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  1. #1
    Very Active Member Joe T.'s Avatar
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    Default The 4th and What I think about - -

    I am working with a company in Germany to develop a thermo-vacuum formable carbon fiber reinforced thermoplastic material. Ingo, my contact, sent me a 'Happy 4th of July' email this morning. That got me to thinking about what the forth means to me and what sacrifices my ancestors made so I can be here, in Wichita KS, writing this message to y'all. My email follows:


    Ingo,

    I am sure you had a lot of European and German history classes when in school and college. I particularly liked history, but that ain't a good way to make a living in life. So, I read a lot. Better to major in something that will provide a better life than a history degree - - -

    Think back to what you imagine it was like living in the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation in ~1750. Now, assume you were not royalty, but a farmer, blacksmith, or other manual type laborer. Most folks were typical 'peasants,' essentially owned by the local Duke or Prince. And they were illiterate.

    My ancestors, and my wife's ancestors, came from the British Isles - British, Scots, and Irish. As a matter of fact, my mother, surname Campbell, was proud they were Scots-Irish and lived for several generations in Appalachia. And believe me, they were not Royalty!!!

    So, Ingo, imagine you're about 15 or 16 years old. You have heard about the British Colonies and the opportunity there and it has captured your imagination. Ya' just gotta go!!!

    Think about that. When my ancestors first arrived in the British Colonies (remember, it wasn't 'America' until after July 4, 1776), they had decided to make a long, perilous trip in a very slow and small sailing 'ship.' The trip took about 6 weeks. It was dangerous and many did not make the trip alive.

    When I think about the 4th, I think about the sacrifices my ancestors made, and all of America's first settlers made, to come to the British Colonies. The first sacrifice was the 'TRIP.'

    Here is an excerpt from Gottleb Mittelberger and his Journey to Pennsylvania in the Year 1750 and Return to Germany in the year 1754:


    Passage To America, 1750​
    At the end of the seventeenth century approximately 200,000 people inhabited the British colonies in North America. The following century saw an explosion in numbers with the population doubling about every 25 years. The majority of these new immigrants were Scotch-Irish, Germans or African slaves. Between 1700 and the beginning of the American Revolution, approximately 250,000 Africans, 210,000 Europeans and 50,000 convicts had reached the colonial shores.

    The passage to America was treacherous by any standard. Many of the immigrants were too poor to pay for the journey and therefore indentured themselves to wealthier colonialists - selling their services for a period of years in return for the price of the passage. Crammed into a small wooden ship, rolling and rocking at the mercy of the sea, the voyagers - men, women and children - endured hardships unimaginable to us today. Misery was the most common description of a journey that typically lasted seven weeks.

    Not An Easy Journey

    Gottleb Mittelberger was an organ master and schoolmaster who left one of the small German states in May 1750 to make his way to America. He arrived at the port of Philadelphia on October 10. He represents the thousands of Germans who settled in middle Pennsylvania during this period. He returned to his homeland in 1754. His diary was published in this country in 1898:

    "- - during the voyage there is on board these ships terrible misery, stench, fumes, horror, vomiting, many kinds of seasickness, fever, dysentery, headache, heat, constipation, boils, scurvy, cancer, mouth rot, and the like, all of which come from old and sharply-salted food and meat, also from very bad and foul water, so that many die miserably.

    Add to this want of provisions, hunger, thirst, frost, heat, dampness, anxiety, want, afflictions and lamentations, together with other trouble, as e.g., the lice abound so frightfully, especially on sick people, that they can be scraped off the body. The misery reaches a climax when a gale rages for two or three nights and days, so that everyone believes that the ship will go to the bottom with all human beings on board. In such a visitation the people cry and pray most piteously.

    No one can have an idea of the sufferings which women in confinement have to bear with their innocent children on board these ships. Few of this class escape with their lives; many a mother is cast into the water with her child as soon as she is dead. One day, just as we had a heavy gale, a woman in our ship, who was to give birth and could not give birth under the circumstances, was pushed through a loophole (porthole) in the ship and dropped into the sea, because she was far in the rear of the ship and could not be brought forward.

