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Schriftenreihe USA-Studien

Ansel Adams, Looking Across Lake Toward Mountains, Evening, McDonald Lake, Glacier National Park, Montana, around 1933-1942 (National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, D.C.)

Ansel Adams, Looking Across Lake Toward Mountains, Evening, McDonald Lake, Glacier National Park, Montana, around 1933-1942 (National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, D.C.)

Ansel Adams, Looking Across Lake Toward Mountains, Evening, McDonald Lake, Glacier National Park, Montana, around 1933-1942 (National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, D.C.)

USA-Studien
Herausgegeben von Hans-Jürgen Grabbe

1. Hartmut Bickelmann: Deutsche Überseeauswanderung in der Weimarer Zeit. 1980. VIII, 180 S., 31 Tab., kt. 3315-7.

2. Agnes Bretting: Soziale Probleme deutscher Einwanderer in New York City 1800–1860. 1981. X, 224 S., kt. 3326-2.

3. Michael Just: Ost- und südosteuropäische Amerikawanderung 1881–1914. Transitprobleme in Deutschland und Aufnahme in den Vereinigten Staaten. 1988. 293 S., kt. 4852-9.

4. Agnes Bretting und Hartmut Bickelmann: Auswanderungsagenturen und Auswanderungsvereine im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert. 1991. 288 S., kt. 4853-3.

5. Michael Just, Agnes Bretting und Hartmut Bickelmann: Auswanderung und Schiffahrtsinteressen / "Little Germanies" in New York / Deutschamerikanische Gesellschaften. 1992. 241 S., kt. 4854-5.

6. Ingrid Schöberl: Amerikanische Einwandererwerbung in Deutschland 1845–1914. 1990. 254 S. m. 13 Abb., kt. 5296-8.

7. Gerhard Wiesinger: Die deutsche Einwanderer-Kolonie von Holyoke, Massachusetts, 1865–1920. 1994. 357 S. m. 56 Abb., kt. 6015-2.

8. Karen Schniedewind: Begrenzter Aufenthalt im Land der unbegrenzten Möglichkeiten. Bremer Rückwanderer aus Amerika 1850–1914. 1994. 232 S., kt. 6322-6.

9. Irene Häderle: Deutsche kirchliche Frauenvereine in Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1870–1930. Eine Studie über die Bedingungen und Formen der Akkulturation deutscher Einwanderinnen und ihrer Töchter in den U.S.A. 1997. 262 S., kt. 7003-6.

10. Hans-Jürgen Grabbe: Vor der großen Flut. Die europäische Migration in die Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika 1783–1820. 2001. 458 S., m. 12 Abb., 27 Tab. u. 20 Schaubildern, geb. 7814-2.

Vor der großen Flut (Before the Great Tidal Waves) is the first large-scale study of the influx of Europeans to America during the early national period. The book endeavors to build a bridge between recent scholarship on the "Atlantic World" and research on nineteenth-century mass migration. Most scholars of immigration to the United States have focused on the years after 1820 on the assumption that the scarcity of data for the young republic and the low contemporary estimates of immigration warranted only cursory treatment of the post-revolutionary era. Scholars of early American history, on the other hand, have rarely ventured beyond the revolutionary period. Marianne Wokeck's  monograph Trade in Strangers: The Beginnings of Mass Migration to North America ends in 1775 but looks at migration and its economic underpinnings from the American and the European perspectives.

One aim pursued in my work was to provide reliable statistics for European immigrants entering Philadelphia during the entire period under examination and for other major ports during the crucial years after the War of 1812. This data base was augmented by scattered contemporary emigration and immigration data pertaining to the United States, the British maritime colonies, and Canada to allow for an estimate that sets the number of immigrants to the U.S. from 1783 to 1820 at 366,000, some 46 percent larger than the traditional figure of 250,000. Since the period under consideration was one of almost continuous strife in Europe, of naval warfare and blockades, and of sharp economic up- and downswings, migration flowed more or less freely only for short periods. Then, however, contemporaries thought they witnessed a "torrent" of newcomers.

Their point of reference was colonial immigration and not modern mass migration. This study shows that patterns of emigrant transportation and immigration to British North America and the United States which had developed during the eighteenth century persisted until about 1820. By this time, it had become clear to prospective emigrants, merchants engaged in the transportation business, and would-be employers of immigrant labor that the traditional destinations of ships carrying European passengers ― above all Philadelphia and, to a lesser extent, Baltimore - were no longer the most desirable ports of entry. The seminal shift to New York in trade and in passenger traffic has been attributed to the opening of the Erie Canal in 1824, but it was foreshadowed by the shifting of the linseed trade from Philadelphia to New York, which began bringing passengers from Ireland into the northern port as a return cargo.

This brings me to the second major aim pursued in Before the Great Tidal Waves. I have utilized hitherto largely untapped archival sources on both sides of the Atlantic in an integrative study of economic, social, political, and human conditions pertaining to the so-called push and pull forces and to the actual process of migration. Several methodological approaches have been employed: The book contains a quantitative examination of transatlantic migration, an economic analysis of transatlantic trade and of market forces in Europe and America, a study of the maritime carrying trade down to the microeconomic level, an examination of legislative and governmental parameters bearing upon the movement of people, and, finally, a study of the decision-making process and of the actual migration process based on the accounts of individuals.

