Wilson lied, people died; his savage mistreatment of Cong. Lindbergh, Sr. who defended the hard-working, honest, law-abiding, valuable white immigrants from Germany

Spread the love

At least Prager did not live to see the US (and UK) incinerate his native Dresden 27 years later, burning 500,000 German civilians alive.

Wilson committed the greatest crime in the history of the world — the creation of the Federal Reserve. Now every dollar or euro in existence (our own money) must be borrowed from the Jews — and paid back to them with interest. 

It’s the money factor.  “Over time, whoever controls the money system, controls the nation.” – Stephen Zarlenga (1941 – 2017)

.

Wilson was being blackmailed by the Jew lawyer Samuel Untermyer (photo – left) over his erotic, adulterous letters to his mistress, which she sold to Untermeyer after the sex-fiend president and hypocrite broke up with her: https://ironink.org/?p=3454

Destiny had marked both Charles Lindbergh and his father, Congressman Charles Lindbergh, born in Stockholm, Sweden, for great things. The senior Lindbergh won immortality by leading the battle in Congress against the passage of Woodrow Wilson’s Federal Reserve Act, when the Rothschilds imposed their Jewish system as the chains of slavery shackled onto the citizens of America.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_August_Lindbergh

But Bernard Baruch and Jewish gold reelected Woodrow Wilson and led us into the mass slaughter of the First World War.

When Congressman Lindbergh [photo] opposed our involvement in this slaughter for the profits of the Jews, federal agents were sent to his home to burn copies of the books he had written opposing the war.

One might suppose that his neighbors and constituents, on seeing their champion under attack by the agents of the Jews, would have rallied to his defense. Instead, they believed a whispering campaign against him, reasoning that since he had been attacked by “federal agents”, he must be some sort of super criminal. Congressman Lindbergh was defeated for re-election.

Instead of backing his courageous stand, his wife left him, preferring to live independently and earn her own living as a school teacher.

At the outset of World War I, C.A. favored neutrality, and soon became an ardent antiwar spokesman. Once the United States joined the war, Lindbergh supported the effort, but his reputation had been set. In 1916, C.A. lost a bid for the U.S. Senate. Then in 1918, he lost a bid for governor in a very contentious race. Following his political bids, C.A. continued to speak out against the war, writing Why Is Your Country At War, a book that prompted the federal government to define his work as “seditious” and call for its destruction.

With his career in politics practically at an end, C.A. bought and sold real estate for a short while, eventually returning to Minnesota and establishing a new law practice in the Twin Cities. In 1924, he mounted a brief campaign for governor, this time as a member of the Farmer-Labor Party.  His son, by then a young aviator, flew his father to several campaign stops.  But C.A. Lindbergh’s return to political life was cut short by a brain tumor, and he died in Crookston, Minn., on May 24, 1924.

The attack of the agents on their home left a permanent scar on the young Charles Lindbergh. This fear was aggravated by the insecurities he developed when his parents separated during his adolescence.

Née Evangeline Lodge Land, the congressman’s wife is seen here with their only child, the future aviator

http://sites.mnhs.org/historic-sites/charles-lindbergh-historic-site/lindbergh-family 

Evangeline had already lived mostly separately from her husband but made it into a total separation in 1917, living only in Minnesota.

Overcompensating for this, Charles Junior threw himself into the study of mechanics, and resolved to devote his life to flying. Soon he had his own plane.

One of his first assignments was to fly his father around the state on a new campaign to regain his seat in Congress. The Jews sabotaged his plane, and he crashed, but due to his great skill, he brought the plane down without injuring himself or his father. The crash put an end to his father’s hopes of a successful campaign, and he died a broken man.

It was then that Divine Providence selected the young Lindbergh as the new champion of America. In this light, his incredible feat of flying alone across the Atlantic becomes more understandable. Handsome, shy and inarticulate, he had become a familiar figure at the nation’s airports, but no one would have thought of him as an international celebrity or as a national leader.

Nevertheless, he found financial backers who put up the money for his flight across the ocean. As he prepared for his entry onto the world stage, everyone believed he was setting off on a suicidal mission.

The Jew Zolotow, in his biography of Billy Wilder, claims that a cynical reporter, not wishing to see young Lindbergh die a virgin, paid a prostitute to spend the night with him before his takeoff. He claimed that this accounted for Lindbergh’s overwhelming fatigue and drowsiness during much of his flight. A more likely explanation is that the Jews put drugs in his thermos, and concocted this out of character explanation for his planned disappearance.

