List of German Americans

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

German Americans (German: Deutschamerikaner) are citizens of the United States who are of German ancestry; they form the largest ethnic ancestry group in the United States, accounting for 17% of U.S. population.[1] The first significant numbers arrived in the 1680s in New York and Pennsylvania. Some eight million German immigrants have entered the United States since that point. Immigration continued in substantial numbers during the 19th century; the largest number of arrivals moved 1840–1900, when Germans formed the largest group of immigrants coming to the U.S., outnumbering the Irish and English.[2] Some arrived seeking religious or political freedom, others for economic opportunities greater than those in Europe, and others for the chance to start afresh in the New World. California and Pennsylvania have the largest populations of German origin, with more than six million German Americans residing in the two states alone.[3] More than 50 million people in the United States identify German as their ancestry; it is often mixed with other Northern European ethnicities.[4] This list also includes people of German Jewish descent.

Americans of German descent live in nearly every American county, from the East Coast, where the first German settlers arrived in the 17th century, to the West Coast and in all the states in between. German Americans and those Germans who settled in the U.S. have been influential in almost every field, from science, to architecture, to entertainment, and to commercial industry.

Art and literature[]

Architects[]

  • Dankmar Adler – architect[5][6]
  • Adolf Cluss – architect, builder of numerous public buildings in Washington, D.C.[7]
  • Ferdinand Gottlieb – architect heading his own firm, Ferdinand Gottlieb & Associates, based in Dobbs Ferry, New York[8]
  • Walter Gropius – pioneer in modern architecture, founder of Bauhaus[9]
  • Albert Kahn – industrial architect; known as the "architect of Detroit", of Jewish descent[10]
  • Richard Kiehnel – senior partner of Kiehnel, Elliot and Chalfant[11]
  • Henry C. Koch – architect based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin[12]
  • Joseph Molitor – Chicago-based church architect
  • John A. Roebling – architect, known for designing the Brooklyn Bridge[13]
  • Washington Roebling – civil engineer known for his work on the Brooklyn Bridge, which was designed by his father John A. Roebling[14]
  • Frederick C. Sauer – architect, particularly in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, region of the late 19th and early 20th centuries[15][16]
  • Frederick G. Scheibler Jr.Art Nouveau Pittsburgh architect[17]
  • August Schoenborn – designed the United States Capitol Dome[18]
  • Hans Schuler – German-born American sculptor and monument maker; first American sculptor to win the Salon Gold Medal[19]
  • Adolph Strauch – landscape architect[20]
  • Horace Trumbauer – architect[21]
  • Ludwig Mies van der Rohe – pioneer of modern architecture, second Chicago School of Architecture[22]
  • Clarence C. Zantzinger – architect and public servant in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[23]

Artists[]

Thomas Nast
Elisabet Ney
Charles Schulz
Alfred Stieglitz
  • Anni Albers – printmaker, textile artist[24]
  • Josef Albers – painter and graphic artist[25]
  • Leonard Bahr – portrait painter, muralist, illustrator and educator. He worked for many years as a painting professor at the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA)[26]
  • Earl W. Bascom – painter, printmaker, and sculptor ("Cowboy of Cowboy Artists")
  • Robert Benecke – early photographer[27]
  • Albert Bierstadt – painter, known for his large landscapes of the American West[28]
  • Richard Bock – sculptor and associate of Frank Lloyd Wright
  • Charles Dellschau – one of America's earliest known outsider artists, draftsman engineer, creating drawings, collages and watercolors of airplanes and airships
  • Rudolph Dirks – comic strip artist who created The Katzenjammer Kids[29]
  • Alfred Eisenstaedt – photographer and photojournalist best remembered for his photograph capturing the celebration of V-J Day[30]
  • Jimmy Ernst – German-born artist[31]
  • Carl Eytel – German-born artist of desert landscapes living in early 20th-century Palm Springs, California[32]
  • Claire Falkenstein – sculptor, painter, print-maker and jewelry designer known for her large-scale abstract metal and glass sculptures
  • Andreas Feininger – photographer and writer on photographic technique[33]
  • Lyonel Feininger – painter and caricaturist[33][34]
  • Steven Fischer – film producer and cartoonist[33]
  • Carl Giers – early photographer[35]
  • George Grosz – member of the Berlin Dada and New Objectivity group, known especially for his savagely caricatural drawings of Berlin life in the 1920s[36]
  • Don Heckcomics artist best known for co-creating the Marvel Comics characters Iron Man and the Wasp, and for his long run penciling the Marvel superhero-team series The Avengers during the 1960s Silver Age of comic books[37]
  • Uli Herzner – fashion designer[38]
  • Hans Hofmannabstract expressionist painter[39]
  • Ubbe Ert IwwerksAcademy Award-winning animator, cartoonist and special effects technician, famous for his work for Walt Disney
  • Klaus Janson – comic book artist (inker), working regularly for Marvel Comics and DC Comics and sporadically for independent companies
  • Ulli Kampelmann – painter and filmmaker
  • Kenya (Robinson) – multimedia artist whose work includes performance, sculpture and installation[40]
  • Charles Kleibacker – fashion designer who earned the nickname "Master of the Bias"[41]
  • Franz Jozef Kline – abstract expressionist painter
  • Harold Knerr – illustrator of The Katzenjammer Kids until 1949[42]
  • John Lewis Krimmel – America's first genre painter[43]
  • Emanuel Leutze – history painter best known for his painting Washington Crossing the Delaware[44]
  • Cornelius Krieghoff – painter[45]
  • Nicola Marschall – artist, designed the first Confederate flag and the Confederate uniform[46]
  • Louis Maurer – lithographer[47]
  • David Muench – landscape and nature photographer known for portraying the American western landscape[48]
  • Marc Muench – sports and landscape photographer[49]
  • Charles Christian Nahl – painter who is called California's first significant artist[50]
  • Thomas Nast – political cartoonist[51]
  • Elisabet Ney – sculptor[52]
  • Erwin Panofsky – art historian, of Jewish descent[53]
  • Julian RitterClassical Realist painter best known for his paintings of nudes, clowns and portraits and his ill-fated voyage of the South Pacific[54]
  • Severin Roesenstill life painter[55]
  • Paulus Roetter – landscape and botanical painter[56]
  • Christopher Sauer – earliest type founder in America, published the first German Bible, 1743, and the first religious magazine in America, 1764[57]
  • Christian Schwartz – type designer[58]
  • Christian Siriano – fashion designer[59]
  • Gustavus Sohon – artist[60][61][62]
  • Henry William Stiegel – glassmaker and ironmaster[33]
  • Alfred Stieglitz – photographer instrumental in making photography an acceptable art form alongside painting and sculpture[63]
  • Ruth VanSickle Ford – painter, art teacher, and owner of the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts[33]
  • Richard Veenfliet – artist known for illustration-figure, genre and landscape
  • Patrizia von Brandenstein – production designer
  • Kat Von D (Katherine von Drachenberg) – tattoo artist[64][65]
  • Elsa von Freytag-Loringhovenavant-garde, Dadaist artist, and poet
  • Baroness Hilla von Rebay – abstract painter, helped establish the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York City[66]
  • Karl Ferdinand Wimar – painter[67]

Authors and writers[]

L. Frank Baum
Mary Roberts Rinehart
Dr. Seuss
John Steinbeck
  • Kathy Acker – author[68]
  • Wendall Anschutz – television newsman for KCTV in Kansas City[69]
  • Sade Baderinwa – news reporter-journalist
  • Matthias Bartgis – printer and publisher[70]
  • L. Frank Baum – author, actor, and independent filmmaker best known as the creator of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz[71]
  • Vicki Baum – writer[72]
  • Salvador Brau – journalist, poet, writer[73]
  • Gene Brewer – author of the K-PAX series of novels
  • Charles Bukowski – poet and novelist[74]
  • Caspar Butz – journalist, politician[75]
  • George DiCaprio – writer, editor, and major west coast underground comic book distributor[76]
  • Theodore Dreiser – author of the naturalist school, known for dealing with the gritty reality of life[77]
  • Gottfried Duden – travel author[78]
  • Roger Ebert – Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic, journalist, and screenwriter[79]
  • Martin Ebon – author of non-fiction books from the paranormal to politics[80]
  • Max Ehrmann – widely known for his 1927 prose poem "Desiderata" (Latin: "things desired").[81]
  • Charles Follen – poet and patriot[82]
  • Cornelia Funke – author[83]
  • James Grauerholz – writer, editor-in-chief, bibliographer, and literary executor of the estate of William S. Burroughs
  • Bob Gretz – award-winning sportswriter and broadcaster[84]
  • Hans Halberstadt – author, filmmaker, historian and photographer
  • Geoffrey Hartman – literary theorist[85]
  • Ursula Hegi – novelist[86]
  • Patricia Highsmith – novelist known for her psychological thrillers[87]
  • Friedrich Hirth – sinologue[88]
  • Max Hofmann – correspondent
  • Amal Kassir – international award-winning spoken word poet.[89]
  • Stephen King – author[90]
  • Chuck Klosterman – writer
  • Siegfried Kracauer – film historian, sociologist and author[91]
  • Herbert Arthur Krause – historian[92]
  • D.L. Lang – poet laureate of Vallejo, California[93]
  • Fritz Leiber – science fiction writer
  • Walter Lippman – writer, journalist, and political commentator
  • H. L. Mencken – journalist[94]
  • Henry Miller – writer and painter[95]
  • Anna Balmer Myers – author of Mennonite (Pennsylvania Dutch) novels[96]
  • Oswald Ottendorfer – journalist associated with the development of the German-language New Yorker Staats-Zeitung into a major newspaper[97][98]
  • Sylvia Plath – poet, novelist, and short story writer[99]
  • Frederik Pohl – science-fiction writer, editor
  • Erich Maria Remarque – German-born author, naturalized United States citizen[100]
  • Conrad Richter – Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist
  • Mary Roberts Rinehart – author[101]
  • Hope Rockefeller Aldrich – journalist[citation needed]
  • Irma S. Rombauer – author of The Joy of Cooking[102]
  • Diane Sawyer – journalist[103]
  • Jack Schaefer – author of Shane[104]
  • Paul Schrader – screenwriter, film director, and film critic[105][106]
  • Peter Schweizer – author of Do as I Say (Not as I Do): Profiles in Liberal Hypocrisy and Clinton Cash
  • Ernest Schwiebertangling writer
  • Charles Sealsfield – pseudonym of Austrian American author of novels and travelogues Carl (or Karl) Anton Postl[107]
  • Dr. Seuss (born Theodor Seuss Geisel) – writer and cartoonist[108]
  • Maria Shriver – journalist and author
  • Mona Simpson – novelist and university professor, biological younger sister of the late Apple Inc. co-founder Steve Jobs[109][110]
  • Curt Siodmak – screenwriter[111]
  • Nicholas Sparks – author and screenwriter
  • Gertrude Stein – author, of Jewish descent[112][113]
  • John Steinbeck – Nobel prize-winning author, one of the best-known and most widely read American writers of the 20th century[114][115]
  • Henry F. Urban – journalist, author[116]
  • Henry Villard – journalist[117]
  • Kurt Vonnegut – novelist[118]
  • Tessa Gräfin von Walderdorff – writer, socialite[119]
  • George Weigel – author; political and social activist[120]

