fbpx
Wikipedia

Germans in Omaha, Nebraska

Germans in Omaha immigrated to the city in Nebraska from its earliest days of founding in 1854, in the years after the Revolutions of 1848 in the German states. They continued to immigrate to Omaha in large numbers later in the 19th century, when many came from Bavaria and southern Germany, and into the early 20th century. Germans created and maintained a high cultural, social and political profile locally and nationally through the 1930s. In 1890, Germans comprised 23% of Omaha's population.[1] By 1910, 57.4% of Omaha's total population of more than 124,000 identified as being of German descent.[2]

By 1930 and the start of the Great Depression, immigration from Germany had virtually ceased. Although Germans comprised the second most numerous group of foreign-born nationals after Czechs, those foreign-born immigrants totaled less than one percent of the total population of the city.[3]

German immigrants and German Americans in Omaha had a high rate of literacy. The mostly working class population supported numerous German-language newspapers that had national as well as local distribution in the early 20th century. Germans built and operated several successful breweries in the city, bringing good beer and beer-making skills to the upper Midwest. The German model of public education was established in states throughout the Midwest, which were quickly training teachers in normal schools to expand education in new villages.

Valentin J. Peter (1875-1960), editor of the German-language Omaha Tribüne, was chiefly responsible for the formation and leadership of the Nebraska chapter of the National German-American Alliance. This coalition was influential in representing and attempting to lead the German-American electorate across the United States between 1912 and 1940, although the community was very heterogeneous.[4]

During the early years of World War I (the Great War), Peter was supportive of Germany and urged German-Americans to be so, too. He changed his position before the US entered the war in 1917 on the side of Great Britain and France, and supported the Allies.[5] He also supported the US and its allies in World War II after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

History

The first known German in the Omaha area arrived more than 20 years before the city was founded. Prince Maximilian of Wied-Neuwied toured the Upper Missouri River in 1832, and recorded a stay at Cabanne's Trading Post in present-day North Omaha.[6] After arriving in Omaha en masse beginning in the 1860s, Germans in Omaha built their own churches. At church and in their businesses, including grocery stores and farm supply shops, they conducted daily life in German for years. Many young German immigrants from Omaha served in the Nebraska battalion during the Civil War,[7] as well as later serving throughout the country.

One early German settler in Omaha was Vincent Burkley. (He anglicized his name). After working as a grocer and farm laborer for three years starting in 1854, he opened his own printing company. He was almost immediately successful.[8] Burkley was elected as a member of the Omaha City Council for several years,[9] as well as the Omaha Board of Education.[10]

Communities

In the earliest days of Omaha, the "heart of the German settlement was in the large concentration between South 10th and 13th Streets. Here one could purchase food from several German merchants, including Volkmier's Meat Market, Schmid's Grocery, and the Schube Haus (bakery) ... The Emmel House (hotel) and Hottenroth and Bauer Boarding House were also located in this core".[11] The area south of the railroad corridor and west of South 16th Street contained an area of German Catholics. This settlement was centered on South 16th Street and Center Street and includes St. Joseph's Church, which was established in 1887 to serve German-speaking Catholics. Protestant Germans settled in a concentration centered on South 11th Street and Center Street, and built a German Methodist Episcopal Church in 1886.[12]

 
German population density in the United States, 1872. Notice the indication that Omaha has a large density.

By 1900 Germans lived in more dispersed neighborhoods, including the Near North Side neighborhood, Florence, and South Omaha. Within 25 years they lived throughout the city, with large enclaves in the Dundee and Field Club neighborhoods.[13] Another "concentration was ... near South 19th and Vinton Streets ... The Bongardt Meat Market, Schmidt Saloon and Muller's Hall were located in the 1700 block of Vinton. Wilg Dry Goods was at 1810 Vinton, Strausburgh Druggist at 1822 Vinton, and the Schouboe Bakery at 3130 S. 18th St."[14]

Culture

Germans built several Deutschekirchen - German churches - throughout Omaha.[5] St. Joseph's was a Roman Catholic parish established in 1901 to serve Omaha's German-speaking Catholics.[15]

The German community in Omaha was literate and large enough to support several German-language newspapers, which also had national distribution. They included the Omaha Tribune, the Volkszeitung Tribune, and the Sonntagspost, which was later called the AmericaHerold.[16]

Edward Rosewater, the Czech editor at The Omaha Bee, used the slogan "Germania our Mother, Columbia our Bride" to describe the kind of "dual-sentimentality" many Germans in America felt toward their country of origin.[17] In the early 20th century, German immigrants came to Omaha for work and to escape state oppression led by Kaiser Wilhelm in Germany.[18]

The German community in Omaha was noted for settling quickly throughout the city. Period sociological research also identified a range of reluctance among some German immigrants, as well as second- and third-generation Germans towards assimilation.[19] During the early 20th century, Germans in Omaha were successful in ensuring that German culture, German history and German language lessons were included in the local public school system, because they comprised a large part of the electorate.[20]

