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Illinois Staats-Zeitung

Illinois Staats-Zeitung (Illinois State Newspaper) was one of the most well-known German-language newspapers of the United States; it was published in Chicago from 1848 until 1922. Along with the Westliche Post and Anzeiger des Westens, both of St. Louis, it was one of the three most successful German-language newspapers in the United States Midwest,[2] and described as "the leading Republican paper of the Northwest", alongside the Chicago Tribune.[3] By 1876, the paper was printing 14,000 copies an hour and was second only to the Tribune in citywide circulation.[4][5]

Illinois Staats-Zeitung
The massive Illinois Staats-Zeitung building constructed after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871
TypeDaily German-language newspaper
Owner(s)A. C. Hesing
PublisherS.S. Spielman (until 1921)
Editor-in-chiefHermann Kriege (1848–1850)
George Schneider (1851–1861)
Lorenz Brentano (1861–1867)
Hermann Raster (1867–1891)
Wilhelm Rapp (1891–1907)
Arthur Lorenz (1907–1921)
Managing editorWashington Hesing (1880–1893)
Joseph Brucker (1894–1901)
FoundedApril 1848
Political alignmentRepublican Party (until 1873)
People's Party (1873–1875)
Independent (after 1876)
LanguageGerman
Ceased publication1921
HeadquartersChicago
Circulation50,000 (1915)[1]

Publication history

Establishment

 
George Schneider, editor from 1851 to 1861

The Illinois Staats-Zeitung was founded in April 1848[2] as a weekly, and became a daily in 1851.[6]

Politically, the newspaper was Republican.[7] Hermann Kriege was the first editor-in-chief.[2] In the 1850s, the paper was taken over by Forty-Eighters and became a major daily newspaper of the Chicago German-born community.[8] In 1851, Georg Schneider joined the staff of the paper and became editor. Among his associates were George Hillgärtner and Daniel Hertel.[2] Schneider played a major role in building the Republican Party in Illinois, a work in which the Illinois Staats-Zeitung played an important function.[9]

The Illinois Staats-Zeitung opposed slavery, and Schneider successfully used the newspaper as a platform to campaign against the Kansas–Nebraska Act.[10] On February 22, 1856 Schneider attended, on behalf of the Illinois Staats-Zeitung, a meeting in Decatur of anti-Nebraska newspapers in Illinois. In total, 26 newspapers were represented at the meeting, assembled by the Morgan Journal editor Paul Selby.[11]

Civil War period

 
Anton C. Hesing was the owner of the Staats-Zeitung from 1867 until his retirement in the 1880s.
 
Lorenz Brentano, editor of the Staats-Zeitung 1861 to 1867

During the Civil War years, Lorenz Brentano was proprietor and editor-in-chief,[12] succeeding Schneider.[2] In these years, the paper fully dominated German-language press in the city, as Democratic German-language newspapers were short-lived at the time.[13] At this point, Illinois Staats-Zeitung was the second-largest daily newspaper in the Chicago.[14]

During the war, Wilhelm Rapp was on the staff. He came from the Baltimore Wecker after a riot destroyed its office. After the war, he returned to the Wecker.

In the years after the war, the Staats-Zeitung was published by Prussian immigrant Anton C. Hesing, a former sheriff of Cook County, who moved from partial ownership to complete ownership in 1867.[15] A public figure and political boss of sorts, Hesing would use the pages of his paper for maximum political impact, helping to launch the pro-alcohol People's Party in 1873 and orchestrating the election of Harvey Doolittle Colvin as the 27th mayor of Chicago. Hesing's independent political venture would fall into disrepute within a few years and the Staats-Zeitung returned to the Republican ranks.

