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Gottlieb Mittelberger

Gottlieb Mittelberger (1714 – 1758) was a German author, schoolmaster, organist, and Lutheran pastor.[1][2] He was best known for his work Journey to Pennsylvania (1756). Mittelberger's travelogue provides a firsthand historic account of the misery and exploitation of German immigrants during the US colonial period. In his work, he tries to convince his fellow Germans not to immigrate to the American colonies, as the forfeiture of freedom, cost of money, lack of health, and loss of life are too exorbitant to risk and sacrifice. Although never an indentured servant, Mittelberger's written testament is one of several surviving historic works describing the hardships of the redemption system.

Gottlieb Mittelberger
Born1714
Died1758
Holy Roman Empire
Occupation
  • Author
  • Schoolmaster
  • Organist
  • Lutheran Pastor
NationalityGerman
Notable worksJourney to Pennsylvania

His meticulous account of his sea voyage to the British Atlantic colonies and subsequent experiences in Pennsylvania has become academically notable, due to the scarcity in primary source material concerning several of the issues he details.[3] Such topics include religious practices in colonial Pennsylvania, European passenger fares for children and adults, as well as the nature and consequences of epidemics on colonial era ships.[3][4][5] The work is also noted for its lengthy discussion of sexuality and social mores, including an account of a bigamous threesome and the status of illegitimate children, as evidencing the religious and sexual tolerance of colonial America.[6]

Life edit

 
Print by Balthasar Leizelt (1770s) depicting Philadelphia, as a European port city, a generation after Mittelberger came to America.

In 1714, Mittelberger was born in Enzweihingen, Vaihingen County in the Duchy of Württemberg of the Holy Roman Empire.[7] He became a schoolmaster in his native Enzweihingen but lost his job around 1750. In the spring of 1750, Mittelberger was offered a position as organist and schoolmaster in New Providence, Pennsylvania.[1]

In May 1750, he left for the town of Heilbronn, where he met up with the river boat to take him and an organ up the Neckar and Rhine into the Netherlands.[7] From Rotterdam, he boarded the British ship Osgood for England and the British Atlantic colony of Pennsylvania. Upon arriving, Mittelberger worked for the German Saint Augustine's Church in New Providence, Pennsylvania.[1] He also became a private instructor of music and tutor of the German language.[1] Among Mittelberger's employers was Captain John Diemer, who led a British colonial expedition into Quebec against New France in 1746 to 1747.

Becoming disenfranchised with the Province of Pennsylvania, he returned to his native Duchy in 1754. Over the next two years, Mittelberger finished writing Journey to Pennsylvania, which was subsequently published in Stuttgart, with the permission of Duke Charles Eugene of Württemberg. He died in the Duchy of Württemberg in 1758.

Journey to Pennsylvania edit

 
Gottlieb Mittelberger's (1756) Journey to Pennsylvania

In Journey to Pennsylvania, published in 1756, Mittelberger wrote a two-part travelogue about his voyage and experiences in colonial America. The first part is entitled "In America" and focuses on the suffering of the underprivileged. The second part is entitled "Description of the Land Pennsylvania" and is more analytical, as Mittelberger discusses sociological and religious topics.

Observing from the perspective of a ship passenger aboard the Dutch vessel Osgood, Mittelberger documented the harrowing experiences of the 400 impoverished European immigrants making the transatlantic voyage from Rotterdam to Philadelphia. The majority of the passengers were representative of the influx of Germans to America from Baden, Württemberg, and the Palatinate.[8] Mittelberger details the exploitation of these poor immigrants by the Newlanders, ship crew and captains, as well as American colonists.

