German-Americans were the largest ethnic contingent to fight for the Union in the American Civil War[citation needed]. More than 200,000 native-born Germans, along with another 250,000 1st-generation German-Americans, served in the Union Army, notably from New York, Wisconsin, and Ohio. Several thousand also fought for the Confederacy. Most German born residents of the Confederacy lived in Louisiana and Texas. Many others were 3rd- and 4th-generation Germans whose ancestors migrated to Virginia and the Carolinas in the 18th and early 19th centuries.
Union Army
German-American army units
Approximately 516,000 Union soldiers, or 23.4% of all Union soldiers, were immigrants; about 216,000 of these were born in Germany. New York supplied the largest number of these native-born Germans with 36,000. Behind the Empire State came Wisconsin with 30,000 and Ohio with 20,000.[1]
Commonly referred to as "Dutchmen" by other Union soldiers, and "lop-eared Dutch" by Confederates, German-American units, in general, earned a reputation for discipline.[2] Some of them had previously served in European armies, and they brought valuable experience to the Union Army.
German-American commanders of note
A popular Union commander and native German, Major GeneralFranz Sigel was the highest ranking German-American officer in the Union Army, with many Germans enlisting to "fight mit Sigel." Sigel was a political appointment of President Abraham Lincoln, who hoped that Sigel's immense popularity would help deliver the votes of the increasingly important German segment of the population.[3] He was a member of the Forty-Eighters, a political movement of revolutionaries in German states whose failure led to thousands of Germans emigrating to the United States. These included such future Civil War officers as Maj. Gen. Carl Schurz, Brig. Gen. August Willich, Louis Blenker, Max Weber and Alexander Schimmelfennig.
Although the Confederacy had general officers born in Ireland, France, and England, only one German-born soldier reached that rank in the Confederate Army, General John A. Wagener of South Carolina. Colonel Adolphus Heiman, a Prussian-born veteran of the Mexican–American War who commanded the 10th Tennessee Infantry and later a brigade; and Colonel Augustus Buchel, a native of Hesse and commander of the 1st Texas Cavalry,[4] were probably the next highest ranking German-Confederates.
Lt. Col. Heros von Borcke, who served on the staff of Maj. Gen. Jeb Stuart, is the most famous German officer in the Confederacy. Von Borcke, a Prussiancavalry officer, slipped through the Union blockade into Charleston Harbor and eventually became one of Confederate Maj. Gen. J.E.B. Stuart's closest confidants and his Adjutant and Chief of Staff. In 1866, he returned to Prussia to fight in the Austro-Prussian War.
German immigrant Simon Baruch served 3 years as a Confederate army surgeon, before becoming a leading advocate of hydrotherapy and bath houses in New York City. His son was famous Presidential advisor Bernard Baruch.
In neutral Missouri on May 9, 1861, Union Capt. Nathaniel Lyon, curious of the Missouri State Guard's intentions for Camp Jackson, engaged in a covert operation to uncover the Guard's plans. Disguised as a woman, Captain Lyon scoured the camp, searching for evidence of any secessionist threat. Lyon and his agents discovered falsely labeled crates containing a number of siege guns to be used for assaulting the Missouri arsenal, sent by the Confederate President Jefferson Davis himself.[5] On May 10, 1861, Lyon, a Radical Republican, marched a large contingent of pro-southern Missouri militia prisoners-of-war through the streets of St. Louis. The men had been captured by a large force composed mostly of German volunteers during an unsuccessful attempt by the pro-southerners to seize the Federal arsenal in St. Louis.[6] The prisoners were guarded by two lines of German-American Union soldiers, who were unpopular with many native-born Missourians, who resented their anti-slavery and anti-secessionist political views. Many people in St. Louis, having moved to the area from Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, and Virginia,[7] had southern sympathies.
Tensions quickly mounted on the streets as civilians hurled fruit, rocks, paving stones, and insults at Lyon's Germans. Shots rang out, killing three militiamen. The soldiers fired into the nearby crowd of bystanders, injuring or killing numerous civilians. Angry mobs rioted throughout the city for the next two days, burning a number of buildings. At least seven more civilians were shot by Federal troops patrolling the streets. The final death toll was 28.[citation needed]
In the spring of 1862, German Texans from Central Texas and the Texas Hill Country, mostly Unionist or neutral in their political views, were drafted into the Confederate Army over their strong objections. Confederate authorities took their reluctance to serve as a sign of rebellion and sent in troops. A violent confrontation between Confederate soldiers and civilians took place on August 10, 1862, in Kinney County, Texas, leading to the deaths of 34 German Texans who were fleeing to Mexico to avoid the draft.
^Rowan, Steven, ed. (1983). Germans for a Free Missouri: Translations from the St. Louis Radical Press, 1857-1862. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press. ISBN0-8262-0410-4.
