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Baltimore Wecker

Der Baltimore Wecker was a daily paper published in the German language in Baltimore, Maryland. It was the object of violence in the civil unrest at Baltimore in April 1861 that produced the first bloodshed of the American Civil War.

Der Baltimore Wecker
TypeDaily newspaper
Founder(s)Carl Heinrich Schnauffer
PublisherCarl Heinrich Schnauffer (1851-1854)

Elise Wilhelmina Schnauffer (1854-c.1859)

Wilhelm Schnauffer (c.1859-1899)
EditorSee List
Founded1851
Political alignmentRepublican Party
LanguageGerman
Ceased publication1877 as a daily (at least 1907 as a weekly)
HeadquartersBaltimore, Maryland, United States
OCLC number11592407

Related titles for this paper were Täglicher Baltimore Wecker (“Daily Baltimore Wecker”), Wochenblatt des Baltimore Wecker (“Weekly Baltimore Wecker”), and Baltimore Wecker: Sonntags-Blatt (“Sunday Baltimore Wecker”).[1]

History edit

Origins in Turnerism & Socialism edit

Der Wecker was founded by Carl Heinrich Schnauffer in October, 1851. Its founder was before that time one of the editors of the Mannheimer Abendzeitung in the city of Mannheim in Baden, Germany, but by taking part in the German revolution of 1848-49 he was compelled to leave the country. He traveled first to Switzerland, and then sought asylum in England, before finally moving to Baltimore in May 1851.[2]

One of the so-called "Forty-Eighters", Schnauffer was closely associated with the developing Turner movement, a broadly republican, German nationalist gymnastics and social organization.[3] Specifically, at least at its origin, the Wecker was an organ of one of its radical branches, the Sozialistischer Turnverein (Socialist Gymnastic Association).[4] At one point, the organization's official paper, the Turnzeitung, was even printed on the same Baltimore presses as the Wecker.[5][6] The Wecker under the editorship of Schnauffer was sympathetic to the philosophy of expatriate German communist and fellow Forty-Eighter Wilhelm Weitling, although this was apparently a short-lived affiliation.[7]

In its first years, the Wecker found itself one site in the intercontinental debates raging amongst the competing factions of the Communist League after its dissolution in 1852. In the pages of the Wecker Adolf Cluss, aligned with the faction supporting Karl Marx in the split, wrote editorials denouncing rival figures like Gottfried Kinkel, August Willich and Alexander Schimmelfennig.[8] Schnauffer himself felt that the Kinkel-Willich faction's plan of raising money for a new German revolution was a waste of resources, arguing a revolution could not be imposed from without, and that the funds could be better spent on the direct aid of poor people.[9]

In September 1854, Schnauffer died of typhoid fever.[10] His widow, Elise W. Schnauffer, continued the publication without interruption, with another German Forty-Eighter, August Becker taking up editorship, apparently in tandem with the widow Schnauffer.[11]

Abolitionism and Republicanism edit

Der Wecker was one of only three Maryland newspapers (along with Turnzeitung and the Jewish Sinai) that advocated for the abolition of slavery, all printed in Baltimore, and all in German.[12] From the outset indeed, the paper had supported this and the other principles of the Republican Party, and this continued to be the case as the 1850s proceeded. Under Becker, the paper supported the candidacy of John C. Frémont in the 1856 United States presidential election.[11] Such was its influence in Republican circles that in "An Address to the Republicans of Maryland" from October 1856, the Wecker was listed as the primary point of contact for those wanting to obtain a copy of the Republican ticket.[13] Such full-throated support of Republican politics was a rarity below the Mason-Dixon line in this period: an 1859 list of "Republican Newspapers Published in the Slave States" put Der Baltimore Wecker among only 16 total papers.[14] This made the Wecker a target for anti-Republican sentiment, and not long after the 1856 election, its offices were attacked by men attempting to incite a riot, although they were prevented from causing serious damage.[15][16]

In 1857, Wilhelm Rapp accepted the editorship, taking over from Becker.[17] Two years later, in 1859, the Wecker came into the hands of Wilhelm Schnauffer, the younger brother of Carl Schnauffer, whose widow, Elise, he married in that year. Wilhelm would maintain a stake in the paper until his death in 1899.[18] Around this time, he also added a weekly edition to the paper, which soon commanded a large circulation in the counties.[15]