Concurrent with Hesing's assumption of the paper's ownership in 1867, Hermann Raster accepted the position of editor — a position he would retain until his death in 1891. Raster was the longest holder of this position, and the paper was at the peak of its financial success during his tenure.[16] Wilhelm Rapp returned to the Staats-Zeitung in 1872, and became editor when Raster died in 1891.[17]

Great Chicago Fire

 
Hermann Raster, editor from 1867 to 1891

The Staats-Zeitung was particularly hard hit during the October 1871 Great Chicago Fire. Not only was the building housing the publication, including its machinery and type, lost to the flames, but so, too, were back files of the paper and the publication's records of accounts.[18] Moreover, virtually the entire staff of the paper from editors to press operators found themselves burned out of their homes.[18]

Necessary lead type for producing a German-language paper proved impossible to obtain on short notice, and as a temporary measure, production was moved briefly to the German enclave of Milwaukee, Wisconsin.[18] After a mere 20 days, production returned to a new press in a new facility in Chicago, the city in which the paper would remain for the rest of its existence, with an expansion of physical size following one month later.[18]

A new permanent home for the paper was finally located about one mile away from the Chicago city center, in a new multistory structure built at the corner of Washington Street and Fifth Avenue.[18] The building measured 100 feet from the basement floor to the peak of the roof, making it one of the largest buildings in its area of town, and was designed with the monumental sensibilities of old Europe.[18]

Historically Republican, the newspaper endorsed Democratic candidate Samuel J. Tilden in the 1876 United States presidential election. However, it remained officially independent from that point forward, criticizing equally both major American parties.[19]

After Hesing, Brentano, and Raster died at the end of the 19th century, the paper began to decline. In 1899, the majority stockholders of the paper created a new board of directors and ousted long-time treasurer Charles Francis Pietsch. Henrietta Hesing and Margarethe Raster, the widows of Washington Hesing and Hermann Raster, controlled the property of the Staats-Zeitung, and Lorenz Brentano's son Theodore became new treasurer.[20]

World War I and termination

Until the United States became involved in World War I, the Illinois Staats-Zeitung supported the German war effort. Editor Arthur Lorenz was reportedly "unrestrained" in his support for the Germans, and the paper lost a great deal of advertising and funding as a result. By the late 1910s, it was in dire financial straits and garnered significant controversy when it ran an article describing members of the American Legion as vagabonds and bums[21] and that the legion had been "bought with British gold to betray American labor."[22] In 1921, the paper was sold for $25,000 and Colonel John Clinnin, assistant United States district attorney, recommended deportation proceedings for Lorenz.[23] The paper was resurrected as Deutsch-Amerikanische Bürger-Zeitung. A short time before, the Chicagoer Freie Presse had merged with the paper.[24]

Illinois Staats-Herold

Following the sale of the Staats-Zeitung, the paper was resurrected and merged with the Chicagoer Herold in the late 1920s to form the Illinois Staats-Herold. The Staats-Herold's circulation was around 40,000 by 1934, but the paper again ceased publication around 1936. It was the first German newspaper in Chicago to host a German broadcasting hour on the radio. The president of the Staats-Herold was Ernest L. Klein and the editor-in-chief was Julius Klein. Like its predecessor, the Staats-Herold was Republican-affiliated.[25]

Staff

In November 1871, publisher Anton Hesing's son, Washington Hesing (1849–1897), an 1870 graduate of Yale College, finished a stint as a political appointee on the Chicago Board of Education and became actively connected with the Staats-Zeitung.[26] The younger Hesing became managing editor of the Staats-Zeitung in April 1880, by which time he was a part owner of the publication.[26] Upon his appointment as postmaster of Chicago in 1893, Washington Hesing was replaced by notable Illinois Republican Joseph Brucker as managing editor of the paper.[27]

Other notable members of the staff of and contributors to the Staats-Zeitung were Adolf Wiesner (who served in an editorial position from 1866 to 1867), Caspar Butz, Emil Dietzsch, August Boecklin, Henry E.O. Heinemann, Paul Grzybowski and Henry Merker.[28] Between 1891 and 1899, the paper had a separate evening edition, Abendblatt (Evening Paper).[24]