Businesspeople and entrepreneurs[]

John Jacob Astor IV
William E. Boeing
Walt Disney
Henry J. Heinz
John D. Rockefeller
Washington Roebling
Levi Strauss
George Westinghouse
  • Philip Anschutz – billionaire businessman who owns or controls many companies in a variety of industries[121]
  • John Jacob Astor – business magnate, merchant and investor and the first multi-millionaire in the United States[122][123][124]
  • John Jacob Astor IV – millionaire businessman, real estate developer, inventor, writer and a lieutenant colonel in the Spanish–American War[122]
  • William Waldorf Astor, 1st Viscount Astor – financier and statesman
  • George Frederick Baer – lawyer, Social Darwinist railroad baron (former President of the Reading Railroad)[125]
  • Ralph Baer – father of the home video game console, of German-Jewish descent[126]
  • John Jacob Bausch – optician who co-founded Bausch & Lomb[127]
  • Andy von Bechtolsheim – co-founder of Sun Microsystems and one of the first investors in Google[128]
  • Maximilian Berlitz – Berlitz Language School[129]
  • Isaac Wolfe Bernheim – businessman notable for starting the I. W. Harper brand of premium bourbon whiskey[130]
  • Bernard Baruch – financier, stock-market speculator, statesman, and political consultant[131]
  • William Edward Boeing – aviation pioneer who founded The Boeing Company[132]
  • Paul Bonwit – founder of Bonwit Teller department store in New York City[133]
  • Emil J. Brach, Founder of Brach's Candy
  • George Brumder – newspaper publisher and businessman in Milwaukee, Wisconsin[134][135]
  • Clyde Cessna – aircraft designer, aviator, and founder of the Cessna Aircraft Corporation[136]
  • Walter ChryslerChrysler automobile developer[129][137]
  • George A. Dickel – whiskey distributor; born in Grünberg, Hesse[138]
  • Chris Deering – businessman and marketer best known for his role as president of Sony Computer Entertainment Europe[139]
  • Noah Dietrich – CEO of the Howard Hughes empire[140]
  • William S. Dietrich II – industrialist who took over and expanded Dietrich Industries, a steel framing manufacturer which he eventually sold to Worthington Industries. Late in life, he made two of the largest charitable contributions in higher education history, to the University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University.
  • Walt Disney – film producer, director, screenwriter, voice actor, animator, entrepreneur, and philanthropist[141]
  • John Doerr – venture capitalist at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers
  • Richard Driehaus – chairman of Driehaus Capital Management LLC[142]
  • August Duesenberg – automobile pioneer manufacturer[143][144][145]
  • Fred Duesenberg – automobile pioneer designer, manufacturer and sportsman[143][144][145]
  • Edward Filene – businessman, social entrepreneur and philanthropist[146]
  • Harvey Firestone – founder of the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company[147]
  • Nicholas C. Forstmann – one of the founding partners of Forstmann Little & Company, a private equity firm[148]
  • Theodore J. Forstmann – one of the founding partners of Forstmann Little & Company, a private equity firm, and chairman and CEO of IMG, a leading global sports and media company[148]
  • Bill Gates – software magnate and investor, founder and former chairman of Microsoft
  • Daniel Frank Gerber – manufacturer of baby food[149]
  • Frank Daniel Gerber – manufacturer of baby food[149]
  • Henry Giessenbier – banker and founder of the Young Men's Progressive Civic Association in 1915 and the United States Junior Chamber in 1920[150]
  • Theodor August Heintzman – piano manufacturer (Heintzman & Co.) and inventor
  • Henry J. HeinzH. J. Heinz Company ketchup founder[151]
  • H. J. Heinz II – best known as Jack Heinz, a business executive and CEO of the H. J. Heinz Company
  • H. Robert Heller – President and CEO of VISA U.S.A. and Federal Reserve Board of Governors
  • Richard Hellmann – company founder of Hellmanns
  • Joseph A. Hemann – educator, newspaper publisher, and banker[152]
  • Milton S. HersheyHershey chocolate founder[151][153]
  • Barron Hilton – chairman of the Hilton Hotel chain and grandfather of Paris Hilton
  • Conrad Hilton – founder of the Hilton Hotel chain and great grandfather of Paris Hilton and Nicky Hilton[154][155]
  • Richard Hilton – hotelier and real estate entrepreneur, father of Paris Hilton
  • George A. Hormel – founder of Hormel Foods Corporation[156]
  • Steve Jobs – software tycoon, co-founder and CEO of Apple Inc.[157]
  • Max Kade – pharmaceutical tycoon, endowed the Max Kade Foundation[158]
  • Otto Hermann Kahn – investment banker[159][160]
  • Jawed Karim – co-founder of YouTube and designer of key parts of PayPal
  • Edgar J. Kaufmann – department store entrepreneur
  • William Myron Keck – oil entrepreneur and philanthropist who is now best known for giving his name to the W. M. Keck Foundation, one of the largest philanthropic foundations[161]
  • Peter Kern – confectioner and mayor of Knoxville, Tennessee[162]
  • John W. Kieckhefer – pioneer in the use of fibre shipping containers and one of the wealthiest men in America in 1957
  • John Kluge – television industry mogul[163]
  • Klaus Kleinfeld – business executive[164]
  • William Knabe – industrialist and piano-manufacturer[165]
  • Lynne Koplitz – comedian[166]
  • James L. Kraft – first to patent processed cheese; founder of Kraft Foods[167]
  • Bernard Kroger – chain grocer founder of the Kroger chain[168][169]
  • Louis Kurz – major publisher of chromolithographs in the late 19th century
  • Henry Emanuel Lutterloh – Quartermaster General under George Washington
  • Johan Adam Lemp – father of modern brewing in St. Louis, started the William J. Lemp Brewing Company[170]
  • James E. Lentz III – president of Toyota Motor Sales, USA
  • Alfred Lion – co-founder of Blue Note Records[171]
  • Solomon Loeb – banker, co-founder of Kuhn, Loeb & Co., of Jewish descent
  • Grover Loening – aircraft manufacturer[172]
  • Henry Lomb – co-founded Bausch & Lomb[173][174]
  • George Lucas – film director and producer, of part German ancestry[175]
  • William H. Luden – developer of the menthol cough drop, the first ever, Luden's Menthol Cough Drops[176]
  • Adolph Luetgert – Chicago businessman of A.L. Luetgert Sausage & Packing Company
  • Peter Luger – steak restaurateur[177]
  • Abby Rockefeller Mauzé – philanthropist[178]
  • Oscar Mayer – meat entrepreneur[179]
  • Frederick L. Maytag – founder of the Maytag Company
  • George W. Merck – scientist and former president of Merck & Co
  • Fred G. Meyer – founder of Fred Meyer
  • Maxey Dell Moody Jr. – founder of MOBRO Marine, Inc. and CEO of M. D. Moody & Sons, Inc.
  • Elon Musk – co-founder of PayPal Inc.; founder of SolarCity, SpaceX, Hyperloop, and Tesla Motors
  • Carrie Marcus Neiman – co-founder of the Neiman-Marcus department store[180]
  • Douglas R. Oberhelman – former CEO and Executive Chairman of Caterpillar Inc. in Peoria, Illinois[181]
  • Adolph Ochs-Sulzberger – newspaper publisher and former owner of The New York Times and The Chattanooga Times (now the Chattanooga Times Free Press)
  • Hermann Oelrichs – shipping magnate and owner of Norddeutsche Lloyd Shipping[182]
  • Albrecht Pagenstecher – pioneer of the modern paper industry[183]
  • Fabian Pascal – consultant to large software vendors[184]
  • Charles Pfizer – founded the Pfizer Inc. pharmaceutical company[185]
  • John C. Pritzlaff – founder of the John Pritzlaff Hardware Company, the largest wholesale hardware store in the Midwestern United States until its closure in 1958[186]
  • Robert Propst – inventor of the Action Office that evolved into the cubicle office furniture system
  • John J. Raskob – builder of the Empire State Building
  • Francis Joseph Reitz – banker, civic leader, and philanthropist[187]
  • John Augustus Reitz – known as the "Lumber Baron", an entrepreneur, industrialist, banker, civic leader, and philanthropist[188]
  • George Remus – famous Cincinnati lawyer and bootlegger during the Prohibition era
  • Adolph Rickenbacher – created the electric guitar manufacturer, Rickenbacher Manufacturing Company
  • William Rittenhouse – built the first paper mill in America[189]
  • David Rockefeller – banker, philanthropist, world statesman, and the current patriarch of the Rockefeller family
  • John D. Rockefeller – oil magnate and philanthropist
  • John D. Rockefeller Jr. – industrialist and philanthropist
  • John D. Rockefeller III – industrialist and philanthropist
  • Laurance Rockefeller – venture capitalist, financier, philanthropist and major conservationist
  • John Augustus Roebling – civil engineer, one of the pioneers in the construction of suspension bridges[190]
  • Washington Roebling – civil engineer best known for his work on the Brooklyn Bridge
  • Jim Rohr – chairman and CEO of PNC Financial Services (PNC Bank)[191]
  • Jacob Ruppert – brewer, businessman, National Guard colonel and United States Congressman, owner of New York Yankees from 1915 until 1939[192][193][194]
  • August Schell – founded The August Schell Brewing Company in 1860, the second oldest family-owned brewery in America
  • Walter Schlage – engineer, inventor, and businessman; founder of Schlage Manufacturing company in San Francisco
  • John Schnatter – founder of Papa John's Pizza
  • Jacob Schiff – banker and philanthropist
  • Julius Schmid – creator of the Sheik condom and the Ramses condom[195][196]
  • Eric Schmidt – executive chairman and former CEO of Alphabet Inc. (the parent company of Google) and a former member of the board of directors of Apple Inc., and 136th-wealthiest person in the world in 2011
  • Charles M. Schwab – steel magnate (Bethlehem Steel)[197]
  • Charles R. Schwab – businessman and investor; founder of the Charles Schwab Corporation
  • Steve Schwarzman – private equity mogul, financier and founder of Blackstone Group
  • Frank Seiberling – inventor and founder of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, Seiberling Rubber Company, Stan Hywet Hall and Gardens[198][199][200]
  • John Seiberling – founder and inventor of one of the first reaping machines[198][199][200]
  • Isaac Singer – inventor, actor, and sewing machine entrepreneur[201]
  • Evan Spiegel – Internet entrepreneur; co-founder and CEO of the mobile application Snapchat[202]
  • Joseph Spiegel – founder of Spiegel catalog[203]
  • Claus Spreckels – industrialist[204]
  • George Steinbrenner – shipping and sports franchise entrepreneur and late owner of the New York Yankees
  • Heinrich Engelhard Steinweg – Steinway pianos manufacturer[205]
  • Henry William Stiegel – glassmaker and ironmaster and an active lay Lutheran and associate of Henry Melchior Muhlenberg
  • Chris Strachwitz – founder and president of Arhoolie Records[206]
  • Levi Strauss – creator of the first company to manufacture blue jeans;[207] of German-Jewish descent
  • Clement Studebaker – founded Studebaker, a wagon, carriage and car manufacturer[208]
  • Arthur Hays Sulzberger – publisher of The New York Times, 1935–1961[209]
  • John Sutter – pioneer settler/colonizer[210]
  • Peter Thiel – co-founder of PayPal Inc.; first outside investor in Facebook, Inc.[211][212]
  • Otto Timm – aircraft manufacturer
  • Robert Uihlein Jr. – heir, businessman, polo player and philanthropist[213]
  • William Utz – snack food entrepreneur
  • Frederick Vogeltanner and businessman from Milwaukee, Wisconsin who spent a single one-year term as a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly[214][215]
  • Charles Von der Ahe – co-founder of the Vons Supermarket chain[216]
  • Wilfred Von der Ahe – co-founder of the Vons Supermarket chain[216]
  • The Warburg Family – bankers, of Jewish descent
  • John Wanamaker – founder of Wanamaker's department store
  • George Westinghouse – engineer and electricity pioneer[217][218]
  • Oscar Werwath – founder and first president of the Milwaukee School of Engineering in Milwaukee, Wisconsin[219]
  • Friedrich Weyerhäuser – timber mogul and founder of the Weyerhaeuser[220]
  • Francis Wolff – co-founder of Blue Note Records[171]
  • Rudolph Wurlitzer – musical instrument entrepreneur[221]
  • William Zeckendorf – real estate developer
  • Frederick G. Zinsser – American chemical company entrepreneur who founded Zinsser & Company, which synthesized organic chemicals.

