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Sängerfest

Sängerfest, also Sängerbund-Fest, Sängerfeste, or Saengerfest, meaning singer festival, is a competition of Sängerbunds, or singer groups, with prizes for the best group or groups. Such public events are also known as a Liederfest, or song festival. Participants number in the hundreds and thousands, and the fest is usually accompanied by a parade and other celebratory events. The sängerfest is most associated with the Germanic culture. Its origins can be traced back to 19th century Europe. Swiss composer Hans Georg Nägeli and educator Carl Friedrich Zelter, both protégés of Swiss educator Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi, established sängerbunds to help foster social change throughout Germany and Prussia. University students began to choose the art form as an avenue for political statements. As the sängerfest concept gained popularity and spread around the world, it was adapted by Christian churches for spiritual worship services. European immigrants brought the tradition in a non-political form to the North American continent. In the early part of the 20th century, sängerfest celebrations drew devotees in the tens of thousands, and included some United States presidents among their audiences. Sängerbunds are still active in Europe and in American communities with Germanic heritage.

Postcard of the 1928 Lausanne Sängerfest

History edit

Europe edit

 
Sängerfest 1928 in Vienna

Students of Swiss educator Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi, a proponent of social reform, applied his teachings when founding some singing groups as an instrument for cultural change.[1] One of his students was Carl Friedrich Zelter, who helped establish the sängerbund movement throughout Prussia in 1809.[2] Pestalozzi's protégé Hans Georg Nägeli was a composer, music teacher and songbook publisher[3] who made numerous journeys across Germany from 1819 to encourage the formation of male singing groups for social reform.[4] Nägeli established several sängerbunds in Switzerland, which became the inspiration for the 1824 establishment of the Stuttgarter Liederkranz.[5][6] Following the 1819 Carlsbad Decrees in Germany, male-only choral celebrations with hundreds or thousands of vocalists were popular with the masses and often part of political events.[7]

 
Liederkranz Quartettverein from Velbert Germany

Composer Friedrich Silcher was directly influenced by Pestalozzi and Nägeli.[8][9] He began using large choirs to express political viewpoints at least as early as 1824 when he and a group of Tübingen University students performed La Marseillaise to commemorate the storming of the Bastille.[10] In 1827 at Plochingen, Baden-Württemberg, several male-voiced choirs combined for a regional liederfest.[11][12] Sängerfests were part of the Hambach Festival of 1832.[13]

Christian church organizations known as Christlicher sängerbunds adapted the sängerfest for religious gatherings and helped spread its popularity throughout Europe, North America and Australia.[14] They became popular in late 19th century Russia among Mennonite congregations. On 30 May 1893, a sängerfest of seven choirs was held in Rückenau in Molotschna, Ukraine. On Sunday, 29 May 1894, the all-day Russische Saengervereinigung was held in Rückenau under the direction of Polish conductor Friedrich Schweige with assistance from Aron Gerhard Sawatsky, director of the Andreasfeld Mennonite Brethren Church.[15] Beginning on 3 May, Schweiger traveled across Russia rehearsing choirs. On 29 May there were breakfasts for attendees, an estimated 50 vocal presentations by individual choirs, prayer services and sermons, lunch for 2,000 people and afternoon snacks.[16][17]

North America edit

 
Houston Saengerbund of the First Lutheran Church in Midtown, Houston

Mennonites established the northwest Philadelphia section of Germantown in 1683.[18] The Philadelphia Männerchor founded by German immigrant Phillip Matthias Wohlseiffer in 1835 was the first German-American singing society organized in the United States where the sängerfest began to evolve as a form of civic entertainment.[19] In 1836, Wohlseiffer founded the Baltimore Liederkranz, which became the first to accept women members (1838).[20] In 1846, the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, group and the Baltimore, Maryland, group performed together at a public sängerfest.[20] The "Brooklyn Daily Eagle Almanac" of 1891 listed numerous sängerbunds in the Brooklyn, New York area.[21] On 21 June 1901, the Nord-Amerikanischer Sängerbund presented a sängerfest in Buffalo, New York, at the famous Pan-American Exposition (where 25th President William McKinley was shot by Leon Czolgosz in a reception line in September 1901). A group in Buffalo hoped to help pay the expenses of the fest by forming the Buffalo Sängerfest Company, selling 1,600 shares of stock at $25 each.[22]

