Social conditions among the Pennsylvania Germans in the eighteenth century, as revealed in the German newspapers published in America . VIII Political Ideals 141 Conclusion 168 Bibliography 212 ABBREVIATIONS. A =Der Unpartheyische Reading Adler (1796-1800). AS =Der Americanische Staatsbothe (1800). Ba = Baileys Das Pennsylvanische Zeitungsblat (1778). CW =Die Chesnuthtller Wochenschrift (1790-1794). DP =Der Deutsche Porcupein (1798-1799). GP =Der General Post-Bothe (lygo). GZ =Die Germantauner Zeitung (1785-1790). GZg =Die Germantauner Zeitung (i 790-1793). H ::^Hutters Der Lancaster Correspon


Social conditions among the Pennsylvania Germans in the eighteenth century, as revealed in the German newspapers published in America . VIII Political Ideals 141 Conclusion 168 Bibliography 212 ABBREVIATIONS. A =Der Unpartheyische Reading Adler (1796-1800). AS =Der Americanische Staatsbothe (1800). Ba = Baileys Das Pennsylvanische Zeitungsblat (1778). CW =Die Chesnuthtller Wochenschrift (1790-1794). DP =Der Deutsche Porcupein (1798-1799). GP =Der General Post-Bothe (lygo). GZ =Die Germantauner Zeitung (1785-1790). GZg =Die Germantauner Zeitung (i 790-1793). H ::^Hutters Der Lancaster Correspondent (1799—1800). M =M\\\trs Staatsbote (1762-1779). NUL=New^ Unpartheyische Lancaster Zeitung (1787-1797)- NUR = 2VeM^ Unpartheyische Readinger Zeitung (1789—1800). PC =Philadelphische Correspondenz (1781-1790). PC2 = Philadelphische Correspondenz (1790-1797). PC3 = Philadelphische Correspondenz (1798-1800). PC4 =-PHiladelphische Correspondenz (1800). PS =Philadelphisches Staatsregister (1779-1780). PZ =^Philadelphische Zeitung (i755-1757). S =Saurs paper (i 739-1777). UH =Die Unpartheyische Hdrrisburg Zeitung (1799—1800).. PREFACE. ^^WO considerations have rendered this subject espe-^^ cially attractive to me. In the first place, none ofthe historians of the Germans in America has given it theattention which it deserved. Kuhns in his German andSwiss Settlements of Colonial Pennsylvania devotes onepage to the subject of newspapers and mentions only oneby name, Saurs colonial paper. Faust in his GermanElement in the United States discusses the German news-papers of the eighteenth century somewhat more in detail,although he does not mention half of them. In fact, itwas Professor Faust himself who suggested the topic tome, because he knew what an imperfect knowledge his-torians possessed of this subject. Needless to say, neitherProfessor Faust nor Professor Kuhns derived the materialfor their accurate works from the periodical Oswald Seidensticker, th


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectgermans, bookyear1922