German Australians

German Australians (German: Deutsch-Australier) are Australian citizens of ethnic German ancestry. The German community constitute one of the largest ethnic groups in Australia, numbering 898,700 or 4.5 percent of respondents in the 2011 Census. It is the fifth most identified European ancestry in Australia behind English, Irish, Scottish and Italian.

German Australians
Deutsch-Australier
Total population
German
898,674 (by ancestry, 2011)
108,003 (by birth, 2011)
4.5% of total Australian population.[1]
Regions with significant populations
South Australia, Western Australia, New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland
Languages
Australian English, German, Barossa German
Religion
Predominantly Lutheranism and Roman Catholicism.[2]

Demography

People with German ancestry as a percentage of the population in Australia divided geographically by statistical local area, as of the 2011 census.

The 2011 Census counted 108,000 Australian residents who were born in Germany.[1] However, 898,700 persons identified themselves as having German ancestry, either alone or in combination with another ancestry.[1] This number does not include people of German ancestry who selected their ancestry as simply "Australian". The 2001 census recorded 103,010 German-born in Australia, although this excludes persons of German ethnicity and culture born elsewhere, such as the Netherlands (1,030), Hungary (660) and Romania (440).

In December 2001, the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs estimated that there were 15,000 Australian citizens resident in Germany.[3]

According to the 2001 Census, the German-born population are more likely than Australians as a whole to live in South Australia (11.9 per cent to 7.6 per cent) and Victoria (27.0 per cent to 24.7 per cent). They are also more likely to live in rural and regional areas. It is probable their German Australian children share this settlement pattern.

According to census data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics in 2004, German Australians are, by religion, 21.7 per cent Catholic, 16.5 per cent Anglican, 32.8 per cent Other Christian, 4.2 Other Religions and 24.8 No Religion.

In 2001, the German language was spoken at home by 76,400 persons in Australia. German is the eighth most widely spoken language in the country after English, Chinese, Italian, Greek, Arabic, Vietnamese, Spanish, and Tagalog.

Immigration history

 No. of arrivals
July 1949 – June 2000[4]
July 1940 – June 1959[lower-alpha 1]July 1959 – June 1970[lower-alpha 2]
Germany255,930162,75650,452
Total immigrant arrivals5,640,6381,253,0831,445,356
Percentage of immigrants from Germany4.5%13.0%3.5%

Germans have been in Australia since the commencement of European settlement in 1788. At least seventy-three Germans arrived in Australia as convicts.[5]

1800s

Klemzig, the first German settlement in Australia (now a suburb of Adelaide), painted by George French Angas in 1846
Alexander Schramm's A Scene in South Australia (1850) depicts German settlers with Aborigines

Germans formed the largest non-English-speaking group in Australia up to the 20th century.[6]

Old Lutherans

Old Lutherans emigrated in response to the 1817 Prussian Union and organized churches both among themselves and with other German speakers, such as the Kavel-Fritzsche Synod.

Although a few individuals had emigrated earlier,[7] the first large group of Germans arrived in South Australia 1838, not long after the British colonisation of South Australia. These "Old Lutherans" were from Brandenburg (then a Prussian province), and were trying to preserve their traditional faith. They emigrated with the financial assistance of George Fife Angas and the Emigration Fund. Not all subsequent arrivals shared this religious motivation, but the Lutheran Church remained at the centre of the German settlers' lives right into the 20th century.[8]

Forty-Eighters

Forty-Eighters is a term for those who participated in or supported the European Revolutions of 1848. Many emigrated as a result of those revolutions. In particular, following the ultimate failure of the "March Revolution" in Germany, a substantial number of Germans immigrated to Australia. See Forty-Eighters in Australia.