In 1838, the Cincinnati Deutscher Gesangverein was formed in Ohio,[23] followed by the Cincinnati Deutsch Liedertafel in 1844.[24] The Gesang und Bildungsverein Deutscher Arbeiter formed in 1846 and was the first Cincinnati group that allowed women.[25] Groups from Ohio, Kentucky, Maryland and Indiana created the Nord-Amerikanischer Sängerbund in 1849 for a sängerfest hosted by Cincinnati, featuring the music of German composers.[24] By 1908, it was estimated that 250,000 German Americans belonged to musical organizations, and 50,000 of those belonged to the Nord-Amerikanischer Sängerbund.[26] The first post-Civil War sängerfest in Columbus, Ohio, took place 29 August – 1 September 1865 at Schreiner's Hall and the Opera House. Each arriving sängerbund was escorted to the hall by the Eighteenth regiment of the United States Infantry. There were an estimated 400 singers entertaining 12,000 to 15,000 attendees. The closing day was celebrated with pomp and circumstance.[27]

The first sängerfest in Texas was held in 1853 in New Braunfels, and was held annually until 1860 when conflicting loyalties about, and participation in, the American Civil War caused a 10-year gap in the events. The San Antonio Männergesang-Verein was formed in 1847,[28] the New Braunfels Gesangverein Germania formed in 1850,[29] and the Austin Männerchor formed in 1852.[29] On 4 July 1853 in San Antonio, the San Antonio Männergesang-Verein sponsored an Independence Day celebration attended by the New Braunfels Gesangverein and the Austin Männerchor. The New Braunfels Gesangverein invited everyone to meet in New Braunfels on 16–17 October 1853 for its first Texas Sängerfest.[30] In 1854, the aggregate sängerbunds formed the Texas State Sängerbund.[31][32] The San Antonio Beethoven Männerchor was organized in 1867 by Wilhelm Thielepape, assistant conductor of the San Antonio Männergesang-Verein. After the surrender of the Confederacy in 1865, Thielepape raised the Union flag of the "Stars and Stripes" over the historic Texan battle site and former church mission, the Alamo in San Antonio and distributed wine and songbooks.[33][34] The all-male Houston Sängerbund was founded on 6 October 1883 and chartered in 1890. It affiliated itself with Der Deutsch-Texanische Sängerbund. In 1887, founding member Carl C. Zeus served as principal of the organization's German-English school.[31][35][36][37]

22nd and 24th President Grover Cleveland, his wife, and guests took a special train from Washington, D.C. on "Independence Day", 4 July 1888, forty miles northeast to see a Baltimore event. Cleveland had friends who were members of the sängerbunds.[38] 27th President William Howard Taft attended the 1 July 1912 event in Philadelphia.[39] On 15 June 1903, 26th President Theodore Roosevelt and Ambassador Herman Speck von Sternberg[40] attended a sängerfest of 6,000 individual singers at Baltimore's Armory Hall. All 9,000 seats were sold out. President Roosevelt delivered an address praising the German culture and the sängerfest tradition.[41][42] The Northeastern Sängerbund presented selections by composers Herman Spielter, David Melamet, Carl Friedrich Zöllner, E.S. Engelsberg, Felix Mendelssohn and Richard Wagner.[43]

When Newark, New Jersey, hosted the 21st National Sängerfest, held on 1–4 July 1906 in Olympic Park, 25,000 people showed up to hear the music, many arriving on chartered trains. Only a few thousand were able to get into the hall, and 2,000 were standing. Five thousand singers from more than a hundred sängerbunds representing forty cities from New Jersey, New York, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Delaware competed for a $20,000 prize offered by Kaiser Wilhelm II.[44] Park vendors offered souvenirs, refreshments, games, and a carousel.[45]

Germans began emigrating to Canada through Nova Scotia, where they helped found the town of Lunenburg in 1753.[46] The sängerfests were first performed in Kitchener, Ontario, in 1862.[47] The community events included the standard concerts and meals, with drama presentations and athletic entertainment sponsored by the local Turnvereine clubs. For the next 40 years, sängerbunds and sängerfests spread throughout Ontario.[48] Pennsylvania Mennonites began settling in Ontario in the late 19th century. Alberta and Saskatchewan host annual Mennonite sängerfestes.[49]

In 1916 at his sentencing for bigamy, Count Max Lymer Louden related another misdeed from his past. Louden claimed he had been hired by a group of wealthy German Americans with a secret fund of $16,000,000 to take 150,000 German reservists, disguised as sängerbunds, across the Canada–United States border for a coup d'état of Canada, on behalf of Kaiser Wilhelm II. If they drew suspicion, they were prepared to "sing at a moment's notice." It was his loyalty to America, he claimed, which caused him to desert the Kaiser's singing invasion force.[50][51]

Current events edit

Although some local festivals were canceled or suspended during the two world wars owing to rising anti-German sentiment, the triennial Sängerfest tradition has largely survived and many communities in areas with a significant German-American population have Sängerfests today.

Two major German-American singing associations are the Nordöstlicher (North Eastern) Sängerbund and the much larger Nord-Amerikanischer (North American) Sängerbund.

