Ohio History Journal

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OHIO'S GERMAN-LANGUAGE PRESS AND THE PEACE

OHIO'S GERMAN-LANGUAGE PRESS AND THE PEACE

NEGOTIATIONS.

 

 

BY CARL WITTKE.

Instructor in American History, Ohio State University.

Long before the conclusion of the armistice, all of Ohio's

German-language newspapers that had survived the trials and

stress of the first years of the war, had completed their strategic

retreat from a position of open pro-Germanism to one of un-

swerving loyalty to the cause of America. At the beginning

of the war it was perhaps to be expected that the editors of

German dailies in this country should express a real sympathy

for the cause of their old Fatherland and swell with pride at

the news of the victories of German arms. Treacherous Eng-

land was denounced as the villain primarily responsible for the

great world catastrophe in which the young giant Germany was

compelled to do battle to break the strangle-hold of a world of

envious foes. When the United States finally entered the war,

the position of the German-American newspaper was extremely

perilous, and it became necessary to beat a quick retreat from

a position that was now not only untenable, but positively trea-

sonable. In spite of what must have been a terrible conflict of

emotions in the hearts of the editors and owners, every Ohio

paper succeeded in shifting its editorial policy, and finally arrived

at the point where the American reasons for entering the war

were accepted as just reasons, and the feats of the American

doughboy lauded to the sky, in studied emulation of the methods

of the English press. It is not for us to judge the motives that

caused such a radical change in policy. In part they must have

been economic, for every German paper found its circulation

lists shrinking, its income rapidly diminishing because of organ-

ized boycotts against advertisers who dared to use the columns

Vol. XXIX-4.            (49)