See also

References

  1. ^ Printers’ ink, no. v. 93, Decker Communications, Incorporated, 1915.
  2. ^ a b c d e Carl Wittke, Refugees of Revolution: The German Forty-Eighters in America. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1952; pg. 273.
  3. ^ Littlewood, Thomas B. Soldiers Back Home: the American Legion in Illinois, 1919–1939. Southern Illinois University Press, 2004.
  4. ^ Fairmount Park, Philadelphia: Centennial Newspaper Exhibition, 1876. New York: George P. Rowell & Co., 1876; pg. 244.
  5. ^ Stevenson, Louise (2015). Lincoln in the Atlantic World. Cambridge University Press. p. 109. ISBN 1107109647.
  6. ^ "Tägliche Illinois Staats-Zeitung. (Chicago) 1851–1862," Chronicling America, Library of Congress, www.chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/
  7. ^ Elliott Shore, Ken Fones-Wolf, and James Philip Danky, The German-American Radical Press: The Shaping of a Left Political Culture, 1850–1940. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press, 1992; pg. 87.
  8. ^ Shore, Fones-Wolf, and Danky, The German-American Radical Press, pg. 50.
  9. ^ George H. Douglas, The Golden Age of the Newspaper. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1999; pg. 213.
  10. ^ The Centennial History of Illinois — Vol. Three — The Era of the Civil War
  11. ^ Snay, Mitchell. Abraham Lincoln, Owen Lovejoy, and the Emergence of the Republican Party in Illinois
  12. ^ Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Brentano, Lorenzo" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  13. ^ Shore, Fones-Wolf, and Danky, The German-American Radical Press, pg. 59.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-12-01. Retrieved 2009-02-08.
  15. ^ "His 70th Year: Birthday of Anton C. Hesing Celebrated at his Home," Chicago Daily Tribune, vol. 52, no. 7 (Jan. 7, 1893), pg. 4.
  16. ^ Inventory of the Hermann Raster Papers at The Newberry Library
  17. ^ Albert B. Faust (1963). "Rapp, Wilhelm". Dictionary of American Biography. Vol. VIII, Part 1. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 384–385.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Fairmount Park, Philadelphia: Centennial Newspaper Exhibition, 1876. New York: George P. Rowell & Co., 1876; pg. 244.
  19. ^ The Review of Reviews: An International Magazine, Volume XI. The Review of Reviews Co. 1895. p. 662.
  20. ^ Fourth Estate: A Weekly Newspaper for Publishers, Advertisers, Advertising Agents and Allied Interests, Issue 281, July 13, 1899.
  21. ^ "Image 19 of The evening world (New York, N.Y.), December 19, 1921, (Final Extra)". Library of Congress. Retrieved 2021-10-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  22. ^ "MOVES TO DEPORT EDITOR.; Federal Attorney Asks Expulsion of Illinois Staats-Zeitung Director". New York Times. 24 December 1921. p. 3.
  23. ^ "German Paper to Resume; Illinois Staats-Zeitung Sold by Receiver in Chicago". New York Times. October 26, 1921. Retrieved 10 February 2009.
  24. ^ a b Encyclopedia of Chicago — Selected Chicago Daily Newspapers, Foreign Language
  25. ^ Illinois Press Association. Illinois Newspaper Directory: History of the Illinois Press Association. [Springfield, Illinois: printed by Hartman-Jefferson printing company], 1934: p539.
  26. ^ a b A.T. Andreas, History of Chicago From the Earliest Period to the Present Time: Volume III: From the Fire of 1871 Until 1885. In Three Volumes. Chicago: A.T. Andreas Company, 1886; pg. 704.
  27. ^ "Joseph Brucker." History of Illinois Republicanism, Embracing a History of the Republican Party in the State to the Present Time ... with Biographies of Its Founders and Supporters ... Also a Chronological Statement of Important Political Events since 1774, by Green B. Raum, Rollins Pub. Co., 1900, pp. 710–714.
  28. ^ Carl Wittke (1952). Refugees of Revolution: The German Forty-Eighters in America. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 274.

Further reading

  • Rudolf Hofmeister, The Germans of Chicago. Champaign, Illinois: Stipes Publishing, 1976.
  • John B. Jentz and Richard Schneirov, Chicago in the Age of Capital: Class, Politics, and Democracy During the Civil War and Reconstruction. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press, 2012.
  • Richard Junger, Becoming the Second City: Chicago's Mass News Media, 1833–1898. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press, 2010.
  • Peter H. Olden, "Anton C. Hesing: The Rise of a Chicago Boss", Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, vol. 35, no. 3 (Sept. 1942), pp. 260–287. In JSTOR