On religion and tolerance edit

Mittelberger expounds upon the lack of religious belief and practice in mid-18th century Philadelphia. He was astonished by the general absence of belief in God and a lack of knowledge of the Bible.[9] Contrarily, he is confronted by a city dominated by free thinkers and infidels.[10] The cultural influence of the Enlightenment is thus attested by Mittelberger's firsthand experience of religious skepticism, naturalism, and the popularity of Deism.[9] By 1750, the decline in Christianity is indicated by the existence of only eighteen churches in Philadelphia, serving a city of over 30,000 inhabitants.[9] As Mittelberger notes:

Besides, there are many hundreds of adult persons who have not been and do not even wish to be baptized. There are many who think nothing of the sacraments and the Holy Bible, nor even of God and His word. Many do not even believe that there is a true God and a devil, a heaven and a hell, salvation and damnation, resurrection of the dead, a judgment and eternal life; they believe that all one can see is natural. For in Pennsylvania every one may not only believe what he will, but he may even say it freely and openly.[10]

According to historian Russell Weigley, Mittelberger was surprised by the relative lack of religious bigotry in colonial America, namely in contrast to the religious fervor and intolerance of the Old World.[9] As Mittelberger wrote of the American colonists: "To speak the truth, one seldom hears or sees a quarrel among them [which is] the result of the liberty which they enjoy and which makes them all equal."[9]

On the misfortune of indentured servants edit

 
An indentured servant's contract (1738) from Bucks County, Pennsylvania.

Mittelberger's primary focus concerns the tribulations of the European immigrants to the British Atlantic colonies. In particular, he wrote of the precarious transatlantic voyage, as well as the sale and exploitation of immigrants into indentured servitude. Mittelberger describes the health conditions at sea as harrowing:

But during the voyage there is on board these ships terrible misery, stench, fumes, horror, vomiting, many kinds of sea-sickness, fever, dysentery, headache, heat, constipation, boils, scurvy, cancer, mouth-rot, and the like, all of which come from old and sharply salted food and meat, also from very bad and foul water, so that many die miserably.[11]

Mittelberger continues:

That most of the people get sick is not surprising, because, in addition to all other trials and hardships, warm food is served only three times a week, the rations being very poor and very little. Such meals can hardly be eaten, on account of being so unclean. The water which is served out on the ships is often very black, thick and full of worms, so that one cannot drink it without loathing, even with the greatest thirst. Toward the end we were compelled to eat the ship's biscuit which had been spoiled long ago; though in a whole biscuit there was scarcely a, piece the size of a dollar that had not been full of red worms and spiders nests.[12]

On the structure of passenger fare edit

As economic historian Farley Grubb states, there are scarce remaining sources in the world documenting 18th century transatlantic passenger fare.[3] Consequently, there is historic significance in Mittelberger documenting the uniform pay for passage to America as being structured by the age of the immigrant. Children under five years of age are free.[13] However, the fee from Rotterdam for any person ten years of age or higher was ten British pounds or 60 Dutch florins (guilders).[13] Children between five and ten years were half priced at 30 florins or five pounds.[13]

On sexual and familial practices edit

As cultural historian Clare Lyons observes, there are three lengthy sexual stories documented by Mittelberger in his travelogue.[6] Similar to the religious tolerance of the era, colonial Philadelphia in the 1750s was relatively hospitable to various forms of sexual behavior and familial structure.[6] As Lyons summarizes:

According to Gottlieb Mittelberger...the town was a place of lax moral discipline, courtship went unregulated, women exercised too much power within marriage, and nonmarital sexuality rampant.[6]

Mittelberger gives as an example the case of an old couple living close to the Blue Mountains in rural Pennsylvania.[14] The old woman, ill and weak, requests of her husband to marry their young servant maid Rosina.[15] The husband and Rosina both consent to the request and marry, whereby Rosina becomes pregnant shortly thereafter.[15] Meanwhile, the first wife's health continues to improve over time.[15] When the colonial authorities learn of the bigamous relationship, they choose not to interfere.[16] Whereas English law punishes bigamy by execution, the authorities do not in this case act, insofar as neither of the wives felt dissatisfied or injured by the bigamy.[16]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Mittelberger 1898, p. 14.
  2. ^ Henneton & Roper 2016, p. 13.
  3. ^ a b c Grubb 1985, p. 861.
  4. ^ Caufield, Ernest (1942). "Early Measles Epidemics in America". The Journal of Biology and Medicine. 15 (4): 531–56. PMC 2601425. PMID 21434087.
  5. ^ Frantz, John (1976). "The Awakening of Religion among the German Settlers in the Middle Colonies". The William and Mary Quarterly. Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture. 33 (2): 271. doi:10.2307/1922165. JSTOR 1922165.
  6. ^ a b c d Lyons 2012, p. 72.
  7. ^ a b Mittelberger 1898, p. 13.
  8. ^ Mittelberger 1898, p. 16.
  9. ^ a b c d e Weigley 1982, p. 101.
  10. ^ a b Mittelberger 1898, p. 32.
  11. ^ Mittelberger 1898, p. 20.
  12. ^ Mittelberger 1898, p. 24.
  13. ^ a b c Mittelberger 1898, p. 26.
  14. ^ Mittelberger 1898, p. 93.
  15. ^ a b c Mittelberger 1898, p. 94.
  16. ^ a b Mittelberger 1898, p. 95.