Employment

 
"Who does not love wine, wife and song, will be a fool for his lifelong!" – a vigorous 1873 assertion of cultural values of German immigrants

Germans in Omaha were employed in many of the city's manufacturing industries, particularly its brewing sector, which was created by German immigrants. Leading German employers in the city included the Metz Brewery, Krug Brewery and the Storz Brewery. Gottlieb Storz, Frederick Krug and Frederick Metz built the success of their breweries by hiring German brewmeisters and laborers for their skills.[21]

Many Germans in the Omaha area also worked at the Union Stockyards, and in farming in Douglas County.[18] In 1910 the Union Stockyards reported to the United States Immigration Commission that 14.1% of its workers were German immigrants.[22] Numerous Germans worked at German-owned beer gardens, dry goods stores, farms, and milling operations throughout the city and Douglas County.[19] The German work ethic was highly regarded throughout the city. Immigrant workers from Germany were readily employed in Jobbers Canyon and by the railroads in Omaha.[13]

Politics

German-owned breweries in Omaha sought to keep alcohol legal at a time when political pressure was widespread to establish Prohibition. German voters in Omaha were largely responsible for the election of Nebraska Governor Ashton C. Shallenberger in 1908, as Shallenberger ran on an anti-Prohibition slate. After he was elected, however, Shallenberger became pro-Prohibition. Temperance was strongly supported in most of Nebraska for 30 years before the national Prohibition movement.[23] A statewide election seeking a prohibition of alcohol in 1890 won in almost every county across the state, except Omaha's Douglas County. The German vote there was credited for keeping the state "wet" during that period.[24] When William Jennings Bryan returned to Nebraska after his third unsuccessful Presidential campaign in 1908 to advocate for Prohibition, he became "the arch enemy of das Deutschtum."[5]

National German-American Alliance

In July 1910 Germans in Omaha rallied with other immigrant organizations across the city to create the National German-American Alliance. At least 54 social, farming and cultural organizations from around Omaha were represented at the first meeting. This alliance brought together many German organizations around Omaha in July 1911 at the city's annual Sängerfest, which was a dance and rally for more than 5,000 attendees. By masking political objectives within a German cultural event, National German-American Alliance leaders were able to politicize the event without scrutiny from the mainstream press.[5]

Bavarian-born Valentin J. Peter was the publisher of a German-language newspaper called the Omaha Tribüne. In 1914 Peter led the National German-American Alliance in strong opposition to women's suffrage during a statewide election on the issue. The Omaha Tribune editor denounced the effort as "chiefly ... to introduce state prohibition with the help of these women's voices."[25]

In the years leading up the US entry into World War I, tensions in Europe were reflected in the US. During a 1915 address to the National German-American Alliance, Valentin Peter said,

Both here and abroad, the enemy is the same! Perfidious Albion - there England has pressed the sword into the hands of almost all the peoples of Europe against Germany. In this country it has a servile press at its command, which uses every foul means to slander everything German and to poison the public mind. - Valentin Peter (1915)[26]

Such expression of pro-German feelings by German immigrants aroused anti-German sentiment in the many Americans who favored the British as allies.[26] But, in 1916, the Vice-President of the National German-American Alliance openly chastised President Woodrow Wilson for pro-Ally actions at the beginning of the Great War.

World War I

By the outbreak of World War I, some Americans were concerned about divided loyalties of German immigrants and their descendants. A nativist movement affected Omaha. The Federal government enforced the Alien and Sedition Acts against Germans nationals. Germans who were not American citizens were required to register with the Federal government as "Alien Enemies".[27] Although Valentin Peter had earlier been a supporter of Germany against Great Britain, by the outbreak of the war, the editor of the Omaha Tribüne had become an ardent supporter of the United States' involvement in World War I on the side of Great Britain.

Anti-German feelings ran high in Nebraska because of the war. A historian noted, "German books were destroyed. The legislature prohibited the use of foreign languages on the public streets or on the telephone and prohibited schools from using or even teaching foreign languages below the eighth grade. Wartime patriots initiated both official and vigilante action against German immigrants."[28] When the United States entered the war, most general businesses and churches ceased conducting affairs in German due to nativist sentiment. They did not want to appear less than loyal to the US.[29] This sentiment seeped into the general Nebraska population.

Post-War

Anti-German sentiment contributed to passage of a 1919 state law that enforced teaching in English. By law, "No person, individually or as a teacher, shall, in any private, denominational, parochial or public school, teach any subject to any person in any language than the English language."[30] Robert Meyer was found to violate this law because he taught German. He was taken to court by the State of Nebraska. Although his appeal to the Nebraska Supreme Court failed, the U.S. Supreme Court in Meyer v. Nebraska determined that Meyer had the right to teach the German language as a subject, and to teach it in German.