External links

  • "Illinois Staats-Zeitung". Chicago Foreign Language Press Survey. Chicago Public Library Omnibus Project of the Works Progress Administration of Illinois. 1942 – via Newberry Library. (English translations of selected articles, 1855–1938).

illinois, staats, zeitung, illinois, state, newspaper, most, well, known, german, language, newspapers, united, states, published, chicago, from, 1848, until, 1922, along, with, westliche, post, anzeiger, westens, both, louis, three, most, successful, german, . Illinois Staats Zeitung Illinois State Newspaper was one of the most well known German language newspapers of the United States it was published in Chicago from 1848 until 1922 Along with the Westliche Post and Anzeiger des Westens both of St Louis it was one of the three most successful German language newspapers in the United States Midwest 2 and described as the leading Republican paper of the Northwest alongside the Chicago Tribune 3 By 1876 the paper was printing 14 000 copies an hour and was second only to the Tribune in citywide circulation 4 5 Illinois Staats ZeitungThe massive Illinois Staats Zeitung building constructed after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871TypeDaily German language newspaperOwner s A C HesingPublisherS S Spielman until 1921 Editor in chiefHermann Kriege 1848 1850 George Schneider 1851 1861 Lorenz Brentano 1861 1867 Hermann Raster 1867 1891 Wilhelm Rapp 1891 1907 Arthur Lorenz 1907 1921 Managing editorWashington Hesing 1880 1893 Joseph Brucker 1894 1901 FoundedApril 1848Political alignmentRepublican Party until 1873 People s Party 1873 1875 Independent after 1876 LanguageGermanCeased publication1921HeadquartersChicagoCirculation50 000 1915 1 Contents 1 Publication history 1 1 Establishment 1 2 Civil War period 1 3 Great Chicago Fire 1 4 World War I and termination 1 5 Illinois Staats Herold 2 Staff 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksPublication history EditEstablishment Edit George Schneider editor from 1851 to 1861 The Illinois Staats Zeitung was founded in April 1848 2 as a weekly and became a daily in 1851 6 Politically the newspaper was Republican 7 Hermann Kriege was the first editor in chief 2 In the 1850s the paper was taken over by Forty Eighters and became a major daily newspaper of the Chicago German born community 8 In 1851 Georg Schneider joined the staff of the paper and became editor Among his associates were George Hillgartner and Daniel Hertel 2 Schneider played a major role in building the Republican Party in Illinois a work in which the Illinois Staats Zeitung played an important function 9 The Illinois Staats Zeitung opposed slavery and Schneider successfully used the newspaper as a platform to campaign against the Kansas Nebraska Act 10 On February 22 1856 Schneider attended on behalf of the Illinois Staats Zeitung a meeting in Decatur of anti Nebraska newspapers in Illinois In total 26 newspapers were represented at the meeting assembled by the Morgan Journal editor Paul Selby 11 Civil War period Edit Anton C Hesing was the owner of the Staats Zeitung from 1867 until his retirement in the 1880s Lorenz Brentano editor of the Staats Zeitung 1861 to 1867 During the Civil War years Lorenz Brentano was proprietor and editor in chief 12 succeeding Schneider 2 In these years the paper fully dominated German language press in the city as Democratic German language newspapers were short lived at the time 13 At this point Illinois Staats Zeitung was the second largest daily newspaper in the Chicago 14 During the war Wilhelm Rapp was on the staff He came from the Baltimore Wecker after a riot destroyed its office After the war he returned to the Wecker In the years after the war the Staats Zeitung was published by Prussian immigrant Anton C Hesing a former sheriff of Cook County who moved from partial ownership to complete ownership in 1867 15 A public figure and political boss of sorts Hesing would use the pages of his paper for maximum political impact helping to launch the pro alcohol People s Party in 1873 and orchestrating the election of Harvey Doolittle Colvin as the 27th mayor of Chicago Hesing s independent political venture would fall into disrepute within a few years and the Staats Zeitung returned to the Republican ranks Concurrent with Hesing s assumption of the paper s ownership in 1867 Hermann Raster accepted the position of editor a position he would retain until his death in 1891 Raster was the longest holder of this position and the paper was at the peak of its financial success during his tenure 16 Wilhelm Rapp returned to the Staats Zeitung in 1872 and