German-American Heritage Museum of the USA

The German-American Heritage Museum of the USA, or GAHM, is located in the Penn Quarter's Hockemeyer Hall in Washington D.C., the capital of the United States of America. The GAHM is sponsored by several German and American organizations. The museum, headquarters of the German-American Heritage Foundation of the USA, traces the 400-year long history of Germans in America from 1600 to now.[1]

German-American Heritage Museum of the USA
Location in Washington, D.C.
German-American Heritage Museum of the USA (the United States)
EstablishedMarch 2010
LocationWashington, D.C.
Coordinates38.899083°N 77.019694°W / 38.899083; -77.019694
Public transit access          
Gallery Place-Chinatown
Websitegahmusa.org

History

Hockemeyer Hall

John Hockemeyer was a German man who emigrated to the United States. After the Civil War, he became a wealthy merchant and a leader among Washington D.C.'s German community. In 1888, Hockemeyer constructed a Victorian townhouse that became a local center for the city's German-American business community and a meeting place for various German clubs and organizations, some of which Hockemeyer was a member of. In October 2008, the German-American Heritage Foundation of the USA purchased this building to establish the museum.[2]

gollark: Anyway, GTech™ runs several petawatts of nuclear reactor capacity tens of kilometres deep in the crust, and nobody has complained yet!
gollark: I cannot actually remember much of it.
gollark: As a young child, I read the entire Wikipedia article or something, on a laptop I had borrowed somehow.
gollark: And the design is now not used anywhere because it was bad.
gollark: Chernobyl was because they decided to do ridiculous secret experiments on running reactors, wrong, repeatedly.

References

  1. "German-American Heritage Museum". washington.rd. City of Washington D.C.
  2. "Hockemeyer Hall". gamust.org. German-American Heritage Foundation.
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