By 1919 open discrimination against Germans throughout Omaha was taking hold. Many German-language newspapers were forced to change to English, or to close.[31]

Political influence

After the First World War, Germans in America sought to regain their political influence, and they succeeded. Both Valentin Peter, editor of the Omaha Tribüne, and the National German-American Alliance gained enough political clout to influence United States presidential campaigns. In 1920, immediately after the 1920 United States presidential election in November, Peter came under scrutiny by the United States Senate, and was called to testify on his involvement in the campaign. According to Peter's testimony, he flipped to supporting Calvin Coolidge in exchange for $12,500.[32] Later, during the 1928 presidential election, the Democratic National Committee enlisted Peter to join to show the support of German-Americans for Al Smith. There were deep divides among Germans in America in politics and many cultural issues.[33][34]

World War II

By this period there were few first generation German immigrants. German Americans had national spokesmen who often provided conflicting political messages. They reflected the wide variety of opinions held by German Americans as they had assimilated into American life. Period sociologists noted the multiplicity of opinions as demonstrating the process of American assimilation among Germans in America.[19] Many German-Americans were completely assimilated into American society. By World War II, many of the distinctive institutions of German society in Omaha, such as stores, German-language churches, and social groups, had disappeared or become less exclusive of other groups.[33]

Legacies

 
Distribution of Americans claiming German Ancestry by county in 2018 Notice the Omaha area.

The experience of German immigrants in Omaha and throughout Nebraska is said to have deeply influenced Willa Cather. She addressed the assimilation, discrimination and community of Germans in several of her stories.[35]

The inventor of the Reuben sandwich was a German American who lived in Omaha.[36] Omaha Tribune editor Val Peter's company, the Interstate Printing Company, is still operated today by the Peter family in Omaha.[37] The Volkszeitung Tribune was a German-language newspaper that was published in Omaha from the late 19th century through the 1980s.[38] A German Old People's Home was located in Omaha for almost 100 years. A home for elderly people of German heritage, it was operated as a charitable, non-profit corporation by twenty-seven trustees, all descendants of German immigrants.[39]

Current

St. Joseph's Catholic Parish, located at 1723 South 17th Street in South Omaha, continues with parishioners of German heritage comprising a large percentage of the church's membership.[15]

The German-American Society, located at 3717 South 120th Street in West Omaha, continues to hold regular events, teach German traditions and observe special celebrations. Its location in a more suburban area represents the long-established assimilation of German Americans.

Notable Germans and German-Americans in Omaha

Notable Germans and German-Americans in Omaha (Alphabetical)
Name Born/died Connection to Germany Connection to Omaha Notability
Adele Astaire
Adele Austerlitz
1896–1981 Daughter of German father Born in Omaha American dancer and entertainer
Fred Astaire
Frederick Austerlitz
1899–1987 Son of Austrian father Born in Omaha American film and Broadway stage dancer, choreographer, singer and actor
Max Baer 1909–1959 Son of German Jewish parents Born in Omaha Onetime Heavyweight Champion of the World American boxer, actor and entertainer
Marlon Brando 1924–2004 German ancestry Born in Omaha American actor
Frederick Krug 1855–1930 Volga German Kratzke, Russia Founder of Krug Brewery
Charles O. Lobeck 1852–1920 Born to German father and Swedish mother Lived in Omaha Democratic U.S. Representative from Nebraska from 1911–1919
Frederick Metz 1832–1901 Immigrated from Hesse-Cassel, Germany in 1851 Lived in Omaha Co-founded Metz Brewery in 1864
Nick Nolte 1941- Grandson of German Born in Omaha American actor
John Louis Nuelsen 1867–1946 Born to German parents Served in Omaha from 1908-1912. Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Conor Oberst 1980- German ancestry Born and raised in Omaha American indie singer
Valentin J. Peter 1875-? Bavaria Lived in Omaha from 1907 to death Publisher and editor of Omaha Tribune
Joseph Rummel 1876–1964 Immigrated from Baden, Germany in 1882 Served as bishop of the Diocese of Omaha from 1928–1935 Archbishop of the Archdiocese of New Orleans
Nicholas Sparks 1965- German ancestry Born in Omaha American author
Gottlieb Storz ?-1939 Immigrated to U.S. from Württemberg, Germany in 1870 Lived in Omaha Founded Storz Brewery in 1876

