and cities.

V. German Americans and Politics through the Civil War

This chapter traces how Germans started out as Jacksonian Democrats and their (partial) conversion to Republicanism by the election of Lincoln. It then analyzes their role as the ethnic group most overrepresented in the Union Army, constituting 10 percent of the total, enlivened by quotes from immigrant letters which we have published. It examines the role of German generals and charges of ethnic discrimination in the Union Army, which led to the Fremont presidential candidacy in 1864 in which Germans played a large part. It also refutes claims that Germans in the South were “unremarkable” in their attitudes to slavery, race, and secession.

VI: Race, Reconstruction, and Late 19th Century Politics

Although German Americans largely rejected slavery, their views on the intertwined issue of race are more complicated. Germans were no more likely than other whites to support black voting rights in post-Civil War referendums. But in the Southern and Border States, Germans were more dedicated to the Union than other whites of these regions, attitudes that carried over into Reconstruction. In a few instances, there were political alliances of German and black Republicans that persisted well into the twentieth century. Missouri was probably the state where Germans had the most political influence in Reconstruction, even electing one of their own, Forty-eighter Carl Schurz, to the U.S. Senate. But Schurz was also a leader in the Liberal Republican movement that distanced itself from radical Reconstruction, although this was not primarily based on race. Relations with the Republican Party remained shaky in the late 19th century, and this alliance was undermined whenever the GOP went on moralistic crusades against alcohol. But this gave Germans considerable bargaining power. Surprisingly, at the city level Germans were nearly as likely to be elected mayor as Irish Catholics, despite the reputation of the latter as born politicians.

VII:The Interactions of Ethnicity and Religion

German-Americans were never as unified as the Irish, in part because of their religious diversity. This chapter looks at the major German confessions, their institutional development, their relations with one another and with other ethnic religious groups. It first examines the German position within American Catholicism, then two different transplanted denomination, the German Lutherans and Lutherans, as well as the most important offshoot of Anglo-Protestantism, German Methodists. It then poses the question of German Jews: a part or apart? Finally, it examines interethnic relations, finding a considerable degree of antagonism even between German Catholics and the Irish, but surprisingly friendly relations with Slavic immigrants, especially in Texas and the Midwest. This amity and antipathy is also reflected in intermarriage rates with various groups.

VIII:German-Language Education in America: Parochial, Public, and Private

Many ethnics, Protestant as well as Catholics, believed that “Language saves Faith,” and endeavored to provide parochial schools often operating largely or entirely in heritage languages. Motivated both by ethnic politics and a desire to give children more exposure to the English language and American culture, authorities in a number of cities introduced German instruction into public elementary schools. Sometimes this involved just an hour of German per day, but at least four cities had programs of “two-way immersion” teaching subject matter in both languages. San Antonio Germans supported a similar private school over three decades. There was also much German instruction in rural districts, with or without official sanction. Many of these programs persisted until World War I.

IX:The German American Press and other Literary and Cultural Expressions

This chapter traces the development of the German-language press, the largest foreign language press in America for at least two centuries, and the roles it played in the ethnic community: from the first announcement of the signing of the Declaration of Independence in any language to the 100th anniversary of the New Braunfelser Zeitung in 1952. It also examines other German-American cultural expressions such as literature, art and music, and the bridging role the ethnic community played between Europe and America.

X:German Niches in the American Economy:

This chapter first explores the paradox that 19th century German-Americans were more urbanized than either Germany or America at the time, but made up one-third of the American farm population by the end of the 20th century. It then examines Germans’ role in American industrialization. It identifies areas of the U.S. economy where Germans were particularly concentrated, and examines the industrial and geographic niches where transatlantic connections were of greatest consequence. Shifting focus from global to individual patterns, it then explores what was German and what was American about German-American entrepreneurship in the mid and late nineteenth century, and what allowed some family firms to persist as long as 150 years.

XI:German Immigrants, the Labor Movement, and Urban Socialism

This chapter traces the important role played by Germans in the American labor movement, including its radical socialism and anarchist elements, especially those involved in the Haymarket affair. The Socialist movement saw its peak influence in Wisconsin, supporting war opponents Robert Lafollette and Victor Berger during World War I and electing the last socialism mayor of a major city, Frank Zeidler Milwaukee, who only left office in 1960 and survived into the 21st century.

XII:The German American Experience in World War I

This chapter offers an overview of both the attitudes and actions of German-Americans in the Great War and the effects of the war on this ethnic group and its language and culture. It is evident that German-Americans were misunderstood both by their former countrymen back in the Fatherland and by their fellow Americans. Germans often assumed that because German-Americans were unable to prevent Woodrow Wilson’s re-election or American entry into World War I, it meant they had quickly shed their ethnicity and immersed themselves in the Melting Pot, abandoning the German language and culture. Anglo-Americans, on the other hand, often confused these cultural loyalties or mere language preservation with political loyalty to the Fatherland. The effect of German-Americans on the war effort, and the effect of the Great War on German-Americans, can be briefly summarized thus: although most would probably have preferred that the United States remain neutral, German-Americans served in the U.S. military at rates only slightly lower than the national average, and at higher rates than some ethnic groups that were presumed beneficiaries of a defeat of the Central Powers. While the war certainly had an impact on the survival of the German language and culture in the United States, this impact was far from universal, and it merely accelerated trends that were already underway well before the fateful shots were fired in Sarajevo or the deadly torpedoes launched against the Lusitania.

XIII:The Twilight of German Ethnicity, 1920 to the Present.

This chapter examines the persistence and decline of German language and culture in the wake of World War I, the varied reactions of German-Americans to the rise of Nazism, the wave of refugees fleeing Nazi persecution and a second wave from 1945 to 1955 precipitated by the devastation of war, and the reasons why neither of these migration waves created the kind of ethnic communities that earlier immigration did. The 1980 census revealed that people of German heritage were the largest ethnic group in the United States, raising the question what significance this fact holds.
  • Format: pdf
  • ISBN: 9781442264984
  • Publisher: ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS
  • Author: Walter D. Kamphoefner
  • Ean Code: 9781442264984
  • Book type: E-book
  • Language: English
  • DRM: Adobe DRM
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