My
World War I research found many instances of paranoia, both by and against the
German-Americans.
Many
Americans with German ancestry, and especially those who were born in Germany,
struggled with divided loyalties at the beginning of the Great War. But once
the United States entered the war, 99% of them were American first.
Still,
not everyone recognized that. One of the most egregious cases of mass paranoia was
the lynching of Robert Prager in Collinsville, Illinois on April 5, 1918. The
motive for the lynching may have been partly based on his union activities, but
that wasn’t the reason given. The lynching party claimed that he was a traitor,
and the only evidence of that was his German origin.
Prager’s
lynching accelerated the harassment against those with a German background. Prominent
men of German descent were tarred and feathered and threatened with lynching. Some
were actually strung up but were cut down at the last minute. All things German
were banned, including Beethoven’s symphonies, and books written in the
language were burned in public bonfires.
The
German-American community’s actions showed their own paranoia in reacting to
the violence. Churches, businesses, and societies Americanized their names,
with St. Paul’s German Lutheran Church becoming St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, Verein
Vorwaerta changing its name to the New Athens Singing Society, and
Dreieinigkeitskirche translating its name to Trinity Church. Most churches
dropped their German services even though some of their older members couldn’t
understand English, and many parochial schools—which were already teaching most
classes in English—stopped using German altogether. German was no longer heard
on the streets, either, as neighbors switched to English when holding public
conversations.
Those
of German descent had some basis for their paranoia, but their persecutors had
none. Although there was no evidence of actual disloyalty among the
German-American community, there were plenty
of charges. Consider these instances that were reported in the Belleville
News-Democrat in the three weeks following the Praeger lynching. One pastor
was arrested for obstructing the draft by telling newly enlisted men that it
would be easy for them to cross the line at the front and join the German army.
Another man was arrested for simply saying that he agreed with statements made
by another man who had been arrested for treason. Both men denied the charges. But
the worst offense against the First Amendment was the arrest of a woman who
called President Wilson a “fat hog.” There was a little more to it than that,
but not much. Here is the full article:
Woman Called Wilson Fat Hog; Is
Arrested
Mrs. Bertha Smith, 53
years old, of 301-A Locust street, St. Louis, a native of Germany, was arrested
yesterday by agents of the Department of Justice. A warrant charging disloyalty
will be issued.
“President Wilson looks
like a big fat hog,” Mrs. Smith said, according to Mrs. Peter Van Rysel, with
whom she roomed. Mrs. Van Rysel, told Federal agents that Mrs. Smith once tore
a Red Cross placard from her window and cursed it. Mrs. Smith had expressed a desire,
it is charged, to have the American flag that was wrapped around Paul Prager
when he was lynched in Collinsville, Ill., that she might tear it up. [Belleville
News-Democrat, April 23, 1918 (errors in the original)]
What
happened to freedom of speech? Paranoia trampled all over it.
The
lesson is simple. Check your facts before you react to what you hear.
Don’t
let paranoia win.
__________
The
image at the head of this post is a World War I poster, drawn by Henry Raleigh,
which was printed in The Sunday Star on September 29, 1919 and mass-produced
as a poster. It is in the public domain because of its age.
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