  • Nordöstlicher Sängerbund: The 49th Sängerfest was in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, in 2006. The 50th Sängerfest, hosted by the Washington Sängerbund, took place on the 2009 Memorial Day Weekend in Washington, D.C.[52] The 51st Sängerfest, hosted by the Lehigh Sängerbund, took place in June 2012 in Allentown, Pennsylvania. The Bloomfield Liedertafel hosted the 52nd Sängerfest in 2015 in Pittsburgh, PA.
  • Nord-Amerikanischer Sängerbund: The 61st Sängerfest of the Nord-Amerikanischer Sängerbund was June 2013 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin with over 1300 singers. The 62nd Sängerfest took place May 27–29, 2016 in Pittsburgh, PA.

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Mark 2008, pp. 31–32.
  2. ^ Applegate 2005, p. 155.
  3. ^ Smither 2000, p. 30.
  4. ^ Lorenzkowski 2010, pp. 105–106.
  5. ^ Harrison, Welch & Adler 2012, p. 245.
  6. ^ Garatt 2010, p. 98, An Equal Music? Singing Festivals as Mass and Counter-culture.
  7. ^ Freitag & Wende 2001, p. 270.
  8. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 104.
  9. ^ Stokes & Bostridge 2011, ebook.
  10. ^ Garatt 2010, p. 118, An Equal Music? Singing Festivals as Mass and Counter-culture.
  11. ^ Eichener 2012, p. 277.
  12. ^ Garatt 2010, pp. 118–119, An Equal Music? Singing Festivals as Mass and Counter-culture.
  13. ^ . The New York Times. 26 June 1855. Archived from the original on 19 October 2013. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  14. ^ Huebert 1999, p. 68.
  15. ^ Huebert 1999, pp. 68, 73.
  16. ^ Huebert 1999, pp. 68–70.
  17. ^ Toews 1995, p. 230.
  18. ^ Adam 2005, pp. 443–445.
  19. ^ Faust 1909, pp. 271–276, VI, Social and Cultural Influences of the German Element, I. Music and the Fine Arts.
  20. ^ a b "History of Nord-Amerikanischer Sängerbund". Nord-Amerikanischer Sängerbund. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  21. ^ "Musician Societies of Brooklyn". Brooklyn Daily Eagle Almanac. 1891. pp. 95–97.
  22. ^ "The Pan American Exposition at Buffalo N.Y.". The Cambrian, Volume 21. Thomas J. Griffiths. 1901. p. 14.
  23. ^ Goss 1912, p. 465.
  24. ^ a b Osborne 2004, p. 344, The German Singing Societies.
  25. ^ Greve 1904, p. 922.
  26. ^ McIntosh & Hobart 1908, Heinrich Gebhard.
  27. ^ Studer 2010, pp. 86–91, The Saengerbund Festival.
  28. ^ Heide, Jean M. "Beethoven Männerchor". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  29. ^ a b Albrecht, Theodore. "German Music". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  30. ^ Warner, Harry T (1913). "The Twenty-Ninth Biennial State Saengerfest". Texas Magazine. 7: 549–550. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  31. ^ a b Wolz & Specht 2005, pp. 119–137, Roots of Classical Music in Texas-The German Contribution.
  32. ^ Albrecht, Theodore. . Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Archived from the original on 19 October 2013. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  33. ^ Kelley & Snell 2004, p. 17.
  34. ^ "History of the Founding of the Beethoven Maennerchor". Beethoven Maennerchor. Retrieved 10 December 2010.
  35. ^ "Houston Sängerbund". Houston Sängerbund. Retrieved 11 December 2010.
  36. ^ Grob, Julie. "Houston Saengerbund Records, 1874–1985". University of Houston Libraries. Retrieved 11 December 2010.
  37. ^ Kirkland 2009, p. 161.
  38. ^ "The National Sängerfest" (PDF). The New York Times. 4 July 1888. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  39. ^ . New York Times. Archived from the original on 19 October 2013. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  40. ^ Watts 2003, p. 233.
  41. ^ Straus 1913, p. 312.
  42. ^ "Saengerfest address 15 June 1903". Almanac of Theodore Roosevelt. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  43. ^ "President a Guest at Monster Saengerfest" (PDF). The New York Times. 16 June 1903. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  44. ^ Siegel 1995, pp. 22–24.
  45. ^ "Saengerfest Concert Draws a Crowd of 25,000" (PDF). The New York Times. 2 July 1906. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  46. ^ "Lunenburg". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica-Dominion. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  47. ^ "The German Saengerfest in Canada" (PDF). The New York Times. 19 August 1875. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  48. ^ Kallmann & Kemp 2006.
  49. ^ "Mennonites". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica-Dominion. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  50. ^ "Louden Tells Plot to Invade Canada" (PDF). The New York Times. 28 April 1916. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  51. ^ Crump 2010, pp. 145–146, The Phantom Invasion.
  52. ^ "The Lyre, the Symbol for Singing". Nordöstlicher Sängerbund of America. Archived from the original on 30 October 2013. Retrieved 29 October 2013.