See also

References

  1. ^ Larsen, L.H., Cottrell, B.J. and Dalstrom, H.A. (2007) Upstream Metropolis: An Urban Biography of Omaha and Council Bluffs. University of Nebraska Press. p 122.
  2. ^ Luebke, F.C. (1999) Germans in the New World: Essays in the History of Immigration. University of Illinois Press. p 27.
  3. ^ Larsen, L.H., Cottrell, B.J. and Dalstrom, H.A. (2007) Upstream Metropolis: An Urban Biography of Omaha and Council Bluffs. University of Nebraska Press. p 157.
  4. ^ Luebke, F.C. (1999) Germans in the New World: Essays in the History of Immigration. University of Illinois Press.
  5. ^ a b c d Luebke, F.C. (1999) Germans in the New World: Essays in the History of Immigration. University of Illinois Press. p 17.
  6. ^ Hunt, D.C., Orr, W.J. and Goetzmann, W.H. (eds) (1984) Karl Bodmer's America. Joslyn Art Museum. p 8.
  7. ^ Scherneckau, A. (2007) Marching with the First Nebraska: A Civil War Diary. University of Oklahoma Press.
  8. ^ Larsen, L.H., Cottrell, B.J. and Dalstrom, H.A. (2007) Upstream Metropolis: An Urban Biography of Omaha and Council Bluffs. University of Nebraska Press. p 76.
  9. ^ (1888) "History of Douglas County." Andreas' History of Nebraska. p 8. Retrieved 9/3/07.
  10. ^ (1888) "History of Douglas County." Andreas' History of Nebraska. p 17. Retrieved 9/3/07.
  11. ^ Fimple, K.L. (1989) An Analysis of the Changing Spatial Dimensions of Ethnic Neighborhoods in Omaha, Nebraska, 1880-1900. University of Nebraska at Lincoln, Department of Geography. p 13.
  12. ^ Mead and Hunt. (2001) [Usurped!]. City of Omaha. p 6. Retrieved 1/20/08.
  13. ^ a b Chudacoff, H.P. (1973) "A New Look At Ethnic Neighborhoods: Residential Dispersion and the Concept of Visibility in a Medium-Sized City," The Journal of American History. 60(1). pp 76-93.
  14. ^ Fimple. (1989) pp 110-13.
  15. ^ a b [Usurped!] Nebraska State Historical Society. Retrieved 9/3/07.
  16. ^ "German American Reading Room: The Germans in America." United States Library of Congress. Retrieved 9/3/07.
  17. ^ Carlson, A.C. (2002) "Hyphenates, Hausfraus and baby-saving: The Peculiar Legacy of German-America", The Family in America. 16(1/2). Retrieved 9/2/07.
  18. ^ a b Folsom, B.W. (1999) No More Free Markets Or Free Beer: The Progressive Era in Nebraska, 1900-1924. Lexington Books. p 11.
  19. ^ a b c Sullenger, T.E. (1937) "Problems of Ethnic Assimilation in Omaha," Social Forces. 15(3) pp. 402-410.
  20. ^ Kaplan, M.M. (1967) Judaism as a Civilization: Toward a Reconstruction of American-Jewish Life. p 551.
  21. ^ Luebke, F.C. (1999) Germans in the New World: Essays in the History of Immigration. University of Illinois Press. p 15.
  22. ^ Dillingham, W.P. (1910) Reports of the Immigration Commission. United States Immigration Commission (1907-1910). p 43. Retrieved 9/3/07.
  23. ^ Luebke, F.C. (1999) Germans in the New World: Essays in the History of Immigration. University of Illinois Press. p 16.
  24. ^ Folsom, B.W. (1999) No More Free Markets Or Free Beer: The Progressive Era in Nebraska, 1900-1924. Lexington Books. p 15.
  25. ^ Folsom, B.W. (1999) No More Free Markets Or Free Beer: The Progressive Era in Nebraska, 1900-1924. Lexington Books. p 86.
  26. ^ a b "Our German Heritage" Retrieved 9/3/07.
  27. ^ Larsen, L. & Cotrell, B. (1997). The gate city: A history of Omaha. University of Nebraska Press. P 159.
  28. ^ Cherny, R.W. (1990) "Nebraska, 1883-1925: Cather's Version and History's." in Willa Cather: Family, Community, and History. Murphy, J.J., Adams, L.H., and Rawlins, P. Brigham Young University. p 233.
  29. ^ Luebke, F.C. (1970) "Immigrants and Politics: The Germans of Nebraska, 1880-1900," The Western Historical Quarterly. 1(4) pp 445-446.
  30. ^ "U.S. Supreme Court: MEYER v. STATE OF NEBRASKA, 262 U.S. 390 (1923)" 2007-08-09 at the Wayback Machine. University of Kansas City. Retrieved 9/3/07.
  31. ^ Folsom, B.W. (1999) No More Free Markets Or Free Beer: The Progressive Era in Nebraska, 1900-1924. Lexington Books. p 112.
  32. ^ Luebke, F.C. (1999) Germans in the New World: Essays in the History of Immigration. University of Illinois Press. p 64.
  33. ^ a b Luebke, F.C. (1999) Germans in the New World: Essays in the History of Immigration. University of Illinois Press. p 66.
  34. ^ Luebke, Frederick C. (1969) "The German-American Alliance in Nebraska, 1910-1917." Nebraska History. 49 pp 165-85.
  35. ^ Rives, D. "We Possessed Together the Communicable Past: Articulating the Connections among Cather, Omaha, Rural Nebraska, and my Family History." 2007-09-11 at the Wayback Machine The Willa Cather Archives. Retrieved 9/3/07.
  36. ^ Rader, J. "The Reuben Sandwich" Merriam-Webster Inc. Retrieved 9/3/07.
  37. ^ "Company History" 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine, Interstate Printing Company. Retrieved 9/3/07.
  38. ^ Arndt, K.J.R. and Olson, M.E. (1976) The German Language Press of the Americas 1732-1968: A History and Bibliography. 2nd volume. Verlag Dokumentation. p 743.
  39. ^ [Usurped!], Nebraska State Historical Society. Retrieved 6/10/08.