The paper continued to advocate for its familiar Republican causes until the Baltimore riot of 1861 when, following the fighting between Union troops and citizens of Baltimore on April 19, the office of the Wecker (then on Frederick Street near Gay Street) was the next day surrounded by a crowd.[19] Earlier that same day, the Turnhalle (Turner Hall) on West Pratt Street, headquarters of the Turnzeitung, had been totally sacked, as had been the offices of the abolitionist Sinai.[20] Owing to the relationship between the Wecker and Turnerism, Rapp felt threatened enough to request assistance from George William Brown, who dispatched police to guard the building.[21] While the account in The Baltimore Sun two days later maintained that "no violence was done,",[21] a series of proceedings of the Baltimore City Council in January 1862 show Wilhelm Schnauffer was seeking reimbursement in the amount of $250 (equivalent to $8,478 in 2023) for "damages committed on his premises by a mob on the 20th of April, 1861."[22] According to a widely reported anecdote, further damage to the building and equipment was stopped when editor Elise Schnauffer stood in doorway, with a child in her arms, blocking the way of the mob until they departed.[20]

Rapp briefly left Baltimore following the attack, returning before General Benjamin Butler's occupation of the city in May 1861, however he departed again for Chicago shortly thereafter, where he would remain for the duration of the war as editor of the Illinois Staats-Zeitung[17] With General Butler in possession of the city, Wilhelm Schnauffer too returned and resumed the publication of his paper and the Wecker continued to be a firm supporter of the Union cause throughout the war. [15]

Post-Civil War edit

In 1865, Franz Sigel became editor and entered into partnership with Wilhelm Schnauffer. Sigel had been another of his late brother Carl's revolutionary associates during the 1848-1849 tumult.[23] This continued for two years, until Sigel went to New York City. Wilhelm Rapp returned from Illinois to edit the Wecker again in 1866, continuing until 1872 when he returned to the Staats-Zeitung.[17] The Wecker was enthusiastically on the side of Prussia in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–1871, with Rapp giving speeches in support of the now Kaiser Wilhelm I, arguing that "although those present were republicans, they could not forget that under the old man 'von Hohenzollern' -King William- Germany had been reborn."[24] This stance of the Wecker was denounced by The Sun, which viewed it to be an abdication of the paper's earlier republican and anti-monarchist stances.[25]

In the spring of 1873, Schnauffer, after 19 years, retired, leaving the paper in the hands of Blumenthal & Co.[15][18] At some point prior to 1877, it passed to the proprietorship of Captain J.R. Fellman[26] The daily edition of Der Wecker ceased publication in September 1877,[1] but Wilhelm Schnauffer, who regained full control of all the assets at that time, continued to produce the weekly version.[26] At this point, the Baltimore Wecker Sonntagsblatt, as it was known, was located at No 1 North Holliday Street.[27] A second weekly, The Mirror was launched by the company in 1895.[28] The paper continued to be published at least as late as 1907, when it was being published by Charles H. Milter from 11 West Saratoga Street.[29]

Editors edit

Portrait Editor Years
  Carl Heinrich Schnauffer 1851-1854
Elise Wilhelmina Schnauffer 1854-1861(?)[30]
  August Becker 1854-1857
Karl Gottfried Becker[31] ?
  Wilhelm Rapp 1857–1861, 1866-1872
  Franz Sigel 1865-1866

