Stigma wrote on 06/20/12 at 00:58:02:
If I'm allowed to be slightly off topic (for some reason several moderators have adopted a much stricter practice on this recently):
Is it true that the USA at one point seriously considered adopting German as its official language? I'm not sure if this is history or an urban legend. To think that this discussion could have been about whose
German is more authentic and widespread!
As far as I know, and perhaps surprisingly, the U.S. doesn't have an official language today.
I dunno how true that is, but I do know that at one time German was the second most widely spoken language in the U.S. There were German language newspapers throughout the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes, and in the East as well. During the civil war, German regiments formed an entire corps in the Union army (three divisions). German immigrants, organized into private political militias, were mainly responsible for Missouri remaining in the Union. The south-facing slopes of the Ohio Valley around Cincinnati were once devoted to the production of German-style wine. Throughout the Midwest there are many splendid surviving examples of German brick churches; more like cathedrals, really.
The anti-German riots of 1917, unfortunately, wiped out all vestiges of German culture. Just here in Columbus, Germans were chased out of their houses, street names were changed, and a statue of Schiller was torn down. (Decades later it was found in a warehouse and restored to its original location). German newspapers ceased publication. Lots of Muellers became Millers. But there are, I believe, some peculiarly German-sounding word-orders used in the English of the Midwest.