We should not forget that he was taking off from Long Island, a stone’s throw from the world headquarters of international Jewry, the bankers whom his father had nearly thwarted. From his own account, in his book, “WE”, he seems to have been unconscious during much of the flight, but his plane was borne up by Divine Providence, and instead of plunging into the ocean as the Jews had planned in wreaking their revenge on his family, his survival and future role as Leader was ensured.

Lucky Lindy and his wife Ann (colorized photo)

; Lindy’s wife Ann was the liberal daughter of a founder of the Fed, and so to avoid his wife leaving him (as his mother had left his father for opposing the Jews) he never brought up the central problem of the entire West: Jews controlling our money. JFK and the Lindberghs (both men were secret antisemites)

 Lindy’s wife Ann was the liberal daughter of a founder of the Fed, and so to avoid his wife leaving him (as his mother had left his father for opposing the Jews) he never brought up the central problem of the entire West: Jews controlling our money. I saw her once being interviewed by the Jew Morley Safer of “60 Minutes” on the horrors of being married to a notorious antisemite. Ann totally sucked up to the Jew.

 

.

.

…….A horrific lynching provoked by the jewspapers’ hate speech against all Germans

THE LYNCHING OF ROBERT PAUL PRAGER
Suspected of Being German Spy
Source: The Troy Call, Troy, Illinois, April 5, 1918
100 years ago

Robert Paul Prager, an alien enemy, 39 years old, and suspected of being a German spy, was hanged by a mob at Mahler Heights, west of Collinsville, about 1 o’clock this morning. Prager had been under surveillance for some time because of alleged disloyal remarks. He was in Maryville yesterday, where he posted a proclamation declaring his loyalty, and as a result he was run out of town. He was followed to Collinsville by a number of men, and a mob soon assembled at the Suburban “Y.” It proceeded to the Bruno bakery where Prager was found and taken out and marched down the street in his bare feet with an American flag wrapped around his body. Police rescued Prager from the mob and took him to the city jail in the city hall. The crowd then went to the jail and demanded that Prager be turned over to them. In the meantime, Mayor Siegel had been summoned and pleaded with the men not to resort to violence. It was then Prager was taken out of his cell and concealed among the rubbish of the city hall. The mob dispersed after the talk by Mayor Siegel, but returned after several hours and made a search for Prager, who was taken out and hurried down the street. The police say they were unable to handle the situation.

Prager was marched out to Mahler Heights, west of Collinsville, and forced to kneel.

Arms crossed, he prayed in German for a few minutes. The men placed a rope around his neck and Prager was swung to a tree for several seconds.

He was then let down and asked if he had anything to say, and requested that he be permitted to write a farewell to his parents in Germany. His brief letter follows:

“Carl Henry Prager,

Dresden, Germany

 

Dear Parents:

I must, this the fourth day of April 1918, die.

Please pray for me, my dear parents. This is my last letter and testament.

Your dear son and brother,

Robert Paul Prager.”

After being permitted to write the note, Prager was again drawn up by the rope and left hanging, and the mob dispersed quietly.

Prager had worked as a baker at the Bruno bakery for several years, but of late had been trying to secure employment at the coal mine at Maryville. He was denied union membership there because of his disloyal remarks against the United States.

[JdN: Ahh, yes, that white privilege.]

He was registered in St. Louis as an alien enemy. The authorities are indignant over the affair. Attorney General Brundage and State’s Attorney Streuber have denounced the lynching as a disgrace, and declare that the members of the mob must suffer for the act which was as unlawful as it was heinous and horrible. President Wilson and his cabinet have also denounced the affair. Attorney General Brundage is expected in Collinsville today, and the inquest into the death of Prager is expected to be held Monday.

********************

NOTES:
During the height of World War I, Prager, a coal miner, made speeches to his fellow coal miners on Socialism, and made derogatory remarks regarding American President Wilson.

Prager had been under surveillance for some time, with some authorities fearing he was a German spy. The fear of German spies was prevalent throughout America, and bridges and vital businesses were guarded by the military to prevent sabotage. Many Germans pledged allegiance to America publicly, and some even changed their names to become more “Americanized.” The day before his lynching, Prager put up posters at the Maryville mine, proclaiming his loyalty to the American government.