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b "About Täglicher Baltimore Wecker. (Baltimore [Md.]) 1867-1877". Library of Congress: Chronicling America.
  2. ^ Zucker 1936, p. 444-445.
  3. ^ Kamman 1917, p. 83.
  4. ^ Marx 1983, p. 742.
  5. ^ Fessenden 2017, p. 67.
  6. ^ Marx 1983, p. 610.
  7. ^ Kamman 1917, p. 41, 87.
  8. ^ Marx 1983, p. 558, 609, 624.
  9. ^ Metzner 1892, p. 132.
  10. ^ Zucker 1939, p. 22.
  11. ^ a b Henninghausen 1892, p. 57.
  12. ^ Fessenden 2017, p. 68.
  13. ^ "An Address to the Republicans of Maryland". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. 1856-10-23. p. 2. Retrieved 2019-03-03.
  14. ^ Helper 1859, p. 204.
  15. ^ a b c d Scharf 1874, p. 104.
  16. ^ "Local Matters - Inciting a Riot at the Wecker Office". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. 1856-09-19. p. 1. ProQuest 533474740.(subscription required)
  17. ^ a b c Faust 1936, p. 384.
  18. ^ a b McKinsey 1910, p. 840.
  19. ^ Scharf 1874, p. 601.
  20. ^ a b Fessenden 2017, p. 70.
  21. ^ a b "CIVIL WAR: INTENSE EXCITEMENT IN BALTIMORE". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. 1861-04-22. p. 1. ProQuest 533652233.(subscription required)
  22. ^ "Proceedings of the City Council". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. 1863-05-26. p. 4. ProQuest 533734788.(subscription required)
  23. ^ Zucker 1939, p. 20.
  24. ^ "Local Matters - The German Population and the French Surrender - Enthusiasm and Rejoicing". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. 1871-01-31. p. 1. ProQuest 534034345.(subscription required)
  25. ^ "A Word to the Wecker". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. 1871-02-18. p. 2. ProQuest 534038495.(subscription required)
  26. ^ a b "The Wecker". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. 1877-09-24. p. 1. Retrieved 2019-03-03.(subscription required)
  27. ^ "Baltimore Wecker Sonntagsblatt". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. 1877-11-17. p. 1. Retrieved 2019-03-03.(subscription required)
  28. ^ "The Mirror". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. 1895-01-23. p. 4. Retrieved 2019-03-03.(subscription required)
  29. ^ "LITTLE-KNOWN JOURNALS PUBLISHED IN BALTIMORE: Foreign Weeklies And Religious Papers--Others That Are More Familiar". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. 1907-12-29. p. 13. ProQuest 537444277.(subscription required)
  30. ^ McKinsey 1910, p. 841.
  31. ^ Henninghausen 1897, p. 13.

References edit

  • "About Täglicher Baltimore Wecker. (Baltimore [Md.]) 1867-1877". Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Library of Congress. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  • Faust, Albert B. (1936). "Rapp, Wilhelm". Dictionary of American Biography. Vol. 15. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 384–385.
  • Fessenden, Nicholas (2017). ""Which Side Are You On?" Baltimore's Immigrants and the Civil War" (PDF). Society for the History of the Germans in Maryland. Forty-Seventh Annual Report, 2017. 47: 63–80. Retrieved 2019-03-03.
  • Helper, Hinton Rowan (1859). Compendium of the impending crisis of the South. New York, A.B. Burdick. Retrieved 2019-03-03.
  • Henninghausen, L.P. (1892). "Reminiscences of the Political life of the German-Americans in Baltimore, During 1850 — 1860" (PDF). Society for the History of the Germans in Maryland. Seventh Annual Report, 1892-1893. 7: 51–60.
  • Henninghausen, L.P. (1897). "Reminiscences of the Political Life of The German-Americans In Baltimore During The Years 1850—1860" (PDF). Society for the History of the Germans in Maryland. 11th and 12th Annual Report, 1897-1899. 11–12: 3–20.
  • Kamman, William Frederick (1917). Socialism in German American Literature. Philadelphia: Americana Germanica Press.
  • Marx, Karl Heinrich (1983). Marx and Engels: 1852-1855. Karl Marx, Frederick Engels: Collected Works. Vol. 39. Betsy Ross, Peter Ross (trans.). New York, NY: International Publishers. ISBN 0-7178-0539-5.
  • McKinsey, Folger (1910). History of Frederick County, Maryland: From the Earliest Settlements to the Beginning of the War Between the States. L. R. Titsworth & Company.
  • Metzner, Henry Christian Anton (1892). Jahrbücher der Deutsch-Amerikanischen Turnerei (in German). Heinrich Metzner.
  • Scharf, John Thomas (1874). The chronicles of Baltimore : being a complete history of "Baltimore town" and Baltimore city from the earliest period to the present time. Baltimore : Turnbull Bros. Retrieved 2019-03-03.
  • Zucker, Adolf Edward (1936). "Schnauffer, Carl Heinrich". Dictionary of American Biography. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 444–445.
  • Zucker, A.E. (1939). "Carl Heinrich Schnauffer" (PDF). Society for the History of the Germans in Maryland. Twenty-Fourth Annual Report, 1939. 24: 17–23.