References edit

  • Adam, Thomas (2005). Germany and the Americas: Culture, Politics, and History (Transatlantic Relations). Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-85109-628-2.
  • Applegate, Celia (2005). Bach in Berlin: Nation and Culture in Mendelssohns Revival of the St. Matthew Passion. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-4389-3.
  • Crump, Jennifer (2010). Canada Under Attack. Toronto, Canada: Dundurn Group. ISBN 9781554887316.
  • Eichener, Barbara (2012). History in Mighty Sounds: Musical Constructions of German National Identity, 1848–1914 (Music in Society and Culture). Woodbridge, UK: Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-84383-754-1.
  • Faust, Albert Bernhardt (1909). The German Element in the United States With Special Reference to Its Political, Moral, Social, and Educational Influence, Vol II. New York, NY: Houghton Mifflin Company. OCLC 832230796.
  • Freitag, Sabine; Wende, Peter (2001). British Envoys to Germany 1816–1866: Volume 1, 1816–1829. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-79066-6.
  • Garatt, James (2010). Music, Culture and Social Reform in the Age of Wagner. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-11054-9.
  • Goss, Charles Frederic (1912). Cincinnati, the Queen City, 1788–1912. Cincinnati, OH: S.J. Clarke Publishing Company. OCLC 1068766.
  • Greve, Charles Theodore (1904). Centennial History of Cincinnati and Representative Citizens. Chicago, IL: Biographical Pub. Co. OCLC 3355988.
  • Harrison, Scott D.; Welch, Graham F.; Adler, Adam (2012). Perspectives on Males and Singing (Landscapes: the Arts, Aesthetics, and Education). New York, NY: Springer. ISBN 978-94-007-2659-8.
  • Huebert, Helmut (1999). Events and People: Events in Russian Mennonite History and the People That Made Them Happen. Winnipeg, Canada: Springfield Publishers. ISBN 978-0-920643-06-8.
  • Kallmann, Helmut; Kemp, Walter P. (7 February 2006). "Sängerfeste". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
  • Kelley, Bruce; Snell, Mark A (2004). Bugle Resounding: Music and Musicians of the Civil War Era. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri. ISBN 978-0-8262-1538-3.
  • Kirkland, Kate Saven (2009). The Hogg Family and Houston: Philanthropy and the Civic Ideal. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-71865-4.
  • Lorenzkowski, Barbara (2010). Sounds of Ethnicity: Listening to German North America, 1850–1914. Winnipeg, Canada: University of Manitoba Press. ISBN 978-0-88755-301-1.
  • Mark, Michael (2008). A Concise History of American Music Education. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Education. ISBN 9781578868506.
  • McIntosh, Burr William; Hobart, Clark (1908), The Burr McIntosh monthly, Volume 17, New York, NY: The Burr Publishing Company
  • Osborne, William (2004). Music in Ohio. Kent, OH: Kent State Univ Press. ISBN 978-0-87338-775-0.
  • Palmer, William (2004). Blood and Village: Two Lives, 1897–1991. Philadelphia, PA: Xlibris Corp. ISBN 978-1-4134-5352-2.[self-published source?]
  • Siegel, Alan A (1995). Smile: A Picture History of Olympic Park, 1887–1965. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-2255-5.
  • Stokes, Richard; Bostridge, Ian (2011). The Book of Lieder. London, UK: Faber and Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-26091-1.
  • Smither, Howard E (2000). A History of the Oratorio: Vol. 4: The Oratorio in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-2511-2.
  • Straus, Oscar Solomon (1913). The American Spirit. New York, NY: The Century Company. OCLC 675513.
  • Studer, Jacob Henry (2010). Columbus, Ohio, Its History, Resources, and Progress. Columbus, OH: BiblioBazaar. ISBN 978-1-140-32066-1.
  • Toews, Paul (1995). Bridging Troubled Waters: Mennonite Brethren at Mid-Twentieth Century. Winnipeg, Canada: Kindred Productions. ISBN 978-0-921788-23-2.
  • Watts, Susan (2003). Rough Rider in the White House: Theodore Roosevelt and the Politics of Desire. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-87607-8.
  • Wolz, Larry; Specht, Joe W. (2005). The Roots of Texas Music. College Station, TX: TAMU Press. ISBN 978-1-58544-492-2.

