Martin Waldseemüller (Germany, 1507), which first used the name
America Lutherans and Catholics typically opposed Yankee moralizing programs such as the prohibition of beer, and favored paternalistic families with the husband deciding the family position on public affairs. They generally opposed women's suffrage but this was used as argument in favor of suffrage when German Americans became pariahs during World War I. On the other hand, there were Protestant groups who emerged from European
pietism such as the German Methodist and
United Brethren; they more closely resembled the Yankee Methodists in their moralism. The emigration of Germans to the United States commenced at the close of the 17th century, a period during which Germany was grappling with the repercussions of the violent religious strife stemming from the
Thirty Years' War, alongside the persecution of Christian minorities. Numerous German farmers endured severe poverty, with their livelihoods jeopardized by unsuccessful harvests and a lack of available land, prompting many to choose to escape first to
British America then later to the United States.
Colonial era The first English settlers arrived at Jamestown, Virginia in 1607, and were accompanied by the first German to settle in North America, physician and botanist Johannes (John) Fleischer. He was followed in 1608 by five
glassmakers and three carpenters or house builders. The first permanent German settlement in what became the United States was
Germantown, Pennsylvania, founded near
Philadelphia on October 6, 1683. , in an oil painting by
Gilbert Stuart, 1794, was the first of the
Astor family dynasty and the first millionaire in the United States, making his fortune in the fur trade and New York City real estate. Large numbers of Germans migrated from the 1680s to 1760s, with Pennsylvania the favored destination. They migrated to America for a variety of reasons. Large sections of Pennsylvania,
Upstate New York, and the
Shenandoah Valley of Virginia attracted Germans. Most were
Lutheran or
German Reformed; many belonged to small religious sects such as the
Moravians and
Mennonites.
German Catholics did not arrive in great number until after the
War of 1812.
Palatines In 1709, Protestant Germans from the Pfalz or
Palatine region of Germany escaped conditions of poverty, traveling first to Rotterdam and then to London.
Queen Anne helped them get to the American colonies. The trip was long and difficult to survive because of the poor quality of food and water aboard ships and the infectious disease
typhus. Many immigrants, particularly children, died before reaching America in June 1710. The Palatine immigration of about 2100 people who survived was the largest single immigration to America in the colonial period. Most were first settled along the
Hudson River in work camps, to pay off their passage. By 1711, seven villages had been established in New York on the
Robert Livingston manor. In 1723 Germans became the first Europeans allowed to buy land in the
Mohawk Valley west of
Little Falls. One hundred homesteads were allocated in the Burnetsfield Patent. By 1750, the Germans occupied a strip some long along both sides of the
Mohawk River. The soil was excellent; some 500 houses were built, mostly of stone, and the region prospered, although the colonization was met with Indigenous resistance.
Herkimer was the best-known of the German settlements in a region long known as the "German Flats". The most famous of the early German Palatine immigrants was editor
John Peter Zenger, who led the fight in colonial New York City for freedom of the press in America. A later immigrant,
John Jacob Astor, who came from
Walldorf,
Electoral Palatinate, since 1803
Baden, after the Revolutionary War, became the richest man in America from his fur trading empire and real estate investments in New York.
Louisiana John Law organized the first colonization of Louisiana with German immigrants. Of the over 5,000 Germans initially immigrating primarily from the
Alsace Region as few as 500 made up the first wave of immigrants to leave France en route to the Americas. Less than 150 of those first indentured German farmers made it to Louisiana and settled along what became known as the German Coast. With tenacity, determination and the leadership of D'arensburg these Germans felled trees, cleared land, and cultivated the soil with simple hand tools as draft animals were not available. The German coast settlers supplied the budding City of New Orleans with corn, rice, eggs. and meat for many years following. The
Mississippi Company settled thousands of German pioneers in French Louisiana during 1721. It encouraged Germans, particularly Germans of the
Alsatian region who had recently fallen under French rule, and the
Swiss to immigrate.
