NAUVOO GERMAN - ICARIAN HISTORY
The Most German Speaking Town in Illinois
Nauvoo's history is filled with German-speaking immigrants. From the beginning of the pioneering of the area until the present, there is hardly a piece of Nauvoo's history that has not been touched. Not all of the German-speaking peoples who came here were from within the boarders of modern Germany, however. Many Swiss, Belgian, and French immigrants were among their numbers, and their religions played no small part in their reasons for settling and their social life once they had established themselves.
The first wave of German immigrants to Nauvoo began during the Mormon Period. Orson Hyde and Orson Pratt, two Mormon apostles, had been among the first to labor as missionaries to German-speaking peoples, and had a good deal of success. Many of these early converts to the faith came to Nauvoo in the early 1840's, establishing the first German-speaking congregations of any faith in Nauvoo. This group had such an influence in town that Joseph Smith began study of the language, even using the Luther Translation of the Holy Bible in several of his sermons. While it is not known for sure, it is believed that the first appearance of a Christmas Tree in Nauvoo occurred during the Mormon sojourn, in the home of one of these natives of the Rhineland.
Irish Catholics came to the area hoping to find good land and jobs lacking in their homeland. Potato blight led to mass starvation in the 1840s, and almost half of all immigrants to the U.S. during the decade were Irish. Many German Catholics also came looking for land, but some were fleeing following the failed German Revolution of 1848. They came to the American mid-west looking for freedom and liberty.
In June of 1673, Father Marquette and explorer Louis Joliet paddled past the Nauvoo peninsula as part of the French Jesuit led effort to bring Catholicism to Native Americans. By 1820, Father St. Cyr offered mass in the area and by 1830, Father LeFevre wrote of the need to establish a parish because of the number of Catholics at the "head of the rapids." Father Griffiths was able to accomplish that goal in 1848 and in about 1851, Father Alleman helped to purchase the former home of Mormon Parley P. Pratt which was converted into St. Patrick's Church. Father Alleman was French with a flock that was mostly Irish, including the Moffitt clan. The Irish were soon outnumbered by Germans, and when a new church opened in the early 1870s, the name was changed to Sts. Peter & Paul. The history of friendship and cooperation between the churches in Nauvoo is largely based on the efforts of historic Catholic priests and their relationship with pastors and people of other churches, and this at a time when the goals of unity and ecumenical effort were still far distant dreams.
When Sister Ottilia Hoeveler disembarked from a steamboat at the Nauvoo landing on October 15, 1874, with four other Sisters from St. Scholastica Convent in Chicago, little did she know that she would soon help to establish a new Benedictine Motherhouse. Working with Fr. Reimbold, Sister Ottilia would establish and oversee a Catholic school in Nauvoo. They purchased the Frederick Baum home, where they set up their convent and St. Scholastica School. Originally the Mormon arsenal and later used by the Icarians, St. Scholastica School began with seven day students. Since 1874, more than two hundred Sisters of St. Benedict followed in Sister Ottilia's footsteps. Hundreds of students were educated at St. Scholastica which expanded into St. Mary's Academy for girls. Boys were educated at Spalding Institute and St. Edmund's School for a time. While ill Mother Ottilia Hoeveler wrote "The Happy Girls of St. Mary's," a book of verse about the school's earliest students. The sisters closed the Academy in 1997 but the tradition of Catholic education in Nauvoo continues with Sts. Peter and Paul School.
In 1846, a Methodist congregation was organized in the Seventies Hall. Under the guidance of Reverend Jacob Haas, this congregation was filled with German-speaking natives, and they soon outgrew the space, building a new church of their own on Winchester Street. Emma Smith, widow of the Mormon Prophet, was married to her second husband in this building in 1847 by Rev. Haas, and attended this congregation for many years. Although an English-speaking congregation was established in 1853, Nauvoo's German Methodists maintained their independence until 1904, when the two merged with a compromise of services being held in the English language but in the German church.
German-speaking Lutherans organized their own congregation in another Mormon building, The New York Store, in 1851, under the direction of the Reverend Christian Veitz, a native of Switzerland. Services continued in the German language until 1915 when the congregation merged with the English-speaking one. Services continued to alternate in English and German until 1918 when the German was very reluctantly given up.
The First Presbyterian Church was organized as a joint English and German-speaking congregation. The Reverend Matthew Waldenmeyer oversaw the foundations in 1855, but in 1869 the German speakers felt that their needs were being neglected, and formed their own congregation. The next year a settlement was reached, and services were observed alternately in English and German. This practice continued for more than 30 years, until 1903 when the members agreed that all services should be held in English.
1850's thru 1915, German was more commonly spoken in Nauvoo than English, and at the end of the 19th Century, was known as "the most German speaking town in Illinois." By the end of World War I most of Nauvoo's native-German speaking residents stopped using German in public, and by the beginning of the Second World War, German stopped being spoken altogether.
While no astonishing events took place during this period, if it had not been for these 'silent heroes,' the Nauvoo that we know today would not exist. These hearty German-speaking pioneers and settlers brought stability and progress to the area. They preserved many of the Mormon homes, and brought and preserved much of Nauvoo's culture. They built most of the business district Nauvoo knows today. This period of Germanic immigration brought a solid economic base to Nauvoo that has preserved it for generations. One of the greatest lessons from Nauvoo comes from a German inscription on what is now known as the Joseph Coolidge Home. Placed there by Johann Georg Kaufmann, who purchased the home in the 1850's, the inscription reads:"Dies Haus ist Mein, und doch nicht Mein. Wer nach Mir Commt, wirds auch so sein. Ich bin hier gewesen. Wer das wird lessen der ist auch hier gewesen."