The miners became incensed at Prager’s action. When they threatened to do him bodily harm, he escaped to Collinsville where he lived. He was followed, captured, and lynched. In Prager’s pocket was found a long “proclamation” in which he stated his loyalty to the United States and to union labor. The location of the hanging was along St. Louis Road in Collinsville, near the St. John Cemetery.

In our neighboring Canada, it was actually claimed the Germans had crucified a surrendered Canadian soldier. This vile lie is memorialized to this very day in a sculpture. It was also said in the jewspapers that Germans raped nuns and cut the hands off babies. And the masses believed it, in an orgy of egoic moral superiority.

Nun rapers and baby killers?

The news of the lynching of Robert Prager spread throughout the country. The Swiss embassy in Washington D.C., which was attending to German interests in America, offered to pay the funeral expenses, however the state of Illinois paid the funeral expense, and sent the Swiss embassy a bill. The funeral was held in St. Louis at the Harmonie Lodge of the I. O. O. F., of which Prager was a member, and he was buried in the St. Matthews Cemetery in St. Louis.

Joseph Riegel [German name], Wesley Beaver, Richard Dukes Jr., William Brockmeier[also a German name] and Enid Elmore, all of Collinsville, were arrested at the request of the coroner’s jury investigating the death of Robert P. Prager. Following the inquest, the men were taken to Edwardsville to await the action of the Madison County Grand Jury. Riegel, a proprietor of a shoe repair shop in Collinsville, previously had admitted to being the leader of the mob. Two of the other men were miners, and one a porter in a saloon.

The land of crude barbarians

Spearing poor little babies, those bloody krauts….

Just look at those evil Hun kids

German-Americans — 1 in 3 of the US population in 1917! — were demonized as traitors and all their huge network of clubs, choirs, schools and theaters were crushed.

The trial was held in May 1918. The eleven defendants arrived in the courtroom wearing American flags. The jury included: Keith Ebey, clerk, Edwardsville; T. Benett, railroad car accountant, Edwardsville; George Neary Sr., janitor, Edwardsville; Walter Solterman, teamster, Worden; W. C. Dippold, flour miller, Edwardsville; Marion Baumgartner, tailor, Edwardsville; D. W. Fiegenbaum, manufacturer, Edwardsville; John Groshans, farmer, Edwardsville; A. H. Challacombe, plumber, Alton; Frank Oben, horse and mule buyer, Alton; F. W. Horn, tailor, Alton; Frank Weeks, clerk, Edwardsville.

State’s Attorney Streuber made a brief opening statement: “We do not represent Prager nor any pro-German nor any pro-German sentiment,” he declared. “We have made an effort to keep possible pro-Germans off the jury and I believe we have one that is 100 percent loyal. Our only interest is to see that the law is upheld. If Prager was either a pro-German or a spy, there was a remedy at law, and we aim to show that a mob took the law upon itself, which is in itself a violation.”

James M. Bandy, chief counsel for the defense, then spoke briefly. He declared there was evidence to show Prager’s disloyalty and that “after all the evidence is in, the jury will not return a verdict of guilty.”

More than 100 witnesses were summoned to appear at the trial. The men were declared not guilty by the jury, and were set free. The announcement of the verdict was greeted with loud cheers, and when the men filed out of the courthouse, they joined in a parade headed by the Great Lakes “Jackie” Band. The acquittal was no great surprise to those who heard the evidence in the case. The state failed to prove the actual participation of any of the accused men. As a result, one county paper asserted that Prager must have hung himself.

Following announcement of the verdict, State’s Attorney Streuber dismissed the charges against five others who were implicated in the Prager case. They were George Davis, Martin Futchek, Fred Frost, Harry Stevens, and John Tobnick. The latter four were police officers and were charged with malfeasance in office.

In September 1919, it was announced that Robert Paul Prager’s body was to be exhumed, and moved “from one of the humblest graves” in the cemetery to one of the “prettiest spots in the burial grounds.” The Harmonic Lodge No. 353, I. O. O. F., was to pay for the exhumation and re-burial. They also erected a monument for Prager.

In my opinion, this event remains a dark stain on the history of Collinsville, as does the murder of Rev. Elijah P. Lovejoy in Alton, also committed by a mob.

Photos:
1. Robert Paul Prager; from Vintage St. Louis.