Alsace was sold to France within the greater context of the
Thirty Years' War (1618–1648). The
Jesuit Charlevoix traveled
New France (Canada and Louisiana) in the early 1700s. His letter said "these 9,000 Germans, who were raised in the Palatinate (Alsace part of France) were in Arkansas. The Germans left Arkansas en masse. They went to
New Orleans and demanded passage to Europe. The Mississippi Company gave the Germans rich lands on the right bank of the
Mississippi River about above New Orleans. The area is now known as 'the
German Coast'." A thriving population of Germans lived upriver from
New Orleans, Louisiana, known as the
German Coast. They were attracted to the area through pamphlets such as J. Hanno Deiler's "Louisiana: A Home for German Settlers". was the first German born US Senator (Missouri, 1868) and later US Secretary of the Interior.
Southeast Two waves of German colonists in 1714 and 1717 founded a colony in
Virginia called
Germanna, located near modern-day
Culpeper, Virginia. Virginia Lieutenant Governor
Alexander Spotswood, taking advantage of the
headright system, had bought land in present-day
Spotsylvania and encouraged German immigration by advertising in Germany for
miners to move to Virginia and establish a mining industry in the colony. The name "Germanna", selected by Governor
Alexander Spotswood, reflected both the German immigrants who sailed across the Atlantic to Virginia and the British queen,
Anne, who was in power at the time of the first settlement at Germanna. In 1721, twelve German families departed Germanna to found
Germantown. They were swiftly replaced by 70 new German arrivals from the
Palatinate, the start of a westward and southward trend of German migration and settlement across the
Virginia Piedmont and
Shenandoah Valley around the
Blue Ridge Mountains, where
Palatine German predominated. Meanwhile, in
Southwest Virginia, Virginia German acquired a
Swabian German accent. In
North Carolina, an expedition of German
Moravians living around
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and a party from Europe led by
August Gottlieb Spangenberg, headed down the
Great Wagon Road and purchased from
Lord Granville (one of the British Lords Proprietor) in the
Piedmont of North Carolina in 1753. The tract was dubbed , Latinized
Wachovia, because the streams and meadows reminded Moravian settlers of the
Wachau valley in
Austria. They established German settlements on that tract, especially in the area around what is now
Winston-Salem. They also founded the transitional settlement of
Bethabara, North Carolina, translated as House of Passage, the first planned Moravian community in North Carolina, in 1759. Soon after, the German Moravians founded the town of
Salem in 1766 (now a historical section in the center of Winston-Salem) and
Salem College (an early female college) in 1772. In the
Georgia Colony, Germans mainly from the
Swabia region settled in Savannah, St. Simon's Island and
Fort Frederica in the 1730s and 1740s. They were actively recruited by
James Oglethorpe and quickly distinguished themselves through improved farming, advanced
tabby (cement)-construction, and leading joint Lutheran-
Anglican-Reformed religious services for the colonists. German immigrants also settled in other areas of the
American South, including around the
Dutch (Deutsch) Fork area of
South Carolina,
Pennsylvania The tide of German immigration to Pennsylvania swelled between 1725 and 1775, with immigrants arriving as
redemptioners or indentured servants. By 1775, Germans constituted about one-third of the population of the state. German farmers were renowned for their highly productive animal husbandry and agricultural practices. Politically, they were generally inactive until 1740, when they joined a
Quaker-led coalition that took control of the legislature, which later supported the
American Revolution. Despite this, many of the German settlers were
loyalists during the Revolution, possibly because they feared their royal land grants would be taken away by a new republican government, or because of loyalty to a British German monarchy who had provided the opportunity to live in a liberal society. The Germans, comprising
Lutherans,
Reformed,
Mennonites,
Amish, and other sects, developed a rich religious life with a strong musical culture. Collectively, they came to be known as the
Pennsylvania Dutch (from
Deutsch). Etymologically, the word Dutch originates from the Old High German word "diutisc" (from "diot" "people"), referring to the Germanic "language of the people" as opposed to Latin, the language of the learned (see also
theodiscus). Eventually the word came to refer to people who speak a Germanic language, and only in the last couple centuries the people of the Netherlands. The
Studebaker brothers, forefathers of the wagon and automobile makers, arrived in Pennsylvania in 1736 from the famous blade town of
Solingen. With their skills, they made wagons that carried the frontiersmen westward; their cannons provided the
Union Army with artillery in the
American Civil War, and their automobile company became one of the largest in America, although never eclipsing the "Big Three", and was a factor in the
war effort and in the industrial foundations of the Army.