became editor when Raster died in 1891 17 Great Chicago Fire Edit Hermann Raster editor from 1867 to 1891 The Staats Zeitung was particularly hard hit during the October 1871 Great Chicago Fire Not only was the building housing the publication including its machinery and type lost to the flames but so too were back files of the paper and the publication s records of accounts 18 Moreover virtually the entire staff of the paper from editors to press operators found themselves burned out of their homes 18 Necessary lead type for producing a German language paper proved impossible to obtain on short notice and as a temporary measure production was moved briefly to the German enclave of Milwaukee Wisconsin 18 After a mere 20 days production returned to a new press in a new facility in Chicago the city in which the paper would remain for the rest of its existence with an expansion of physical size following one month later 18 A new permanent home for the paper was finally located about one mile away from the Chicago city center in a new multistory structure built at the corner of Washington Street and Fifth Avenue 18 The building measured 100 feet from the basement floor to the peak of the roof making it one of the largest buildings in its area of town and was designed with the monumental sensibilities of old Europe 18 Historically Republican the newspaper endorsed Democratic candidate Samuel J Tilden in the 1876 United States presidential election However it remained officially independent from that point forward criticizing equally both major American parties 19 After Hesing Brentano and Raster died at the end of the 19th century the paper began to decline In 1899 the majority stockholders of the paper created a new board of directors and ousted long time treasurer Charles Francis Pietsch Henrietta Hesing and Margarethe Raster the widows of Washington Hesing and Hermann Raster controlled the property of theStaats Zeitung and Lorenz Brentano s son Theodore became new treasurer 20 World War I and termination Edit Until the United States became involved in World War I the Illinois Staats Zeitung supported the German war effort Editor Arthur Lorenz was reportedly unrestrained in his support for the Germans and the paper lost a great deal of advertising and funding as a result By the late 1910s it was in dire financial straits and garnered significant controversy when it ran an article describing members of the American Legion as vagabonds and bums 21 and that the legion had been bought with British gold to betray American labor 22 In 1921 the paper was sold for 25 000 and Colonel John Clinnin assistant United States district attorney recommended deportation proceedings for Lorenz 23 The paper was resurrected as Deutsch Amerikanische Burger Zeitung A short time before the Chicagoer Freie Presse had merged with the paper 24 Illinois Staats Herold Edit Following the sale of theStaats Zeitung the paper was resurrected and merged with the Chicagoer Herold in the late 1920s to form the Illinois Staats Herold TheStaats Herold s circulation was around 40 000 by 1934 but the paper again ceased publication around 1936 It was the first German newspaper in Chicago to host a German broadcasting hour on the radio The president of the Staats Herold was Ernest L Klein and the editor in chief was Julius Klein Like its predecessor theStaats Heroldwas Republican affiliated 25 Staff Edit Anton C Hesing Owner George Schneider Chief editor from 1851 to 1861 Lorenzo Brentano Chief editor from 1861 to 1867 Hermann Raster Chief editor from 1867 to 1891 Wilhelm Rapp Chief editor from 1891 to 1907 Washington Hesing Managing editor from 1880 to 1893 Joseph Brucker Managing editor from 1894 to 1901 Charles Francis Pietsch Treasurer until 1899 Theodore Brentano Treasurer after 1899In November 1871 publisher Anton Hesing s son Washington Hesing 1849 1897 an 1870 graduate of Yale College finished a stint as a political appointee on the Chicago Board of Education and became actively connected with the Staats Zeitung 26 The younger Hesing became managing editor of the Staats Zeitung in April 1880 by which time he was a part owner of the publication 26 Upon his appointment as postmaster of Chicago in 1893 Washington Hesing was replaced by notable Illinois Republican Joseph Brucker as managing editor of the paper 27 Other notable members of the staff of and contributors to the Staats Zeitung were Adolf Wiesner who served in an editorial position from 1866 to 1867 Caspar Butz Emil Dietzsch August Boecklin Henry E O Heinemann Paul Grzybowski and Henry Merker 28 Between 1891 and 1899 the paper had a separate