Further reading edit

  • Greene, Victor R (2004). A Singing Ambivalence: American Immigrants Between Old World and New, 1830–1930. Kent State University Press. ISBN 978-0-87338-794-1.

External links edit

  • Nord-Amerikanischer Sängerbund
  • Freundschaft Liederkranz of California
  • Delaware Saengerbund and Library Association
  • New York State Saengerbund Inc.
  • Washington Sängerbund

sängerfest, also, sängerbund, fest, saengerfest, meaning, singer, festival, competition, sängerbunds, singer, groups, with, prizes, best, group, groups, such, public, events, also, known, liederfest, song, festival, participants, number, hundreds, thousands, f. Sangerfest also Sangerbund Fest Sangerfeste or Saengerfest meaning singer festival is a competition of Sangerbunds or singer groups with prizes for the best group or groups Such public events are also known as a Liederfest or song festival Participants number in the hundreds and thousands and the fest is usually accompanied by a parade and other celebratory events The sangerfest is most associated with the Germanic culture Its origins can be traced back to 19th century Europe Swiss composer Hans Georg Nageli and educator Carl Friedrich Zelter both proteges of Swiss educator Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi established sangerbunds to help foster social change throughout Germany and Prussia University students began to choose the art form as an avenue for political statements As the sangerfest concept gained popularity and spread around the world it was adapted by Christian churches for spiritual worship services European immigrants brought the tradition in a non political form to the North American continent In the early part of the 20th century sangerfest celebrations drew devotees in the tens of thousands and included some United States presidents among their audiences Sangerbunds are still active in Europe and in American communities with Germanic heritage Postcard of the 1928 Lausanne Sangerfest Contents 1 History 1 1 Europe 1 2 North America 2 Current events 3 Gallery 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editEurope edit nbsp Sangerfest 1928 in ViennaStudents of Swiss educator Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi a proponent of social reform applied his teachings when founding some singing groups as an instrument for cultural change 1 One of his students was Carl Friedrich Zelter who helped establish the sangerbund movement throughout Prussia in 1809 2 Pestalozzi s protege Hans Georg Nageli was a composer music teacher and songbook publisher 3 who made numerous journeys across Germany from 1819 to encourage the formation of male singing groups for social reform 4 Nageli established several sangerbunds in Switzerland which became the inspiration for the 1824 establishment of the Stuttgarter Liederkranz 5 6 Following the 1819 Carlsbad Decrees in Germany male only choral celebrations with hundreds or thousands of vocalists were popular with the masses and often part of political events 7 nbsp Liederkranz Quartettverein from Velbert GermanyComposer Friedrich Silcher was directly influenced by Pestalozzi and Nageli 8 9 He began using large choirs to express political viewpoints at least as early as 1824 when he and a group of Tubingen University students performed La Marseillaise to commemorate the storming of the Bastille 10 In 1827 at Plochingen Baden Wurttemberg several male voiced choirs combined for a regional liederfest 11 12 Sangerfests were part of the Hambach Festival of 1832 13 Christian church organizations known as Christlicher sangerbunds adapted the sangerfest for religious gatherings and helped spread its popularity throughout Europe North America and Australia 14 They became popular in late 19th century Russia among Mennonite congregations On 30 May 1893 a sangerfest of seven choirs was held in Ruckenau in Molotschna Ukraine On Sunday 29 May 1894 the all day Russische Saengervereinigung was held in Ruckenau under the direction of Polish conductor Friedrich Schweige with assistance from Aron Gerhard Sawatsky director of the Andreasfeld Mennonite Brethren Church 15 Beginning on 3 May Schweiger traveled across Russia rehearsing choirs On 29 May there were breakfasts for attendees an estimated 50 vocal presentations by individual choirs prayer services and sermons lunch for 2 000 people and afternoon snacks 16 17 North America edit nbsp Houston Saengerbund of the First Lutheran Church in Midtown HoustonMennonites established the northwest Philadelphia section of Germantown in 1683 18 The Philadelphia Mannerchor founded by German immigrant Phillip Matthias Wohlseiffer in 1835 was the first German American singing society organized in the United States where the sangerfest began to evolve as a form of civic entertainment 19 In 1836 Wohlseiffer founded the Baltimore