Bibliography and further reading edit

  • Grubb, Farley (1985). "The Market for Indentured Immigrants: Evidence on the Efficiency of Forward-Labor Contracting in Philadelphia, 1745-1773" (PDF). The Journal of Economic History. Cambridge University Press. 45 (4): 855–868. doi:10.1017/s0022050700035130. S2CID 36848963. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  • Henneton, Lauric; Roper, Louis, eds. (2016). Fear and the Shaping of Early American Societies. Leiden: BRILL. ISBN 978-9004314740. Retrieved 14 September 2016.
  • Lyons, Clare (2012). Sex Among the Rabble: An Intimate History of Gender and Power in the Age of Revolution, Philadelphia, 1730-1830. Chapel Hill, NC: UNC Press Books. ISBN 9780807838969. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  • Mittelberger, Gottlieb (1898). Journey to Pennsylvania in the Year 1750 and Return to Germany in the Year 1754. Philadelphia: John Joseph McCevy. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  • Weigley, Russell (1982). Philadelphia: A 300 Year History. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 101. ISBN 9780393016109. Retrieved 11 September 2016. gottlieb mittelberger Russell Weigley.

External links edit

  • Gottlieb Mittelberger Biography (German)
  • Journey to Pennsylvania (1898)

gottlieb, mittelberger, 1714, 1758, german, author, schoolmaster, organist, lutheran, pastor, best, known, work, journey, pennsylvania, 1756, mittelberger, travelogue, provides, firsthand, historic, account, misery, exploitation, german, immigrants, during, co. Gottlieb Mittelberger 1714 1758 was a German author schoolmaster organist and Lutheran pastor 1 2 He was best known for his work Journey to Pennsylvania 1756 Mittelberger s travelogue provides a firsthand historic account of the misery and exploitation of German immigrants during the US colonial period In his work he tries to convince his fellow Germans not to immigrate to the American colonies as the forfeiture of freedom cost of money lack of health and loss of life are too exorbitant to risk and sacrifice Although never an indentured servant Mittelberger s written testament is one of several surviving historic works describing the hardships of the redemption system Gottlieb MittelbergerBorn1714Enzweihingen VaihingenDuchy of WurttembergHoly Roman EmpireDied1758Holy Roman EmpireOccupationAuthorSchoolmasterOrganistLutheran PastorNationalityGermanNotable worksJourney to PennsylvaniaHis meticulous account of his sea voyage to the British Atlantic colonies and subsequent experiences in Pennsylvania has become academically notable due to the scarcity in primary source material concerning several of the issues he details 3 Such topics include religious practices in colonial Pennsylvania European passenger fares for children and adults as well as the nature and consequences of epidemics on colonial era ships 3 4 5 The work is also noted for its lengthy discussion of sexuality and social mores including an account of a bigamous threesome and the status of illegitimate children as evidencing the religious and sexual tolerance of colonial America 6 Contents 1 Life 2 Journey to Pennsylvania 2 1 On religion and tolerance 2 2 On the misfortune of indentured servants 2 3 On the structure of passenger fare 2 4 On sexual and familial practices 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography and further reading 6 External linksLife edit nbsp Print by Balthasar Leizelt 1770s depicting Philadelphia as a European port city a generation after Mittelberger came to America In 1714 Mittelberger was born in Enzweihingen Vaihingen County in the Duchy of Wurttemberg of the Holy Roman Empire 7 He became a schoolmaster in his native Enzweihingen but lost his job around 1750 In the spring of 1750 Mittelberger was offered a position as organist and schoolmaster in New Providence Pennsylvania 1 In May 1750 he left for the town of Heilbronn where he met up with the river boat to take him and an organ up the Neckar and Rhine into the Netherlands 7 From Rotterdam he boarded the British ship Osgood for England and the British Atlantic colony of Pennsylvania Upon arriving Mittelberger worked for the German Saint Augustine s Church in New Providence Pennsylvania 1 He also became a private instructor of music and tutor of the German