German-born
immigrants have played significant roles in Utah's history
since the first Anglo-Europeans entered the region because
of the fur trade. Probably the first German-American
to set foot in Utah was John H. Weber, who joined the
William H. Ashley expedition in 1822. Born in Hamburg
in the state of Holstein in l779, Weber has been identified
by some as Danish because at the time of his birth,
Holstein, though predominantly German speaking, was
under the control of Denmark. In 1824 Weber led a party
of trappers into present-day Utah by way of Bear Lake,
which was known to American trappers initially as Weaver's
(Weber's) lake in his honor. The group spent the winter
of 1824-25 in Cache Valley before continuing south,
where Weber became one of the first Anglo-Europeans
to view the Great Salt Lake. His name is commemorated
in Utah in Weber Valley, Weber River, Weber County,
and Weber State University, among others.
During the next two decades other German-born travelers
entered Utah. One was Frederick A. Wislizenus, an adventurous
German traveler who attended the last great mountain
man rendezvous in 1836 and then visited the Flaming
Gorge area of northeastern Utah. In 1843 Charles Preuss,
born in Germany and the official cartographer and artist
for the John C. Frémont expedition, visited the
Great Salt Lake with the famous explorer and paddled
out to Fremont Island in a rubber boat they carried
with them. Three years later, in 1846, German-born travelers,
including some members of the ill-fated Donner-Reed
Party, passed through Utah over the Hastings Cut-off
on their way to California.
The year 1847 saw the arrival of the first permanent
settlers of Utah. Among the original 143 Mormon pioneers
to enter the Salt Lake Valley was Konrad Kleinman, a
native of Germany.
Once Mormons had established a foothold in Utah, they
began sending missionaries to Germany and Switzerland
in the mid-1850s. The greatest number of converts initially
came from Switzerland. Coming to Utah, some as handcart
pioneers, most Swiss immigrants scattered throughout
the state, especially to the communities of Santa Clara,
Midway, and Providence. At the same time, one of the
first (and perhaps the most famous) German convert to
Mormonism, Karl G. Maeser, was baptized in the Elbe
River near Dresden. Immigrating to Utah in 1860, Maeser--an
educator by training--was asked by Brigham Young to
move to Provo in 1876 to establish Brigham Young Academy,
the forerunner of Brigham Young University.
While conversion to the Mormon faith was the primary
impetus for most German immigrants to come to Utah,
others came as miners or as merchants. The latter were
almost exclusively German-born Jews who established
businesses in Salt Lake, Ogden, and some of the mining
communities.
The most successful German-born miner in Utah was John
Beck. Born in 1843 in Aichelberg, Wurttemberg, Beck
joined the Mormon Church in 1862 and served as a missionary
in Switzerland and Germany before leaving for Utah in
1864. In the early 1870s he made a fortune with his
Bullion Beck mine in the Tintic Mining District. A number
of German-born Mormon converts were hired by Beck to
work in his mines.
Germany produced two of Utah's most famous architects:
Richard K.A. Kletting, architect of the Utah State Capitol
and a number of other significant buildings; and Karl
Neuhausen, who designed the Cathedral of the Madeleine
and the Thomas Kearns Mansion--the current Utah Governor's
Mansion.
The decades between 1850 and World War I saw a steady
increase in the number of German-born immigrants coming
to Utah. Although there were only sixty German or Swiss
residents in the Utah Territory in 1850, by 1910 the
number had reached 7,524. While this figure equalled
only about two percent of the total state population
of 373,000, the German presence was felt in a number
of areas beyond those of education, mining, and architecture
which have been mentioned. John Held's band played concerts
from the 1890s to the 1930s. The John Held collection,
housed at the Utah State Historical Society, is one
of the finest collections of band music in the United
States. Alexander Schreiner, a 1912 immigrant from Nuremberg,
became the best known of all the Salt Lake Tabernacle
organists. Breweries operated by German-born brewers
Henry Wagener and Albert Fischer in Salt Lake City and
Gustav Becker, the son of a German immigrant, in Ogden
were important.
As German immigration peaked around the turn of the
century, German organizations flourished. The Salt
Lake Beobachter, begun in 1890, was a German-language
newspaper which served to foster the German language
in Utah, provide news of the homeland, and maintain
a network for German-born immigrants residing not only
in Utah communities but also in Idaho and Wyoming.
World War I brought a significant change to Utah's German-American
community. Deeply concerned about events affecting their
former homeland, most Utah Germans demonstrated their
loyalty to Germany from the war's outbreak in August
1914 until America's entry into the war in April 1917.
Some returned to join the German army. Most followed,
as best they could, the fate of relatives and friends
fighting on the eastern and western fronts. German-Americans
resented the pro-English press and urged strict adherence
to President Woodrow Wilson's neutrality policy. With
the resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare by
Germany, the United States entered the war as an ally
of the British and French. Faced with the dilemma of
perceived dual loyalties, Utah's German-Americans demonstrated
their unswerving loyalty to the United States through
meetings, parades, proclamations, the purchase of war
bonds, fund-raising drives, registering for the draft,
and joining the army. Still, their loyalty often was
suspect and German clubs, including the LDS German organization,
were forced to suspend activities. Official action even
was taken to end the teaching of German in Utah schools.
