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  1. German Americans in many cities, such as Milwaukee, brought their strong support of education, establishing German-language schools and teacher training seminaries (Töchter-Institut) to prepare students and teachers in German language training. By the late 19th century, the Germania Publishing Company was established in Milwaukee, a publisher ...

  2. May 11, 2018 · At the time, these roughly eight million Americans were the country’s largest non-English-speaking group. Many had come over in a migration wave in the late 19th century. Once here, they built ...

    • Becky Little
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  4. Oct 16, 2023 · Kids Encyclopedia Facts. German Americans is a ethnic group of American citizens of German ancestry. According to the United States Census Bureau, in 2013 there were 46 million Americans who claimed some German ancestry. In parts of the Northern United States they outnumber any other ethnic groups. In Wisconsin, for example, 41% of the ...

  5. New York, is an example of a publication for German-speaking children in America. At the turn of the twentieth century many Americans (over 30% in some Midwestern states) spoke German in their homes, often in the second or third generation. In schools, children learned to read and write in German, but in an American context.

  6. Sep 5, 2018 · The United States is a country built on immigration — and the largest group of immigrants actually came from Germany! Based on the most recent US Census, more than 44 million Americans claim German ancestry. That’s a higher number than those who claimed English, Italian or Mexican ancestry. At the turn of the last century, Germans were even ...

  7. Mission: The German-American Heritage Foundation of the USA® (GAHF) is dedicated to preserving, educating and promoting the cultural heritage of Americans of German-speaking ancestry. Our mission is to be an effective voice for German-Americans in cultural and public policy matters in the United States.

  8. Sep 22, 2022 · Like other “hyphenated” Americans during wartime then and since, German Americans’ loyalties were questioned during World War I, as in this newspaper cartoon. Sydney Joseph Greene, print, 1915-16. This historical and social framework of the German experience in America has made this country’s largest immigrant group also its most invisible.

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