language 1 Among Mittelberger s employers was Captain John Diemer who led a British colonial expedition into Quebec against New France in 1746 to 1747 Becoming disenfranchised with the Province of Pennsylvania he returned to his native Duchy in 1754 Over the next two years Mittelberger finished writing Journey to Pennsylvania which was subsequently published in Stuttgart with the permission of Duke Charles Eugene of Wurttemberg He died in the Duchy of Wurttemberg in 1758 Journey to Pennsylvania edit nbsp Gottlieb Mittelberger s 1756 Journey to PennsylvaniaIn Journey to Pennsylvania published in 1756 Mittelberger wrote a two part travelogue about his voyage and experiences in colonial America The first part is entitled In America and focuses on the suffering of the underprivileged The second part is entitled Description of the Land Pennsylvania and is more analytical as Mittelberger discusses sociological and religious topics Observing from the perspective of a ship passenger aboard the Dutch vessel Osgood Mittelberger documented the harrowing experiences of the 400 impoverished European immigrants making the transatlantic voyage from Rotterdam to Philadelphia The majority of the passengers were representative of the influx of Germans to America from Baden Wurttemberg and the Palatinate 8 Mittelberger details the exploitation of these poor immigrants by the Newlanders ship crew and captains as well as American colonists On religion and tolerance edit Mittelberger expounds upon the lack of religious belief and practice in mid 18th century Philadelphia He was astonished by the general absence of belief in God and a lack of knowledge of the Bible 9 Contrarily he is confronted by a city dominated by free thinkers and infidels 10 The cultural influence of the Enlightenment is thus attested by Mittelberger s firsthand experience of religious skepticism naturalism and the popularity of Deism 9 By 1750 the decline in Christianity is indicated by the existence of only eighteen churches in Philadelphia serving a city of over 30 000 inhabitants 9 As Mittelberger notes Besides there are many hundreds of adult persons who have not been and do not even wish to be baptized There are many who think nothing of the sacraments and the Holy Bible nor even of God and His word Many do not even believe that there is a true God and a devil a heaven and a hell salvation and damnation resurrection of the dead a judgment and eternal life they believe that all one can see is natural For in Pennsylvania every one may not only believe what he will but he may even say it freely and openly 10 According to historian Russell Weigley Mittelberger was surprised by the relative lack of religious bigotry in colonial America namely in contrast to the religious fervor and intolerance of the Old World 9 As Mittelberger wrote of the American colonists To speak the truth one seldom hears or sees a quarrel among them which is the result of the liberty which they enjoy and which makes them all equal 9 On the misfortune of indentured servants edit nbsp An indentured servant s contract 1738 from Bucks County Pennsylvania Mittelberger s primary focus concerns the tribulations of the European immigrants to the British Atlantic colonies In particular he wrote of the precarious transatlantic voyage as well as the sale and exploitation of immigrants into indentured servitude Mittelberger describes the health conditions at sea as harrowing But during the voyage there is on board these ships terrible misery stench fumes horror vomiting many kinds of sea sickness fever dysentery headache heat constipation boils scurvy cancer mouth rot and the like all of which come from old and sharply salted food and meat also from very bad and foul water so that many die miserably 11 Mittelberger continues That most of the people get sick is not surprising because in addition to all other trials and hardships warm food is served only three times a week the rations being very poor and very little Such meals can hardly be eaten on account of being so unclean The water which is served out on the ships is often very black thick and full of worms so that one cannot drink it without loathing even with the greatest thirst Toward the end we were compelled to eat the ship s biscuit which had been spoiled long ago though