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Before Locust Point became famous.
Before steamships crowded the harbor.
Before Ellis Island opened its gates -
German voices were already shaping Baltimore.
Serving Sauerkraut tells the full story of German immigration to Baltimore from the early 1700s through the great steamship era of the late 19th century. Grounded in census records, church archives, immigration statistics, and institutional history, this book traces how a steady colonial trickle became one of the most powerful immigrant waves in the city's history.
Inside you will discover:
- The first German families settling in Maryland before Baltimore was even a city
- The Palatine migrations and Atlantic crossings of the 1700s
- The rise of Zion Lutheran Church and German Catholic parishes
- German participation in the American Revolution
- The explosion of immigration between 1820-1850
- The political refugees of the 1848 Revolution
- The transformative 1867 agreement between the B&O Railroad and North German Lloyd
- The creation of the Locust Point immigration corridor
- The growth of German neighborhoods in East Baltimore and beyond
- The brewing empires of Gunther, Wiessner, and Bauernschmidt
- German-language newspapers like Der Deutsche Correspondent
- Turnvereins, Schuetzen Parks, mutual aid societies, and bilingual schools
- The cultural imprint of food, music, faith, architecture, and civic life
By 1890, more than 41,000 German-born residents lived in Baltimore. Tens of thousands more were second-generation German Americans. They were not a side note in the city's history - they were a central force in its economic rise, industrial strength, and cultural character.
They built churches.
They founded breweries.
They established schools.
They organized societies.
They voted.
They stayed.
Richly illustrated with historical images, maps, and demographic analysis, Serving Sauerkraut reveals how German immigrants did more than pass through Baltimore - they transformed it.
Baltimore did not simply receive Germans.
It became, in many ways, a German-American city.
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