Fleeing militarism

Many Germans had immigrated to Australia to flee the rise of militarism and martial chauvinism in the land of their birth. Indeed, "After the Unification of Germany under Prussia in 1870/1871, when Universal Conscription was brought in across all the States of Deutschland, the pattern of emigration from Germany to Australia changed. Instead of the earlier pattern of the majority of settlers arriving in families, young single men started to arrive, young men who were at odds with the increasing militarisation of their Fatherland, and also often at odds with the Rampant Chauvinisation of German Social Life."[9]

1900s

By 1900, Germans were the fourth-largest European ethnic group on the continent, behind the English, Irish and Scots.[10]

By 1914, the number of German-Australians (including the descendants of German-born migrants of the second and third generation who had become Australians by birth) was estimated at approximately 100,000.[11]

Throughout both world wars Germans were considered an "enemy within" and a number were interned or deported – or both. The persecution of German Australians also included the closure of German schools, the banning of the German language in government schools, and the renaming of many German place names. To avoid persecution and/or to demonstrate that they commit themselves to their new home, many German Australians changed their names into Anglicised or Francophone variants. During WWII, Australia was also place of incarceration of 2,542 "enemy aliens" deported from Britain, composed of many of the Austrian and German nationals who were expelled in a blanket deportation, and numerous Italian citizens.[12] Notorious for the inhumane treatment present during the voyage, the 2,053 anti-Nazis, 451 prisoners of war, and approximately 55 Nazi sympathisers and others departed from Liverpool via HMT Dunera shortly after the Fall of France in 1940.[12]

After the Second World War, Australia received a large influx of ethnic German displaced persons who were a significant proportion of Australia's post war immigrants. A number of German scientists were recruited soon after the War through the ESTEA scheme some of them coming by migrant ships such as the Partizanka.[13][14] In the 1950s and 1960s, German immigration continued under assisted migration programs promoted by the Australian Government. By July 2000, Germany was the fifth most common birthplace for settler arrivals in Australia after United Kingdom, Ireland, Italy and New Zealand.[4] By 1991, there were 112,000 German-born persons in Australia.

World War I

Internment camps

Plaque commemorating the internment camp on Torrens Island
Group of interned Germans playing zithers and guitars in the Berrima camp
Trial Bay Gaol

The internment camps were maintained by the Australian Army during World War I. At the time, they were also described as concentration camps. Old prison buildings in Berrima and Trial Bay Gaol were initially used as locations for camps in New South Wales.

The largest internment camp in WWI was the Holsworthy Internment Camp, located west of Sydney.[15] There were camps in Berrima; Bourke; Holsworthy and Trial Bay (all New South Wales); Enoggera, Queensland; Langwarrin, Victoria; the Molonglo camp at Fyshwick, Australian Capital Territory; Rottnest Island, Western Australia; and Torrens Island, South Australia. Smaller and temporary internment camps were also established on Bruny Island, Tasmania; Fort Largs, South Australia; and Garden Island, Western Australia.[16] The camp on Rottnest Island, which operated from the end of 1914 until the end of 1915, housed 989 people in September 1915. Among this group were 841 Australian and Austrian internees, as well as 148 prisoners of war.[17] According to a statement by the Australian War Memorial organisation, there were a total of 7,000 people interned over the course of World War I, including roughly 4,500 Germans and British people of German background who had already been living in Australia for a long time.[18] This meant approximately 4.5% of the German-Australian population were held in internment camps.

One of the largest internment camps for imprisoned officers and soldiers of the Imperial German Navy from the warzones in the Pacific, in China and in Southeast Asia, was the Trial Bay Gaol. Among those interned were German and Austrian business people who had been captured on ships, as well as wealthy, high-standing Germans and Austrians living in Australia who were assumed to be sympathising with the enemy. The camp was opened in August 1915 and at its peak contained as many as 580 men.[19] The internees were held in solitary cells within the prison, with the exception of those with a high social or military rank, who were kept in cabins on the bay. The prisoners were free to swim, fish, and sunbathe on the beach or play tennis in the prison yard on a court they had built themselves. In 1916 they held a theatre performance of the comedy Minna von Barnhelm by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing.[20] They had their own orchestra and in 1917 created their own newspaper named Welt am Montag (World on Monday), which was published once a week. In memory of the four Germans who died in the camp, the internees built a monument on the hill at Trial Bay. The internees were transferred in 1918 due to fears that German warships would be able to land in the bay. They were moved to the Holsworthy internment camp near Sydney, now Holsworthy Barracks.[19] After it became known that graves of the Allied forces in Germany had been vandalised, the internees' monument was destroyed. It was once again constructed in 1960 and now leads the way to the memorial site on the hill.[21]