evening edition Abendblatt Evening Paper 24 See also EditGerman language newspapers in the United StatesReferences Edit Printers ink no v 93 Decker Communications Incorporated 1915 a b c d e Carl Wittke Refugees of Revolution The German Forty Eighters in America Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press 1952 pg 273 Littlewood Thomas B Soldiers Back Home the American Legion in Illinois 1919 1939 Southern Illinois University Press 2004 Fairmount Park Philadelphia Centennial Newspaper Exhibition 1876 New York George P Rowell amp Co 1876 pg 244 Stevenson Louise 2015 Lincoln in the Atlantic World Cambridge University Press p 109 ISBN 1107109647 Tagliche Illinois Staats Zeitung Chicago 1851 1862 Chronicling America Library of Congress www chroniclingamerica loc gov Elliott Shore Ken Fones Wolf and James Philip Danky The German American Radical Press The Shaping of a Left Political Culture 1850 1940 Urbana Illinois University of Illinois Press 1992 pg 87 Shore Fones Wolf and Danky The German American Radical Press pg 50 George H Douglas The Golden Age of the Newspaper Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press 1999 pg 213 The Centennial History of Illinois Vol Three The Era of the Civil War Snay Mitchell Abraham Lincoln Owen Lovejoy and the Emergence of the Republican Party in Illinois Wilson J G Fiske J eds 1900 Brentano Lorenzo Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York D Appleton Shore Fones Wolf and Danky The German American Radical Press pg 59 Schied Fred M Education and Working Class Culture German Workers Clubs in Nineteenth Century Chicago Archived from the original on 2008 12 01 Retrieved 2009 02 08 His 70th Year Birthday of Anton C Hesing Celebrated at his Home Chicago Daily Tribune vol 52 no 7 Jan 7 1893 pg 4 Inventory of the Hermann Raster Papers at The Newberry Library Albert B Faust 1963 Rapp Wilhelm Dictionary of American Biography Vol VIII Part 1 New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 384 385 a b c d e f Fairmount Park Philadelphia Centennial Newspaper Exhibition 1876 New York George P Rowell amp Co 1876 pg 244 The Review of Reviews An International Magazine Volume XI The Review of Reviews Co 1895 p 662 Fourth Estate A Weekly Newspaper for Publishers Advertisers Advertising Agents and Allied Interests Issue 281 July 13 1899 Image 19 of The evening world New York N Y December 19 1921 Final Extra Library of Congress Retrieved 2021 10 21 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link MOVES TO DEPORT EDITOR Federal Attorney Asks Expulsion of Illinois Staats Zeitung Director New York Times 24 December 1921 p 3 German Paper to Resume Illinois Staats Zeitung Sold by Receiver in Chicago New York Times October 26 1921 Retrieved 10 February 2009 a b Encyclopedia of Chicago Selected Chicago Daily Newspapers Foreign Language Illinois Press Association Illinois Newspaper Directory History of the Illinois Press Association Springfield Illinois printed by Hartman Jefferson printing company 1934 p539 a b A T Andreas History of Chicago From the Earliest Period to the Present Time Volume III From the Fire of 1871 Until 1885 In Three Volumes Chicago A T Andreas Company 1886 pg 704 Joseph Brucker History of Illinois Republicanism Embracing a History of the Republican Party in the State to the Present Time with Biographies of Its Founders and Supporters Also a Chronological Statement of Important Political Events since 1774 by Green B Raum Rollins Pub Co 1900 pp 710 714 Carl Wittke 1952 Refugees of Revolution The German Forty Eighters in America Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 274 Further reading EditRudolf Hofmeister The Germans of Chicago Champaign Illinois Stipes Publishing 1976 John B Jentz and Richard Schneirov Chicago in the Age of Capital Class Politics and Democracy During the Civil War and Reconstruction Urbana Illinois University of Illinois Press 2012 Richard Junger Becoming the Second City Chicago s Mass News Media 1833 1898 Urbana Illinois University of Illinois Press 2010 Peter H Olden Anton C Hesing The Rise of a Chicago Boss Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society vol 35 no 3 Sept 1942 pp 260 287 In JSTORExternal links Edit Illinois Staats Zeitung Chicago Foreign Language Press Survey Chicago Public Library Omnibus Project of the Works Progress Administration of Illinois 1942 via Newberry Library English translations of selected articles 1855 1938 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Illinois Staats Zeitung amp oldid 1091553033, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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