Brewers[]

Adolphus Busch
Frederick Miller
  • Eberhard Anheuser – soap and candle maker, president and CEO of Eberhard Anheuser and Company, which eventually became Anheuser-Busch[222]
  • Valentin Blatz – beer baron, started the Valentin Blatz Brewing Company[223]
  • Adolphus BuschAnheuser-Busch brewing company founder[224]
  • Adolphus Busch III – brewing magnate who was the President and CEO of Anheuser-Busch, 1934–1946
  • August Anheuser Busch Sr. – brewing magnate who served as the President and CEO of Anheuser-Busch, 1913–1934
  • August Busch IV – president and CEO of Anheuser-Busch
  • Gussie Busch – brewing magnate who built the Anheuser-Busch Companies into the largest brewery in the world as company chairman, 1946–1975, and became a prominent sportsman as owner of the St. Louis Cardinals franchise in MLB
  • Adolph CoorsCoors beer empire founder[225]
  • Matthias Haffen – New York City brewer, formerly located at the Haffen Building in the Bronx[226]
  • Theodore Hamm – founder of Hamm's Brewery
  • Frederick MillerMiller beer creator[227]
  • Frederick Pabst – founder of Pabst Brewery (with Philip Best)
  • Tom Pastorius – founded Penn Brewery (Pennsylvania Brewing Co.)[228]
  • Frederick Schaefer – beer baron, started F. & M. Schaefer Brewing Company[229][230]
  • Joseph Schlitz – beer baron, founded Joseph Schlitz Brewing Company[231]
  • Kosmas Spoetzl – brewer, Shiner Brewery[232][233]
  • Peter P. Straub – founder of Straub Brewery[234]
  • August Uihlein – Uhrig Brewery and Joseph Schlitz Brewing Company brewer, business executive and horse breeder[235]
  • Herman Weiss – first brewmaster in Shiner, Texas; hired in 1909 by the Shiner Brewing Association to start the brewery; later took the same position at the San Antonio Brewing Association

Distillers[]

Entertainment[]

Actors[]