    Children from one to seven years rarely survive the voyage; and many a time parents are compelled to see their children miserably suffer and die from hunger, thirst, and sickness, and then to see them cast into the water. I witnessed such misery in no less than thirty-two children in our ship, all of whom were thrown into the sea. The parents grieve all the more since their children find no resting place in the earth, but are devoured by the monsters of the sea. It is a notable fact that children who have not yet had the measles or smallpox generally get them on board the ship, and mostly die of them.

    When the ships have landed at Philadelphia after their long voyage, no one is permitted to leave them except those who pay for their passage or can give good security; the others, who cannot pay, must remain on board the ships till they are purchased and are released from the ships by their purchasers. The sick always fare the worst, for the healthy are naturally preferred and purchased first; and so the sick and wretched must often remain on board in front of the city for two or three weeks, and frequently die, whereas many a one, if he could pay his debt and were permitted to leave the ship immediately, might recover and remain alive.

    The sale of human beings in the market on board the ship is carried on thus: Every day Englishmen, Dutchmen, and High German people come from the city of Philadelphia and other places, in part from a great distance, say twenty, thirty, or forty hours away, and go on board the newly-arrived ship that has brought and offers for sale passengers from Europe, and select among the healthy persons such as they deem suitable for their business, and bargain with them how long they will serve for their passage money, which most of them are still in debt for, When they have come to an agreement, it happens that adult persons bind themselves in writing to serve three, four, five, or six years for the amount due by them, according to their age and strength. But very young people, from ten to fifteen years, must serve till they are twenty-one years old.

    Many parents must sell and trade away their children like so many head of cattle, for if their children take the debt upon them- selves, the parents can leave the ship free and unrestrained; but as the parents often do not know where and to what people their children are going, it often happens that such parents and children, after leaving the ship, do not see each other again for many years, perhaps no more in all their lives.

    It often happens that whole families, husband, wife, and children, are separated by being sold to different purchasers, especially when they have not paid any part of their passage money.

    When a husband or wife has died at sea, when the ship has made more than half of her trip, the survivor must pay or serve not only for himself or herself, but also for the deceased. When both parents have died over halfway at sea, their children, especially when they are young and have nothing to pawn or to pay, must stand for their own and their parents' passage, and serve till they are twenty-one years old. When one has served his or her term, he or she is entitled to a new suit of clothes at parting; and if it has been so stipulated, a man gets in addition a horse, a woman, a cow."

    References:
    Mittelberger, Gottleb, Gottleb Mittelberger's Journey to Pennsylvania in the Year 1750 and Return to Germany in the year 1754 (published by the German Society of Pennsylvania 1898)

    OK, Ingo, now you are in the British Colonies. You are an indentured servant. Your family is a thousand miles away across the unforgiving ocean. Now what do you do?

    Well, you're illiterate so you need the local Clergy to write a letter home to your family to let them know ya' made it. Maybe, after some time, the local priest/preacher/minister will have time to write the letter. Maybe not - - -

    But, you're in AMERICA (eh, I mean 'The British Colonies'). But, you're here for life. You will be lucky if you get one letter to your family every couple of years. You are alone in a new, strange land. It is up to you to stay alive and, hopefully, make a life for yourself and your future family. There ain't no one else to help - - - -

    So, it was a tough life. But, apparently well worth it. I'm sure glad my ancestors made it.

    This is what I think about on the 4th of July.

    I appreciate your time. I hope I didn't bore you too much.

    Regards,
    Joe T.
    Joe T.
    I miss SoCal - - - -

  2. #2
    Very Active Member BLUEKNIGHT911's Avatar
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    Very well said ..... I sent you a PM ..... Mike

  3. #3
    Very Active Member Joe T.'s Avatar
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    PM received.

    Thanks,
    Joe T.
    Joe T.
    I miss SoCal - - - -

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