German Workers Dot Org?

JPK Huson 1863

Brev. Brig. Gen'l
Joined
Feb 14, 2012
Location
Central Pennsylvania
The ' dot org ' thing is a joke- you just know there'd be a website in 2014.

This photo might not be ' Of the war ' but it's of the era- and have no clue to what they might be referring? It's titled a ' German Workers Organization ', although got the idea it's immigrants, not Germans posing in their home country?

Apologize if that isn't the case- once again bit on Pinterest. It was included in an ' Occupational ' grouping which kept exclusively to 1800's America. I know German communities here tended to function for generations as if they were not very far from their village in the Old Country- heck, loved going to the post office in Gratz, PA. If you took your time there 20 years ago, could hear the older folks passing the time of day in PA Dutch. Not Amish- just Germans whose ancestors came there an awfully long time ago. Really nice.

german workers organization.jpg
 
The ' dot org ' thing is a joke- you just know there'd be a website in 2014.

This photo might not be ' Of the war ' but it's of the era- and have no clue to what they might be referring? It's titled a ' German Workers Organization ', although got the idea it's immigrants, not Germans posing in their home country?

Apologize if that isn't the case- once again bit on Pinterest. It was included in an ' Occupational ' grouping which kept exclusively to 1800's America. I know German communities here tended to function for generations as if they were not very far from their village in the Old Country- heck, loved going to the post office in Gratz, PA. If you took your time there 20 years ago, could hear the older folks passing the time of day in PA Dutch. Not Amish- just Germans whose ancestors came there an awfully long time ago. Really nice.

View attachment 45392
I wonder if it is a Turner group or if it is a union's militia.
 
Can we get a time range from the photograph? Before the Civil War many Germans formed themselves into "rifle clubs" or "shooting clubs". These clubs often wore uniforms, marched in parades and that type of thing. I have some material on them including a few images.

Many militia companies concentrated on marching and having social event and rarely if ever fired their weapons, German shooting clubs where formed for shooting rifles. They would form up and march to the location of the rife contest and have marksmanship contests. Usually eating and beer drinking was engaged in in addition to seeing who was the best shoot. They would march back home and often go to a beer house and drink some more. Some German shooting clubs were like unofficial militia companies, other clubs were more like picnic clubs who drank a lot of beer and would have limited shooting contests. Please note some states did not allow ethic militia companies and some German shooting clubs were an attempt to get around this no ethnic militia company rule and were unofficial militia companies.
 
Hahaa, yes!!
Big tradition here. In Hannover you will find the biggest "Schützenfest" on earth, that's something our city is very proud of. And beer is at least as important as shooting. :D
And parading (that's our city hall in the background):
images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTaVkjM-MbM96NlzgBad6jEuBg-nl8TYZygSju0JcEuJb4NaiYG.jpg

(From: http://www.schalmeienzug-osterhagen.de/fotos.html)

I never made it to Hanover, but I was very close. A small village something __dorf, :unsure: been awhile.

:smile coffee::smile coffee::smile coffee: Barnstorf, Germany
 
Can we get a time range from the photograph? Before the Civil War many Germans formed themselves into "rifle clubs" or "shooting clubs". These clubs often wore uniforms, marched in parades and that type of thing. I have some material on them including a few images.

Many militia companies concentrated on marching and having social event and rarely if ever fired their weapons, German shooting clubs where formed for shooting rifles. They would form up and march to the location of the rife contest and have marksmanship contests. Usually eating and beer drinking was engaged in in addition to seeing who was the best shoot. They would march back home and often go to a beer house and drink some more. Some German shooting clubs were like unofficial militia companies, other clubs were more like picnic clubs who drank a lot of beer and would have limited shooting contests. Please note some states did not allow ethic militia companies and some German shooting clubs were an attempt to get around this no ethnic militia company rule and were unofficial militia companies.

It's Pinterest so take it with possible salt, but think it said just pre-war? Some posters there are extremely meticulous, others extremely careless. Interesting, that some of these clubs were an excuse for another type of club- you could see that and what a shame it was like that! Oh well, at least they managed to achieve a way to hang out together plus it gave us a terrific photo!

The gentleman front, left, looks to be powerful-crosseyed! How might that affect his marksmanship?
287882[/ATTACH]']
502c30d2-109e-4cad-b24c-b17174e0c558_zps0cd49b6c.jpg

I'm a decent shot ( It's a massacre around here at the Annual Easter Egg Shoot. We shoot the eggs after Easter dinner instead of letting them collect dust for the next 2 weeks )- not being cross-eyed, wouldn't know what it would be like to shoot it I were? Perhaps it is like a lot of other things, where one learns to compensate, you know? Does someone who has this manner of sight have the ability to focus their eyes independently? If so, would have to think this guy would be able to shoot as well as anybody. Hee- having said that, someone who knows a lot more than me is going to jump in here with the RIGHT answer, wait for it. :)
 

Attachments

  • 502c30d2-109e-4cad-b24c-b17174e0c558_zps0cd49b6c.jpg
    502c30d2-109e-4cad-b24c-b17174e0c558_zps0cd49b6c.jpg
    11.4 KB · Views: 57
Hahaa, yes!!
Big tradition here. In Hannover you will find the biggest "Schützenfest" on earth, that's something our city is very proud of. And beer is at least as important as shooting. :D
And parading (that's our city hall in the background):
images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTaVkjM-MbM96NlzgBad6jEuBg-nl8TYZygSju0JcEuJb4NaiYG.jpg

(From: http://www.schalmeienzug-osterhagen.de/fotos.html)

I had beer somewhere in Germany once- only bring this up because it was the largest amount of beer in one vessel I'd ever seen- and I grew up in the 70's. Also the largest radish was served with it- someone told me I was supposed to EAT it, not use it for weaponry. ' In Muchenstate ein Hofbruhause, einse, zwei, gesuffe '- that place, only spelled correctly.
 
The trim on the collar and cuff is very similar to the trim on the frock coat trim according to the 1850 regulations. In the 1850s many state militia more or less based their uniforms on the 1850 regulations. The use of gray was very common in many state militia companies. Brass buttons were common in militia companies, less so on other jackets. The turned up brim on the hat and the feather is sort of military style. However very few militia companies would have used this type of rifle. German style militia rifle companies normally would be expected to have a large knife.
 
The trim on the collar and cuff is very similar to the trim on the frock coat trim according to the 1850 regulations. In the 1850s many state militia more or less based their uniforms on the 1850 regulations. The use of gray was very common in many state militia companies. Brass buttons were common in militia companies, less so on other jackets. The turned up brim on the hat and the feather is sort of military style. However very few militia companies would have used this type of rifle. German style militia rifle companies normally would be expected to have a large knife.
Great info!
 

Learn About Us
About CivilWarTalk
Contact the Webmaster
Meet the Staff
Link to CivilWarTalk
Join Our Community
Register
Browse Forums
View Today's Discussions
Search the Forum
Get Help
FAQ
Student Guide
Forum Rules & Etiquette
Copyright / DMCA

     Contact Us CivilwarTalk on Facebook CivilWarTalk on YouTube CivilWarTalk on Twitter RSS Feed

Bringing the American Civil War and More to Life.
© 1999 - , CIVILWARTALK, LLC - Site Version 10.0

SlaveryTalk.com - SecessionTalk.com - CivilWarTalk.com - ReconstructionTalk.com
Back
Top