2. Tombstone of Robert Prager; from Find A Grave.

Madison County ILGenWeb Thank you for providing this link. I’ve never seen a photo of the men involved.
Scott Monahan Wow, could you imagine if we still hung people that said something bad about the USA or even the president? There wouldn’t be anyone left! I guess the 1st Amendment was not in effect in 1918.
Stephanie Lieber Johnson Hung him then let him down to write a letter? Did they even use a noose? What a horrible death. A stain indeed.
Denise Evans How sad lynchings were a terrible thing. My Stiefel ancestors came from Saxony.
Jim Davis did they ever name all the defendents?
Paul Klaase If he didn’t like it here, why not move ?
John de Nugent He didn’t like lies, such as how the US entering the war would “make the world safe for democracy” and how Wilson claimed it would be “the war to end all wars.”
.
.
Prager also doubted correctly the sincerity of Wilson and his “14 Points,” esp. “self-determination” and “a peace without victors” — all flagrantly broken by the Versailles Treaty.
.
If I object to government lies today, does that mean that this former Marine NCO “hates America”? My family came here in 1635!
.
.

….Daily Mail article on how Germans were treated in “the land of the free!”

Tarred and feathered, lynched in the street and locked up in internment camps: The tragic plight of Germans in AMERICA during the First World War

  • As Europe was ravaged by fighting, German immigrants in the US suffered harassment, internment, lynchings – and even the humiliation of being tarred and feathered 
  • Although a little-remembered part of history today, America was completely wracked by the fear and paranoia that swept from coast to coast during the Great War 
  • The United States declared war on Germany in April 1917 and helped lead the Allies to victory. But before that, many Americans were terrified of the German threat growing on the other side of the world 

A fascinating collection of photos have resurfaced showing the hardships faced by German-Americans at the brutal height of the First World War.

As Europe was ravaged by fighting, German immigrants in the US suffered harassment, internment, lynchings – and even the humiliation of being tarred and feathered.

Although a little-remembered part of history today, America was wracked by the fear and paranoia that swept from coast to coast during the Great War.

The United States declared war on Germany in April 1917 and helped lead the Allies to victory. But before that, many Americans were terrified of the German threat growing on the other side of the world.

This collection of pictures reveals the full extent of war hysteria and open hostility towards all things German that erupted across the nation.

A fascinating collection of photos have resurfaced showing the hardships faced by German-Americans at the brutal height of the First World War

Pictured, German-American farmer John Meints, from Luverne, Minnesota, after being attacked, tarred and feathered by a group of masked men because he was accused of failing to buy war bonds in August 19, 1918

A fascinating collection of photos have resurfaced showing the hardships faced by German-Americans at the brutal height of the First World War. Pictured, German-American farmer John Meints, from Luverne, Minnesota, after being attacked, tarred and feathered by a group of masked men because he was accused of failing to buy war bonds in August 19, 1918

As Europe was ravaged by fighting, German immigrants in the US suffered harassment, internment, lynchings - and even the humiliation of being tarred and feathered. Pictured, the dormitory inside a German-American internment camp at Fort Douglas, Utah

As Europe was ravaged by fighting, German immigrants in the US suffered harassment, internment, lynchings – and even the humiliation of being tarred and feathered. Pictured, the dormitory inside a German-American internment camp at Fort Douglas, Utah

Although a little-remembered part of history today, America was wracked by the fear and paranoia that swept from coast to coast during the Great War. Pictured, a crowd gathers for a German-language book burning at Baraboo High School in Wisconsin in 1918

Although a little-remembered part of history today, America was wracked by the fear and paranoia that swept from coast to coast during the Great War. Pictured, a crowd gathers for a German-language book burning at Baraboo High School in Wisconsin in 1918

The United States declared war on Germany in April 1917 and helped lead the Allies to victory. But before that, many Americans were terrified of the German threat growing on the other side of the world. Pictured, interned Germans forced to build the barracks for their own internment camp

The United States declared war on Germany in April 1917 and helped lead the Allies to victory. But before that, many Americans were terrified of the German threat growing on the other side of the world. Pictured, interned Germans forced to build the barracks for their own internment camp

Before the war broke out, America had welcomed German immigrants and regarded them highly. German was the second most widely spoken language in the country and there were over 100 million first and second-generation German-Americans living in the United States, with many of them involved in the thousands of German organizations across the country.

The United States embraced them and the German language became an established part of the high school curriculum.

