Conflict and Suspicion: Anti-Germanism during the War
When the United States officially entered WWI, President Wilson established the Committee on Public Information and charged them with the task of bolstering public support for the war. This new organization bombarded the public with images depicting Germans as monstrous, cruel, and right on our doorstep. Americans were told to “Beat back the Hun!” and “Destroy this mad brute!” These images instilled anger and paranoia all over the country, including in Wooster. State governments and angry civilians suppressed German language and culture, often violently. At the College of Wooster, a group of students vandalized classrooms in the German department, decapitating the likeness of Kaiser Wilhelm in a portrait that hung on the wall.1 Men working on the construction of the Federal Savings and Loan building downtown allegedly placed a German flag atop the building and shot at it.2
Wooster’s German-American community, however, evaded much of the mistreatment leveled at German immigrants across the country. Many of the Wooster’s civic leaders were of German descent, and the institutions that marked the Wooster’s German community as “other,” the German newspaper for instance, had faded by 1917. World War I marked a critical juncture for German-Americans in Wooster, as in other communities around the country, as many chose to identify themselves as Americans and Woosterites first, and Germans second.
Certain groups in Wayne County remained closely tied to “German-ness” in the public eye, however, namely the Amish and Mennonite communities. In addition to their use of the German language, these groups experienced persecution because of their status as conscientious objectors, and their vocal opposition to the war. Wayne County’s branch of the American Protective League, a nationwide organization dedicated to rooting out potential German sympathizers, specifically targeted the Amish and Mennonite community.3 Some Wayne County residents coerced Mennonites to violate the pacifist doctrine of their faith and purchase Liberty Bonds, going so far as to kidnap one Wooster Mennonite man.4 Samuel H. Miller, the editor of an Amish newspaper in nearby Holmes County, was tried and jailed for sedition because his paper printed pacifist literature.5 Although Mennonite churches supported the relief efforts of organizations such as the Red Cross, their refusal to participate in the war clashed with the nationalistic attitudes of many Wayne County residents.
1 “Kaiser’s Head in Photo Gone,” The Wooster Daily Republican, Apr. 7, 1917.
2 McClarran, 252.
3 Hauenstein, 186.
4 “World War I and Reconstruction Work,” Mennonite Church USA Archives, http://www.mcusa-archives.org/library/omh/pdf/3.11.pdf, 181.
5 Levi Miller. "Miller, Samuel H. (1862-1928)," Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online, March 2009, http://gameo.org/index.php?title=Miller,_Samuel_H._(1862-1928)&oldid=113525.