Kitchener AND THE FIRST WORLD WAR
290 likes | 458 Vues
Kitchener AND THE FIRST WORLD WAR. The Berlin Name Change, 1916. Berlin on the eve of WWI. city was about 70 % German origin recently earned city status in June, 1912 with over 15,000 population strong manufacturing town that boasted its name and background. “Canada’s German Capital”.
Kitchener AND THE FIRST WORLD WAR
E N D
Presentation Transcript
Kitchener AND THE FIRST WORLD WAR The Berlin Name Change, 1916
Berlin on the eve of WWI • city was about 70 % German origin • recently earned city status in June, 1912 with over 15,000 population • strong manufacturing town that boasted its name and background “Canada’s German Capital”
Berlin’s dual identity German Pride and loyalties Attachment to the British empire Kaiser Wilhelm I Queen Victoria Berlin saw little conflict in its dual loyalties: Victoria and Wilhelm were cousins.
The Outbreak of War • challenged Berlin’s ability to maintain both loyalties • economic concerns: “Made in Berlin” • strong British nationalism distrusts many of German descent • seen at start of war with the Kaiser’s Bust incident • August 22nd (or 23rd), 1914 • bust pulled off monument and thrown in Victoria Park Lake!
German community retrieves bust from lake; stores it in the Concordia Club • symbolic anti-German gesture, but sign of growing tensions
Vandalized monument the day after the bust was thrown in the lake
118th Battalion • North Waterloo battalion created in fall, 1915 • recruits mostly British descent • numbers fall short of full strength • frustrations taken out on young men, German community
Parading down King Street in Waterloo Marching in Victoria Park
led by Sergaent-Major Granville Blood: • “Once again, be British. Do your duty or be despised. … Be British or be damned.” • bully tactics used against “slackers” • police do/can do little: constable’s jaw broken • Galt Reporter: “Are these the Methods of the Kaiser’s Berlin or Berlin, Ontario?” • Berlin begins process of changing its name in February, 1916 • plebiscite called for May 19th
Berlin Name-change Plebiscite • yes/no vote • campaign increases tensions in the city, leading to several more incidents: • 118th soldiers break into Concordia Club, possibly steal Kaiser’s bust • steal and destroy German memorabilia; burn it on King Street • mystery as to where bust went “The Concordia Club, supposed to be a singing organization, was in reality a strong German club with a large membership of young men. … It was an organization to foster and maintain a strong German spirit and love for the Fatherland.” - conclusion of military investigation
Major Blood leads attack on Reverend C. R. Tappert of St. Matthews Church, on March 4th, 1916 • break into his home, beaten, dragged through streets by horses • Blood and one soldier charged; given suspended sentence New York Times, March 9th, 1916
Two Votes: May 19th • YES: British League, Telegraph • NO: Citizens’ League, News Record • 3,057 votes cast; YES wins by 81 votes • voter intimidation likely reduced No vote • Jacob Kaufman and August Lang attacked by soldiers on victory night
Two Votes: June 9th • second vote to choose a name • citizens asked for suggestions:
group of 99 citizens choose final 6 names: • Hydro City • Dunard • Huronto • Renowa • Agnoleo (name of locally-ground flour) • Bercana • briefly contemplate merger with Waterloo
final list of 6 chosen by city council: • Adanac • Benton • Brock • Corona • Keowana • Kitchener • name of Lord Kitchener added at last minute by council after death on June 5th
The Results • voting began around June 9th • 1055 people voted • 163 spoiled ballots • 346 for Kitchener • Brock second with 335 • News Record’s summary: “The outstanding feature (of the vote) was the absolute indifference displayed by the ratepayers.” • Berlin officially changed to Kitchener on September 1, 1916
Long-term Significance • Berlin/Kitchener begins to de-emphasize its German character • names of people, businesses changed • Schmidt to Smith, Braun to Brown • Doerr Biscuits to Dare • shows the power of the war to divide communities, create animosity
Sources • KPL, Online Photograph Collection • WPL, Online Photograph Collection • English and McLaughlin, Kitchener: An Illustrated History • Hayes, Waterloo County: An Illustrated History • New York Times, Online Archives • Library and Archives Canada