But when the war broke out and Germany became the enemy of the Allies abroad, the American government began calling on its people to reject their German-American neighbors.

President Woodrow Wilson declared that German-Americans were to be treated as ‘alien-enemies’ and that they should reject their German identity if they were to be accepted in US society.

This collection of pictures reveals the full extent of war hysteria and open hostility towards all things German that erupted across the nation. Pictured, German prisoners put to work gardening and harvesting food in Oglethorpe, Georgia on February 8, 1918

This collection of pictures reveals the full extent of war hysteria and open hostility towards all things German that erupted across the nation. Pictured, German prisoners put to work gardening and harvesting food in Oglethorpe, Georgia on February 8, 1918

Before the war broke out, America had welcomed German immigrants and regarded them highly. Pictured, German prisoners holding their tools while posing for a photograph in Hot Springs, North Carolina, in 1917

Before the war broke out, America had welcomed German immigrants and regarded them highly. Pictured, German prisoners holding their tools while posing for a photograph in Hot Springs, North Carolina, in 1917

German was the second most widely spoken language in the country and there were over 100 million first and second-generation German-Americans living in the United States. Pictured, the burnt ashes of Baraboo High School's German books. Above the ashes are written the words: 'Here lies the remains of German in B.H.S'

German was the second most widely spoken language in the country and there were over 100 million first and second-generation German-Americans living in the United States. Pictured, the burnt ashes of Baraboo High School’s German books. Above the ashes are written the words: ‘Here lies the remains of German in B.H.S’

When the war broke out and Germany became the enemy of the Allies abroad, the American government began calling on its people to reject their German-American neighbors. Pictured, German-Americans, shortly after being freed from their internment camps, line up for a train in Hoboken, New Jersey, on September 25, 1919

When the war broke out and Germany became the enemy of the Allies abroad, the American government began calling on its people to reject their German-American neighbors. Pictured, German-Americans, shortly after being freed from their internment camps, line up for a train in Hoboken, New Jersey, on September 25, 1919

IMPRISONED FOR A POEM…

In July 1918, German-speaking immigrant Erich Posselt wrote a poem about a group of aviators bumbling through Germany that landed him in an internment camp for 17 months.

The Department of Justice, which found the poem during a search of his home, sent Posselt to Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia.

He was finally released in January 1920 and settled in New York.

Here is an extract of the offending poem:

Six little aviators / Went flying out one day / They wished to go to Coblenz / And never came away. 

… 

Two little aviators / Got cold feet on the run / One lost all the breath he had / Then there was only one.

One little aviator / Soon to an end was brought / He grieved so for the other five / He too at last was caught.

Source: Smithsonian  

This change in public opinion was immediate.

Literature began to directly attack German-American churches, schools, societies, and newspapers as agents of Imperial German conspiracy.

Thousands lost their jobs and countless more stopped speaking German. Fourteen states banned schools from teaching the language, declaring that German was ‘not a fit language to teach clean and pure American boys and girls.’

The American Defense Society, an off-shoot of the National Security League, encouraged the public burning of German-language books and campaigned to change the names of cities, streets, parks, and schools in America to the names of Belgian and French communities destroyed in the war.

Some Germans even saw their property seized by authorities – in total, the US confiscated half a billion dollars in private property during WWI.

The names of German food were removed from restaurant menus; sauerkraut became ‘liberty cabbage’, hamburger became ‘liberty steak’.

Even German Daschund dogs became known as ‘liberty dogs’ and German measles became ‘liberty measles’.

Harassment of German-Americans became commonplace. Employers would receive telephone calls asking if they still had ‘that German spy’ on the payroll.

Just having a German name was cause enough for the American Protective League to launch an investigation into a person’s private affairs.

A mob in Illinois lynched a man named Robert Prager in April 1918 because they were convinced he was a German spy

Pictured, a German-American iknitting a scarf at a camp in Fort Douglas, Utah

A mob in Illinois lynched a man named Robert Prager (left) in April 1918 because they were convinced he was a German spy. Pictured right, a German-American iknitting a scarf at a camp in Fort Douglas, Utah

President Woodrow Wilson declared that German-Americans were to be treated as 'alien-enemies' and that they should reject their German identity if they were to be accepted in US society. Pictured, German-Americans peer out the back of the train in Hoboken, New Jersey, on September 25, 1919