External links

  • German-American Society of Omaha
  • German-American Heritage Foundation of the USA in Washington, DC

germans, omaha, nebraska, germans, omaha, immigrated, city, nebraska, from, earliest, days, founding, 1854, years, after, revolutions, 1848, german, states, they, continued, immigrate, omaha, large, numbers, later, 19th, century, when, many, came, from, bavari. Germans in Omaha immigrated to the city in Nebraska from its earliest days of founding in 1854 in the years after the Revolutions of 1848 in the German states They continued to immigrate to Omaha in large numbers later in the 19th century when many came from Bavaria and southern Germany and into the early 20th century Germans created and maintained a high cultural social and political profile locally and nationally through the 1930s In 1890 Germans comprised 23 of Omaha s population 1 By 1910 57 4 of Omaha s total population of more than 124 000 identified as being of German descent 2 By 1930 and the start of the Great Depression immigration from Germany had virtually ceased Although Germans comprised the second most numerous group of foreign born nationals after Czechs those foreign born immigrants totaled less than one percent of the total population of the city 3 German immigrants and German Americans in Omaha had a high rate of literacy The mostly working class population supported numerous German language newspapers that had national as well as local distribution in the early 20th century Germans built and operated several successful breweries in the city bringing good beer and beer making skills to the upper Midwest The German model of public education was established in states throughout the Midwest which were quickly training teachers in normal schools to expand education in new villages Valentin J Peter 1875 1960 editor of the German language Omaha Tribune was chiefly responsible for the formation and leadership of the Nebraska chapter of the National German American Alliance This coalition was influential in representing and attempting to lead the German American electorate across the United States between 1912 and 1940 although the community was very heterogeneous 4 During the early years of World War I the Great War Peter was supportive of Germany and urged German Americans to be so too He changed his position before the US entered the war in 1917 on the side of Great Britain and France and supported the Allies 5 He also supported the US and its allies in World War II after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor Contents 1 History 1 1 Communities 1 2 Culture 1 3 Employment 1 4 Politics 2 National German American Alliance 3 World War I 3 1 Post War 3 2 Political influence 4 World War II 5 Legacies 6 Current 7 Notable Germans and German Americans in Omaha 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditThe first known German in the Omaha area arrived more than 20 years before the city was founded Prince Maximilian of Wied Neuwied toured the Upper Missouri River in 1832 and recorded a stay at Cabanne s Trading Post in present day North Omaha 6 After arriving in Omaha en masse beginning in the 1860s Germans in Omaha built their own churches At church and in their businesses including grocery stores and farm supply shops they conducted daily life in German for years Many young German immigrants from Omaha served in the Nebraska battalion during the Civil War 7 as well as later serving throughout the country One early German settler in Omaha was Vincent Burkley He anglicized his name After working as a grocer and farm laborer for three years starting in 1854 he opened his own printing company He was almost immediately successful 8 Burkley was elected as a member of the Omaha City Council for several years 9 as well as the Omaha Board of Education 10 Communities Edit In the earliest days of Omaha the heart of the German settlement was in the large concentration between South 10th and 13th Streets Here one could purchase food from several German merchants including Volkmier s Meat Market Schmid s Grocery and the Schube Haus bakery The Emmel House hotel and Hottenroth and Bauer Boarding House were also located in this core 11 The area south of the railroad corridor and west of South 16th Street contained an area of German Catholics This settlement was centered on South 16th Street and Center Street and includes St Joseph s Church which was established in 1887 to serve German speaking Catholics Protestant Germans settled in a concentration centered on South 11th Street and Center Street and built a German Methodist Episcopal Church in 1886 12 German population density in the United States 1872 Notice the indication that Omaha has a large density By 1900 Germans lived in more dispersed neighborhoods including the Near North Side neighborhood Florence and South Omaha Within 25 years they lived throughout the city with large enclaves in the Dundee and Field Club neighborhoods 13 Another concentration was near South 19th and Vinton Streets The Bongardt Meat Market Schmidt Saloon and Muller s Hall were located in the 1700 block of Vinton Wilg Dry Goods was at 1810 Vinton Strausburgh Druggist at 1822 Vinton and the Schouboe Bakery at 3130 S 18th St 14 Culture Edit Germans built several Deutschekirchen German churches throughout Omaha 5 St Joseph s was a Roman Catholic parish established in 1901 to serve Omaha s German speaking Catholics 15 The German community in Omaha was literate