What emerges is a picture of a transitional period between pre-modern and modern times. The transitional character is clearly evident in the disappearance of the redemptioner system and of immigrant indentured servitude in the United States. Here, my findings go beyond those of economic historians. In addition to market forces, I attribute importance to the revisions of state insolvency laws which after 1790 increasingly favored debtors. The pivotal factor, however, was the growing reluctance of Americans, particularly German-Americans, to accept white bound labor and the equally growing determination of immigrants to avoid servitude even though they had entered the country on a redemptioner loan agreement. Sources show that by about 1815 immigrants to the United States managed to rid themselves of an old world deferential mentality which up to this time had been one of the foundations of white servitude.

My overall conclusion is that from the vantage point of immigration history the eighteenth century ended around 1820. On the other hand, I maintain that developments attributed by historians to the mid nineteenth-century were foreshadowed if not anticipated earlier in the century. This is the case, for example, regarding Oliver MacDonagh's observation that social legislation and administrative action in Great Britain during the 1830s and 1840s amounted to a "revolution in government," preparing the way for the modern interventionist state. My research shows that already the British and American passenger acts and the Pennsylvania and New York health and poor laws passed at the beginning of the nineteenth century were remarkably effective both in curbing the flow of people across the Atlantic, in maintaining decent conditions of ocean travel, and, when this was deemed desirable, in opening the flood valves.Hans-Jürgen Grabbe

11. Michael Wala, Hrsg.: Gesellschaft und Diplomatie im transatlantischen Kontext. Festschrift für Reinhard R. Doerries zum 65. Geburtstag. 1999. XIII, 480 S., kt. 7529-1.

12. Axel R. Schäfer: American Progressives and German Social Reform, 1875–1920. 2000. 252 S., kt. 07461-9.

13. Anjana Buckow: Zwischen Propaganda und Realpolitik. Die USA und der sowjetisch besetzte Teil Deutschlands 1945–1955. 2003. 697 S., geb. 8261-1.

14. Ursula Lehmkuhl, Clemens Wurm und Hubert Zimmermann, Hrsg.: Deutschland, Großbritannien, Amerika. Politik, Gesellschaft und Internationale Geschichte im 20. Jahrhundert. Festschrift für Gustav Schmidt zum 65. Geburtstag. 2003. 283 S., kt. 8395-2.

15. Hans-Jürgen Grabbe, Hrsg.: Halle Pietism, Colonial North America, and the Young United States. 2008. Ca. 340 S., kt. 8767-2.

Von den pietistisch geprägten Franckeschen Stiftungen in Halle gingen bedeutende kulturelle, theologische und wirtschaftliche Impulse aus, die auf das kolonialzeitliche Britisch-Nordamerika und die junge amerikanische Republik einwirkten. Hallesche Netzwerke, Verbindungen nach und Einflüsse in Nordamerika werden im atlantischen Kontext, aber auch in der Nachwirkung sowohl in Deutschland als auch in den Vereinigten Staaten des 19. Jahrhunderts untersucht. Die Beiträge des Sammelbandes ordnen den halleschen Pietismus und die von Halle geprägten lutherischen Deutsch-Amerikaner jeweils in größere zeitgeschichtliche Zusammenhänge ein: Es geht z.B. um die ethnische Dimension des Nationalismus bei Franklin sowie um die Einflüsse der lutherischen Lehre und des Pietismus auf den Methodismus. Hinzu kommen Mikrostudien zu Interdependenzen zwischen halleschen Pastoren und amerikanischem Umfeld. Die Lockerung der Verbindungen zwischen Halle und Nordamerika nach der Wende zum 19. Jahrhundert wird anhand der nachlassenden Verbreitung des aus Halle stammenden naturwissenschaftlichen, insbesondere pharmazeutischen Wissens aufgezeigt.  

The significant cultural, theological, and economic impulses originating from the pietist- influenced Francke Foundations in Halle had a profound effect on colonial British North America and the young American Republic. The Hallensian networks as well as their connections to and influences within North America are analyzed not only in the Atlantic context, but also in terms of the repercussions felt both in Germany and the United States during the 19th century. The contributions comprising this collection of essays situate Hallensian Pietism and Halle-influenced Lutheran German-Americans within their respective larger historical contexts. Two such examples are the ethnic dimension of Franklin's nationalism as well as the influence of Lutheran doctrine and Pietism on the founding of Methodism. Additionally, there are several micro-studies concerned with the interdependencies between pastors from Halle and the American social surroundings into which they were thrust. The unraveling of the connections between Halle and North America at the dawn of the 19th century is illustrated in terms of the waning dissemination of knowledge in the natural sciences, above all pharmaceutical knowledge, stemming from Halle.

Franz Steiner Verlag Stuttgart

ISSN 0173-1995

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