Some Australians believed that the prisoners were being treated too well. However, they were under constant surveillance, their post was censored and contact with the outside world (as well as contact with internees from other camps) was not allowed.[19]

Many internees from Western Australia were transported to camps in New South Wales, including the 193 German marines from the SMS Emden which had been defeated by HMAS Sydney.

After the war ended, the camps were shut down and most of the occupants were deported[15], but German immigration was only made legal again in 1925. The German population increased slowly as a result and eventually came to a halt in 1933 with Adolf Hitler's rise to power.[22]

World War II

Internment

Georg Auer, a Jew from Austria who came to Australia on the HMT Dunera. He was interned until 1942 and later joined the Australian Army.

In World War I, the majority of internees were of German heritage. However, in World War II, a large number of Italians and Japanese were also imprisoned. The internees, which included women and children, had come from more than 30 different countries, including Finland, Hungary, Portugal and also the Soviet Union. In addition to the Australian residents who were imprisoned, there were also people of German and Japanese descent who were captured overseas and brought to Australia. These people came from England, Palestine, Iran, present-day Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, New Zealand and New Caledonia. The first of these groups arrived on the HMT Dunera from England in 1940[23] and their destination was the Hay Internment Camp in New South Wales.

The internment camps in WWII were constructed for three reasons: residents could not be allowed to support Australia's enemies, the public needed to be placated, and those who had been captured overseas and transported to Australia had to be housed somewhere. All Japanese people were immediately imprisoned, but it was only after the war criminals of Nazi Germany and Italy were discovered that Germans and Italians were sent to the internment camps. This was especially true for those living in northern Australia, because that was where the enemy was expected to invade. More than 20 percent of Italians in Australia were held in internment camps as well as a total of 7,000 people with connections to the enemy, 1,500 of which who were British nationals. 8,000 people from overseas were detained in Australian camps and in 1942, the camps were at their largest, with a total of 12,000 internees in the country. In addition to British people of German origin, Australian fascists could not escape imprisonment: leading members of the Australia First Movement were interned, including Adela Pankhurst and P. R. Stephensen.[24]

Tourism

Australia has long been a popular destination for German tourists and students.[25]

Education

There are the following German international schools in Australia:

German Australian culture

The Australian wine industry was the creation of German settlers in the nineteenth century.[26]

The Goethe-Institut is active in Australia, there are branches in Melbourne and Sydney.[27]

Media

Historically, German newspapers were set up by early settlers, with many being forced to close or merge due to labour shortages caused by the Victorian gold rush of the 1850s-1860s. A number of the earliest South Australian newspapers were printed primarily in German, and these included:

  • Die Deutsche Post für die Australischen Colonien (1848–1850) – Adelaide: Australia's first non-English newspaper[28]
  • Suedaustralische Zeitung (1850–1851) – Adelaide
  • Deutsche Zeitung für Süd-Australien (1851) – Tanunda
  • Adelaider Deutsche Zeitung (1851–1862) – Adelaide: this was also the first German language newspaper to publish an entertainment supplement - Blatter fur Ernst und scherz.[29]
  • Süd Australische Zeitung (1860–1874) – Tanunda/Adelaide
  • Australisches Unterhaltungsblatt (1862–1916) – Tanunda: a supplement to the Süd Australische Zeitung and Australische Zeitung
  • Tanunda Deutsche Zeitung (1863–1869) – Tanunda; later renamed Australische Deutsche Zeitung
  • Australische Deutsche Zeitung (1870–1874) – Tanunda/Adelaide: a Melbourne edition of the newspaper was also printed 1870–1872.
  • Neue Deutsche Zeitung (1875–1876) – Adelaide: opposition newspaper to Australische Zeitung
  • Australische Zeitung (1875–1916) – Tanunda/Adelaide: formed by the merger of Süd Australische Zeitung, and Australische Deutsche Zeitung; closed due to WWI
  • Australische Zeitung (1927–1929) – Tanunda: attempted revival
  • Adelaider Post (1960–1962) – Adelaide: South Australian edition of the Sydney-based Die Woche in Australien.
  • Neue Australische Post (1984–1993), Salisbury