and large enough to support several German language newspapers which also had national distribution They included the Omaha Tribune the Volkszeitung Tribune and the Sonntagspost which was later called the AmericaHerold 16 Edward Rosewater the Czech editor at The Omaha Bee used the slogan Germania our Mother Columbia our Bride to describe the kind of dual sentimentality many Germans in America felt toward their country of origin 17 In the early 20th century German immigrants came to Omaha for work and to escape state oppression led by Kaiser Wilhelm in Germany 18 The German community in Omaha was noted for settling quickly throughout the city Period sociological research also identified a range of reluctance among some German immigrants as well as second and third generation Germans towards assimilation 19 During the early 20th century Germans in Omaha were successful in ensuring that German culture German history and German language lessons were included in the local public school system because they comprised a large part of the electorate 20 Employment Edit Who does not love wine wife and song will be a fool for his lifelong a vigorous 1873 assertion of cultural values of German immigrants Germans in Omaha were employed in many of the city s manufacturing industries particularly its brewing sector which was created by German immigrants Leading German employers in the city included the Metz Brewery Krug Brewery and the Storz Brewery Gottlieb Storz Frederick Krug and Frederick Metz built the success of their breweries by hiring German brewmeisters and laborers for their skills 21 Many Germans in the Omaha area also worked at the Union Stockyards and in farming in Douglas County 18 In 1910 the Union Stockyards reported to the United States Immigration Commission that 14 1 of its workers were German immigrants 22 Numerous Germans worked at German owned beer gardens dry goods stores farms and milling operations throughout the city and Douglas County 19 The German work ethic was highly regarded throughout the city Immigrant workers from Germany were readily employed in Jobbers Canyon and by the railroads in Omaha 13 Politics Edit German owned breweries in Omaha sought to keep alcohol legal at a time when political pressure was widespread to establish Prohibition German voters in Omaha were largely responsible for the election of Nebraska Governor Ashton C Shallenberger in 1908 as Shallenberger ran on an anti Prohibition slate After he was elected however Shallenberger became pro Prohibition Temperance was strongly supported in most of Nebraska for 30 years before the national Prohibition movement 23 A statewide election seeking a prohibition of alcohol in 1890 won in almost every county across the state except Omaha s Douglas County The German vote there was credited for keeping the state wet during that period 24 When William Jennings Bryan returned to Nebraska after his third unsuccessful Presidential campaign in 1908 to advocate for Prohibition he became the arch enemy of das Deutschtum 5 National German American Alliance EditIn July 1910 Germans in Omaha rallied with other immigrant organizations across the city to create the National German American Alliance At least 54 social farming and cultural organizations from around Omaha were represented at the first meeting This alliance brought together many German organizations around Omaha in July 1911 at the city s annual Sangerfest which was a dance and rally for more than 5 000 attendees By masking political objectives within a German cultural event National German American Alliance leaders were able to politicize the event without scrutiny from the mainstream press 5 Bavarian born Valentin J Peter was the publisher of a German language newspaper called the Omaha Tribune In 1914 Peter led the National German American Alliance in strong opposition to women s suffrage during a statewide election on the issue The Omaha Tribune editor denounced the effort as chiefly to introduce state prohibition with the help of these women s voices 25 In the years leading up the US entry into World War I tensions in Europe were reflected in the US During a 1915 address to the National German American Alliance Valentin Peter said Both here and abroad the enemy is the same Perfidious Albion there England has pressed the sword into the hands of almost all the peoples of Europe against Germany In this country it has a servile press at its command which uses every foul means to slander everything German and to poison the public mind Valentin Peter 1915 26 Such expression of pro German feelings by German immigrants aroused anti German sentiment in the many Americans who favored the British as allies 26 But in 1916 the Vice President of the National German American Alliance openly chastised President Woodrow Wilson for pro Ally actions at the beginning of the Great War World War I EditBy the outbreak of World War I some Americans were concerned about divided loyalties of German immigrants and their descendants A nativist movement affected Omaha The Federal government enforced the Alien and Sedition Acts against Germans nationals Germans who were not American citizens were required to register with the Federal government as Alien Enemies 27 Although Valentin Peter had earlier been a supporter of Germany against Great Britain by the outbreak of the war the editor of the Omaha Tribune had become an ardent supporter of the United States involvement in World