Jensen Ackles
Ben Affleck
Sandra Bullock
Nicolas Cage
George Clooney
Tom Cruise
Robert De Niro
Johnny Depp
Leonardo DiCaprio
Vin Diesel
Peter Dinklage
Adam Driver
Tina Fey
Jon Hamm
Anne Hathaway
Angelina Jolie
Julia Louis-Dreyfus
Matthew McConaughey
Wentworth Miller
Gwyneth Paltrow
Joaquin Phoenix
Brad Pitt
Amy Poehler
Julia Roberts
Emma Stone
Meryl Streep
  • Jensen Ackles – actor
  • Gideon Adlon – actress
  • Ben Affleck – actor and filmmaker
  • Casey Affleck – actor and director
  • Eddie Albert (born Edward Albert Heimberger) – Academy Award- and Primetime Emmy Award-nominated American stage, film, character actor, gardener, humanitarian activist, and World War II hero
  • Tim Allen – actor and comedian[238]
  • Woody Allen (born Allan Stewart Konigsberg) – filmmaker, writer, actor, comedian, and musician, of Jewish descent
  • Mädchen Amick – actress
  • Fred Armisen
  • Fred Astaire – dancer, singer, actor, choreographer, and television presenter[239][240]
  • Odessa A'zion – actress
  • Catherine Bach – actress[241]
  • Diedrich Bader – actor
  • Haley Bennett – actress
  • Hailey Baldwin – actress
  • John Banner – actor
  • Earl W. Bascom – film actor[242]
  • Kim Basinger – actress, small amount of German ancestry[243][244]
  • Brian Baumgartner – actor
  • Kristen Bell – actress[245]
  • Zazie Beetz – actress[246]
  • Candice Bergen – actress; mother Frances Bergen was of German descent
  • Frances Bergen (née Westerman) – maternal grandparents of German descent
  • Ingrid Bergman – actress; mother was an immigrant from Germany
  • Halle Berry – actress[247]
  • Carl Betz – actor and World War II veteran
  • Michael Biehn – actor[248]
  • Jessica Biel – actress, small amount of German ancestry, also of Jewish descent[249]
  • Karen Black – actress
  • Curt Bois – actor[250]
  • Johnny Yong Bosch – actor, of partial paternal German descent
  • Julie Bowen – actress, of part German ancestry[251]
  • Eric Braeden – actor[252][253]
  • Marlon Brando – actor; father was of partial German ancestry[254]
  • Benjamin Bratt – actor; father is of mostly German ancestry[255]
  • Hermann Braun – actor[256]
  • Felix Bressart – actor[257]
  • Agnes Bruckner – actress, of part German descent[258]
  • Sandra Bullock – actress; mother was an immigrant from Germany, father had some German ancestry[259]
  • Ty Burrell – actor
  • Scott Caan – actor
  • Nicolas Cage – actor
  • Nancy Cartwright
  • Dana Carvey – actor, comedian, and producer
  • Loan Chabanol – actress
  • Sarah Chalke – actress; mother is an immigrant from Germany[260]
  • Carol Channing – actor, of 3/4 German and 1/4 African-American ancestry[261]
  • Claudia Christian – actress; mother is a German immigrant[262][263]
  • Mae Clarke (born Violet Mary Klotz) – actress[264]
  • Montgomery Clift – actor
  • George Clooney – actor, director, producer, screenwriter, activist, businessman, and philanthropist[265]
  • Kevin Costner – actor, of part German descent[266]
  • Tom Cruise – actor; parents both of part German ancestry[267]
  • Tony Curtis (born Bernard Schwartz) – actor, German Jewish descent
  • Willem Dafoe – actor
  • Josh Dallas - actor
  • Helmut Dantine – actor[268]
  • Doris Day – actress, singer[269][270]
  • Robert De Niro – actor; mother was of half German descent[271]
  • James Dean – actor, small amount of German ancestry
  • Johnny Depp – actor, small amount of German ancestry[272]
  • Cameron Diaz – actress; mother of German descent[273][274]
  • Leonardo DiCaprio – actor, paternal grandmother was of German descent, and mother is an immigrant from Germany[275][276][277]
  • Angie Dickinson – actress[278]
  • Vin Diesel – actor; mother of part German ancestry[279]
  • Marlene Dietrich – actress; an immigrant from Germany[280]
  • Peter Dinklage – Primetime Emmy Award-winning actor, of part German descent[281]
  • Adam Driver – actor[282]
  • Patty Duke – actress; mother of Mackenzie Astin and Sean Astin; she's of one quarter German descent[283]
  • Kirsten Dunst – film actress and former model; German father, and maternal grandfather of German descent[284]
  • Aaron Eckhart – actor; father is of German ancestry, mother also has some German roots
  • Zac Efron – actor, of part German descent
  • Nicole Eggert – actress; father is a German immigrant[285]
  • Erika Eleniak – actress; mother is of Estonian and German ancestry[286]
  • Noah Emmerich – actor; father a German Jewish immigrant, mother of Eastern European Jewish descent
  • Chris Evans – actor; father of half German ancestry[287]
  • Dakota Fanning – actress, of part German descent[288]
  • Elle Fanning – actress; younger sister of Dakota Fanning, of part German descent
  • Tina Fey – writer, comedian, and Primetime Emmy Award-winning actress; father is of half German ancestry[289]
  • William Fichtner – actor[290]
  • Jenna Fischer – actress[291]
  • Carrie Fisher – actress, of part German descent
  • Jodie Foster – actress; mother is of part German ancestry[292]
  • Dennis Franz (born Dennis Franz Schlachta) – award-winning actor; father was a German immigrant, mother was of German descent[293][294]
  • Brendan Fraser – actor[295]
  • Tatiana von Fürstenberg – rock singer and filmmaker; daughter of fashion designers Diane and Prince Egon von Fürstenberg
  • James Garner (born James Scott Bumgarner) – actor; father is of German descent
  • Clark Gable – actor[296]
  • Janet Gaynor – actress
  • Mitzi Gaynor (born Francesca Marlene de Czanyi von Gerber) – actress, singer, and dancer[149]
  • Lillian Gish – actress[297]
  • Summer Glau – actress, of part German descent[298]
  • Karl Glusman – actor[299][300][301]
  • Crispin Glover – actor
  • Betty Grable – actress, dancer, and singer
  • Joel Gretsch – actor
  • Andy Griffith – actor, of part German descent
  • Harry Groener – three-time Tony Award nominee
  • Lukas Haas – actor; father is a German immigrant
  • Gene Hackman – actor; part German
  • Thomas J. Hageboeck (1945–1996) – actor
  • Uta Hagen – actress, an immigrant from Germany[302]
  • Jon Hamm – actor[303]
  • Chelsea Handler – comedian and actress; mother was German[304]
  • Daryl Hannah – actress
  • Melora Hardin – actress and singer
  • Mariska Hargitay – actress; mother is of half German descent
  • Woody Harrelson – actor
  • Cecilia Hart – television and stage actress, of Belgian, Cornish, Dutch, English, French-Canadian, German, Irish, Italian, Norwegian and Scottish descent.
  • David Hasselhoff – actor, of one quarter German descent[305]
  • Anne Hathaway – actress, small amount of German ancestry[306]
  • Cole Hauser – film and television actor; father of part German descent
  • Dwight Hauser – actor and film producer, of part German descent
  • Wings Hauser – actor, director and film writer, of part German descent
  • James Haven – actor, of part German descent[307][308]
  • Rita Hayworth – actress and dancer, of part German descent
  • Bill Heck – actor
  • Eileen Heckart – actress
  • Katherine Heigl – actress, of mostly German descent[309]
  • Tricia Helfer
  • Marg Helgenberger – actress, of mostly German descent[310]
  • Paul Henreid (born Paul Georg Julius Hernried Freiherr von Wassel-Waldingau)[citation needed]
  • Richard Henzel – film, TV, and voice-over actor
  • Edward Herrmann – television and film actor, of part German descent[311]
  • J. G. Hertzler – actor, author, screenwriter best known for his role on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine as the Klingon General (later Chancellor) Martok[312]
  • Emile Hirsch – actor
  • Katie Holmes – actress, of part German ancestry[313]
  • Sofia Hublitz – actress[314]
  • Adam Huber - actor
  • Rock Hudson – actor, of half German/Swiss-German descent
  • Tab Hunter – film actor and singer, father was a German-Jewish immigrant, mother a German Lutheran immigrant
  • Josh Hutcherson – actor
  • Martha Hyer – Academy Award-nominated actress[315]
  • Gillian Jacobs – film, theater and television actress, of part German descent
  • Emil Jannings – first actor to receive the Academy Award for Best Actor[316]
  • Van Johnson – film and television actor and dancer who was a major star at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios during and after World War II, of part German descent[317]
  • Angelina Jolie (born Angelina Jolie Voight) – actress, of part German descent
  • James Earl Jones – actor, of African American, Native American, English, French Huguenot, German, Irish, Scotch-Irish, Scottish, Swedish and Welsh descent.
  • Leatrice Joy (born Leatrice Joy Zeidler) – silent film era actress[318]
  • Victoria Justice – actress; father of part German descent
  • Vincent Kartheiser – actor[319]
  • Grace Kelly – actress; mother was of German ancestry[320]
  • Ellie Kemper – actress and comedian
  • Richard Kiel – actor
  • Q'orianka Kilcher – actress and singer, of part Swiss-German descent[321]
  • Val Kilmer – actor[322][323]
  • Angela Kinsey – actress, of part German descent
  • Chris Klein – actor, both parents of part German descent
  • Werner Klemperer – actor[324]
  • Kevin Kline – actor; father was of German Jewish descent[325]
  • Johnny Knoxville – actor
  • Boris Kodjoe – actor; mother of German and German-Jewish descent
  • David Koechner – actor, comedian, and musician, of part German descent[326]
  • Lynne Koplitz – actor and comedian
  • Fran Kranz – actor, of part German descent
  • Kurt Kreuger – actor[327]
  • Diane Kruger – actress
  • Mickey Kuhn – actor[328]
  • Ashton Kutcher – actor
  • Cheryl Ladd – actress and model, of part German descent
  • Veronica Lake – actress and pin-up model[329]
  • Jessica Lange – actress, paternal grandfather was of German descent[330]
  • Wesley Lau – film and television actor[331]
  • Cyndi Lauper – singer, actress, of part German descent[332]
  • Ed Lauter – actor, of part German descent[333]
  • Taylor Lautner – actor/martial artist, of part German descent[334]
  • Jennifer Lawrence – actress, of part German descent[335]
  • Bruce Lee – actor; father of Brandon Lee and Shannon Lee; Bruce's mother was of Chinese and German ancestry[336]
  • Janine Lindemulder – exotic dancer and adult film actress[337]
  • Kay Lenz – Emmy Award-winning actress
  • Clara Lipman – actress and playwright; sister of Lieder singer Mattie Lipman Marum[338]
  • Blake Lively – actress, of part German descent
  • Kristanna Loken – actress
  • Carole Lombard – actress
  • Julia Louis-Dreyfus – actress (Veep, Seinfeld, and The New Adventures of Old Christine); partly of German descent
  • Chad Lowe – actor and director
  • Rob Lowe – actor
  • Kellan Lutz – fashion model and actor for television and films; of mostly German descent
  • Chloë Grace Moretz – actress[339]
  • Kaitlyn Maher – actress and singer
  • John Malkovich – actor, of part German ancestry on his mother's side
  • Jayne Mansfield – actress[340]
  • William Mapother – actor; Tom Cruise's cousin, of part German descent
  • Marx Brothers – actors, of German Jewish descent
  • Matthew McConaughey – actor, of part German descent
  • Mia Malkova – pornographic actress, of part German descent
  • Candice Michelle – model, actress, WWE wrestler[341]
  • Wentworth Miller – actor; father of part German descent
  • Jason Momoa – actor; mother of part German descent
  • Michelle Monaghan – actress[342]
  • Barbara Nichols – actress
  • Jack Nicholson – actor and filmmaker[343]
  • Nick Nolte – actor, of part German descent[344]
  • Bob Odenkirk – actor
  • Chris O'Donnell – actor who played Robin in two Batman films; mother is of part German ancestry[345]
  • Nick Offerman – actor and comedian[346]
  • Heather O'Rourke – child actress, of part German descent
  • Chord Overstreet – of part German descent
  • Jared Padalecki – actor, mother was part German[347]
  • Lilli Palmer (born Lillie Marie Peiser) – actress, German Jewish[348]
  • Gwyneth Paltrow – actress; daughter of Blythe Danner, who is of mostly German descent, also of Jewish descent
  • Sarah Jessica Parker – actress; mother of mostly German descent, father of partial Jewish descent[349][350]
  • Penny Pax – adult film actress[351]
  • Gregory Peck – actor
  • William Petersen – actor and producer, of mostly German descent[352]
  • Michelle Pfeiffer – actress; father was of half German ancestry[353]
  • Joaquin Phoenix – actor, father had part German ancestry
  • Brad Pitt – actor, of part German descent, and fluent in the German language[354]
  • Amy Poehler – actress, comedian, producer and writer, of 1/8th German descent
  • Erich Pommer – actor and film producer[355]
  • Chris Pratt – actor, of part German descent, and has limited proficiency in the German language[356]
  • Laura Prepon – actress; mother is part German
  • Freddie Prinze Jr. – actor
  • Jürgen Prochnow – actor
  • George Raft (born George Ranft) – actor; father was an immigrant from Germany and mother was of German descent[357]
  • Luise Rainer – actress, Jewish immigrant from Germany[358]
  • John Ratzenberger – actor with part German American father
  • Donna Reed – actress, of part German descent[359]
  • Frank Reicher – German-born American actor, director and producer[360]
  • Jeremy Renner – actor and musician, father is of part German ancestry[361][362]
  • Denise Richards – actress
  • Molly Ringwald – actress
  • Naya Rivera – actress and singer (a quarter German descent)
  • Julia Roberts – actress and producer[363]
  • Isabella Rossellini – actress, daughter of Ingrid Bergman; maternal grandmother was German
  • Andrew Rothenberg – television actor
  • Mercedes Ruehl – theater, television and film actor; father was of part German descent[364]
  • Katee Sackhoff – actress, of part German descent
  • William Sadler – film and television actor[365][366]
  • Roy Scheider – actor; father was of German descent
  • August Schellenberg – actor[367]
  • Kendall Schmidt – actor and singer – well known for his part in Big Time Rush
  • Danielle Schneider – actress, comedian, and writer
  • Helen Schneider – actress and singer
  • John Schneider – actor and singer
  • Liev Schreiber – actor
  • Pablo Schreiber – actor
  • Ricky Schroder – actor and film director
  • Carly Schroeder – actress and model
  • Brooke Shields – actress with distant German ancestors
  • Tom Selleck – actor
  • Amanda Seyfried – actress, of heavily German descent
  • Sherri Saum – actress with German mother
  • Elke Sommer – actress
  • Josef Sommer – actor, immigrant from Germany[368]
  • Shannyn Sossamon – actress, dancer, model, and musician, of part German descent[369]
  • Nick Stahl – actor, of part German descent
  • Frances Sternhagen – actress
  • Emma Stone – actress, of part German descent
  • Michael Strahan – retired football player, actor, and television personality; lived in Germany
  • Meryl Streep – actress; father was of German/Swiss-German descent, mother was of part German ancestry
  • Jeremy Sumpter – actor, of part German descent
  • Carl Switzer – "Alfalfa", actor, professional dog breeder and hunting guide
  • Ralph Taeger – actor
  • Channing Tatum – actor, distant German ancestry[370]
  • Shirley Temple – actress, part German
  • Alexis Texas – pornographic actress
  • Charlize Theron – actress; mother has German ancestry[371]
  • Jonathan Taylor Thomas (born Jonathan Taylor Weiss) – actor, best known for Home Improvement
  • Uma Thurman – actress; mother is model Nena von Schlebrügge, of half German descent
  • Rip Torn – actor and voice actor[372]
  • Liv Tyler – actress, of part German descent
  • Alida Valli (Maria Laura Altenburger von Marckenstein-Frauenberg) – actress
  • Mario Van Peebles – actor and director; mother is German[373]
  • Mike Vogel – actor[374]
  • Jon Voight – actor; maternal grandparents were immigrants from Germany[375]
  • Erik von Detten – actor; father is German[376]
  • Jenna von Oÿ – actress and singer[377]
  • Christopher Walken – actor; father was an immigrant from Germany[378]
  • Paul Walker – actor, of part German descent[379]
  • Erin Wasson – actress and model[380]
  • Johnny Weissmuller – Olympic swimmer, actor, best known as Tarzan[381]
  • Lois Weber – silent film actress, screenwriter, producer, and director. She is identified in some historical references as "the most important female director the American film industry has known"[382]
  • George Wendt – actor, of part German descent
  • Frank Welker – actor
  • Mae West – actress, playwright, screenwriter, and sex symbol; mother was an immigrant from Germany[383]
  • Vera-Ellen Westmeier Rohe – actress and dancer
  • Bruce Willis – actor; mother was German[384]
  • Henry Winkler – actor, comedian, director, producer, and author (parents were German Jews)[385][386]
  • Frank Wolff – actor
  • Elijah Wood – actor; father of half German descent; mother has one quarter German ancestry
  • Kari Wuhrer – actress and singer, of part German descent
  • Wolfgang Zilzer – actor[387]
  • Zendaya – (born Zendaya Maree Stoermer Coleman) actress; mother of German descent