German missionaries

There were many German missionaries who emigrated to Australia, established mission stations and worked with Aboriginal Australians, in some cases helping to preserve their languages and culture.[30]

Missions founded by Germans

Notable Australians of German ancestry

NameBornDescriptionConnection to AustraliaConnection to Germany
Eric Abetz1958Australian SenatorImmigrated to Australia from Germany in 1961Born in Germany
Eric Bana1968Australian ActorBorn in AustraliaGerman mother
Gerard Brennan1928Judge and retired Chief Justice of Australia (1995–1998)Born in AustraliaGerman maternal ancestry
Bettina Arndt1949Sexologist and critic of feminismBorn in the United KingdomGerman father
Heinz Arndt1915EconomistImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Shaun Berrigan1978Rugby League playerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Henry Bolte1908Politician (Premier of Victoria)Born in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Dieter Brummer1976Soap opera actorBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Ernest Burgmann1885Anglican bishop and social justice activistBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Meredith Burgmann1947Politician (Australian Labor Party)Born in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Wolfgang Degenhardt1924ArtistImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Carl Ditterich1945Australian rules footballerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Andrew Ettingshausen1965Rugby League playerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Brad Fittler1972Rugby League playerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Harry Frei1951CricketerImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Johannes Fritzsch1960ConductorWorks and lives in AustraliaBorn in Germany
Gotthard Fritzsche1797Lutheran pastorImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Ken GrendaBusinessman and philanthropistBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Michael Grenda1964Olympic cyclistBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Andre Haermeyer1956Politician (Australian Labor Party)Immigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Heinrich Haussler1984CyclistBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
George Heinz1891Australian rules footballerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Hans Heysen1877Landscape artistImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Ben Hilfenhaus1983CricketerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Bert Hinkler1892AviatorBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Hermann Homburg1874PoliticianBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
August Kavel1798Lutheran pastorImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Kristina Keneally1968Politician (Premier of New South Wales)Immigrated to Australian from the United StatesGerman ancestry
David Klemmer1993Rugby league playerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
David Koch1956Television presenterBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Gerard Krefft1830Zoologist and palaeontologistImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Sonia Kruger1965Television presenter, media personality and dancerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Dichen Lachman1982Actress and producerRaised in Adelaide, AustraliaBorn in Kathmandu, Nepal, to a German-Australian father
Ludwig Leichhardt1813ExplorerImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Darren Lehmann1970CricketerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Carl Linger1810ComposerImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Stewart Loewe1968Australian rules footballerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Baz Luhrmann1962Film director, screenwriter, producer, and actorBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Bertha McNamara1853Socialist and feministImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
John Monash1865Australian GeneralBorn in AustraliaGerman (Jewish) Parents
Ferdinand von Mueller1825Botanist, geologist and physicianImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
David Neitz1975Australian rules footballerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Nadine Neumann1975Olympic swimmerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Hubert Opperman1904Cyclist and politicianBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Annastacia Palaszczuk196939th Premier of QueenslandBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Arthur Phillip1738First Governor of New South WalesServed in NSW 1788–1792German father
Ingo Rademacher1971Soap opera actorImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Jack Riewoldt1988Australian rules footballerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Nick Riewoldt1982Australian rules footballerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Hermann Sasse1895Lutheran theologianImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Chris Schacht1946Politician (Australian Labor Party) and mining company directorBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Manfred Schäfer1943Football (soccer) playerImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Jessicah Schipper1986Olympic swimmerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Melanie Schlanger1986Olympic swimmerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Mark Schwarzer1972Football (soccer) playerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Emily Seebohm1992Olympic swimmerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Anthony Seibold1974Rugby league coachBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Gert Sellheim1901ArtistImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Lithuania to ethnically-German parents
Wolfgang Sievers1913PhotographerImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Christian Sprenger1985Olympic swimmerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Carl Strehlow1871Lutheran missionaryImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Ted Strehlow1908AnthropologistBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Matthias Ungemach1968Olympic rowerImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Shane Warne1969CricketerBorn in AustraliaGerman mother
Chris Watson1867Prime Minister of AustraliaImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Chile to ethnically-German father
Shane Webcke1974Rugby League playerBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
Judith Zeidler1968Olympic rowerImmigrated to AustraliaBorn in Germany
Markus Zusak1975WriterBorn in AustraliaGerman ancestry
gollark: I don't really know our family income so I can't compare that against the countrywide distribution.
gollark: Eh, upper middle maybe.
gollark: ···
gollark: But scale to bigger ones and you need actual conflict resolution mechanisms, because you can't just fallback to social stuff for it.
gollark: I mean, in smallish groups with heavy social interaction and stuff, *maybe*?