in a whole biscuit there was scarcely a piece the size of a dollar that had not been full of red worms and spiders nests 12 On the structure of passenger fare edit As economic historian Farley Grubb states there are scarce remaining sources in the world documenting 18th century transatlantic passenger fare 3 Consequently there is historic significance in Mittelberger documenting the uniform pay for passage to America as being structured by the age of the immigrant Children under five years of age are free 13 However the fee from Rotterdam for any person ten years of age or higher was ten British pounds or 60 Dutch florins guilders 13 Children between five and ten years were half priced at 30 florins or five pounds 13 On sexual and familial practices edit As cultural historian Clare Lyons observes there are three lengthy sexual stories documented by Mittelberger in his travelogue 6 Similar to the religious tolerance of the era colonial Philadelphia in the 1750s was relatively hospitable to various forms of sexual behavior and familial structure 6 As Lyons summarizes According to Gottlieb Mittelberger the town was a place of lax moral discipline courtship went unregulated women exercised too much power within marriage and nonmarital sexuality rampant 6 Mittelberger gives as an example the case of an old couple living close to the Blue Mountains in rural Pennsylvania 14 The old woman ill and weak requests of her husband to marry their young servant maid Rosina 15 The husband and Rosina both consent to the request and marry whereby Rosina becomes pregnant shortly thereafter 15 Meanwhile the first wife s health continues to improve over time 15 When the colonial authorities learn of the bigamous relationship they choose not to interfere 16 Whereas English law punishes bigamy by execution the authorities do not in this case act insofar as neither of the wives felt dissatisfied or injured by the bigamy 16 See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Germany portal nbsp History portal nbsp Pennsylvania portalColonial history of the United States James Hamilton Pennsylvania Indentured servitude in Pennsylvania Province of Pennsylvania RedemptionerReferences edit a b c d Mittelberger 1898 p 14 Henneton amp Roper 2016 p 13 a b c Grubb 1985 p 861 Caufield Ernest 1942 Early Measles Epidemics in America The Journal of Biology and Medicine 15 4 531 56 PMC 2601425 PMID 21434087 Frantz John 1976 The Awakening of Religion among the German Settlers in the Middle Colonies The William and Mary Quarterly Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture 33 2 271 doi 10 2307 1922165 JSTOR 1922165 a b c d Lyons 2012 p 72 a b Mittelberger 1898 p 13 Mittelberger 1898 p 16 a b c d e Weigley 1982 p 101 a b Mittelberger 1898 p 32 Mittelberger 1898 p 20 Mittelberger 1898 p 24 a b c Mittelberger 1898 p 26 Mittelberger 1898 p 93 a b c Mittelberger 1898 p 94 a b Mittelberger 1898 p 95 Bibliography and further reading editGrubb Farley 1985 The Market for Indentured Immigrants Evidence on the Efficiency of Forward Labor Contracting in Philadelphia 1745 1773 PDF The Journal of Economic History Cambridge University Press 45 4 855 868 doi 10 1017 s0022050700035130 S2CID 36848963 Retrieved 7 September 2016 Henneton Lauric Roper Louis eds 2016 Fear and the Shaping of Early American Societies Leiden BRILL ISBN 978 9004314740 Retrieved 14 September 2016 Lyons Clare 2012 Sex Among the Rabble An Intimate History of Gender and Power in the Age of Revolution Philadelphia 1730 1830 Chapel Hill NC UNC Press Books ISBN 9780807838969 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Mittelberger Gottlieb 1898 Journey to Pennsylvania in the Year 1750 and Return to Germany in the Year 1754 Philadelphia John Joseph McCevy Retrieved 7 September 2016 Weigley Russell 1982 Philadelphia A 300 Year History New York W W Norton amp Company p 101 ISBN 9780393016109 Retrieved 11 September 2016 gottlieb mittelberger Russell Weigley External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Gottlieb Mittelberger Gottlieb Mittelberger Biography German Journey to Pennsylvania 1898 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gottlieb Mittelberger amp oldid 1184801328, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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