President Woodrow Wilson declared that German-Americans were to be treated as ‘alien-enemies’ and that they should reject their German identity if they were to be accepted in US society. Pictured, German-Americans peer out the back of the train in Hoboken, New Jersey, on September 25, 1919

Fourteen states banned schools from teaching the language, declaring that German was 'not a fit language to teach clean and pure American boys and girls.' Pictured, the barracks inside the German internment camp in Hot Springs, North Carolina, in 1917

Fourteen states banned schools from teaching the language, declaring that German was ‘not a fit language to teach clean and pure American boys and girls.’ Pictured, the barracks inside the German internment camp in Hot Springs, North Carolina, in 1917

German-owned ships were captured by the American government after the US entered the war. In total, 54 merchant vessels were taken in and 1,800 sailors were sent to internment camps

German-owned ships were captured by the American government after the US entered the war. In total, 54 merchant vessels were taken in and 1,800 sailors were sent to internment camps

The American Defense Society, an off-shoot of the National Security League, encouraged the public burning of German-language books and campaigned to change the names of cities, streets, parks, and schools in America to the names of Belgian and French communities destroyed in the war. Pictured, German-Americans inmates built a German-style village for themselves in Hot Springs, North Carolina, in 1917 

The American Defense Society, an off-shoot of the National Security League, encouraged the public burning of German-language books and campaigned to change the names of cities, streets, parks, and schools in America to the names of Belgian and French communities destroyed in the war. Pictured, German-Americans inmates built a German-style village for themselves in Hot Springs, North Carolina, in 1917

Some Germans even saw their property seized by authorities - in total, the US confiscated half a billion dollars in private property during WWI. Pictured, a view of the German-American village set up inside of the internment camp at Hot Springs

Some Germans even saw their property seized by authorities – in total, the US confiscated half a billion dollars in private property during WWI. Pictured, a view of the German-American village set up inside of the internment camp at Hot Springs

Harassment of German-Americans became commonplace. Employers would receive telephone calls asking if they still had 'that German spy' on the payroll. Pictured, a small wooden house built by inmates at Hot Springs 

Harassment of German-Americans became commonplace. Employers would receive telephone calls asking if they still had ‘that German spy’ on the payroll. Pictured, a small wooden house built by inmates at Hot Springs

Inmates at Hot Springs used recycled tobacco tins to build the church (left). The names of German food were removed from restaurant menus; sauerkraut became ‘liberty cabbage’, hamburger became ‘liberty steak’. Even German Daschund dogs became known as ‘liberty dogs’

Worse yet, violence broke out – violence egged on by the government. Persons reading German-language newspapers on public trains were verbally insulted and spat on. A mob in Minnesota, for example, tarred and feathered a German-American man named John Meints in August 1918 on the grounds that he hadn’t bought war bonds. And another mob in Illinois lynched a man named Robert Prager in April 1918 because they were convinced he was a German spy.

While some German-Americans were attacked, around 6,000 were sent to internment camps. The government barred all German-Americans from living near military facilities, airports, port towns, or the capitol. And it forced every German-American to get fingerprinted and registered and sent them into camps across the country, locked in like prisoners of war.

Even when the fighting ended in late 1918, many weren’t sent free. Some inmates remained incarcerated until 1920.

Just having a German name was cause enough for the American Protective League to launch an investigation into a person's private affairs. Pictured, children are stopped on their way to the park by a sign that reads: 'DANGER!! To Pro-Germans --- Loyal Americans Welcome to Edison Park,' in Chicago, Illinois, in 1917

Just having a German name was cause enough for the American Protective League to launch an investigation into a person’s private affairs. Pictured, children are stopped on their way to the park by a sign that reads: ‘DANGER!! To Pro-Germans — Loyal Americans Welcome to Edison Park,’ in Chicago, Illinois, in 1917

Worse yet, violence broke out - violence egged on by the government. Persons reading German-language newspapers on public trains were verbally insulted and spat on. Pictured, German-Americans at a train station in Hoboken, New Jersey, on September 25, 1919

Worse yet, violence broke out – violence egged on by the government. Persons reading German-language newspapers on public trains were verbally insulted and spat on. Pictured, German-Americans at a train station in Hoboken, New Jersey, on September 25, 1919

These men are actually German soldiers. In a strange story, they ended up staying in America by choice, afraid that they would be destroyed by the British Navy if they returned to Europe. They were ultimately sent into internment camps along with the German-Americans in Portsmouth, Virginia, in 1916