Celebrities[]

Katie Couric
Alex Jones
Megyn Kelly
Jimmy Kimmel
Ruth Westheimer
  • Glenn Beck – political commentator[388]
  • Benjamin C. Bradlee (1921-2014) – editor-in-chief of the Washington Post during the Watergate scandal; maternal great-grandfather was Dr. Ernst Bruno von Gersdorff
  • Samantha Brown (born 1970) – television host of several Travel Channel programs
  • Pat Buchanan – political commentator
  • Kristin Cavallari – television personality, fashion designer, and actress[389]
  • Katie Couric – television and online journalist, presenter, producer, and author; mother and maternal grandparents were Jewish German[390]
  • Walter Cronkite – broadcast journalist, best known as anchorman for the CBS Evening News for 19 years (1962–1981)[391]
  • Jeanne Dixon – born Lydia Emma Pinckert, astrologer and self-proclaimed psychic, columnist[392]
  • Siegfried Fischbacher – magician[393]
  • Willie Geist – television personality, journalist and humorist[394]
  • Nicky Hilton – businesswoman, socialite, model, member of the former Hilton Hotel owners family[154]
  • Paris Hilton – businesswoman, socialite, model, member of the former Hilton Hotel owners family[395]
  • James Holzhauer (born 1984) – game show contestant and professional sports gambler, he is the fourth highest-earning American game show contestant of all time and is best known for his record-setting 2019 run as champion on the quiz show Jeopardy![396]
  • Roy Horn – magician[397]
  • Kris Jenner – socialite
  • Kendall Jenner – socialite and model
  • Kylie Jenner – socialite, model, media personality, businesswoman, and billionaire from Kylie Cosmetics
  • Alex Jones – conspiracy theorist
  • Khloe Kardashian – socialite and model
  • Kourtney Kardashian – socialite and model
  • Kim Kardashian – television personality, socialite, actress, businesswoman, and model[398]
  • Megyn Kelly – journalist, attorney, talk show host
  • Jimmy Kimmel – comedian, writer, late night talk show host, game show host, and producer[399]
  • Tomi Lahren – political commentator[400]
  • Alicia Menendez – television journalist
  • Bridget Marquardt – model and TV personality (maiden name Sandmeier), reality tv star[401]
  • Jenny McCarthy – model, author, activist, actress, Playboy Playmate of the Year, and television personality[402]
  • Keith Olbermann – news anchor, sports and political commentator, and radio sportscaster[403]
  • Jeff Probst – Primetime Emmy Award-winning host, game show host, and executive producer
  • Brad Rutter – game show contestant, TV host, producer, and actor; highest-earning American game show contestant of all time and the highest-earning contestant on the U.S. syndicated game show Jeopardy!
  • Judy Sheindlin – television personality, television producer, author, former prosecutor and family court judge[404]
  • Stassi Schroeder – television personality, podcast host, author, fashion blogger, and model[405]
  • Ed Schultz – television and radio host, liberal political commentator, former sports broadcaster
  • Jerry Springer – television personality of German-Jewish descent, journalist, comedian[406]
  • Ruth Westheimer (born 1928) – known as "Dr. Ruth," sex therapist, talk show host, author, professor, Holocaust survivor, and former Haganah sniper.