War I on the side of Great Britain Anti German feelings ran high in Nebraska because of the war A historian noted German books were destroyed The legislature prohibited the use of foreign languages on the public streets or on the telephone and prohibited schools from using or even teaching foreign languages below the eighth grade Wartime patriots initiated both official and vigilante action against German immigrants 28 When the United States entered the war most general businesses and churches ceased conducting affairs in German due to nativist sentiment They did not want to appear less than loyal to the US 29 This sentiment seeped into the general Nebraska population Post War Edit Anti German sentiment contributed to passage of a 1919 state law that enforced teaching in English By law No person individually or as a teacher shall in any private denominational parochial or public school teach any subject to any person in any language than the English language 30 Robert Meyer was found to violate this law because he taught German He was taken to court by the State of Nebraska Although his appeal to the Nebraska Supreme Court failed the U S Supreme Court in Meyer v Nebraska determined that Meyer had the right to teach the German language as a subject and to teach it in German By 1919 open discrimination against Germans throughout Omaha was taking hold Many German language newspapers were forced to change to English or to close 31 Political influence Edit After the First World War Germans in America sought to regain their political influence and they succeeded Both Valentin Peter editor of the Omaha Tribune and the National German American Alliance gained enough political clout to influence United States presidential campaigns In 1920 immediately after the 1920 United States presidential election in November Peter came under scrutiny by the United States Senate and was called to testify on his involvement in the campaign According to Peter s testimony he flipped to supporting Calvin Coolidge in exchange for 12 500 32 Later during the 1928 presidential election the Democratic National Committee enlisted Peter to join to show the support of German Americans for Al Smith There were deep divides among Germans in America in politics and many cultural issues 33 34 World War II EditBy this period there were few first generation German immigrants German Americans had national spokesmen who often provided conflicting political messages They reflected the wide variety of opinions held by German Americans as they had assimilated into American life Period sociologists noted the multiplicity of opinions as demonstrating the process of American assimilation among Germans in America 19 Many German Americans were completely assimilated into American society By World War II many of the distinctive institutions of German society in Omaha such as stores German language churches and social groups had disappeared or become less exclusive of other groups 33 Legacies Edit Distribution of Americans claiming German Ancestry by county in 2018 Notice the Omaha area The experience of German immigrants in Omaha and throughout Nebraska is said to have deeply influenced Willa Cather She addressed the assimilation discrimination and community of Germans in several of her stories 35 The inventor of the Reuben sandwich was a German American who lived in Omaha 36 Omaha Tribune editor Val Peter s company the Interstate Printing Company is still operated today by the Peter family in Omaha 37 The Volkszeitung Tribune was a German language newspaper that was published in Omaha from the late 19th century through the 1980s 38 A German Old People s Home was located in Omaha for almost 100 years A home for elderly people of German heritage it was operated as a charitable non profit corporation by twenty seven trustees all descendants of German immigrants 39 Current EditSt Joseph s Catholic Parish located at 1723 South 17th Street in South Omaha continues with parishioners of German heritage comprising a large percentage of the church s membership 15 The German American Society located at 3717 South 120th Street in West Omaha continues to hold regular events teach German traditions and observe special celebrations Its location in a more suburban area represents the long established assimilation of German Americans Notable Germans and German Americans in Omaha EditNotable Germans and German Americans in Omaha Alphabetical Name Born died Connection to Germany Connection to Omaha NotabilityAdele AstaireAdele Austerlitz 1896 1981 Daughter of German father Born in Omaha American dancer and entertainerFred AstaireFrederick Austerlitz 1899 1987 Son of Austrian father Born in Omaha American film and Broadway stage dancer choreographer singer and actorMax Baer 1909 1959 Son of German Jewish parents Born in Omaha Onetime Heavyweight Champion of the World American boxer actor and entertainerMarlon Brando 1924 2004 German ancestry Born in Omaha American actorFrederick Krug 1855 1930 Volga German Kratzke Russia Founder of Krug BreweryCharles O Lobeck 1852 1920 Born to German father and Swedish mother Lived in Omaha Democratic U S Representative from Nebraska from 1911 1919Frederick Metz 1832 1901 Immigrated from Hesse Cassel Germany in 1851 Lived in Omaha Co founded Metz Brewery in 1864Nick Nolte 1941 Grandson of German Born in Omaha American actorJohn Louis Nuelsen 1867 1946 Born to German parents Served in Omaha from 1908 1912 Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal ChurchConor Oberst 1980 German ancestry Born and raised in Omaha American indie singerValentin J Peter 1875 Bavaria Lived in Omaha from 1907 to death Publisher and editor of Omaha TribuneJoseph Rummel 1876 1964 Immigrated from Baden Germany in 1882 Served as bishop of the Diocese of Omaha from 1928 1935 Archbishop of the Archdiocese of New OrleansNicholas Sparks 1965 German ancestry Born in Omaha American authorGottlieb Storz 1939 Immigrated to U S from Wurttemberg Germany in 1870 Lived in Omaha Founded Storz Brewery in 1876See also EditGerman Nebraskan History of Omaha Krug Brewery Metz Brewery Storz BreweryReferences Edit Larsen L H Cottrell B J and Dalstrom H A 2007 Upstream Metropolis An Urban Biography of Omaha and Council Bluffs University of Nebraska Press p 122 Luebke F C 1999 Germans in the New World Essays in the History of Immigration University of Illinois Press p 27 Larsen L H Cottrell B J and Dalstrom H A 2007 Upstream Metropolis An Urban Biography of Omaha and Council Bluffs University of Nebraska Press p 157 Luebke F C 1999 Germans in the New World Essays in the History of Immigration University of Illinois Press a b c d Luebke F C 1999 Germans in the New World Essays in the History of Immigration University of Illinois Press p 17 Hunt D C Orr W J and Goetzmann W H eds 1984 Karl Bodmer s America Joslyn Art Museum p 8 Scherneckau A 2007 Marching with the First Nebraska A Civil War Diary University of Oklahoma Press Larsen L H Cottrell B J and Dalstrom H A 2007 Upstream Metropolis An Urban Biography of Omaha and Council Bluffs University of Nebraska Press p 76 1888 History of Douglas County Andreas History of Nebraska p 8 Retrieved 9 3 07 1888 History of Douglas County Andreas History of Nebraska p 17 Retrieved 9 3 07 Fimple K L 1989 An Analysis of the Changing Spatial Dimensions of Ethnic Neighborhoods in Omaha Nebraska 1880 1900 University of Nebraska at Lincoln Department of Geography p 13 Mead and Hunt 2001 Reconnaissance survey of portions of south central Omaha Usurped City of Omaha p 6 Retrieved 1 20 08 a b Chudacoff H P 1973 A New Look At Ethnic Neighborhoods Residential Dispersion and the Concept of Visibility in a Medium Sized City The Journal of American History 60 1 pp 76 93 Fimple 1989 pp 110 13 a b More Nebraska National Register Sites in Douglas County Usurped Nebraska State Historical Society Retrieved 9 3 07 German American Reading Room The Germans in America United States Library of Congress Retrieved 9 3 07 Carlson A C 2002 Hyphenates Hausfraus and baby saving The Peculiar Legacy of German America The Family in America 16 1 2 Retrieved 9 2 07 a b Folsom B W 1999 No More Free Markets Or Free Beer The Progressive Era in Nebraska 1900 1924 Lexington Books p 11 a b c Sullenger T E 1937 Problems of Ethnic Assimilation in Omaha Social Forces 15 3 pp 402 410 Kaplan M M 1967 Judaism as a Civilization Toward a Reconstruction of American Jewish Life p 551 Luebke F C 1999 Germans in the New World Essays in the History of Immigration University of Illinois Press p 15 Dillingham W P 1910 Reports of the Immigration Commission United States Immigration Commission 1907 1910 p 43 Retrieved 9 3 07 Luebke F C 1999 Germans in the New World Essays in the History of Immigration University of Illinois Press p 16 Folsom B W 1999 No More Free Markets Or Free Beer The Progressive Era in Nebraska 1900 1924 Lexington Books p 15 Folsom B W 1999 No More Free Markets Or Free Beer The Progressive Era in Nebraska 1900 1924 Lexington Books p 86 a b Our German Heritage Retrieved 9 3 07 Larsen L amp Cotrell B 1997 The gate city A history of Omaha University of Nebraska Press P 159 Cherny R W 1990 Nebraska 1883 1925 Cather s Version and History s in Willa Cather Family Community and History Murphy J J Adams L H and Rawlins P Brigham Young University p 233 Luebke F C 1970 Immigrants and Politics The Germans of Nebraska 1880 1900 The Western Historical Quarterly 1 4 pp 445 446 U S Supreme Court MEYER v STATE OF NEBRASKA 262 U S 390 1923 Archived 2007 08 09 at the Wayback Machine University of Kansas City Retrieved 9 3 07 Folsom B W 1999 No More Free Markets Or Free Beer The Progressive Era in Nebraska 1900 1924 Lexington Books p 112 Luebke F C 1999 Germans in the New World Essays in the History of Immigration University of Illinois Press p 64 a b Luebke F C 1999 Germans in the New World Essays in the History of Immigration University of Illinois Press p 66 Luebke Frederick C 1969 The German American Alliance in Nebraska 1910 1917 Nebraska History 49 pp 165 85 Rives D We Possessed Together the Communicable Past Articulating the Connections among Cather Omaha Rural Nebraska and my Family History Archived 2007 09 11 at the Wayback Machine The Willa Cather Archives Retrieved 9 3 07 Rader J The Reuben Sandwich Merriam Webster Inc Retrieved 9 3 07 Company History Archived 2007 09 28 at the Wayback Machine Interstate Printing Company Retrieved 9 3 07 Arndt K J R and Olson M E 1976 The German Language Press of the Americas 1732 1968 A History and Bibliography 2nd volume Verlag Dokumentation p 743 German Old Folks Home Usurped Nebraska State Historical Society Retrieved 6 10 08 External links EditGerman American Society of Omaha German American Heritage Foundation of the USA in Washington DC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Germans in Omaha Nebraska amp oldid 1118230211, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.