However, unlike other parts of the country, the Salt
Lake Beobachter was allowed to continue to be published
but only under the masthead, "American in everything
but language."
World War I also brought a contingent of German prisoners
of war to Utah's Fort Douglas. More than five hundred
German seamen, captured on board the German cruiser
SMS Cormoran at Guam and the SMS Geier
at Hawaii when America declared war on Germany, were
interned at Fort Douglas between June 1917 and March
1918. Fort Douglas was also the prison for enemy aliens,
conscientious objectors, and others arrested for violations
of wartime legislation.
World War I halted immigration from Germany to Utah
for nearly a decade. By 1920 there were nearly 1,400
fewer German-born residents in Utah than in 1910. After
about 1924 immigration resumed as a significant number
of members of the LDS Church came to Utah. But they
served only to slow the rate of decline in the number
of German-born residents in Utah, as the newcomers only
partially replaced the passing generation of nineteenth-century
and turn-of-the-century immigrants.
During the 1930s, the combination of worldwide depression,
felt especially severely in Utah, and the ascent of
Adolf Hitler and his National Socialist Party in Germany,
significantly reduced the number of German immigrants
to Utah. Whereas 7,524 German- and Swiss-born immigrants
resided in Utah in 1910, by 1940 the number had dropped
to 4,889. Still, the 1920s and early 1930s was a period
of significant activity as newly arrived young immigrants
founded the Germania Athletic Club, sponsored outings,
and performed choir concerts and German operettas in
German. Germans marched proudly in Salt Lake City's
July 24th parade and memorialized the German war dead
through commemorations at the graves of German prisoners
who died at Fort Douglas during and just after World
War I. A monument to those twenty men was created by
the German-born stonecarver and immigrant to Utah, Arlo
Steineke, and dedicated on Memorial Day 1933 after an
extensive fundraising campaign.
During World War II, more than 7,000 German prisoners
of war captured on the battlefields of North Africa,
Italy, and France were brought to twelve different camps
in Utah. The largest number were interned at the Tooele
and Ogden Defense depots. Utah's German community was
involved to a limited degree with the prisoners of war;
some sought to carry out missionary work among them
on behalf of the Mormon Church among them while others
petitioned their representatives unsuccessfully trying
to make arrangements for relatives and other members
of the LDS Church to be sent to Utah. All prisoners
of war were returned to Germany after the war. A few
returned to Utah in the 1950s along with more than 3,000
Germans who came primarily because of their ties to
the LDS Church.
By 1960 there were 5,585 German-born residents in Utah,
nearly 1,500 more than the 4,104 residents in 1930,
but still two thousand fewer than the peak number of
7,524 in 1910. Many of the post-World War II arrivals
had lost their homes in the eastern parts of Germany
during the Russian advance and occupation that followed.
Others lost their homes during British and American
bombing attacks. Many different forces drove them from
their German homeland and pulled them to Utah. Once
in Utah, many skilled workers were able to find ready
employment, while others had to accept more menial positions.
These postwar immigrants tried to adapt to the local
way of life as quickly as possible. Some did this by
severing all ties with Germany, German culture, and
the German language as quickly as possible. For some,
Utah was a place of exile to which they were banished
because of the war and related circumstances. Adaptation
to Utah came slowly and with great difficulty, and in
a few cases was not achieved at all. Others maintained
German customs, taught their children to speak German,
became active in German organizations, fostered German
music and theater, and returned to Germany for periodic
visits. At the same time, they worked with, lived by,
and attended church and social events with non-German
Utahns while developing a strong attachment to the community
and the surrounding land.
Although the Salt Lake Beobachter ceased publication
in the mid-1930s, today's German community remains tied
by a weekly German radio program produced by Klaus Rathke,
a Berlin-born Salt Lake City businessman. The German
chorus Harmonie offers an annual concert series; its
membership is comprised mostly of those who came as
adult immigrants in the 1950s and early 1960s. An annual
commemoration is held at the Fort Douglas cemetery under
the direction of the German Air Force liaison officer
at Hill Air Force Base on the German National Day of
Mourning on the second Sunday in November. A German-American
Society of Utah, organized in 1983 after a highly successful
celebration of the three-hundredth anniversary of German
immigration to the Untied States, also serves to coordinate,
facilitate, and promote activities to preserve the German
language and customs and to encourage good will and
a better understanding between Utah and Germany.
As is the case with other countries such as Denmark,
Sweden, Italy, and Greece which once supplied hundreds
of emigrants to Utah, few emigrants today are leaving
Germany's shores. Still, several factors suggest that
German influence will remain an ongoing element of Utah
life. More and more Utahns are traveling to Germany,
and German remains behind Spanish the most popular foreign
language offered in Utah schools. German restaurants
and delicatessens are popular with both German-born
and other Utah residents. Finally, Germans come to Utah
in greater numbers than ever before, but now they come
as tourists rather than as immigrants. Utah's national
parks in particular have become one of the most popular
draws, and Germany ranks as the leading country for
overseas visitors to Utah with more than 100,000 Germans
visiting the state each year.
Allan Kent Powell