Composers and musicians[]

Jon Bon Jovi
Miley Cyrus
John Denver
Eminem
Katy Perry
John Philip Sousa
Taylor Swift
  • George Antheilavant-garde composer, pianist, author, and inventor whose modernist musical compositions explored the modern sounds – musical, industrial, mechanical – of the early 20th century[407]
  • Bibi Bourelly - singer
  • Andy Biersack — lead singer of Black Veil Brides
  • Tre Cool – punk rocker (born in Frankfurt, West Germany)[408]
  • Bix Beiderbecke – jazz cornet player and a classical and jazz pianist
  • Jon Bon Jovi – singer and musician[409]
  • Eva Cassidy – singer[410]
  • Miley Cyrus – singer, songwriter, and actress
  • Patrick Dahlheimer – bassist for the band Live[411]
  • Walter Johannes Damrosch – conductor[412]
  • John Denver (born Henry John Deutschendorf Jr.) – musician[413]
  • Dave Dudley – (born David Darwin Pedruska) – country music singer
  • David Ellefson – co-founder of thrash metal band Megadeth
  • Eminem – rapper and actor[414] His mother nearly died during her 73-hour labor with him.[415]
  • Lukas Foss – conductor[416]
  • Chris Frantz – musician and record producer; the drummer for both Talking Heads and the Tom Tom Club
  • Norman Frauenheim – acclaimed pianist and music teacher[417]
  • Ace Frehley – band member of Kiss[418]
  • Hugo Friedhofer – film music composer[419]
  • Louis F. Gottschalk – composer
  • Dave Grohl – musician[420][421]
  • Hilary Hahn - violinist[422]
  • Daryl Hall – born Daryl Hohl, rock, R&B, and soul singer; keyboardist, guitarist, songwriter, and producer, best known as the co-founder and principal lead vocalist of Hall & Oates (with guitarist and songwriter John Oates)[423]
  • Jeff Hanneman – guitarist of Slayer
  • Reinhold Heil – film and television composer[424]
  • Otto K. E. Heinemann – manager for the U.S. branch of German-owned Odeon Records
  • James Hetfield – vocalist, rhythm guitarist and co-founder of Metallica
  • Elbert Joseph Higgins – songwriter[425]
  • Paul Hindemith – composer, violinist and teacher[426]
  • Hanya Holm – choreographer[427]
  • Horst P. Horst – photographer[428]
  • Terry Kath – first guitarist of the rock band Chicago, 1966–1978; German mother
  • Josh Kaufman – singer-songwriter and season six winner of NBC's The Voice
  • John Kiffmeyer – first drummer of the punk rock band Green Day
  • Otto Klemperer – conductor[429]
  • Alison Krauss – bluegrass-country singer, songwriter, and musician
  • Nick Lachey – pop singer[430]
  • Armando Lichtenberger Jr. – Member of musical band La Mafia
  • Charles Martin Loeffler – composer[431]
  • Courtney Love – actress and frontwoman of Hole[432]
  • Marilyn Manson – front man of rock band Marilyn Manson; father is of German descent
  • Melissa Auf der Maur – rock singer
  • Alyson Michalka – actress, singer-songwriter, and guitarist[433]
  • Amanda Michalka – actress, singer-songwriter, and guitarist[434]
  • Sanford A. Moeller – rudimental drummer, national champion, educator, author and Spanish–American War veteran
  • Tomo in der Mühlen – producer and guitar player, known for work with Harold Perrineau, Masta Ace, Styles P, and Ekatarina Velika
  • Dave Mustaine – co-founder of thrash metal band Megadeth and first lead guitarist for thrash metal band Metallica
  • James Pankow – trombone player for the rock band Chicago
  • Jaco Pastorius – musician and songwriter widely acknowledged for his virtuosity with the fretless bass[435]
  • Jaan Patterson – founder of the Surrism-Phonoethics label, also known as Undress Béton
  • Katy Perry – singer and songwriter; English, German, Irish, and Portuguese ancestry
  • Pink (Alecia Beth Moore) – singer, songwriter, dancer, and actress[436]
  • Jimmy Pop – musician, composer, comedian and lead singer of the Bloodhound Gang
  • Elvis Presley – singer, songwriter, and actor[437]
  • Dee Dee Ramone – bassist for the Ramones[438]
  • Trent Reznor – musician, film score composer and founder of Nine Inch Nails[439]
  • Heinz Eric Roemheld – composer; won the Academy Award for Best Original Music Score for Yankee Doodle Dandy in 1943[440][441]
  • Linda Ronstadt – singer and songwriter[442][443]
  • Nate Ruess – singer-songwriter and musician, best known as the lead vocalist of indie rock band Fun
  • Felix Salten – composed scores for some 150 Hollywood movies[444]
  • Peter Schless – Grammy-nominated composer, of such hits as Jeffrey Osborne's "On the Wings of Love"
  • Arnold Schoenberg – expressionist movement in German poetry and art, and leader of the Second Viennese School[445]
  • Wesley Schultz – guitarist and lead vocalist for the American folk rock band The Lumineers
  • Pete Seeger – folk singer
  • John Philip Sousa – composer and conductor of the late Romantic era, known particularly for American military and patriotic marches[446]
  • James Shaffer – co-founder and guitarist of the nu metal band Korn
  • Paul Stanley – musician from the band KISS, of Jewish descent, his mother was born in Berlin
  • Frederick Stock – composer and conductor with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra
  • Mark Stoermer – musician, producer and singer-songwriter; bassist for alternative rock band the Killers[447]
  • Joel Stroetzel – guitarist from the metalcore band Killswitch Engage
  • Taylor Swift – singer-songwriter[448][449]
  • Theodore Thomas – conductor[450]
  • Obie Trice – rapper
  • Steven Tyler – lead singer of Aerosmith
  • Eddie Vedder – lead vocalist of Pearl Jam
  • Kurt Weill – composer[451]
  • Lawrence Welk – bandleader[452]
  • Pete Wentz – bassist for Fall Out Boy[453]
  • Hans ZimmerAcademy Award-winning film composer, German immigrant
  • Wolfgang Zuckermannharpsichord maker and writer[454][455][456]

Directors, producers, screenwriters, and film editors[]

  • Michael Ballhaus – Hollywood film director[457]
  • Gesine Bullock-Prado – pastry chef, TV personality, author, attorney, and former film executive[458][459]
  • Frank Dexter (1882–1965) – German-born American art director[460]
  • Roy O. Disney – entertainment industry executive
  • Roland Emmerich – Hollywood film director; born in Stuttgart[461]
  • Paul Feig – actor and director, of Jewish descent; parents converted to Christian Science
  • Steven Fischer – producer and director; two-time Primetime Emmy Award nominee
  • Ray Harryhausen – visual effects creator, writer, and producer
  • Carl Laemmle – pioneer in American filmmaking and a founder of one of the original major Hollywood movie studios, of Jewish descent
  • Ernst Lubitsch – acclaimed film director, special Academy Award winner[462][463]
  • Anthony Mann – film director and actor[464]
  • Richard C. Meyer – German-American television and film editor
  • Russ Meyer – director and photographer[465]
  • F. W. Murnau – film director of the silent era[466]
  • Seymour Nebenzahl – film producer, of Jewish descent[467]
  • Kurt Neumann – Hollywood film director who specialized in science fiction[468]
  • Mike Nichols – Academy Award-winning film director, writer and producer[469]
  • Arch Oboler – scriptwriter, novelist, producer and director who was active in films, radio and television
  • Wolfgang Petersen – director[470]
  • Wally Pfister – Academy Award-nominated American cinematographer[471]
  • Kelly Reichardt – screenwriter and film director working within American indie cinema
  • Gottfried Reinhardt – producer and director[472]
  • Ringling brothers – circus owners[473]
  • Victor Schertzinger – composer, film director, film producer, and screenwriter[474]
  • Eugen Schüfftan – cinematographer and inventor[475]
  • Nev Schulman – producer, actor, and photographer
  • Reinhold Schünzel – director and actor[476]
  • Robert Siodmak – director[477]
  • Wim Wenders – film director[478]
  • William Wyler – film director[479]
  • Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. – Broadway impresario, notable for his series of theatrical revues, the Ziegfeld Follies[480]

Humorists[]

  • Michael Ian Black (born Michael Ian Schwartz) – comedian, actor, writer, and director[481]
  • David Letterman – late-night talk show host and comedian and the host of CBS's Late Show with David Letterman[482]
  • Daniel Tosh – comedian, host of Comedy Central's Tosh.0[483]

Models[]

  • Wilhelmina Cooper – model who began with Ford Models, and at the peak of her success, founded her own agency, Wilhelmina Models[484]
  • Cindy Crawford – model[485]
  • Rande Gerber – male model and entrepreneur
  • Karlie Kloss – fashion model and entrepreneur[486][487]
  • Heidi Klum – model[488]
  • Nicole Brown Simpson – model
  • Nena von Schlebrügge – former fashion model in the 1950s and 1960s; of German and Swedish descent;[489] mother of actress Uma Thurman

First Ladies of the United States[]

(in order by their husband's presidency)

  • Lucretia Garfield[490]
  • Florence Harding
  • Pat Nixon

Historical figures[]