American Revolution , "father of the American military" Great Britain, whose
King George III was also the
Elector of
Hanover in Germany, hired 18,000
Hessians. They were auxiliary soldiers rented out by the rulers of several small German states such as
Hesse to fight on the British side. Many were captured; they remained as prisoners during the war but some stayed and became U.S. citizens. In the American Revolution the Mennonites and other small religious sects were neutral pacifists. The Lutherans of Pennsylvania were
on the patriot side. The Muhlenberg family, led by Rev.
Henry Muhlenberg was especially influential on the Patriot side. His son
Peter Muhlenberg, a Lutheran clergyman in Virginia became a major general and later a Congressman. However, in upstate New York, many Germans were neutral or supported the
Loyalist cause. From names in the 1790 U.S. census, historians estimate Germans constituted nearly 9% of the white population in the United States.
Colonial German American population by state The brief
Fries's Rebellion was an anti-tax movement among Germans in Pennsylvania in 1799–1800.
19th century The largest flow of German immigration to America occurred between 1820 and
World WarI, during which time nearly six million Germans immigrated to the United States. From 1840 to 1890, they were the largest group of immigrants. Following the
Revolutions of 1848 in the German states, a wave of political refugees fled to America, who became known as
Forty-Eighters. They included professionals, journalists, and politicians. Prominent Forty-Eighters included
Carl Schurz and
Henry Villard. It is estimated that between 1800 and the present over seven million German-speakers emigrated to the U.S., the majority of whom arrived between about 1840 and 1914. "Latin farmer" or
Latin Settlement is the designation of several settlements founded by some of the
Dreissiger and other refugees from Europe after rebellions like the
Frankfurter Wachensturm beginning in the 1830s—predominantly in Texas and Missouri, but also in other U.S. states—in which German intellectuals (
freethinkers, , and
Latinists) met together to devote themselves to the
German literature,
philosophy, science, classical music, and the
Latin language. A prominent representative of this generation of immigrants was
Gustav Koerner who lived most of the time in
Belleville, Illinois until his death.
Jewish Germans A few
German Jews came in
the colonial era. The largest numbers arrived after 1820, especially in the mid-19th century. They spread across the North and South (and California, where
Levi Strauss arrived in 1853). They formed small German-Jewish communities in cities and towns. They typically were local and regional merchants selling clothing; others were livestock dealers, agricultural commodity traders, bankers, and operators of local businesses.
Henry Lehman, who founded
Lehman Brothers in Alabama, was a particularly prominent example of such a German-Jewish immigrant. They formed
Reform synagogues and sponsored numerous local and national philanthropic organizations, such as
B'nai B'rith. This German-speaking group is quite distinct from the Yiddish-speaking East-European Jews who arrived in much larger numbers starting in the late 19th century and concentrated in New York.
Northeastern cities The port cities of New York City, and
Baltimore had large populations, as did
Hoboken, New Jersey.
Cities of the Midwest In the 19th century, German immigrants settled in Midwest, where land was available. Cities along the Great Lakes, the Ohio River, and the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers attracted a large German element. The
Midwestern cities of
Milwaukee,
Cincinnati,
St. Louis,
Chicago were favored destinations of German immigrants. The
Northern Kentucky and
Louisville area along the
Ohio River was also a favored destination. By 1900, the populations of the cities of
Cleveland,
Milwaukee, and
Cincinnati were all more than 40% German American.
Dubuque and
Davenport, Iowa had even larger proportions, as did
Omaha, Nebraska, where the proportion of German Americans was 57% in 1910. In many other cities of the Midwest, such as
Fort Wayne, Indiana, German Americans were at least 30% of the population. By 1850 there were 5,000 Germans, mostly
Schwabians living in, and around,
Ann Arbor, Michigan. Many concentrations acquired distinctive names suggesting their heritage, such as the "
Over-the-Rhine" district in Cincinnati, "
Dutchtown" in South St Louis, and "
German Village" in Columbus, Ohio. A particularly attractive destination was
Milwaukee, which came to be known as "the German
Athens". Radical Germans trained in politics in the old country dominated the city's
Socialists. Skilled workers dominated many crafts, while entrepreneurs created the brewing industry; the most famous brands included
Pabst,
Schlitz,
Miller, and
Blatz. Whereas half of German immigrants settled in cities, the other half established farms in the Midwest. From Ohio to the Plains states, a heavy presence persists in rural areas into the 21st century.
