German immigration: The early years

Along with 190 other passengers from the Grand Duchy of Baden, Joseph Mast set sail aboard the Bolivar from the Havre, France, on April 5, 1834.
After 58 days at sea, the ship arrived at the port of New Orleans on June 2, only to find the city in the throes of a cholera epidemic.
To avoid the sickness in the city, a number of the immigrants, including Mast, took a steamboat north the next day. At the mouth of the Ohio River they left the boat, and camped for a night at the present site of Cairo, where they gathered wood and built a large campfire. The next morning, they boarded another boat, which landed them at St. Louis on June 13. On the 14th they again headed up the river.
On the 15th, the vessel they were aboard collided with a boat headed downstream, and the group narrowly missed shipwreck. Finally, on June 16, Joseph reached Quincy, two and one-half months after leaving the Havre.
Joseph was the nephew of Michael Mast, the first German to settle in the Quincy area, in 1829. While Joseph's trip across the ocean had been plagued by bad weather and sea sickness, all had survived the voyage. However, of his further travels up the Mississippi, Joseph noted, in a letter to his parents dated July 20, 1834, "the trip on the Mississippi is a sour and unhealthy trip, for cholera reigns mostly on ships. On two ships eight days later we continued; on one 8 died and on the other 28 died."
Nor did Joseph find life in Illinois initially as promising as he had hoped. Although his cousin had become "a rich respected man" with the five houses he had built in town all rented, and two more built on 130 acres outside town where he intended to move, Joseph cautioned his parents not to sell up in Germany and join him immediately. According to Joseph, work was not readily assured, clothes and equipment were expensive, and farming required work from dawn to dusk and beyond. But, he advised, if they had already sold their holdings, and were intent on coming, they should provide themselves well with food for the ocean voyage, so as to arrive at their destination in good health. Not withstanding this inauspicious beginning, Joseph and his relatives prospered as citizens of the new city of Quincy, and as farmers of Adams County.
Beginning in the 1830s, German settlers arrived in this area of Illinois in increasing numbers. They were drawn by a mixed topography of upland prairie and timber broken by spring fed streams, and rich forest and river bottomland soils with agricultural potential. These German immigrant farmers, taking advantage of land for sale in the vast Illinois Military Tract, would settle in the southern sections of the county, particularly in Melrose and Fall Creek townships.
Others, interested in labor and business opportunities offered by the rapidly growing river town of Quincy, would purchase small city lots and build their homes primarily on the south side of the growing city, in the area variously known as "New Bielfield," "Hereford Meadows," or "Calftown."
The reasons for immigration were varied, and while the majority of German men coming to Adams County brought their families with them, in other cases, such as that of Michael and Joseph Mast, the men of the family came first, and later brought over successive groups of parents, aunts, uncles, cousins and siblings.
In 1833 Anton Delabar, a cabinet maker in his native Baden, brought his wife and 10-year-old daughter with him to Quincy, where he built a water-driven saw mill in the area of Third and Delaware. He also established the first brewery, on Kentucky between Fourth and Fifth streets. Many German immigrants, like Delabar, left Germany with the Quincy area as their destination. Others, who had settled elsewhere in the United States, were drawn to the area by reports of its growth and prosperity.
In some cases, their relocation to Adams County represented the end stage in the "chain migration" of their family and acquaintances across the country. Such was the journey of the family of Adam Schmitt, born in 1805 in Hesse, who arrived in the port of Baltimore in 1831. A year later, as a furniture maker in Chambersburg, Pa., he married Marie Herlemann, who had immigrated to America with her parents. He next moved his new family to Pittsburgh, where he built and operated a furniture store which burned down after two years, leaving him penniless.
Next, with 15 Schmitt and Herleman family members, Adam traveled to St. Louis, and on to Belleville, to join relatives already living in that area.
Still searching for a place to settle, Schmitt and Wilhelm Dickhut, another German immigrant, arrived in the small Illinois town of Quincy in 1834. Liking what he found, Schmitt rented a log "blockhouse" at Third and Hampshire, then returned to St. Louis by the next steamer to gather the remaining members of the family, all of whom joined him in temporarily living in the rented structure. While his father-in-law, Mr. Herlemann, soon moved to a farm in the county, Schmitt remained in town, building a home and a furniture workshop at 10th and Broadway. Quincy founder John Wood, who would serve as the city's mayor; act briefly as governor of the state of Illinois; and serve his country as an officer in the Civil War was also of German descent. His mother, Katharine Krause Wood, was German by birth, and spoke only German with her son John, who was born in Sempronius, N.Y. When Wood, who had settled in what would become Quincy in 1821, set out to build his fine Greek Revival mansion at the corner of 12th Street and Burton Road, he made a trip to St. Louis to recruit German builders and craftsmen to help with the construction. Many of these men, drawn to the area by a job opportunity, stayed to settle on land initially belonging to Wood. In later years, many of their family members would remember with fondness and respect Woods role in drawing their families to the Quincy area, and giving them the means to stay and prosper.
Indeed, when the German voting block became an important element in the contests of the 1850s, the Quincy Whig, the Republican newspaper in town, quoted from a letter published by its political rival the Herald, which referred to Wood, stating, "His Whig friends here say he's the only man in the district who can carry the ‘Dutch' vote" of Quincy. Further, the letter suggested, "should John Wood ever remove from Quincy the ‘Dutch' would follow him."
Woods influence on local citizens of German heritage may have been exaggerated in the above instance. However, it is clear that the city of Quincy, as well as Adams County, was enriched by immigrants of German ancestry, who built homes, farms and businesses, and raised generations of their families in their adopted land.
This heritage was profound and lasting, and in the 1990 U.S. Census over 56 percent of Quincy residents claimed at least partial German ancestry. These numbers were far higher than those reported for Chicago (9.7 percent), Rockford (30.1 percent), Peoria (34.7 percent) or Springfield (36.7 percent).
Lynn M. Snyder is a native of Adams County, a semi-retired archaeologist and museum researcher, a former librarian and present library volunteer at the Veterans Home, and a Historical Society board member and volunteer.
Sources
Bornmann's Sketches of Early Germans of Quincy and Adams County. 1999 (reprinted
2013). Quincy: Great River Genealogical Society.
Jones, A.D. 1838. Illinois and the West. Boston: Weeks, Jordan and Company.
Quincy Daily Whig. Jun 18, 1852, p. 2. "The Old Game."
Quincy Herald Whig. July 12, 1992. "Census shows Quincy's Strong German
Heritage."
Slack, Kent P. 1994. The Germans and The Gem Study: A Study of the Impact of
of German Immigrants on the Growth of Adams County and the City of Quincy,
Illinois, from 1830 to 1890. MS thesis, Illinois State University.
Wilcox, David, ed. 1919. Quincy and Adams County History and Representative Men,
2 vols. Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Company.





