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English Pages 32 Year [1875]
THE PENNSYLVANIA GERMANS. _A.
IsT
J^ ID ID K.
ESS
DELIVERED AT THE DEDICATIOX '
or
-
PALATLNATE COLLEGE Myekstoavn, Pa., Dkc. BY
GEORGE
23,
1875,
.
F.
973.0^,
BAER.
J S /'^C
V13,fl3 14-6
UNIVERSITY-
Of PENNSYLVANIA LIBRARIES
::
Reading, Pa., Dec. 30th, 1S75.
GEO.
Dear Sir cr
n
Esq.,
— At
the
late
meeting of the Board of Trustees
Palatinate College, the following was unanimonslg agreed to
of
.-
Besolved, That we tender Geo- F. Baer, Esq., our hearty ihanlis for the timely, able and eloquent address drUuered this day, on the occasion of Palatinate College dedication. Resolved, That we respectfully solicit a copy of the in the " Merccrshury
Wc
same for
jiuhlication
Heview," and in pamphlet form.
sinccrehj hope you
will
Wc
comply with the request.
arc
sure that the facts therein set forth, and the kind spirit in whicJi they arc clothed, are calculated to do
much
good,
and should he
generally read.
Very truly, yours, &c.,
H.
MOSSER, Sec^y of the Board.
Rev.
II.
MOSSER,
Dear Sir
— In
Secretary, &c.
compliance with the wisltes of the Board of " address " at your disposed. It was hur-
Trustees, I place the
"1
\
BAER,
F.
riedly written, in the midst of arduous profcs:]ional labors, hut I
give
it
to
you far what
sufficient general
interest
it
is
to
worth.
The subject ought
to he
atone for any short comings .
in
h'calment.
Yours, truly, li
GEO.
F.
BAER.
of its
\
TIIJ^]
PENNSYLYAxNIA GERMANS.
Ladies anj) Gentlemen: tine, I
count
— A descendant of a
a higli privilege to
it
]*ala-
meet with you at
the dedication of Palatinate College.
Most
lieailily
do I wish the part assigned to nie had fallen to soauj
more worthy representative
my
interest
and
zeal for wliatcver concerns the
my
sylvania Germans, offset of thorough
is
unfitness,
lot
Penn-
my want
and
be atoned for by a heart
preparation
whose every pulsation speaks well
But
of our people.
true to
for the future of
my own
people.
our people that here
It in
Eastern Pennsylvania a college should be four.ded
and named Palatinate.
The impulse
us to honor our ancestors, naturi}.
Next
is
vvdiich
prom])ls
one of the noblest of our
to the Cliristian
priiiciple
which
re-
quires our walk and conversation to be perfect bofoio
the liord, there
is
no greater conservator of public
morality, nor stricter censor of private action, than
the reflection that a given line of conduct will be un-
worthy of our ancestors, and bring disgrace on our children, even
beyond the fourth generation
'I'his
respect
mand
was
Honor thy thy days may be long
of the decalogue, "
mother, that
Lord thy God giveth If
it
their
father
and thy
in the
land the
theo."
be true that the departed dead can look from
mansions in the skies upon the abodes of mortal
men, there
and
beginning implied in the com-
in the very
will be joy in heaven, that after a century
a half of neglect of,
of the pious
and indifference
Germans, who
som as the rose, commemoration
fame
for the sake of religious
freedom, and rest and peace from settled these lands,
to the
and made
strife
and war,
this wilderness to blos-
their descendants, in recognition
of their trials
dedicate a college
named
in
and
and merits, meet
to
honor of them.
Iso people are so little understood as the Pennsyl-
They have never been given their They and the history of this continent.
vania Germans. true place in their
descendniits
who have migrated
to
different
parts of the United States, constitute a large pro})ortion of the population of this country
histories fail to give
any
fair
but the written
account of them.
are cither completely ignored, or tlie
;
most casual way, and too
if
mentioned,
often
They it is
in
Avith the sneers
and the gibes of narrow-minded men \vho can see no merit in the
The of
German
stories of Pl^Miiouth
New Amsterdam,
words,
people.
all
Rock, of Jamo?town, and
are as familiar as household
over the land.
Their minutest details have
been carefully preserved and recorded. in poetry
In history,
and song, in school-books, on every national
fast or festival, in the halls of legislation, at the hust-
and
ings,
fathers
is
told
tions, a little
:
How, because
band
of religious
of oppressed English Christians
of the great
deep, and
day on Plymouth Rock w^ere wasted
;
being storm-
after
tossed and tempest-driven, landed on
and want,
persecu-
and from thence ventured on the
fled to IFolland,
bossom
Pilgrim
the pulpit the story of the
in
how they
a-
bleak, wintry
suffered privation
by famine and consumed by
braved the ferocity of savages, bore untold
fevers,
hardships, to find freedom to worship God, to found
an asylum
for tlie
oppressed of the earth
Grand, sublimely grand, was the heroism of the
men, and grander
still
the fortitude of the
women
and children who composed that Pilgrim band
bow
in
respectful deference
to the
memory
!