Deep South Few German immigrants settled in the
Deep South, apart from
New Orleans, the
German Coast, and Texas.
Texas in
Austin served as a German-American school. Texas attracted many Germans who entered through
Galveston and
Indianola, both those who came to farm, and later immigrants who more rapidly took industrial jobs in cities such as Houston. As in
Milwaukee, Germans in Houston built the brewing industry. By the 1920s, the first generation of college-educated German Americans were moving into the chemical and oil industries.
Germans from Russia in central Kansas, 1875
Germans from Russia were the most traditional of German-speaking arrivals. They were Germans who had lived for generations throughout the
Russian Empire, but especially along the
Volga River and the
Black Sea. Their ancestors had come from all over the German-speaking world, invited by
Catherine the Great in 1762 and 1763 to settle and introduce more advanced German agriculture methods to rural Russia. They had been promised by the manifesto of their settlement the ability to practice their respective Christian denominations, retain their culture and language, and retain immunity from conscription for them and their descendants. As time passed, the Russian monarchy gradually eroded the ethnic German population's relative autonomy. Conscription eventually was reinstated; this was especially harmful to the Mennonites, who practice pacifism. Throughout the 19th century, pressure increased from the Russian government to culturally assimilate. Many Germans from Russia found it necessary to emigrate to avoid conscription and preserve their culture. About 100,000 immigrated by 1900, settling primarily in the
Great Plains. Negatively influenced by the violation of their rights and cultural persecution by the
Tsar, the Germans from Russia who settled in the northern
Midwest saw themselves as a downtrodden ethnic group separate from Russian Americans and having an entirely different experience from the German Americans who had emigrated from German lands. They settled in tight-knit communities who retained their German language and culture. They raised large families, built German-style churches, buried their dead in distinctive cemeteries using cast iron grave markers, and sang German hymns. Many farmers specialized in the production of sugar beets and wheat, which are still major crops in the upper Great Plains. During World WarI, their identity was challenged by
anti-German sentiment. By the end of World WarII, the German language, which had always been used with English for public and official matters, was in serious decline. Today, German is preserved mainly through singing groups, recipes, and educational settings. While most descendants of Germans from Russia primarily speak English, many are choosing to learn
German in an attempt to reconnect with their heritage. Germans from Russia often use
loanwords, such as
Kuchen for cake. Despite the loss of their language, the ethnic group remains distinct, and has left a lasting impression on the American West. Musician
Lawrence Welk (1903–1992) became an iconic figure in the German-Russian community of the northern Great Plains—his success story personified the American dream.
Civil War Sentiment among German Americans was largely anti-slavery, especially among Forty-Eighters. Notable Forty-Eighter
Hermann Raster wrote passionately against slavery and was very pro-Lincoln. Raster published anti-slavery pamphlets and was the editor of the most influential German language newspaper in America at the time. He helped secure the votes of German-Americans across the United States for Abraham Lincoln. When Raster died the
Chicago Tribune published an article regarding his service as a correspondent for America to the German states saying, "His writings during and after the Civil War did more to create understanding and appreciation of the American situation in Germany and to float U.S. bonds in Europe than the combined efforts of all the U.S. ministers and consuls." Hundreds of thousands of German Americans volunteered to fight for the
Union in the
American Civil War (1861–1865). The Germans were the largest immigrant group to participate in the Civil War; over 176,000 U.S. soldiers were born in Germany. A popular Union commander among Germans, Major General
Franz Sigel was the highest-ranking German officer in the
Union Army, with many German immigrants claiming to enlist to "fight
mit Sigel". (right poster), but also disliked the overseas expansion
