Abstract
Immigrants from Germany formed a significant
early ethnic community in the Copper Country. Escaping the
industrialization of their traditionally rural homeland, Germans
sought a more rural and small town setting for their experience
in North America. Mining provided important employment for
German immigrants, with some rising to skilled positions within
local companies. Others pursued commercial interests, including
successful retail, brewing and hotel businesses. Germans formed
many fraternal, benevolent and charitable organizations and
were notable for their choral groups. Although foreign-born
German immigrants never formed a large numeric grouping in
historic census records, self-ascribed German Americans now
form the second largest ethnic group in the Copper Country.
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Germans were present in Michigan’s
Copper Country from the start of modern extractive mining
and, along with the Irish, Cornish and French Canadians,
were among the large ethnic groups that dominated the
Copper Country in its formative years. Germans who migrated
to the Keweenaw Range were part of a much larger exodus
from Germany. In the years between 1820 and 1900, nearly
five million Germans immigrated to the United States,
accounting for 15% of the total immigration into the
United States (Germ
1). German immigration was not only great in numbers
but also sustained over the entire nineteenth century.
In no decade between 1830 and 1890 were the Germans ever
less than a quarter of all immigrates into the United
States and during the 1850s and 1860s, they constituted
a third of all immigrants (Germ
2). It is therefore not surprising that by 1900,
German immigrants and their descendents accounted for
over 10% of the population of the United States (Germ
3), and at present 12% of Americans claim German
ancestry, placing the ethnic group second only to those
14% claiming British ancestry (Germ
4). It must be remembered, however, that German unification
did not occur until 1871 and Germans in America emigrated
with, and retained, a high degree of regional identity.
For example, German Protestants from Prussia were very
different from German Catholics from Bavaria. With such
regional diversity among German immigrants, it is difficult
to construct a common history of German Americans (Germ
5).
While some Germans emigrated to avoid
compulsorily military service or for political reasons,
such as the famous “48ers” who fled Germany
after the failed revolution in 1848, the overwhelming
majority of Germans who immigrated to the United States,
as was the case for all immigrant groups, did so for
economic reasons. Nineteenth-Century Germany experienced
tremendous land pressure as rural overpopulation produced
very high levels of surplus labor. Germany, of course,
did industrialize but that industrialization was both
geographically and chronologically uneven and did not
produce enough employment for those who could no longer
sustain themselves in agriculture. Many German farmers
chose to immigrated to the United States, purchase land
and remain in agriculture rather than migrating to a
German industrial center as a wage laborer. Many such
German farmers, as well as skilled craftsmen and small
shopkeepers, seeking to maintain their traditional rural
way of life, chose to move to rural America rather than
to urban industrial Germany (Germ
6).
Initially, the Germans provided a substantial
proportion of the labor at the mines on the Keweenaw
Peninsula, ranking forth in the number of laborers and
third in the number of miners in 1870 (Germ
7). As was the case with the Cornish and Irish, the
evidence suggests that the Germans arrived on the Keweenaw
with previous mining experience. Circuit Court Judge
Patrick H. O’Brien recalled that German miners
distinguished themselves by wearing beautiful drilling
clothes, which made them “look like Gods to the
common miners,” and by their facility to plan out
every exacting detail of mining (Germ
8). In addition to mining, Germans did most of the
mechanical work at the mines (Germ
9). Many Germans left mining to pursue commercial
interests on the Keweenaw and established a number of
prominent businesses in brewing, construction, salon
keeping, retail and hospitality. A Report of the Immigration
Commission offers a statistical glimpse into the males
of Copper Country’s foreign-born German community
in 1909. The Report paints a portrait of an established
and stable immigrant community. Eighty-five percent of
the German immigrants had lived in the United States
for 20 years or more and less than five percent had left
the country since their initial immigration. As further
evidence of the communities long-term nature, all of
the German immigrants surveyed indicated that they were
either citizens or had filled naturalization papers.
Nine out of ten were 30 years or older and half were
married. In contrast to the larger married male immigrant
community in the Copper Country who had quarter of their
wives living abroad, none of the Germans surveyed lived
apart from their wives (Germ
10).
Similar to all large immigrant communities
in the Copper Country, Germans formed some thirty religious,
cultural, fraternal, beneficial, charitable and social
organizations to helped maintain community identity while
simultaneously assisting with their transition into the
larger American society. First among these German American
organizations were mutual benefit societies that collected
dues and served as an insurance pool to be extended to
members in times of financial stress, such as an illness,
an injury or death. Between 1859 and 1912, Germans in
the Copper Country established eleven such societies.
The Germania Society was active in Hancock from 1865,
while the St. Joseph German Society, a Catholic benevolent
society formed in Hancock in 1877. Branches of the Unterstuetzungs
Verein were established in Hancock (1859), Houghton (1882),
Tamarack City (1899), and Calumet (1912). The German
Aid Society formed a group in Calumet in 1872, with chapters
following in Hancock (1906), Lake Linden (1906) (Germ
11).
Copper County Germans also established
numerous cultural and social organizations. As was the
case with the larger German American community within
the United States, the Order of the Sons of Herman (O.D.H.S)
emerged during the nineteenth-century the most popular
fraternal organization in the Copper Country. Hancock
Germans establish the first such lodge in 1865, and over
the next forty years, six additional lodges were established
in Lake Linden, Houghton and Calumet. It was through
fraternal organizations such as the Sons of Herman that
German immigrants and their children located housing,
found work, organized into political blocks and met their
prospective mates. Another distinguishing feature of
German America was its singing societies, or Mannerchor,
and in the Copper Country, Houghton, Hancock and Calumet
each established their own Mannerchor (Germ
12).
Unlike some groups whose numbers in
the Copper Country were disproportionate to their populations
across the nation, German immigrant population on the
Keweenaw more or less mirrored their percentage within
the United States. In the decades between 1870 and 1890,
the percentage of foreign-born Germans ranged from 17.5
to 10 percent in Houghton County (Germ
13). In the early twentieth century, German immigration
to the Keweenaw appears to have remained relatively constant.
In the five census enumerations from 1870 to 1910, the
number of German immigrants in each enumeration ranged
from 1,380 to 1,723(Germ
14). Even with the tremendous in-migration at the
turn of the century, German immigrants as a percent of
the foreign born population, continued to range in the
narrow band between seven to five percent in the first
four enumeration of the twentieth century, or the decades
between 1900 and 1930(Germ
15). While the 1920 the US census found only 754
German immigrants in Houghton County, it appears that
a large number of ethnic Germans remained throughout
the twentieth century as the 2000 Census revealed that
self-ascribed Germans are the second largest ethnic group
in the Copper County.
Further Reading
Hawgood, John Arkas. The Tragedy of German-America.
New York: Arno Press, 1970.
Kilar, Jeremy. Germans in Michigan. East Lansing: Michigan
University Press, 2002.
O’Connor, Richard. The German Americans. Boston:
Little & Brown, 1968.
Trommler, Frank and Joseph McVeigh, eds. America and
the Germans: An Assessment of a Three- Hundred-Year History.
Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1985.
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