I
of the
Pilgrim fathers.
Happy Ilem'ans,
They have had such pooty such orators as Webster to perpetuate Pilgrims!
words that shall never be
and
if
fame defect,
lost, their
as in
undying fauie;
the truth of history itself be not sufficient, the of their great orator
and accomplish and
tion that,
"It
shall yet
will
supply the
his
proud predic-
if tlic
three luiudrod
fullill
go hard
surely
millions of people of China shall not one day hoar and
know something
of the rock of
Plymouth
too."
6 1
would not take one
leaf
from the proud
cLtiplot,
the sons of 'Nqw England have woven for their Puritan fathers.
can forget their faults, their short-
I
comings, their inconsistencies, their crimes, when 1
remember
hovv-
much
their descendants
have done
to
build up and defend our great fabric of Constitutional
American
man
such
liberty,
great public services of one
''j'he
as Webster,
more than a propitiation
is
for
a century of mistakes and errors of the people from •.
whom
he sprang.
But there
is
untold by the
story
a
historian,
neglected by the poet, forgotten by the many, per-
verted by the few, of a people whose descendants
outnumber the Puritans, which, when truthfully is
told,
worthy of no mean place alongside the story of
Plymouth Kock.
I
audience
the glorious record of a noble peo-
ple,
;
for
it is
need not hesitate
you may well exult
to call
ti"ave
liives
your ancestors.
German
It starts with the great
I
need not dwell on the
scene.? of that tirst great struggle.
centuries those noble old
llcforination tJuit
Plere at least history
birth to Protestantism,
no uncertain sound.
to tell it to this
German
For ahoost two
heroes, with a faith
in i\o(\ that
never faltered, defended the faith and
];rinci]^les of
Protestantism with their lives and prop-
erty.
The records
fane, con.tain no
vations,
of histor}',
whether sacred or pro-
more heart-rending accounts of
suiVerings,
persecutions,
pri-
and niartyrdoms,
than those which
to the lot of the defenders of
fell
Protestantism in Germany, France and Switzerland.
All the snfterings and persecutions the Anglo-Saxons of
England
inflicted
light as air,"
human
upon the Puritans, were "
compared
tortures
trifles
the beastly violence, in-
witli
and fiendish
cruelties
inflicted
by
Spanish and Freneli fanaticism on the followers of the Reformers.
The
punishments pagan im-
direst
agination could create, as the criminals, were in
fit
doom
of the greatest
by the
actual practice exceeded
religious fanaticism of the people
who sought
to ex-
terminate Protestantism in the countries of the Rhine.
The armies
of
France
Louis
after
XIV revoked the
edict of jSTantes (1G85,) were let loose
testants
to
terrify
them
into
upon the Pro-
Whole
conversion.
troops of dissolute soldiers were allowed to practice the most revolting cruelties and frightful barbarities. 'Not only
were the French provinces subjected
these barbarities, but the Palatinate was
to
over-run,
and her devoted people treated in the same way.
The French army on duce everything
to
the Rhein was oi'dered to re-
ashes.
"The
Frcncli
generals
v/ho dared not refuse to obey," writes Voltaire, " wove
then obliged to drive out in the middle of winter the unfortunate inhabitants of the Palatinate and
neighboring provinces. ing the reign of Louis
It
the
was the second time dur-
XIV
this beautiful country
was rendered desolate; but the
fires
with
which
8
Turenne had burnt ten
cities
and twenty villages of
the Palatinate were but sparks in comparison with
Worms,
Spires,
this last conflagration.
Heidelberg,
Manheim, and a multitude of burghs and villages were 2:1 veil to the flames. The Palatinate, the Electorate of Treves and the 'Margravate of
covered with ruins.
'
IS
Baden
w^cre
ever had the Vandals, wdio at
a former epoch passed over this country, committed
such awful atrocities.".
The whole country was
])ii!:iged
;
houses were burnt
and crops destroyed; men, women and children were left
they stripped of to
Not only were
without homes, food or shelter.
earthly possessions and reduced
all
beggary and starvation, but they were denied the
God
right in their distress to call upon
and help
in the only
modes
of worship
for protection
and forms
of
prayer their tongues knew, or their souls could pour
The peace
forth.
of Utrecht
(1713),
(1714), brought only partial relief.
a decree prohibited Catecjiism in
The loved then as
tlic
tlie
1719
Heidelberg
Palatinate.
to tlio
it still is
'^iJie
the use of
entircl}'
late as
fatherland, the Rhine, as dear to
held of battle
made
As
and Rastadt
and
Wachi
in
Am
German
them
hearts, who, on the
the councils of State, have Ilhciii'^
resound through the
world, and liave wiped out centuries
of
and reproach, had no home, no
rest,
no peace,
future for them.
they
SA^iei'o
shall
contumely
go?
no
Europe
:
9 offered no
asylum
the space to give
England had the
;
homes
still
redeemed from barbarism
to be
and made the home of
forty years'
men.
civilized
turned their longing eyes.