Allendorf, Donald (2006). Long Road to Liberty: The Odyssey of a German Regiment in the Yankee Army; The 15th Missouri Volunteer Infantry. Kent State University Press. ISBN9780873388719.
Baron, Frank (2012). Abraham Lincoln and the German Immigrants: Turners and Forty-Eighters (Yearbook of German-American Studies, Supplemental Issue, Vol 4). Lawrence, Kan.: The Society for German-American Studies. ISSN0741-2827.
Bearden-White, Christina (2016). "Illinois Germans and the Coming of the Civil War: Reshaping Ethnic Identity". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 109 (3): 231–251. doi:10.5406/jillistathistsoc.109.3.0231.
Burton, William L. (1988). Melting Pot Soldiers: The Union's Ethnic Regiments. Ames, IA: Iowa State University Press. ISBN0-8138-1115-5.
Efford, Alison Clark (2013). German Immigrants: Race and Citizenship in the Civil War Era. Cambridge University Press. ISBN9781316025734.
Engle, Stephen D. (1993). Yankee Dutchman: The Life of Franz Sigel. Fayetteville, AR: University of Arkansas Press. ISBN1-55728-273-0.
Kamphoefner, Walter D. (1975). "St-Louis Germans And The Republican-Party, 1848-1860". Mid-America-An Historical Review. 57 (2): 69–88.
Kamphoefner, Walter D. (1999). "New perspectives on Texas Germans and the Confederacy". Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 102 (4): 440–455. JSTOR30242540.
Kaufmann, Wilhelm (1999). Tolzmann, Don Heinrich; Mueller, Werner D.; Ward, Robert E. (eds.). The Germans in the American Civil War, With a Biographical Directory. Translated by Rowan, Steven. Carlisle, Pa.: John Kallmann. ISBN9780965092678.
Linedecker, Clifford L., ed. (2002). Civil War, A-Z: The Complete Handbook of America's Bloodiest Conflict. New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN0-89141-878-4.
Lonn, Ella (2002) [1940]. Foreigners in the Confederacy. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN9780807854006.
Öfele, Martin W. (2004). German Speaking-Officers in the U.S. Colored Troops, 1863-1867. University Press of Florida. ISBN978-0-8130-2692-3.
Reinhart, Joseph R. (2010). A German Hurrah: Civil War Letters of Friedrich Bertsch and Wilhelm Stängel, 9th Ohio Infantry. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. ISBN9781606350386.
Reinhart, Joseph R. (2006). August Willich's Gallant Dutchmen: Civil War Letters from the 32nd Indiana Infantry. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. ISBN9780873388627.
Reinhart, Joseph R. (2004). Two Germans in the Civil War: The Diary of John Daeuble and the Letters of Gottfried Rentschler, 6th Kentucky Infantry. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. ISBN9781572332799.
Tafel, Gustav (2010). The Cincinnati Germans in the Civil War. Translated and edited with Supplements on Germans from Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana in the Civil War by Don Heinrich Tolzmann. Milford, Ohio: Little Miami. ISBN9781932250862.
Valuska, David; Keller, Christian (2004). Damn Dutch: Pennsylvania Germans at Gettysburg. Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania: Stackpole Books. ISBN0-8117-0074-7..
Wittke, Carl (1952). "In Defense of the Union". Refugees of Revolution: The German Forty-Eighters in America. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 221–43. JSTORj.ctv4s7m9n.19.
Kaufmann, Wilhelm (2015) [1911]. Die Deutschen im Amerikanischen Bürgerkriege. Hamburg: Nikol Verlag. ISBN978-3-86820-236-6.
Richter, Rüdiger B. (2004). "Corpsstudenten im Amerikanischen Bürgerkrieg". Einst und Jetzt, Band 49, Jahrbuch des Vereins für corpsstudentische Geschichtsforschung.
Primary sources in English
Kamphoefner, Walter D.; Helbich, Wolfgang Johannes, eds. (2006). Germans in the Civil War: the letters they wrote home. Translated by Vogel, Susan Carter. U of North Carolina Press. doi:10.5149/9780807876596_kamphoefner. ISBN9780807830444.
Kamphoefner, Walter D.; Helbich, Wolfgang; Sommer, Ulrike, eds. (1991). News from the Land of Freedom: German Immigrants Write Home. Translated by Vogel, Susan Carter. Cornell University Press. ISBN9780801425233.
Rowan, Steven, ed. (1983). Germans for a Free Missouri: Translations from the St. Louis Radical Press, 1857-1862. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press. ISBN0-8262-0410-4.
Schaller, Mary E.; Schaller, Martin N. (2007). Soldiering for Glory: The Civil War Letters of Col. Frank Schaller, Twenty-second Mississippi Infantry. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press. ISBN1-57003-701-9.