baltimore, wecker, daily, paper, published, german, language, baltimore, maryland, object, violence, civil, unrest, baltimore, april, 1861, that, produced, first, bloodshed, american, civil, typedaily, newspaperfounder, carl, heinrich, schnaufferpublishercarl,. Der Baltimore Wecker was a daily paper published in the German language in Baltimore Maryland It was the object of violence in the civil unrest at Baltimore in April 1861 that produced the first bloodshed of the American Civil War Der Baltimore WeckerTypeDaily newspaperFounder s Carl Heinrich SchnaufferPublisherCarl Heinrich Schnauffer 1851 1854 Elise Wilhelmina Schnauffer 1854 c 1859 Wilhelm Schnauffer c 1859 1899 EditorSee ListFounded1851Political alignmentRepublican PartyLanguageGermanCeased publication1877 as a daily at least 1907 as a weekly HeadquartersBaltimore Maryland United StatesOCLC number11592407 Related titles for this paper were Taglicher Baltimore Wecker Daily Baltimore Wecker Wochenblatt des Baltimore Wecker Weekly Baltimore Wecker and Baltimore Wecker Sonntags Blatt Sunday Baltimore Wecker 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins in Turnerism amp Socialism 1 2 Abolitionism and Republicanism 1 3 Post Civil War 2 Editors 3 See also 4 Notes 5 ReferencesHistory editOrigins in Turnerism amp Socialism edit Der Wecker was founded by Carl Heinrich Schnauffer in October 1851 Its founder was before that time one of the editors of the Mannheimer Abendzeitung in the city of Mannheim in Baden Germany but by taking part in the German revolution of 1848 49 he was compelled to leave the country He traveled first to Switzerland and then sought asylum in England before finally moving to Baltimore in May 1851 2 One of the so called Forty Eighters Schnauffer was closely associated with the developing Turner movement a broadly republican German nationalist gymnastics and social organization 3 Specifically at least at its origin the Wecker was an organ of one of its radical branches the Sozialistischer Turnverein Socialist Gymnastic Association 4 At one point the organization s official paper the Turnzeitung was even printed on the same Baltimore presses as the Wecker 5 6 The Wecker under the editorship of Schnauffer was sympathetic to the philosophy of expatriate German communist and fellow Forty Eighter Wilhelm Weitling although this was apparently a short lived affiliation 7 In its first years the Wecker found itself one site in the intercontinental debates raging amongst the competing factions of the Communist League after its dissolution in 1852 In the pages of the Wecker Adolf Cluss aligned with the faction supporting Karl Marx in the split wrote editorials denouncing rival figures like Gottfried Kinkel August Willich and Alexander Schimmelfennig 8 Schnauffer himself felt that the Kinkel Willich faction s plan of raising money for a new German revolution was a waste of resources arguing a revolution could not be imposed from without and that the funds could be better spent on the direct aid of poor people 9 In September 1854 Schnauffer died of typhoid fever 10 His widow Elise W Schnauffer continued the publication without interruption with another German Forty Eighter August Becker taking up editorship apparently in tandem with the widow Schnauffer 11 Abolitionism and Republicanism edit Der Wecker was one of only three Maryland newspapers along with Turnzeitung and the Jewish Sinai that advocated for the abolition of slavery all printed in Baltimore and all in German 12 From the outset indeed the paper had supported this and the other principles of the Republican Party and this continued to be the case as the 1850s proceeded Under Becker the paper supported the candidacy of John C Fremont in the 1856 United States presidential election 11 Such was its influence in Republican circles that in An Address to the Republicans of Maryland from October 1856 the Wecker was listed as the primary point of contact for those wanting to obtain a copy of the Republican ticket 13 Such full throated support of Republican politics was a rarity below the Mason Dixon line in this period an 1859 list of Republican Newspapers Published in the Slave States put Der Baltimore Wecker among only 16 total papers 14 This made the Wecker a target for anti Republican sentiment and not long