Illinois has a very large German-descended population with many representative towns and cities. When the project began to visit these places we realized that a German heritage trail was not appropriate. We reached this decision because most of the German heritage towns are socioeconomically comfortable and some are affluent, such as Columbia. Therefore, in addition to meaningfully managing the profusion of communities, it was clear that they did not conform to our criteria for investment. Nevertheless, the topic of German heritage in Illinois is very interesting and worthwhile of attention.
We are grateful to historical researcher Tom Emery of Carlinville, IL who has provided us with the following introductory text to the German heritage of Illinois. Mr. Emery is the author of numerous articles published in local sources and is the creator of the Illinois State Library Heritage Project. He exemplifies public history and the community outreach our project is intended to have.
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Many Germans arrived following the failed German revolution of 1848. Of the nearly 1.8 million residents of Illinois in 1860, nearly 325,000 were of foreign birth. Germans were the largest ethnic group with 130,000 people, nearly eight percent of the state’s total population. Twenty percent of Chicago’s population was German. A heavy concentration of Germans lived in St. Clair County, near Belleville. Others settled in cities like Quincy, Alton, Peoria, Springfield, and Galena. In the northern Illinois community of Peru, Germans made up 1,000 of the total population of 3,500 in 1854. The names of a number of towns and villages across the state honor German heritage, including New Baden, New Minden, Germantown, Darmstadt, and Meppen. Architecture of traditionally German-American buildings, often in brick, is still visible across the state.
Many Germans were farmers, while others were laborers, merchants, and skilled tradesmen. Some followed the popular crafts of their homeland and worked as butchers, bakers, shoemakers, furniture and wagon builders, and cigar makers.
German-language newspapers were found across the state, even in the smallest towns. In 1859, future Presidential candidate Abraham Lincoln bought the press and type to establish a German-language Republican paper.
Politically, German support was crucial, and their weight was felt at the first Illinois Republican state convention in 1856. The German influence was also a key factor in the 1860 presidential race, and at the Republican National Convention in Chicago, German resolutions were even incorporated into the national platform. Germans were perceived to be staunch abolitionists, although some scholars dispute that claim.
Nearly 6,000 Illinois Germans enlisted in the first six months of the Civil War, comprising practically three whole regiments. One top German commander was Friedrich Hecker, a renowned 1848 revolutionary who was a gentleman farmer near Belleville, in the heart of heavily German settlements. Another German regimental commander from St. Clair County was Gustave Koerner, who served as lieutenant governor of Illinois from 1852-56 and was a pallbearer at Lincoln’s Springfield funeral.
By 1910, over 319,000 German immigrants were in Illinois, and over a million people of German descent – a tenth of the national total – called the state home. With nearly 400,000 first- and second-generation German immigrants, Chicago was the sixth-largest German city on the globe in 1914.
The high concentration of Germans caused some protest at the outbreak of World War I, as many of German descent decried their adopted country’s stance against their homeland. Music by German composers such as Mozart and Beethoven was banned in some public places, and some German-Americans were under surveillance by state and federal officials. Other German-Americans were forced to recite loyalty oaths in public spectacles. Within a few years, use of the German language, once prominent, faded from schools and churches.
As a result, many Germans in Illinois distanced themselves from their heritage. From 1914 to 1920, the number of Illinois residents who identified themselves as German on the census dropped over 41 percent, to 112,000. But many Germans remained loyal to the American cause, and took active roles in the war effort both at home and abroad.
A quarter-century later, dislike of German residents was a minor issue in World War II, as many chose to focus their disgust on Adolph Hitler, rather than their German neighbors.
Various key figures in Illinois history had been born in Germany or had German ancestry. In Peoria, future Illinois Secretary of State Edward Rummel, a native of Baden, Germany, ran a German paper and print shop, which produced goods in both German and English. John Wood, who founded the city of Quincy and served as Illinois governor for ten months in 1860-61, was born to a German mother. In 1892, John Altgeld, a Prussian native, won election for one term as Illinois governor and is best known for his pardon of three of the accused men in the infamous Haymarket Riot.
Today, German heritage in Illinois is celebrated in festivals and carnivals statewide. Oktoberfest is one such celebration in various towns, such as Belleville, Waterloo and Maeystown. In Chicago as well as in Moline, Peoria, Gibson City, Mascoutah, Waterloo, and Millstadt there are popular German restaurants. Museums and research centers on German-American history and heritage are found in several large metro areas, such as Chicago, Frankfort, and the Quad Cities.
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There are many towns in Illinois with a large German heritage community. We have chosen four. They range from very small (Maeystown and Warsaw) to large (Mascoutah and Belleville). Please use the pull-down menu or click on the urls below to learn more about them.
Belleville
https://mythicmississippi.illinois.edu/belleville-german/
Maeystown
https://mythicmississippi.illinois.edu/german-il/maeystown/
Mascoutah
https://mythicmississippi.illinois.edu/german-il/mascoutah/
Warsaw
https://mythicmississippi.illinois.edu/mormon-heritage/german-warsaw/