Liederkranz which became the first to accept women members 1838 20 In 1846 the Philadelphia Pennsylvania group and the Baltimore Maryland group performed together at a public sangerfest 20 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Almanac of 1891 listed numerous sangerbunds in the Brooklyn New York area 21 On 21 June 1901 the Nord Amerikanischer Sangerbund presented a sangerfest in Buffalo New York at the famous Pan American Exposition where 25th President William McKinley was shot by Leon Czolgosz in a reception line in September 1901 A group in Buffalo hoped to help pay the expenses of the fest by forming the Buffalo Sangerfest Company selling 1 600 shares of stock at 25 each 22 In 1838 the Cincinnati Deutscher Gesangverein was formed in Ohio 23 followed by the Cincinnati Deutsch Liedertafel in 1844 24 The Gesang und Bildungsverein Deutscher Arbeiter formed in 1846 and was the first Cincinnati group that allowed women 25 Groups from Ohio Kentucky Maryland and Indiana created the Nord Amerikanischer Sangerbund in 1849 for a sangerfest hosted by Cincinnati featuring the music of German composers 24 By 1908 it was estimated that 250 000 German Americans belonged to musical organizations and 50 000 of those belonged to the Nord Amerikanischer Sangerbund 26 The first post Civil War sangerfest in Columbus Ohio took place 29 August 1 September 1865 at Schreiner s Hall and the Opera House Each arriving sangerbund was escorted to the hall by the Eighteenth regiment of the United States Infantry There were an estimated 400 singers entertaining 12 000 to 15 000 attendees The closing day was celebrated with pomp and circumstance 27 The first sangerfest in Texas was held in 1853 in New Braunfels and was held annually until 1860 when conflicting loyalties about and participation in the American Civil War caused a 10 year gap in the events The San Antonio Mannergesang Verein was formed in 1847 28 the New Braunfels Gesangverein Germania formed in 1850 29 and the Austin Mannerchor formed in 1852 29 On 4 July 1853 in San Antonio the San Antonio Mannergesang Verein sponsored an Independence Day celebration attended by the New Braunfels Gesangverein and the Austin Mannerchor The New Braunfels Gesangverein invited everyone to meet in New Braunfels on 16 17 October 1853 for its first Texas Sangerfest 30 In 1854 the aggregate sangerbunds formed the Texas State Sangerbund 31 32 The San Antonio Beethoven Mannerchor was organized in 1867 by Wilhelm Thielepape assistant conductor of the San Antonio Mannergesang Verein After the surrender of the Confederacy in 1865 Thielepape raised the Union flag of the Stars and Stripes over the historic Texan battle site and former church mission the Alamo in San Antonio and distributed wine and songbooks 33 34 The all male Houston Sangerbund was founded on 6 October 1883 and chartered in 1890 It affiliated itself with Der Deutsch Texanische Sangerbund In 1887 founding member Carl C Zeus served as principal of the organization s German English school 31 35 36 37 22nd and 24th President Grover Cleveland his wife and guests took a special train from Washington D C on Independence Day 4 July 1888 forty miles northeast to see a Baltimore event Cleveland had friends who were members of the sangerbunds 38 27th President William Howard Taft attended the 1 July 1912 event in Philadelphia 39 On 15 June 1903 26th President Theodore Roosevelt and Ambassador Herman Speck von Sternberg 40 attended a sangerfest of 6 000 individual singers at Baltimore s Armory Hall All 9 000 seats were sold out President Roosevelt delivered an address praising the German culture and the sangerfest tradition 41 42 The Northeastern Sangerbund presented selections by composers Herman Spielter David Melamet Carl Friedrich Zollner E S Engelsberg Felix Mendelssohn and Richard Wagner 43 When Newark New Jersey hosted the 21st National Sangerfest held on 1 4 July 1906 in Olympic Park 25 000 people showed up to hear the music many arriving on chartered trains Only a few thousand were able to get into the hall and 2 000 were standing Five thousand singers from more than a hundred sangerbunds representing forty cities from New Jersey New York Maryland Pennsylvania and Delaware competed for a 20 000 prize offered by Kaiser Wilhelm II 44 Park vendors offered souvenirs refreshments games and a carousel 45 Germans began emigrating to Canada through Nova Scotia where they helped found the town of Lunenburg in 1753 46 The sangerfests were first performed in Kitchener Ontario in 1862 47 The community events included the standard concerts and meals with drama presentations and athletic entertainment sponsored by the local Turnvereine clubs For the next 40 years sangerbunds and sangerfests spread throughout Ontario 48 Pennsylvania Mennonites began settling in Ontario in the late 19th century Alberta and