By Jean Lundquist
Special to The Free Press
NEW ULM — Steeped in German heritage, many New Ulm residents are proud of their history. And an upcoming installment of the “Civil War and More” series at the New Ulm Public Library may give residents a few more reasons to look back with pride.
At 6 p.m. Tuesdays, episodes of the Ken Burns PBS documentary “ The Civil War” are shown on a 6-by-9 screen, followed by a brief presentation of other Civil War history by Library Director Larry Hlavsa. The one exception will be Jan. 18, when local historian Denny Warta will provide information on the role German Americans played in the Civil War — the only presentation that will have a local angle considering New Ulm’s German heritage.
Warta says the importance of German-speaking soldiers in the war has been ignored because of the role of Germany in the two world wars. He said it was a combination of beliefs, culture and personal history that made the Germans good soldiers.
“Germans were anti-slavery as a group, and (President) Lincoln’s strongest support came from Germans in America. They could not imagine a free country with slavery,” Warta said.
Warta calls the mass emigration of Germans to America after a 1848 revolution “ the first German brain drain to the United States.”
That year, many German intellectuals gathered in Europe hoping to create a German state modeled after the United States, complete with its Constitution and Bill of Rights. The Prussian Kaiser sent his army to quash the effort, Warta said, and many of the people involved fled to America. Some found their way to Minnesota and founded the German city of New Ulm.
Other so- called “1848- ers” settled in southern states, where they found life much more difficult when the Civil War erupted, Warta said. In addition to being against slavery, Germans also take the swearing of an oath very seriously. These people had taken a vow to support the Union when they arrived in this country and were not in favor of secession, he said.
As such, they refused to fight against Union soldiers.
The combination of beliefs and culture led to the lynching of a total of 150 German men and boys in Fredericksburg, Texas, when they refused to take a new oath to the Confederacy, Warta said. In Comfort, Texas, 36 young German-heritage men decided to escape across the Rio Grande, make their way to New York and join the Union army. A traitor learned of the plans, Warta said, and informed the Confederate Army. All 36 were killed and later buried in a mass grave.Warta said a monument to the men was placed at the gravesite, with the words “ Treue der Union,” or True to the Union, engraved on it.
Warta said it is the only monument dedicated to the Union in the former Confederate territory.
Meanwhile, the Germans who had settled in New Ulm were quick to organize and go to war for the Union, many fighting at Gettysburg.
“New Ulm area soldiers fought heroically at Shiloh,” Warta said, where a monument recognizes their contribution.
The Battle of Shiloh is among the bloodiest of all American battles; nearly 24,000 soldiers died during two days of fighting in April of 1862.
Warta said shortly after the battle, New Ulm soldiers headed back to Minnesota to defend their own homes, as the Dakota Conflict was breaking out.
Both Warta and Hlavsa say the “Civil War and More” series is a chance to add more depth and understanding to a time that still fascinates Americans.
“ There are Civil War reenactors all across the country,” Hlavsa said.