See also

Notes

  1. Department of Immigration and Multicultural Affairs: Settler arrivals by birthplace data not available prior to 1959. For the period July 1949 to June 1959, Permanent and Long Term Arrivals by Country of Last Residence have been included as a proxy for this data. When interpreting this data for some countries, in the period immediately after World War II, there were large numbers of displaced persons whose country of last residence was not necessarily the same as their birthplace.
  2. Note this period covers 11 years rather than a decade.

References

  1. "Reflecting a Nation: Stories from the 2011 Census, 2012–2013". 2011 Census. Australian Bureau of Statistics. 21 June 2012. Retrieved 14 March 2013. Total count of persons: 19,855,288.
  2. "Welcome to the Department of Home Affairs". www.immi.gov.au. Retrieved 23 August 2018.
  3. "Estimates of Australian Citizens Living Overseas as at December 2001" (PDF). Southern Cross Group (DFAT data). 14 February 2001. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 July 2008. Retrieved 15 July 2008.
  4. "Immigration: Federation to Century's End 1901–2000" (PDF). Department of Immigration and Multicultural Affairs. October 2001. p. 25. Archived from the original (pdf, 64 pages) on 4 December 2010. Retrieved 21 July 2008.
  5. Donohoe, J.H. (1988) The Forgotten Australians: Non-Anglo or Celtic Convicts and Exiles.
  6. G. Leitner, Australia's Many Voices: Australian English – The National Language, 2004, p. 181
  7. "09/06/1837-16/10/1837: Solway [Hamburg to Nepean Bay]". Passengers in History. Retrieved 6 December 2019.
  8. Harmstorf, Ian (5 June 2015). "Germans". Adelaidia. "First published in The Wakefield companion to South Australian history, edited by Wilfrid Prest, Kerrie Round and Carol Fort (Adelaide: Wakefield Press, 2001). Edited lightly and references updated". Retrieved 6 December 2019.
  9. Knoll, Wayne D. (4 May 2011). "GERMAN-AUSTRALIAN ALIENS OF MILITARISM: The Anti-War German-Australian Story". Retrieved 23 August 2018.
  10. Harmstorf & Cigler 1985, p. .
  11. Kay Saunders, Roger Daniels, Alien Justice: Wartime Internment in Australia and North America, p. 4
  12. "Wartime internment". naa.gov.au. Retrieved 17 August 2017.
  13. Homeyer, Uta v. (1994). "The Employment of Scientific and Technical Enemy Aliens (Estea) Scheme in Australia: A Reparation for World War Ii?". Prometheus. 12: 77–93. doi:10.1080/08109029408629379.
  14. Muenstermann, Ingrid (30 May 2015). Some Personal Stories of German Immigration to Australia since 1945. Xlibris Corporation. ISBN 9781503503137.
  15. "Wartime internment camps in Australia". National Archives of Australia. Retrieved 1 September 2017.
  16. "World War I internment camps". National Archives of Australia. Retrieved 1 September 2017.
  17. "Military Functions – Rottnest Island Authority". Rottnest Island. 2005. Archived from the original on 21 August 2006. Retrieved 4 April 2019.
  18. "Civilian internees in Australia". Australian War Memorial. Archived from the original on 1 September 2017. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  19. "Trial Bay, South West Rocks Detention Barracks 1914–1918 [Germany]". Auspostal History. 2016. Archived from the original on 3 February 2017. Retrieved 31 August 2017.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