McKinley had delivered (left poster). Although only one in four Germans fought in all-German regiments, they created the public image of the German soldier. Pennsylvania fielded five German regiments, New York eleven, and Ohio six. Throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, the German Americans showed a high interest in becoming farmers, and keeping their children and grandchildren on the land. While they needed profits to stay in operation, they used profits as a tool "to maintain continuity of the family". They used risk averse strategies, and carefully planned their inheritances to keep the land in the family. Their communities showed smaller average farm size, greater equality, less absentee ownership and greater geographic persistence. As one farmer explained, "To protect your family has turned out to be the same thing as protecting your land." Germany was a large country with many diverse subregions which contributed immigrants. Dubuque was the base of the
Ostfriesische Nachrichten ("East Frisian News") from 1881 to 1971. It connected the 20,000 immigrants from East Friesland (Ostfriesland), Germany, to each other across the Midwest, and to their old homeland. In Germany East Friesland was often a topic of ridicule regarding backward rustics, but editor Leupke Hündling shrewdly combined stories of proud memories of Ostfriesland. The editor enlisted a network of local correspondents. By mixing local American and local German news, letters, poetry, fiction, and dialogue, the German-language newspaper allowed immigrants to honor their origins and celebrate their new life as highly prosperous farmers with much larger farms than were possible back in impoverished Ostfriesland. During the world wars, when Germania came under heavy attack, the paper stressed its humanitarian role, mobilizing readers to help the people of East Friesland with relief funds. Younger generations could usually speak German but not read it, so the subscription base dwindled away as the target audience Americanized itself.
Politics Relatively few German Americans held office, but the men voted once they became citizens. In general during the
Third party System (1850s–1890s), the Protestants and Jews leaned toward the
Republican party and the Catholics were strongly
Democratic. When
prohibition was on the ballot, the Germans voted solidly against it. They strongly distrusted moralistic crusaders, whom they called "Puritans", including the temperance reformers and many
Populists. The German community strongly opposed
Free Silver, and voted heavily against crusader
William Jennings Bryan in 1896. In 1900, many German Democrats returned to their party and voted for Bryan, perhaps because of President
William McKinley's foreign policy. At the local level, historians have explored the changing voting behavior of the German-American community and one of its major strongholds, St. Louis, Missouri. The German Americans had voted 80 percent for Lincoln in 1860, and strongly supported the war effort. They were a bastion of the Republican Party in St. Louis and nearby immigrant strongholds in Missouri and southern Illinois. The German Americans were angered by a proposed Missouri state constitution that discriminated against Catholics and freethinkers. The requirement of a special loyalty oath for priests and ministers was troublesome. Despite their strong opposition the constitution was ratified in 1865. Racial tensions with the blacks began to emerge, especially in terms of competition for unskilled labor jobs. Germania was nervous about black suffrage in 1868, fearing that blacks would support puritanical laws, especially regarding the prohibition of beer gardens on Sundays. The tensions split off a large German element in 1872, led by Carl Schurz. They supported the Liberal Republican party led by
Benjamin Gratz Brown for governor in 1870 and
Horace Greeley for president in 1872. Many late 19th century communists were German Americans from cities and Germans played a significant role in the labor union movement. A few were anarchists. Eight of the forty-two anarchist defendants in the
Haymarket Affair of 1886 in Chicago were German.
World Wars Intellectuals Hugo Münsterberg (1863–1916), a German psychologist, moved to Harvard in the 1890s and became a leader in the new profession. He was president of the American Psychological Association in 1898, and the
American Philosophical Association in 1908, and played a major role in many other American and international organizations.
Arthur Preuss (1871–1934) was a leading journalist, and theologian. A layman in St Louis. His
Fortnightly Review (in English) was a major conservative voice read closely by church leaders and intellectuals from 1894 until 1934. He was intensely loyal to the Vatican. Preuss upheld the German Catholic community, denounced the "Americanism" heresy, promoted the
Catholic University of America, and anguished over the anti-German America hysteria during World WarI. He provided lengthy commentary regarding the National Catholic Welfare Conference, the anti-Catholic factor in the presidential campaign of 1928, the hardships of the Great Depression, and the liberalism of the New Deal.
