Jonathan Sperber (1992), ‘Festivals of National Unity in the German Revolution of 1848–1849’, Past and Present, 136, pp. 114–38.

1848 ◽  
2017 ◽  
pp. 309-334
PMLA ◽  
1945 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 611-615
Author(s):  
Philip Allison Shelley

Niclas Müller, obscure printer, minor poet, and earnest patriot, belonged to the band of Forty-Eighters, whose love of liberty led them to transplant their ideal from the fallow soil of the old world to the fertile fields of the new, where, finding it flourish and flower, they were not content to enjoy its fruits by themselves but sought to share them with others who had as yet not tasted them. A typical member of this consecrated band, Müller, in the words of the Reverend Charles Timothy Brooks, had “always been at hand during the struggles for liberty on both sides of the water,” having been involved in both the German Revolution of 1848 and the American Civil War. As publicist and poet he supported the liberal movement in Germany and the abolition movement in America. “He wrote,” Brooks remarked, “several stirring songs during our war.” Foremost among them was a cycle of sonnets entitled Zehn gepanzerte Sonnete, Mit einer Widmung an Ferdinand Freiligrath, und einem Nachklang: “Die Union, wie sie sein soll,” Von Niclas Müller, Im November 1862 (New York, Gedruckt und zu haben bei Nic. Müller, 48 Beekman St.), which Brooks himself translated into English but never published.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1959 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 330-337
Author(s):  
Lytt I. Gardner ◽  
Ira M. Rosenthal ◽  
Richard J. Feinberg

Dr. Gardner: Historically pediatricians have been in the vanguard of the social and scientific forces improving the health and well-being of their patients—the children of this country. Indeed, we have the heavy responsibility of carrying on the proud tradition of our professional great-grandfather, Dr. Abraham Jacobi, who came to these shores in the aftermath of the German Revolution of 1848, and who eventually rose to the presidency of the American Medical Association. As the pioneer in American pediatrics, Jacobi never failed to let his position be known on controversial issues. His intuitive Jeffersonian grasp of the democratic process facilitated his rôle in the early development of pediatrics here. Jacobi's coat has, in a sense, fallen upon our shoulders, and American pediatrics must continually be on the alert to live up to what he would have expected of us. Therefore let me come directly to the problem at hand. As we know, the relative number of children with congenital defects in our hospitals is very much greater than 25 years ago. Recently in our hospital we tabulated the cases over a 5-month period, and found that 30% of the pediatric inpatients were there because of congenital defects. This apparent increase is almost certainly due in large part to the reduction in patients with infectious disease, but the figure of 30% still must remind us that the care of children with congenital defects is a field of major importance in modern pediatrics. How many of these defects are genetically determined is not known for sure, but certainly a considerable part of this group of patients represents inherited disease. As is obvious from the syndromes we will take up in this endocrine round table, nearly every one of these conditions is genetically determined, that is to say, the result of a mutation which has taken place in the human hereditary material.


1973 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 180-192
Author(s):  
Donald J. Mattheisen

As everyone knows, the failure of the German revolution of 1848 was the loss of a great opportunity.* If the revolution had succeeded, German unification might have been consummated on a popular basis, rather than through Bismarckian authoritarianism. The result could have been a German nation-state more closely in step with the liberal-democratic age that was dawning in western Europe. Subsequent German and European history might then have been much happier than it actually turned out to be. For, by thwarting liberalism and delaying democracy, the collapse of this revolution helped to make Germany the European problem child she has been in this century.


2021 ◽  
Vol 111 (2) ◽  
pp. 472-505
Author(s):  
Christian Dippel ◽  
Stephan Heblich

This paper studies the role of leaders in the social movement against slavery that culminated in the US Civil War. Our analysis is organized around a natural experiment: leaders of the failed German revolution of 1848–1849 were expelled to the United States and became antislavery campaigners who helped mobilize Union Army volunteers. Towns where Forty-Eighters settled show two-thirds higher Union Army enlistments. Their influence worked through local newspapers and social clubs. Going beyond enlistment decisions, Forty-Eighters reduced their companies’ desertion rate during the war. In the long run, Forty-Eighter towns were more likely to form a local chapter of the NAACP. (JEL D74, J15, J45, J61, N31, N41)


1951 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 120
Author(s):  
Thomas N. Brown ◽  
A. E. Zucker ◽  
Arthur D. Graeff

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