The
migration.
Across the mighty ocean
There was but one hope. a continent was
large a
so
to
heart, but not
Thither they
speak
I
wanderings of the
it
reverently
Israelites in the
wilderness were not years of greater trial for (God by miracles provided for and protected them), than the
German
years of suffering and privation our
fathers endured between the repeal of the
them
transplanted
by day nor
fire
by night guided
fail to discern, witli
God
in guiding
come a goodly
and persecuting tion the
tanism.
terrible.
though
and were
Roman
;
but who
to a province destined to be-
they were
who dared
itself.
burning witches
still
from or ques-
to differ
rigid, stern
and
frigid Puri-
freedom
there
than the scalping knife of the savage
The
to their credit
tolerant,
pillar of cloud
their path
prospect for religious
less inviting
was
all
a
the eye of faith, the finger of
narrow tenets of "J'he
Xo
inheritance, an empire within
New England
In
was
them
across
land,
this
to
mightier water than the Jordan.
can
edict of
and the beginning of that great migration
]N^antcs,
which
fore-
Uoman be
were not
it
to
Catholic.
promised a sure and safe
settlements,
Catliolic
spoken, the most liberal
be trusted,
The province retreat.
becau.-iO
of
they
Penn alone
Thither
th.ey fled
10
They
by the thousaiuls.
^
settled the " back part^
the province."
On
the 17th September, 1717^ the Lieutenant-Gov-
ernor "observed to the Board that great numbers of forciiiiiers
and
from Germaiiv, strano-ers
constitutions,
province."
have
l>itely
to our laniiuaire
been imported into this
In the proceedings of the Council between
the Indians and the
Government
of Pennsylvania,
held at Conestoga on the Xoth day of ]March, 1721, the lact that the Palatines undertook to furnish the
corn to be presented to the Indians
They experienced great
tioned. to
titles
claimed
the lands
men-
specially
trouble in securing
they improved.
An Act
title.
is
The Indians
General Assembly,
of the
passed in 1700, prohibited the buying of lands of the
The proprietary agents treated them unand refused to sell them lands. In 1724 they
natives.
kindly,
foriiiall}^
tliey
petitioned the governor
'"Would recommend them
and Council that (Palatines),
to
the
favorable usage of the projn'ieiaries' agents, and that
they
might bo allowed
to
purchase lands in this
province."
in 1726, Logan, the Secretary of the Province, v/rites,
mciiiy
"
We
sliall
soon
have a German colony, so
thousands of Palatines are already
country.
They say the proprietary
in
the
invited peojile to
co2ne and settle his country." 'J'iic
extent of
11: is
gi-cat
exodus from the P;datina.te
to these shores niay be gathered
from a report
to the
11
made in 1731, wliich gives Uie number of Reformed members of ttie oppressed inhab-
Synod
of Ilollaiul,
Germany, particularly out
itants of
of
tlic
Palatinate,
already here, as 15,000, and there were perhaps as
many more
Lutherans.
Exiles from the
home
of their
birth,
martyrs to
Protestantism, they only asked permission to settle
They had known
the back parts of l*enn's province. all
the horrors of war, of famine, of torture, of oppres-
They had
sion.
and they were
wrong
to
Him
in
But they
their fellow-men,
the savage tribes of the
They should have been kindly welcomed, for their own sakes, of
ingenuity of
perfectly willing to risk finding peace
among
rest
that the
all
men could invent
civilized
and
suffered
new world.
received and heartily as well as for the sake
whose cause thoy had suffered so much.
For many years they were sub-
v.ere not.
jected to great annoyances at the hands of the Govern-
ment
officials of
Here vania.
the province.
is
the action of the
It
speaks for
itself:
Government
At
of Pennsyl-
a meeting of Council,
held on the 14th September, 1727, at Phiiad'-lphia,
"The Governor called
there
acquainted
them togothor is
at tliis
lately ariived
hundred Palatines, as
the Board that he had
time
to
inform
from IToiland,
a.
ship
tlioiti
that
v.'ith
four
and that he has
infor-
nnation tln^y will very soon be followed by a
much
greater
numlxn-,
who
'tis
said,
design to settle in
tJje
back
12 parts of this province,
'"'
*
^\
and
it
would be highly
necessary to concert proper measures for the peace
and security g-er-ed
of the province,
may
which
be endan-
by such numbers of strangers daih' poured
in,
who, being ignorant of our language and laws, and
body together, make as
settling in a
it
were a
dis-
tinct 2)eople froni^j^^^^ii«i«^sty's subject?,"
"The Board, taking
the
same
into their
serious
considerations, observe, as these people pretended at first
that they lly hither on the score of their religious
liberties,
and come under the
Majesty,
its
requisite
of
His
place
they
protection
that in the
first
should take the Oath of Allegiance, or some equivalent to
to Ilis Majesty,
it,
and promise
fidelity to the
Proprietor and obedience to our established constitution
;
therefore, 7mtil some ])yo2)€r remedi/ can he
and
had from home,
to
^jrfu