World War I anti-German sentiment During World War I, German Americans were often accused of being too sympathetic to Imperial Germany. Former president
Theodore Roosevelt denounced "
hyphenated Americanism", insisting that dual loyalties were impossible in wartime. A small minority came out for Germany, such as
H. L. Mencken. Similarly, Harvard psychology professor
Hugo Münsterberg dropped his efforts to mediate between America and Germany, and threw his efforts behind the German cause. There was also some Anti-German hysteria like the killing of
Pastor Edmund Kayser. The Justice Department prepared a list of all German aliens, counting approximately 480,000 of them, more than 4,000 of whom were imprisoned in 1917–18. The allegations included spying for Germany or endorsing the German war effort. Thousands were forced to buy war bonds to show their loyalty. The
Red Cross barred individuals with German last names from joining in fear of sabotage. One person was killed by a mob; in
Collinsville, Illinois, German-born
Robert Prager was dragged from jail as a suspected spy and lynched. A Minnesota minister was
tarred and feathered when he was overheard praying in German with a dying woman. Questions of German American loyalty increased due to events like the German
bombing of Black Tom island and the U.S. entering World War I, many German Americans were arrested for refusing allegiance to the U.S. War hysteria led to the removal of German names in public, names of things such as streets, and businesses. Schools also began to eliminate or discourage the teaching of the German language. In Chicago,
Frederick Stock temporarily stepped down as conductor of the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra until he finalized his naturalization papers. Orchestras replaced music by German composer
Wagner with French composer
Berlioz. In
Cincinnati, the public library was asked to withdraw all German books from its shelves. German-named streets were renamed. The town, Berlin, Michigan, was changed to
Marne, Michigan (honoring those who fought in the Battle of Marne). In Iowa, in the 1918
Babel Proclamation, the governor prohibited all foreign languages in schools and public places. Nebraska banned instruction in any language except English, but the
U.S. Supreme Court ruled the ban illegal in 1923 (
Meyer v. Nebraska). The response of German Americans to these tactics was often to "
Americanize" names (e.g., Schmidt to Smith, Müller to Miller) and limit the use of the German language in public places, especially churches. About 25,000 people became paying members of the pro-Nazi
German American Bund during the years before the war. German aliens were the subject of suspicion and discrimination during the war, although prejudice and sheer numbers meant they suffered as a group generally less than
Japanese Americans. The
Alien Registration Act of 1940 required 300,000 German-born resident aliens who had German citizenship to register with the Federal government and restricted their travel and property ownership rights. Under the still active
Alien Enemy Act of 1798, the United States government
interned nearly 11,000 German citizens between 1940 and 1948. Civil rights violations occurred. An unknown number of "voluntary internees" joined their spouses and parents in the camps and were not permitted to leave. Many Americans of German ancestry had top war jobs, including General
Dwight D. Eisenhower, Admiral
Chester W. Nimitz, and
USAAF General
Carl Andrew Spaatz. Roosevelt appointed Republican
Wendell Willkie (who ironically ran against Roosevelt in the
1940 presidential election) as a personal representative. German Americans who had fluent German language skills were an important asset to wartime intelligence, and they served as translators and as spies for the United States. The war evoked strong pro-American patriotic sentiments among German Americans, few of whom by then had contacts with distant relatives in the old country.
Contemporary period , July 1974. In the aftermath of World War II, millions of
ethnic Germans were forcibly expelled from their homes within the redrawn borders of Central and Eastern Europe, including the Soviet Union, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Romania, Hungary and Yugoslavia. Most resettled in Germany, but others came as refugees to the United States in the late 1940s, and established cultural centers in their new homes. Some
Danube Swabians, for instance,
ethnic Germans who had maintained language and customs after settlement in Hungary and the Balkans, immigrated to the U.S. after the war. After 1970, the anti-German sentiment aroused by World War II faded away. Today, German Americans who immigrated after World WarII share the same characteristics as any other Western European immigrant group in the U.S. The German American community supported reunification in 1990. In the
1990 U.S. census, 58 million Americans claimed to be solely or partially of German descent. According to the 2005 American Community Survey, 50 million Americans have German ancestry. German Americans represent 17% of the total U.S. population and 26% of the non-Hispanic white population.
The Economist magazine in 2015 interviewed Petra Schürmann, the director of the German-American Heritage Museum in Washington D.C. for a major article on German-Americans. She notes that all over the United States, celebrations such as German fests and Oktoberfests have been appearing. ==Demographics==