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'The Lord Hath Helped Thus Far'


Article # : 13831 

Section : CULTURE
Issue Date : 12 / 1988  4,451 Words
Author : George Fenwick Jones
A professor of history at the University of Maryland, George Fenwick Jones is the author of the forthcoming book German- American Names, to be published this year by the Genealogical Publishing Company in Baltimore.

       It is generally but incorrectly believed that Georgia was a debtor colony. To be sure, among its other goals the colony aimed to help the down-and-out of England; yet, on the first ship to Georgia, the Ann, whose passengers were well recorded, there were no debtors. The Trustees, the benevolent founders of the colony, had paid off the debts of the few who owed any. What is not generally known is that for some time the English in Georgia were a minority, outnumbered by German-speaking colonists.
       
       Today, two and a half centuries after their ancestors settled in Georgia, the following families are listed in the Savannah telephone directory: Arnsdorf, Blackwelder (Schwarzwälder), Burckhalter, Burgstiner, Dasher, Densler, Exley, Geiger, Gnann, Griner, Groover, Grovenstine, Grover, Gruber, Gugel, Geidt, Gelmly, Hinely, Kessler, Kieffer, Meyer, Mingeldorf, Nease, Neidlinger, Nongasser, Rahn, Reiter, Rentz, Rieser, Schubdrine, Seckinger, Shearouse, Snyder, Stine, Swiger, Walthour, Wannamaker, Whitenour, Wideman, Winkler, Wisenbaker, Youngblood, Zeagler, Zettler, Ziegler, Zipperer, and Zittrauer. Nearly all of these families are descended from ancestors who came to Georgia before 1752, traveling from Austria and the immediately surrounding parts of Switzerland and the Germany princedoms. Many other families are also descended from settlers from the same area, but their surnames have been so anglicized that they are unrecognizable as originally German. These German surnames are also borne by some black families whose ancestors may have belonged to German settlers.
       
       The surprising thing is that histories of Georgia make little mention of these German-speaking colonists even though for a while they were the most numerous and most successful element of the colonial population. One reason for this neglect was the colonial officials' ignorance of the Germans and their language. Another is that many of the historical documents are written in German—in an ancient and difficult script—and are housed in the archives of the Francke Foundation, a missionary and educational institution in Halle in East Germany. Since an avowed purpose of the Georgia Trustees was to establish a haven for persecuted Protestants, it is understandable that so many Austrian, Swiss, and other German-speaking settlers came to Georgia.
       
       Religious persecution and invitation to Georgia
       
       The persecuted Protestants in question were chiefly Lutherans, who were being expelled from their Alpine homeland in Salzburg. This province, now in the republic of Austria, was then a
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