Heimat in the Heartland: The Significance of an Ethnic Newspaper
by Mattew Lindaman
On the evening of 31 December 1881, Luepke H»ndling tucked a modest stack
of freshly printed newspapers under his arm, walking toward the post office
in Dubuque, Iowa. Officially known as the Ostfriesische Nachrichten
(East Frisian News), the newspaper was sent out after the holiday season
had drawn to a conclusion. The launching of yet another ethnic newspaper
was certainly not uncommon for the era. The German-American population
alone supported hundreds of newspapers in the German language. H»ndling's
new enterprise, however, was neither religious nor labor oriented, thus
distinguishing itself from the scope of dozens of other ethnic newspapers.
Moreover, his paper focused on neither national events, nor coverage of
one specific locality. Instead, his was the twin goal of joining dozens
of growing East Frisian communities spread out across the prairie in an
open discourse, not only amongst themselves, but also with the old homeland.
By the turn of the century, the Ostfriesische Nachrichten found
a welcome place in thousands of East Frisian homes†both in the Midwest
and abroad. Analysis of the Ostfriesische Nachrichten reveals
that the newspaper played an enabling factor in chain migration, while
also holding the widespread rural communities together. By linking the
isolated communities and inviting the East Frisian immigrants to participate
in an open discourse, the paper allowed readers to reify old traditions
while negotiating the new American culture. As a result, the Ostfriesische
Nachrichten helped create and preserve a more specific East Frisian-American
identity and not a more generalized German identity.
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