These men are actually German soldiers. In a strange story, they ended up staying in America by choice, afraid that they would be destroyed by the British Navy if they returned to Europe. They were ultimately sent into internment camps along with the German-Americans in Portsmouth, Virginia, in 1916

While some German-Americans were attacked, around 6,000 were sent to internment camps. Pictured, the inside of a barracks at Hot Springs, North Carolina 

While some German-Americans were attacked, around 6,000 were sent to internment camps. Pictured, the inside of a barracks at Hot Springs, North Carolina

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4992032/Germans-AMERICA-World-War.html#ixzz5BuEgnB4s
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

6 Comments

  1. Great work exposing this well-hidden and disgraceful period of American history. It’s amazing how stupid and gullible Americans can be – they will believe any lie the Jew-owned media tells them.

    • Thank you, comrade!

      But comrades too believe whatever they want. Our movement is rife with infighting, lies, false rumors…. The entire human race on this planet is full of young souls who pick and choose what truths they like, what lies they like — and what truths they hate. 😉

      The Turks say: “He who tells the truth should have one foot in the stirrup.” 😉

      Mundus decipi vult, the Ancient Romans already chuckled: “The world wants to be deceived.”

      Famous “Fleetwood Mac” song

      .https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xr9Oubxw1gA

      Lyrics
      If I could turn the page
      In time then I’d rearrange
      Just a day or two
      Close my, close my, close my eyes
      But I couldn’t find a way
      So I’ll settle for one day
      To believe in you
      Tell me, tell me, tell me lies
      Tell me lies
      Tell me sweet little lies
      (Tell me lies, tell me, tell me lies)
      Oh, no, no you can’t disguise
      (You can’t disguise, no you can’t disguise)
      Tell me lies
      Tell me sweet little lies
      Although I’m not making plans
      I hope that you understand
      There’s a reason why
      Close your, close your, close your eyes
      No more broken hearts
      We’re better off apart
      Let’s give it a try
      Tell me, tell me, tell me lies
      Tell me lies
      Tell me sweet little lies
      (Tell me lies, tell me, tell me lies)
      Oh, no, no you can’t disguise
      (You can’t disguise, no you can’t disguise)
      Tell me lies
      Tell me sweet little lies
      If I could turn the page
      In time then I’d rearrange
      Just a day or two
      (Close my, close my, close my eyes)
      But I couldn’t find a way
      So I’ll settle for one day
      To believe in you
      (Tell me, tell me, tell me lies)
      Tell me lies
      Tell me sweet little lies
      (Tell me lies, tell me, tell me lies)
      Oh, no, no you can’t disguise
      (You can’t disguise, no you can’t disguise)
      Tell me lies
      Tell me sweet little lies
      (Tell me lies, tell me, tell me lies)
      Oh, no, no you can’t disguise
      (You can’t disguise, no you can’t disguise)
      Tell me lies
      Tell me sweet little lies
      (Tell me, tell me lies)
      Songwriters: Christine Mcvie / Eddy Quintela Mendonca
      Little Lies lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group

  2. My mother, whose maiden name was Herr, was born in Fayetteville. Arkansas in 1919. There was no mention from her about persecution due to having a German name. Nor did any of the other Herrs I knew as relatives speak of this.

    • I am sure that is accurate.

      The Deep South never had a huge German influx, although New Orleans did have a German section, full of industry, called Gretna, which I visited.

      (The Appalachian mountain range also had German immigrants, such as my late wife’s ancestor, Jacob Hochstetter, after he left Pennsylvania in the wake of a traumatic Amerindian massacre of his family. But the Appalachian area was/is not the Deep South at all, and in fact, it rejected slavery — without loving the blacks in the slightest, also very true today — and the mountain folk, a mix of Scots-Irish and German, like Margi, sympathized with the Union in the “Civil War.”

      They were against slavery because they were against the blacks and did not want them entering their region. This was also true of Oregon, btw, which enacted a prohibition on Blacks living there. Anti-slavery sentiment was often anti-black, and saw the Southern white slave-owners and plantation-owners as greedy fools who were short-sighted and inflicting a negro curse on America.