  20. "Trial Bay, New South Wales". National Archives of Australia. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  21. "Arakoon State Recreation Area Plan of Management" (PDF). NSW Environment, Energy and Science. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  22. Tampke, Jurgen (2008). "Germans". The Dictionary of Sydney. Retrieved 4 September 2017.
  23. The compete passenger list can be retrieved at RecordSearch | National Archives of Australia using the search term "Dunera". It is also possible to search using passenger names.
  24. "Wartime internment camps in Australia". National Archives of Australia. Retrieved 1 September 2017.
  25. "Welcome to the Australian Embassy, Berlin". www.germany.embassy.gov.au. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  26. Speech By The Prime Minister, The Hon PJ Keating, Mp Luncheon The His Excellency Dr Von Weizsaecrer, President Of The Federal Republic Of Germany Parliament House, Canberra, 6 September 1993 Archived 7 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  27. "Goethe-Institut Australien". www.goethe.de. Retrieved 23 August 2018.
  28. Laube, Anthony. "LibGuides: SA Newspapers: C-E". guides.slsa.sa.gov.au. Retrieved 22 August 2018.
  29. Laube, Anthony. "LibGuides: SA Newspapers: A-B". guides.slsa.sa.gov.au. Retrieved 22 August 2018.
  30. Ganter, Regina (2009–2018). "A web-directory of intercultural encounters". German Missionaries in Australia. Griffith University. Retrieved 7 December 2019.
  31. Amery, Robert. "Piltawodli Native Location (1838–1845)". German Missionaries in Australia. Griffith University. Retrieved 7 December 2019.
  32. Scherer, Paul E. (2004). "Strehlow, Carl Friedrich Theodor (1871–1922)". webjournals.ac.edu.au. Evangelical History Association of Australia. Archived from the original on 6 April 2015.
  33. "Beagle Bay (1890–2000)". German missionaries in Australia. Griffith University. Retrieved 8 December 2019. Also known as: Nôtre Dame du Sacré Coeur (1890-1901), Sacred Heart Mission, Herz Jesu Mission.
  34. "La Grange Mission (Bidyadanga) (1924–1985)". German missionaries in Australia. Griffith University. Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  35. "Aurukun (1904–1913))". German missionaries in Australia. Griffith University. Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  36. "Bathurst Island Mission 1911-1938-1978)". German missionaries in Australia. Griffith University. Retrieved 8 December 2019.

Sources

  • Harmstorf, Ian; Cigler, Michael (1985). The Germans in Australia. Australian ethnic heritage series. Melbourne: AE Press. ISBN 0-86787-203-9.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

Further reading

  • Lehmann, Hartmut. "South Australian German Lutherans in the second half of the nineteenth century: A case of rejected assimilation?." Journal of Intercultural Studies 2.2 (1981): 24–42. online
  • Lehmann, Hartmut. "Conflicting kinds of loyalty: The political outlook of the australischer christenbote, Melbourne, 1867–1910." Journal of Intercultural Studies 6.2 (1985): 5–21.
  • Petersson, Irmtraud. German Images in Australian Literature from the 1940s to the 1980s (P. Lang, 1990)
  • Seitz, Anne, and Lois Foster. "Dilemmas of immigration—Australian expectations, migrant responses: Germans in Melbourne." Journal of Sociology 21.3 (1985): 414–430. online
  • Tolley, Julie Holbrook. "A social and cultural investigation of women in the wine industry of South Australia" (thesis, 2004) online
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