Saskatchewan host annual Mennonite sangerfestes 49 In 1916 at his sentencing for bigamy Count Max Lymer Louden related another misdeed from his past Louden claimed he had been hired by a group of wealthy German Americans with a secret fund of 16 000 000 to take 150 000 German reservists disguised as sangerbunds across the Canada United States border for a coup d etat of Canada on behalf of Kaiser Wilhelm II If they drew suspicion they were prepared to sing at a moment s notice It was his loyalty to America he claimed which caused him to desert the Kaiser s singing invasion force 50 51 Current events editAlthough some local festivals were canceled or suspended during the two world wars owing to rising anti German sentiment the triennial Sangerfest tradition has largely survived and many communities in areas with a significant German American population have Sangerfests today Two major German American singing associations are the Nordostlicher North Eastern Sangerbund and the much larger Nord Amerikanischer North American Sangerbund Nordostlicher Sangerbund The 49th Sangerfest was in Lancaster Pennsylvania in 2006 The 50th Sangerfest hosted by the Washington Sangerbund took place on the 2009 Memorial Day Weekend in Washington D C 52 The 51st Sangerfest hosted by the Lehigh Sangerbund took place in June 2012 in Allentown Pennsylvania The Bloomfield Liedertafel hosted the 52nd Sangerfest in 2015 in Pittsburgh PA Nord Amerikanischer Sangerbund The 61st Sangerfest of the Nord Amerikanischer Sangerbund was June 2013 in Milwaukee Wisconsin with over 1300 singers The 62nd Sangerfest took place May 27 29 2016 in Pittsburgh PA Gallery edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Medaille Deutsches Sangerbundesfest in Wien 1890 von A Scharff nbsp Medaille Deutsches Sangerbundesfest in Wien 1890 von J SchwerdtnerSee also edit nbsp Music portalSaengerfest Halle Saengerfest ParkNotes edit Mark 2008 pp 31 32 Applegate 2005 p 155 Smither 2000 p 30 Lorenzkowski 2010 pp 105 106 Harrison Welch amp Adler 2012 p 245 Garatt 2010 p 98 An Equal Music Singing Festivals as Mass and Counter culture Freitag amp Wende 2001 p 270 Palmer 2004 p 104 Stokes amp Bostridge 2011 ebook Garatt 2010 p 118 An Equal Music Singing Festivals as Mass and Counter culture Eichener 2012 p 277 Garatt 2010 pp 118 119 An Equal Music Singing Festivals as Mass and Counter culture The German Unions The New York Times 26 June 1855 Archived from the original on 19 October 2013 Retrieved 12 October 2013 Huebert 1999 p 68 Huebert 1999 pp 68 73 Huebert 1999 pp 68 70 Toews 1995 p 230 Adam 2005 pp 443 445 Faust 1909 pp 271 276 VI Social and Cultural Influences of the German Element I Music and the Fine Arts a b History of Nord Amerikanischer Sangerbund Nord Amerikanischer Sangerbund Retrieved 8 December 2010 Musician Societies of Brooklyn Brooklyn Daily Eagle Almanac 1891 pp 95 97 The Pan American Exposition at Buffalo N Y The Cambrian Volume 21 Thomas J Griffiths 1901 p 14 Goss 1912 p 465 a b Osborne 2004 p 344 The German Singing Societies Greve 1904 p 922 McIntosh amp Hobart 1908 Heinrich Gebhard Studer 2010 pp 86 91 The Saengerbund Festival Heide Jean M Beethoven Mannerchor Handbook of Texas Online Texas State Historical Association Retrieved 9 December 2010 a b Albrecht Theodore German Music Handbook of Texas Online Texas State Historical Association Retrieved 9 December 2010 Warner Harry T 1913 The Twenty Ninth Biennial State Saengerfest Texas Magazine 7 549 550 Retrieved 12 October 2013 a b Wolz amp Specht 2005 pp 119 137 Roots of Classical Music in Texas The German Contribution Albrecht Theodore Texas State Sangerbund Handbook of Texas Online Texas State Historical Association Archived from the original on 19 October 2013 Retrieved 9 December 2010 Kelley amp Snell 2004 p 17 History of the Founding of the Beethoven Maennerchor Beethoven Maennerchor Retrieved 10 December 2010 Houston Sangerbund Houston Sangerbund Retrieved 11 December 2010 Grob Julie Houston Saengerbund Records 1874 1985 University of Houston Libraries Retrieved 11 December 2010 Kirkland 2009 p 161 The National Sangerfest PDF The New York Times 4 July 1888 Retrieved 12 October 2013 Taft to Attend Saengerfest on July 1 New York Times Archived from the original on 19 October 2013 Retrieved 12 October 2013 Watts 2003 p 233 Straus 1913 p 312 Saengerfest address 15 June 1903 Almanac of Theodore Roosevelt Retrieved 9 December 2010 President a Guest at Monster Saengerfest PDF The New York Times 16 June 1903 Retrieved 12 October 2013 Siegel 1995 pp 22 24 Saengerfest Concert Draws a Crowd of 25 000 PDF The New York Times 2 July 1906 Retrieved 12 October 2013 Lunenburg The Canadian Encyclopedia Historica Dominion Retrieved 28 October 2013 The German Saengerfest in Canada PDF The New York Times 19 August 1875 Retrieved 12 October 2013 Kallmann amp Kemp 2006 Mennonites