after the 1856 election its offices were attacked by men attempting to incite a riot although they were prevented from causing serious damage 15 16 In 1857 Wilhelm Rapp accepted the editorship taking over from Becker 17 Two years later in 1859 the Wecker came into the hands of Wilhelm Schnauffer the younger brother of Carl Schnauffer whose widow Elise he married in that year Wilhelm would maintain a stake in the paper until his death in 1899 18 Around this time he also added a weekly edition to the paper which soon commanded a large circulation in the counties 15 The paper continued to advocate for its familiar Republican causes until the Baltimore riot of 1861 when following the fighting between Union troops and citizens of Baltimore on April 19 the office of the Wecker then on Frederick Street near Gay Street was the next day surrounded by a crowd 19 Earlier that same day the Turnhalle Turner Hall on West Pratt Street headquarters of the Turnzeitung had been totally sacked as had been the offices of the abolitionist Sinai 20 Owing to the relationship between the Wecker and Turnerism Rapp felt threatened enough to request assistance from George William Brown who dispatched police to guard the building 21 While the account in The Baltimore Sun two days later maintained that no violence was done 21 a series of proceedings of the Baltimore City Council in January 1862 show Wilhelm Schnauffer was seeking reimbursement in the amount of 250 equivalent to 8 478 in 2023 for damages committed on his premises by a mob on the 20th of April 1861 22 According to a widely reported anecdote further damage to the building and equipment was stopped when editor Elise Schnauffer stood in doorway with a child in her arms blocking the way of the mob until they departed 20 Rapp briefly left Baltimore following the attack returning before General Benjamin Butler s occupation of the city in May 1861 however he departed again for Chicago shortly thereafter where he would remain for the duration of the war as editor of the Illinois Staats Zeitung 17 With General Butler in possession of the city Wilhelm Schnauffer too returned and resumed the publication of his paper and the Wecker continued to be a firm supporter of the Union cause throughout the war 15 Post Civil War edit In 1865 Franz Sigel became editor and entered into partnership with Wilhelm Schnauffer Sigel had been another of his late brother Carl s revolutionary associates during the 1848 1849 tumult 23 This continued for two years until Sigel went to New York City Wilhelm Rapp returned from Illinois to edit the Wecker again in 1866 continuing until 1872 when he returned to the Staats Zeitung 17 The Wecker was enthusiastically on the side of Prussia in the Franco Prussian War of 1870 1871 with Rapp giving speeches in support of the now Kaiser Wilhelm I arguing that although those present were republicans they could not forget that under the old man von Hohenzollern King William Germany had been reborn 24 This stance of the Wecker was denounced by The Sun which viewed it to be an abdication of the paper s earlier republican and anti monarchist stances 25 In the spring of 1873 Schnauffer after 19 years retired leaving the paper in the hands of Blumenthal amp Co 15 18 At some point prior to 1877 it passed to the proprietorship of Captain J R Fellman 26 The daily edition of Der Wecker ceased publication in September 1877 1 but Wilhelm Schnauffer who regained full control of all the assets at that time continued to produce the weekly version 26 At this point the Baltimore Wecker Sonntagsblatt as it was known was located at No 1 North Holliday Street 27 A second weekly The Mirror was launched by the company in 1895 28 The paper continued to be published at least as late as 1907 when it was being published by Charles H Milter from 11 West Saratoga Street 29 Editors editPortrait Editor Years nbsp Carl Heinrich Schnauffer 1851 1854 Elise Wilhelmina Schnauffer 1854 1861 30 nbsp August Becker 1854 1857 Karl Gottfried Becker 31 nbsp Wilhelm Rapp 1857 1861 1866 1872 nbsp Franz Sigel 1865 1866See also editHistory of the Germans in Baltimore German language newspapers in the United StatesNotes edit a b About Taglicher Baltimore Wecker Baltimore Md 1867 1877 Library of Congress Chronicling America Zucker 1936 p 444 