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Hopeful Journeys: German Immigration, Settlement, And Political Culture In Colonial America, 1717-1775 (Early American Studies)
Aaron Spencer Fogleman

Hopeful Journeys: German Immigration, Settlement, And Political Culture In Colonial America, 1717-1775 (Early American Studies)

German immigration, settlement, and political culture in colonial America, 1717-1775

Univ of Pennsylvania Pr (Mar 1996)
9780812233094
| Hardcover
257 pages | English
$ 34.95 | Value: $ 34.95
Dewey 305.83/1073/090
LC Classification E184 Fogleman 1996
LC Control No. 95043562

Subject

  • General & Miscellaneous German History
  • German American Studies
  • Immigrants - United States
  • Immigration & Emigration - Germany
  • Immigration & Emigration - History
  • Immigration & Emigration - United States - Histo
  • United States History - Ethnic Histories

Plot

Hopeful Journeys traces the German migrant groups from their origins to their places of final settlement in the colonies. The immigrants' Old World customs, beliefs, and connections did not entirely disappear as they adapted to life in the colonies; instead, the Germans' past ways helped shape behavior in the New World. Germans settled in rural, ethnic communities where family, village, and religion helped them succeed in the multi-ethnic, capitalist economy of British North America. This collective strategy carried into the political arena, as the immigrants and their descendants sought to solidify and protect their gains. Fogleman contends that, to a significant degree, the immigrants and their children developed a new ethnic identity: adapting to the strains of migration, settlement, and politicization, they became Americanized without becoming less German.