The Canadian Encyclopedia Historica Dominion Retrieved 28 October 2013 Louden Tells Plot to Invade Canada PDF The New York Times 28 April 1916 Retrieved 12 October 2013 Crump 2010 pp 145 146 The Phantom Invasion The Lyre the Symbol for Singing Nordostlicher Sangerbund of America Archived from the original on 30 October 2013 Retrieved 29 October 2013 References editAdam Thomas 2005 Germany and the Americas Culture Politics and History Transatlantic Relations Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 628 2 Applegate Celia 2005 Bach in Berlin Nation and Culture in Mendelssohns Revival of the St Matthew Passion Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 4389 3 Crump Jennifer 2010 Canada Under Attack Toronto Canada Dundurn Group ISBN 9781554887316 Eichener Barbara 2012 History in Mighty Sounds Musical Constructions of German National Identity 1848 1914 Music in Society and Culture Woodbridge UK Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 754 1 Faust Albert Bernhardt 1909 The German Element in the United States With Special Reference to Its Political Moral Social and Educational Influence Vol II New York NY Houghton Mifflin Company OCLC 832230796 Freitag Sabine Wende Peter 2001 British Envoys to Germany 1816 1866 Volume 1 1816 1829 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79066 6 Garatt James 2010 Music Culture and Social Reform in the Age of Wagner Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 11054 9 Goss Charles Frederic 1912 Cincinnati the Queen City 1788 1912 Cincinnati OH S J Clarke Publishing Company OCLC 1068766 Greve Charles Theodore 1904 Centennial History of Cincinnati and Representative Citizens Chicago IL Biographical Pub Co OCLC 3355988 Harrison Scott D Welch Graham F Adler Adam 2012 Perspectives on Males and Singing Landscapes the Arts Aesthetics and Education New York NY Springer ISBN 978 94 007 2659 8 Huebert Helmut 1999 Events and People Events in Russian Mennonite History and the People That Made Them Happen Winnipeg Canada Springfield Publishers ISBN 978 0 920643 06 8 Kallmann Helmut Kemp Walter P 7 February 2006 Sangerfeste The Canadian Encyclopedia Historica Canada Retrieved 21 April 2021 Kelley Bruce Snell Mark A 2004 Bugle Resounding Music and Musicians of the Civil War Era Columbia MO University of Missouri ISBN 978 0 8262 1538 3 Kirkland Kate Saven 2009 The Hogg Family and Houston Philanthropy and the Civic Ideal Austin TX University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 71865 4 Lorenzkowski Barbara 2010 Sounds of Ethnicity Listening to German North America 1850 1914 Winnipeg Canada University of Manitoba Press ISBN 978 0 88755 301 1 Mark Michael 2008 A Concise History of American Music Education Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield Education ISBN 9781578868506 McIntosh Burr William Hobart Clark 1908 The Burr McIntosh monthly Volume 17 New York NY The Burr Publishing Company Osborne William 2004 Music in Ohio Kent OH Kent State Univ Press ISBN 978 0 87338 775 0 Palmer William 2004 Blood and Village Two Lives 1897 1991 Philadelphia PA Xlibris Corp ISBN 978 1 4134 5352 2 self published source Siegel Alan A 1995 Smile A Picture History of Olympic Park 1887 1965 New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 2255 5 Stokes Richard Bostridge Ian 2011 The Book of Lieder London UK Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0 571 26091 1 Smither Howard E 2000 A History of the Oratorio Vol 4 The Oratorio in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Chapel Hill NC The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 2511 2 Straus Oscar Solomon 1913 The American Spirit New York NY The Century Company OCLC 675513 Studer Jacob Henry 2010 Columbus Ohio Its History Resources and Progress Columbus OH BiblioBazaar ISBN 978 1 140 32066 1 Toews Paul 1995 Bridging Troubled Waters Mennonite Brethren at Mid Twentieth Century Winnipeg Canada Kindred Productions ISBN 978 0 921788 23 2 Watts Susan 2003 Rough Rider in the White House Theodore Roosevelt and the Politics of Desire Chicago IL University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 87607 8 Wolz Larry Specht Joe W 2005 The Roots of Texas Music College Station TX TAMU Press ISBN 978 1 58544 492 2 Further reading editGreene Victor R 2004 A Singing Ambivalence American Immigrants Between Old World and New 1830 1930 Kent State University Press ISBN 978 0 87338 794 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sangerfest Nord Amerikanischer Sangerbund Freundschaft Liederkranz of California Delaware Saengerbund and Library Association Houston Liederkranz New York State Saengerbund Inc Washington Sangerbund Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sangerfest amp oldid 1164622704, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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