Neil Armstrong
George Atzerodt
Laura Bullion
Hermann Raster
The Rockefeller brothers
John Davison Rockefeller Sr.
John Davison Rockefeller Sr.
William Avery Rockefeller Jr.
William Avery Rockefeller Jr.
  • Buzz Aldrin – astronaut, first human to speak on the Moon[491]
  • Harry J. Anslinger – United States government official who served as the first commissioner of the United States Department of the Treasury's Federal Bureau of Narcotics, supporter of prohibition and the criminalization of drugs, and played a pivotal role in cannabis prohibition[492][493]
  • Neil Armstrong – astronaut, first human to set foot on the Moon[494]
  • George Atzerodt – assassin, conspirator in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln[495]
  • Meta Schlichting Berger – socialist organizer[496]
  • Laura Bullion (1876–1961) – female Old West outlaw
  • Warren E. Burger (1907–1995) – Chief Justice of the United States, 1969–1986[497]
  • Harold Hitz Burton – politician and lawyer, served as the 45th mayor of Cleveland, Ohio, as a U.S. senator from Ohio, and as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States[498]
  • Willard Erastus Christianson aka Matt Warner – Old West outlaw, deputy sheriff[499]
  • John Dillinger – bank robber in the Depression
  • Dr. Carl Adolph Douai – educational reformer, abolitionist, newspaper editor, and labor leader[500]
  • Amelia Earhart – aviation pioneer and author, the first woman to receive the Distinguished Flying Cross[501]
  • Johann Friedrich Ernst – "Father of German Immigration to Texas", arriving in 1831[502][503]
  • Bobby Fischer – chess prodigy, grandmaster, and the eleventh World Chess Champion[504][505]
  • Henry Francis Fisher – German Texan in Houston, Texas, where he was consul for the Hanseatic League, became acting treasurer of the San Saba Company[506]
  • Gerhard Gesell – United States federal judge
  • Meyer Guggenheim (1828–1905) – statesman, patriarch of what became known as the Guggenheim family[507]
  • Frank Gusenburg – gangster and a victim of the Saint Valentine's Day massacre in Chicago[508]
  • Peter Gusenberg – member of Chicago's North Side Gang, the main rival to the Chicago Outfit[508]
  • Bruno Hauptmann – Lindbergh kidnapper[509]
  • Alfons Heck – writer and former Hitler Youth[510]
  • Friedrich Hecker – revolutionary[511]
  • Michael Hillegas – first Treasurer of the United States[512]
  • Alger Hiss – American government official accused in 1948 of having spied for the Soviet Union in the 1930s, original surname of "Hesse"[513]
  • Jimmy Hoffa – labor union leader and author[514]
  • J. Edgar Hoover – first Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
  • Lena Kleinschmidt – jewel thief
  • Fritz KuhnGerman American Bund leader[515]
  • Maria Kraus-Boelté – pioneer of Fröbel education in the United States, and helped promote kindergarten training as suitable for study at university level
  • Herman Lamm – considered the "father of modern bank robbery"
  • Johann Lederer – explorer[516][517]
  • Jacob Leisler – colonist[518]
  • Frank J. Loesch – law enforcement official, reformer and a founder of the Chicago Crime Commission
  • Kurt Frederick Ludwig – head of the "Joe K" spy ring in the United States in 1940–41
  • Paul Machemehl – German-Texan, rancher and civic leader
  • Fredericka Mandelbaum – entrepreneur and criminal
  • Nicola Marschall – designer of the first national flag and uniform of the Confederacy[519]
  • Christene Mayer – aka "Kid Glove Rosey", famous thief and associate of "Black" Lena Kleinschmidt
  • Benjamin Kurtz Miller – philanthropist[520]
  • Burchard Miller – Texas land pioneer
  • Peter MinuitDirector-General of the Dutch colony of New Netherland[521]
  • Charles Mohr – pharmacist[522]
  • Pat Nixon – former First Lady of the United States[523]
  • Duncan Niederauer – CEO of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)[524][525]
  • Madge Oberholtzer – schoolteacher who worked for the state of Indiana on adult literacy
  • Bonnie Parker – outlaw, robber, and criminal[526]
  • Franz Daniel Pastorius – pioneer and founder of Germantown, Pennsylvania[527]
  • Molly Pitcher (born Mary Ludwig) – American Revolutionary War hero[173]
  • Robert Prager – Illinois coal miner lynched during World War I because of anti-German sentiment
  • Hermann Raster – Chicago politician, editor, and abolitionist
  • Charles Reiser – safecracker
  • William Addams Reitwiesnergenealogist who traced the ancestry of United States political figures, European royalty and celebrities[528]
  • Walter Reuther – labor leader[529]
  • Rockefeller family – industrial and political family that made one of the world's largest fortunes in the oil business during the late 19th and early 20th centuries
  • Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. – historian, social critic, and public intellectual[530]
  • Reinhold O. Schmidt – 1950s UFO "contactee"
  • August Schrader – engineer and mechanic[531]
  • Carl Schurz – politician, newspaper editor, Civil War general[532]
  • Norman Schwarzkopf Sr. – Lindbergh kidnapping investigator[533]
  • Dutch Schultz (born Arthur Flegenheimer) – New York City-area gangster[534][535]
  • Margarethe Schurz – established the kindergarten system in the United States
  • Frank "The German" Schweihs – alleged hitman who had been known to work for The Outfit, the organized crime family in Chicago[536]
  • Prince Carl of Solms-Braunfels – "Texas-Carl" was an Austro-Hungarian Lieutenant General and founder of the town New Braunfels, Texas
  • Jacob Sternberger – historian and one of the original Forty-Eighters
  • Ida Straus – victim of the sinking of the RMS Titanic
  • Isidor Straus – former co-owner of Macy's and victim of the sinking of the RMS Titanic
  • Harry "Pittsburgh Phil" Strauss – prolific contract killer for Murder, Inc.
  • Chesley Sullenberger – commercial airline pilot, safety expert, and accident investigator; piloted US Airways Flight 1549 to a safe ditching in the Hudson River in New York City
  • John Sutter – settler/colonizer[537]
  • Jack SwigertNASA astronaut, one of the 24 persons who have flown to the Moon
  • Count Ludwig Joseph von Boos-Waldeck – German noble descended from a line of Rhenish Knights and nobles dating back to the 13th century, organized the Adelsverein, to promote German emigration to Texas[538]
  • Andrew Von Etter – Boston mobster[539]
  • Paul Warburg – banker[540]
  • Louis J. Weichmann – chief witnesses for the prosecution in the conspiracy trial of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln
  • Conrad Weiser – pioneer, farmer, monk, tanner, judge, soldier, interpreter and diplomat between the Pennsylvania Colony and Native Americans[541]
  • Lewis Wetzel – frontiersman and Indian fighter[542]
  • Gus Winkler – St. Louis mobster[543][544]
  • Adam Worth – gentleman criminal
  • Joe Wurzelbacher – employee of Newell Plumbing & Heating, "the most famous plumber in the nation", rose to national attention when he was mentioned by Republican United States Senator John McCain and Democratic Senator Barack Obama at least 23 times, during the third and final presidential debate on October 15, 2008[545]
  • John Peter Zenger – printer, publisher, editor and journalist in New York City[546]
  • David Ziegler – first mayor of Cincinnati; Revolutionary War Veteran and aide to president George Washington

Military[]

George Armstrong Custer
Aleda E. Lutz
Norman Schwarzkopf
Baron von Steuben
  • Rosemarie Aquilina – Judge, Michigan Army National Guardswoman, Michigan's first female member of the Judge Advocate General's Corps[547]
  • Otto BoehlerUnited States Army private awarded the Medal of Honor for actions during the Moro Rebellion during the Philippine–American War
  • Johann August Heinrich Heros von Borcke – Major in the Confederate army[548]
  • George Armstrong Custer (1839–1876) – United States Army cavalry commander[549][550][551]
  • Thomas Custer – United States Army officer and two-time recipient of the Medal of Honor for bravery during the American Civil War; a younger brother of George Armstrong Custer, perishing with him at Little Bighorn in the Montana Territory[550][551][552]
  • Konrad Dannenberg – rocket pioneer and member of the German Rocket Team, brought to the U.S. under Operation Paperclip
  • Dieter Dengler – German born United States Navy Naval aviator during the Vietnam War
  • Hubert Dilger – decorated artillerist in the Union Army during the American Civil War[553]
  • Walter Dornberger – leader of Germany's V-2 rocket program and other projects at the Peenemünde Army Research Center, brought to the U.S. under Operation Paperclip
  • Johann de Kalb – Major General in the American Revolution[554]
  • Frank Finkel – claimed to be the only white survivor of the Battle of Little Big Horn[555]
  • Alfred Maximilian Gruenther – senior United States Army officer, Red Cross president, and bridge player[556]
  • Thomas W. HartmannBrigadier General, lawyer and officer in the United States Air Force Reserve
  • Friedrich Hecker – lawyer, politician, revolutionary and Civil War colonel
  • Lewis Heermann – commissioned Surgeon's Mate in the United States Navy February 8, 1802; in 1942, the destroyer USS Heermann was named in his honor
  • Nicholas Herkimer – commanding general at Battle of Oriskany, American Revolutionary War
  • Daniel Hiester – political and military leader from the Revolutionary War period to the early 19th century
  • John Hiester – military leader from the Revolutionary War period to the early 19th century
  • Ralph Ignatowski – soldier, of Polish descent, World War II veteran, best friend of John Bradley
  • Herman Kahn – military strategist and systems theorist
  • August Kautz – Brigadier General /Union Army officer[557]
  • Walter Krueger – United States Army general during World War II and military historian
  • Eugene H. C. Leutze – Admiral of the United States Navy, appointed to the United States Naval Academy by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863
  • Jerry M. Linenger – captain, Medical Corps, U.S. Navy and a former NASA astronaut
  • Frank Luke MOH aviator World War I
  • Aleda E. Lutz – American Army flight nurse during World War II, second-most decorated woman in American military history
  • Marc Mitscher – Vice Admiral in the U.S. Navy; served as commander of the Fast Carrier Task Force in the Pacific in the latter half of World War II
  • Peter Muhlenberg – clergyman, soldier and a politician of the Colonial, Revolutionary, and Post-Revolutionary eras in Pennsylvania[558]
  • Chester W. Nimitz – Commander in Chief of Pacific Forces for the United States and Allied forces during World War II[559]
  • Peter OsterhausUnion Army general in the American Civil War, later serving as a U.S. diplomat[560]
  • John J. Pershing – officer in the United States Army, rose to the highest rank ever held in the U.S. Army – General of the Armies[561]
  • Molly Pitcher (Mary Ludwig Hays) – American Revolutionary soldier
  • Friedrich Adolf Riedesel – regiment commander of the Duchy of Brunswick (Braunschweig) unit hired by the British during the American Revolution
  • Edward S. Salomon – Union brigadier general in the American Civil War, of Jewish descent[citation needed]
  • Frederick Salomon – Union brigadier general in the American Civil War[citation needed]
  • Alexander Schimmelfennig – American Civil War general in the Union Army[562]
  • Harry Schmidt – U.S. Marine Corps general
  • Tony F. Schneider – World War II pilot who served as Associate Professor of Naval Science at University of Louisville and as Professor of Naval Science at the University of New Mexico
  • James Martinus SchoonmakerColonel in the Union Army in the American Civil War and a vice-president of the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad[563]
  • Harold G. Schrier – officer in the United States Marine Corps, recipient of the Navy Cross, the nation's second highest award for valor, and a combat veteran of World War II and the Korean War; one of the six Marines who raised the first American flag on Mount Suribachi, during the Battle of Iwo Jima on February 23, 1945
  • Theodore Schwan – officer who served with distinction during the American Civil War, Spanish–American War and the Philippine–American War
  • Norman Schwarzkopf Jr. – United States Army General
  • Albert Sieber – U.S Civil War veteran, Chief of Scouts for much of the Apache Wars and tracked Geronimo[564]
  • Franz Sigel – teacher, newspaperman, politician, and served as a Union general in the American Civil War[565]
  • Clem Sohn – airshow dare-devil in the 1930s; perfected a way of gliding through the air with a home-made wingsuit[566]
  • Carl Andrew Spaatz – general in World War II[567]
  • Adolph von Steinwehr – served as a Union general in the American Civil War[citation needed]
  • Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolf Gerhard Augustin von Steuben – German–Prussian General; served with George Washington in the American Revolutionary War; credited with teaching the Continental Army the essentials of military drill and discipline[568]
  • Michael Strobl – retired United States Marine Corps officer
  • Gustav Tafel – colonel in the Union Army during the American Civil War[569]
  • Stephen J. Townsend – U.S. Army general, served with the 10th Mountain Division during the war in Afghanistan; born in (West) Germany[570]
  • Max Weber – Brigadier General in the Union army during the American Civil War;[571] settled in New York City and worked as proprietor of the Konstanz Hotel in New York[572][573]
  • Lewis Wetzel – frontiersman and Indian fighter who roamed the hills of western Virginia and Ohio; Wetzel County, West Virginia, is named for him
  • Godfrey Weitzel – Major General in the Union army during the American Civil War[574]
  • August Willich – general in the Union Army during the American Civil War[575][576]
  • Charles Henry Wilcken – artilleryman who was awarded the Iron Cross by the King of Prussia, Frederick William IV[577][578]
  • Jurgen Wilson – Union Army officer during the American Civil War[579]
  • Frederick Charles Winklerlieutenant colonel in the Union Army during the American Civil War who was nominated and confirmed for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general in 1866. He later became a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly[580]
  • Henry Wirz (born Heinrich Hartmann Wirz) – Confederate officer tried and executed in the aftermath of the American Civil War[581]
  • Elmo Zumwalt – Admiral and later the 19th Chief of Naval Operations in the U.S. Navy, playing a major part in the Vietnam War, the USS Zumwalt (DDG-1000), a guided missile destroyer was named in his honor[582]

