No, president Dwight D. Eisenhower is a German-American, and he wasn't impeached or mobbed or anything. The name "Eisenhower" is German for "iron hewer".
Statistics like that were not measured in 1918, but it is likely that more than 20% of the U.S. population claimed some German ancestry.
During World War II, some Americans did fight on the German side but this was uncommon and typically involved individuals with strong ideological beliefs or personal reasons for supporting Germany. The vast majority of Americans fought for the Allied Powers against Germany.
For the majority of German-Americans the answer is no. Some German families expect their children to speak German at home, even when in the United States but there are many American children with German parents who don't speak the language.
Close to 40%, which means more people than people claiming Irish, or English, ancestors. I only know this because it was in the Reader's Digest last month.
yes they do ...........German people tend to shake hands way more than the average american.
Japanese Americans
they didn't get persecuted for religious beliefs
Japanese-Americans, German-Americans, and Italian-Americans.
There were essentially three different Klans. The first, formed right after the Civil War, persecuted freed African Americans and those who supported their rights. The second, commonly called the Klan of the 1920s, also persecuted African Americans and some immigrants but also moonshiners and bootleggers. The third Klan, that of the 1950s and 1960s, persecuted African Americans and those who promoted their civil rights.
Americans
Don Heinrich Tolzmann has written: 'German-American studies' -- subject(s): German Americans, Study and teaching 'German Achievements in America' 'Upper Midwest German biographical index' -- subject(s): Biography, German Americans, Indexes 'German-Americana' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Civilization, German Americans, German influences 'Covington's German heritage' -- subject(s): Genealogy, German Americans, History 'German Cincinnati (OH)' 'German-American biographical index' 'Ohio Valley German biographical index' -- subject(s): Biography, German Americans, Indexes 'Germany and America 1450-1700' 'The First Germans in America' 'German-Americana A Bibliography' 'The German-American experience' -- subject(s): German Americans, History, Miscellanea 'Cincinnati's German heritage' -- subject(s): Ethnic relations, German Americans, History, Social conditions
German- Americans and Irish- Americans were commonly called hyphenateds during the WWI area.
The majority of the population was German, and he claimed that they were being persecuted by the Czechoslovak government.
people
German Jews, non-German Jews and people who weren't actually Jewish but were considered Jewish by the Germans.
According to the 2000 U.S. Census 0.41% of Americans speak only German at home.
Magdeburg