      Thomas Jefferson of Virginia had 200 slaves, but wanted all negroes some day to be 1) freed and 2) immediately expelled to a faraway place. Robert E. Lee felt the same way, and, in fact, wanted the Blacks to be expelled while still slaves, walking up the gangplank while still under slave discipline, and never freed at all while on American soil. Some of his letters to his wife during the “Civil War” were discovered a few decades ago in a vault at the Burke & Herbert Bank of Alexandria, Virginia, where I used to bank myself.)

      I learned a huge amount about the German-Americans when I worked for a German-American Foundation, the Tricentennial Foundation, in 1985-87.

      The Deep South (not to include Texas) was of British stock (with a smidgen of Cajun-French names radiating out from New Orleans and the Acadian/Cajun bayou areas).

      I surmise that the German element in the Deep South was correctly seen as not being a political or economic threat to the Wilson warmongering of 1916-1917. But Wilson, an Ohioan, knew just how strong the Germans were in the Midwest.

      The Midwest was very different from the monolingual, English-speaking Deep South. Germans were, in many areas, by far the largest white ethnic subgroup and had thousands of newspapers, clubs, choirs, beer gardens, theaters, symphonies, private schools and religious services (Protestant/Lutheran and Catholic),all held in the German language.

      Had the Midwestern German-Americans not been crushed by a wave of outrageous jewspaper lies and defamations about fictitious atrocities, they had the economic and political clout to thwart Wilson’s declaration of war on Germany.

      In fact, the Temperance/Prohibition movement (to ban bars and the sale and consumption of alcohol) was blocked for decades by overall German-American political and economic clout and especially by the big German-American beer brewers (Anheuser-Busch, Stroh’s, Schlitz, Pabst, etc.). A key point in htis regard was that the beer brewers had concluded a strong and serious political alliance with the Irish-Americans, who then (as now) ran very many bars, and this was their livelihood.

      Only the crushing of German-American power in 1917, which then left the Irish-Americans standing alone against “Temperance” (also called “Prohibition”), made the passage of Prohibition possible. This movement to ban alcohol was just about entirely borne by the Americans of British stock (English, Scottish, Welsh, etc.), and, to this day, “dry counties” are found in the overwhelmingly British-settled South of the USA.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temperance_movement

      Excerpt:

      …there was significant pushback against the growing temperance movement, particularly in urban areas with significant European immigrant communities. Chicago political bosses A.C. Hesing and Hermann Raster forced the Republican Party to adopt an anti-temperance platform at the 1872 Republican National Convention with the threat of taking the German and European vote away from the party. The following year, Hesing formed the People’s Party, a breakaway pro-liquor faction of the Republican Party, and elected Harvey Doolittle Colvin as mayor of Chicago by a wide margin.[66][67]

      […] The movement gained traction during the First World War, with President Wilson issuing sharp restrictions on the sale of alcohol in many combatant countries. This was done to preserve grain for food production.[14] During this time, prohibitionists used anti-German sentiment related to the war to rally against alcohol sales, since many brewers were of German-American descent.[52][note 3]

      The German-American presence and pride from 1690 to 1917 were in one sense comparable to the burgeoning Hispanic presence of today, with the open use of the Spanish language and completely Spanish neighborhoods, eating establishments, clubs, the Mass being held in Spanish, etc, etc.

      Of course, in contrast, the German immigrants were white, law-abiding, either highly educated or skilled in the trades, and emigrated to America with money in their pocket from hard work, having a skilled profession, and from thrift (which equals that of the Scots).

      The German immigrants fit in instantly with the British-Americans, looking only slightly different with perhaps wider or squarer faces), intermarried with them, and learned to speak impeccable English, especially their children, since simple, daily English vocabulary, being mostly Anglo-Saxon, is a very cognate language.

      AND, let me add, the German immigrants, serious people with a strenous work ethic, held their liquor well and were NOT known themselves for drunkenness.

      In the Wild West, the desperados and gunslingers often had British names, whereas the Germans were often among the law-abiding townspeople who avoided prostitutes, saloon fights, card games and gambling, gunfights, etc.

      The Germans came to America to start solid farms and businesses, and so they did. 🙂

      It was sickening what the liar and sex-fiend Woodrow Wilson did to them, who arguably were the best immigrants America ever received, with the Calvinist/Presbyterian Scots in second place, also having a superb work ethic, thrift, and a law-abiding spirit. (My great-grandfather Waddell of Greensburg, Pennsylvania was one of them. And he, looking for a woman with similar values, married a woman who had a rather German-sounding name, “Berlin.” 😉
      .
      .

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*