Solo Analysis Document 3.4 Gottlieb Mittelberger, Laboring in Pennsylvania, 1756

SOLO ANALYSIS

Gottlieb Mittelberger | Laboring in Pennsylvania, 1756

German colonists began moving to Pennsylvania in the late seventeenth century, encouraged by reports of rich land and religious freedom. In 1750 Gottlieb Mittelberger, a professional organist, left his home in Württemberg, Germany, and headed to Pennsylvania. He returned home in 1754 and two years later published a book warning others against settling in the American colonies. Although Mittelberger was not an indentured servant or a redemptioner, he focused on the hardships experienced by these bound laborers.

Document 3.4

Our Europeans, who are purchased [indentured servants and redemptioners], must always work hard, for new fields are constantly laid out; and so they learn that stumps of oak-trees are in America certainly as hard as in Germany. In this hot land they fully experience in their own persons what God has imposed on man for his sin and disobedience; for in Genesis we read the words: In the sweat of thy brow shalt thou eat bread. Who therefore wishes to earn his bread in a Christian and honest way, and cannot earn it in his fatherland otherwise than by the work of his hands, let him do so in his own country, and not in America; for he will not fare better in America. However hard he may be compelled to work in his fatherland, he will surely find it quite as hard, if not harder, in the new country. Besides, there is not only the long and arduous journey lasting half a year, during which he has to suffer, more than with the hardest work; he has also spent about 200 florins which no one will refund to him. If he has so much money, it will slip out of his hands; if he has it not, he must work his debt off as a slave and poor serf. Therefore let every one stay in his own country and support himself and his family honestly. Besides I say that those who suffer themselves to be persuaded and enticed away by the man-thieves, are very foolish if they believe that roasted pigeons will fly into their mouths in America or Pennsylvania without their working for them.

Source: Gottlieb Mittelberger, Gottlieb Mittelberger’s Journey to Pennsylvania in the Year 1750 and Return to Germany in the Year 1754, trans. Carl Theo. Eben (Philadelphia: John Jos. McVey, 1898), 30–31.

Interpret the Evidence

  1. What myths about America does Mittelberger try to dispel?

  2. How does Mittelberger perceive the situation of indentured servants and redemptioners in colonial Pennsylvania?

Put It in Context

How might this account affect German individuals or families considering migration to North America?