445 Kamman 1917 p 83 Marx 1983 p 742 Fessenden 2017 p 67 Marx 1983 p 610 Kamman 1917 p 41 87 Marx 1983 p 558 609 624 Metzner 1892 p 132 Zucker 1939 p 22 a b Henninghausen 1892 p 57 Fessenden 2017 p 68 An Address to the Republicans of Maryland The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland 1856 10 23 p 2 Retrieved 2019 03 03 Helper 1859 p 204 a b c d Scharf 1874 p 104 Local Matters Inciting a Riot at the Wecker Office The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland 1856 09 19 p 1 ProQuest 533474740 subscription required a b c Faust 1936 p 384 a b McKinsey 1910 p 840 Scharf 1874 p 601 a b Fessenden 2017 p 70 a b CIVIL WAR INTENSE EXCITEMENT IN BALTIMORE The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland 1861 04 22 p 1 ProQuest 533652233 subscription required Proceedings of the City Council The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland 1863 05 26 p 4 ProQuest 533734788 subscription required Zucker 1939 p 20 Local Matters The German Population and the French Surrender Enthusiasm and Rejoicing The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland 1871 01 31 p 1 ProQuest 534034345 subscription required A Word to the Wecker The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland 1871 02 18 p 2 ProQuest 534038495 subscription required a b The Wecker The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland 1877 09 24 p 1 Retrieved 2019 03 03 subscription required Baltimore Wecker Sonntagsblatt The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland 1877 11 17 p 1 Retrieved 2019 03 03 subscription required The Mirror The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland 1895 01 23 p 4 Retrieved 2019 03 03 subscription required LITTLE KNOWN JOURNALS PUBLISHED IN BALTIMORE Foreign Weeklies And Religious Papers Others That Are More Familiar The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland 1907 12 29 p 13 ProQuest 537444277 subscription required McKinsey 1910 p 841 Henninghausen 1897 p 13 References edit About Taglicher Baltimore Wecker Baltimore Md 1867 1877 Chronicling America Historic American Newspapers Library of Congress Retrieved 22 September 2015 Faust Albert B 1936 Rapp Wilhelm Dictionary of American Biography Vol 15 New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 384 385 Fessenden Nicholas 2017 Which Side Are You On Baltimore s Immigrants and the Civil War PDF Society for the History of the Germans in Maryland Forty Seventh Annual Report 2017 47 63 80 Retrieved 2019 03 03 Helper Hinton Rowan 1859 Compendium of the impending crisis of the South New York A B Burdick Retrieved 2019 03 03 Henninghausen L P 1892 Reminiscences of the Political life of the German Americans in Baltimore During 1850 1860 PDF Society for the History of the Germans in Maryland Seventh Annual Report 1892 1893 7 51 60 Henninghausen L P 1897 Reminiscences of the Political Life of The German Americans In Baltimore During The Years 1850 1860 PDF Society for the History of the Germans in Maryland 11th and 12th Annual Report 1897 1899 11 12 3 20 Kamman William Frederick 1917 Socialism in German American Literature Philadelphia Americana Germanica Press Marx Karl Heinrich 1983 Marx and Engels 1852 1855 Karl Marx Frederick Engels Collected Works Vol 39 Betsy Ross Peter Ross trans New York NY International Publishers ISBN 0 7178 0539 5 McKinsey Folger 1910 History of Frederick County Maryland From the Earliest Settlements to the Beginning of the War Between the States L R Titsworth amp Company Metzner Henry Christian Anton 1892 Jahrbucher der Deutsch Amerikanischen Turnerei in German Heinrich Metzner Scharf John Thomas 1874 The chronicles of Baltimore being a complete history of Baltimore town and Baltimore city from the earliest period to the present time Baltimore Turnbull Bros Retrieved 2019 03 03 Zucker Adolf Edward 1936 Schnauffer Carl Heinrich Dictionary of American Biography New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 444 445 Zucker A E 1939 Carl Heinrich Schnauffer PDF Society for the History of the Germans in Maryland Twenty Fourth Annual Report 1939 24 17 23 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baltimore Wecker amp oldid 1185018384, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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