Philosophers[]

  • Felix Adler – rationalist intellectual[583]
  • Hannah Arendt – political theorist[584]
  • Rudolf Carnap – philosopher[585]
  • Adolf Grünbaum – philosopher
  • Francis Lieber – jurist/political philosopher[586]
  • Herbert Marcuse – philosopher (1898–1979)
  • Nicholas Rescher – philosopher

Politicians[]

Lorenzo Brentano
George W. Bush
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Darrell Issa
Henry Kissinger
Theodore Roosevelt
Paul Ryan
Carl Schurz
  • Robert Aderholt – politician and attorney serving as the U.S. Representative for Alabama's 4th congressional district, serving since 1997.
  • John Peter Altgeld – former Union troop, Illinois governor and leading figure of the Progressive Era movement
  • Edward L. Bader – politician who served as mayor of Atlantic City, New Jersey
  • William B. Bader – Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs 1999–2001
  • Gerhard Adolph Bading – physician, politician, and diplomat[587]
  • Charles Augustus BarnitzAnti-Masonic member of the United States House of Representatives for Pennsylvania's 11th congressional district from 1833 to 1835[588][589]
  • Gary Bauer – politician
  • Martin Baum – former Mayor of Cincinnati, fought with General Anthony Wayne at the Battle of Fallen Timbers[590][591]
  • Paul Bechtner – newspaper editor of Abendpost, manufacturer, and Wisconsin State Assembly politician[592]
  • John Boehner – Republican House Majority Leader in the 109th Congress, and a U.S. representative from Ohio's 8th congressional district[593]
  • John Bohn – politician who served as mayor of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, from 1942 to 1948[594]
  • William C. Bouck – Governor of the New York, 1843–1844[595]
  • Philip Becker – Mayor of Buffalo, New York, serving 1876–1877 and 1886–1889[596]
  • Sherburn M. Becker – politician and the 41st Mayor of Milwaukee[597]
  • Mike Braun – Businessman and politician serving as the junior United States senator from Indiana[598]
  • Martin Grove Brumbaugh – Pennsylvania's 25th Governor (Republican)[599]
  • Warren E. Burger – former Chief Justice of the United States[497]
  • Henry Burk – former Republican member of the United States House of Representatives from Pennsylvania
  • George W. Bush – U.S. President (2001–2009)[600]
  • Earl Lauer ButzSecretary of Agriculture under presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford
  • Hiester Clymer (1827–1884) U.S. Congressman from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
  • Kent Conrad – U.S. Senator from North Dakota
  • William Q. Dallmeyer – Missouri politician[601]
  • Thomas Dixon Jr. – politician, lawyer
  • Tom Daschle – U.S. Senator from South Dakota, 1987–2005, former Senate Majority Leader[602]
  • William J. Diehl – served as Mayor of Pittsburgh, 1899–1901, a thirty-third degree mason[603]
  • George Anthony Dondero – U.S. Representative from Michigan
  • Sean Duffy – U.S. Representative for Wisconsin's 7th congressional district
  • Gerhard Anton (Anthony) Eickhoff – journalist, editor, author, lawyer, United States Congress representative of New York City, United States Treasury auditor and New York City Fire Commissioner[604]
  • Dwight D. Eisenhower – five-star Army general and U.S. president[605]
  • Jesse E. Eschbach – judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana and a judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
  • Jonathan Fritz – politician who has served in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives from the 111th district
  • Tulsi Gabbard – U.S. Congresswoman from Hawaii's 2nd Congressional District[606]
  • Timothy Geithner – U.S. Secretary of the Treasury[607]
  • Dick Gephardt – U.S. Congressman, 1977–2005[608][609]
  • James Lawrence Getz – member of the United States House of Representatives from Pennsylvania[610]
  • William Goebel – controversial politician who served as Governor of Kentucky for a few days in 1900 before being assassinated
  • Richard W. Guenther – 19th-century politician and pharmacist from Wisconsin
  • Charles Godfrey Gunther – Mayor of New York, 1864–1866
  • Paul Grottkausocialist political activist and newspaper publisher[611]
  • Chuck Hagel – U.S. Senator and Secretary of Defense[612]
  • Louis F. Haffen – two-time Bronx, New York Borough President, 1898–1909[613]
  • John Paul Hammerschmidt – served for 13 terms in the United States House of Representatives from Arkansas[614]
  • William Havemeyer – served three times as the Mayor of New York City (1845–1846, 1848–1849, and 1873–1874)
  • Max W. Heck – politician and jurist[615]
  • Julius Heil – Governor of Wisconsin, 1939–1943
  • H. Robert Heller – Governor, Federal Reserve System, 1986–1989 and President of VISA U.S.A.
  • Daniel Hiester (1747–1804) US Congressman
  • Gabriel Hiester (1749–1824) Pennsylvania political leader
  • Isaac Ellmaker Hiester (1824–1871) US Congressman
  • John Hiester (1745–1821) US Congressman
  • Joseph Hiester (1752–1832) US Congressman and Governor of Pennsylvania[616]
  • Daniel Hiester the younger (1774–1834) US Congressman
  • William Hiester (1790–1853) US Congressman
  • William Muhlenberg Hiester – (1818–1878) political and military leader in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
  • H. John Heinz III – member of the United States House of Representatives from Pennsylvania (1971–1977) and the United States Senate (1977–1991) and son of H. J. Heinz II (heir to the H. J. Heinz Company)
  • Gustav A. Hoff (1852–1930) – German-born American politician and businessman active in Arizona Territory[617]
  • Herbert Hoover – U.S. President[618]
  • Franz Hübschmann – prominent physician and political leader in Milwaukee, Wisconsin[619][620][621]
  • Arthur W. Hummel Jr. – U.S. ambassador
  • Don Hummel – businessman and politician
  • Darrell Issa – businessman and U.S. Representative from California[622]
  • Philip Mayer Kaiser – former U.S. diplomat
  • Vera Katz – 45th mayor of Portland, Oregon
  • Steve King – U.S. Representative
  • Charles Frederick Kirschler – former mayor of Allegheny City, Pennsylvania which included Deutschtown, annexed by Pittsburgh[623]
  • Henry Kissinger – former Secretary of State, of Jewish-German descent[624]
  • John C. KochRepublican politician who served two terms as mayor of Milwaukee, Wisconsin[625]
  • Matt Koehl leader of the American Nazi Party, which in 1983, influenced by esoteric Nazism, he renamed as the New Order
  • Gustav Koerner – Lieutenant Governor of Illinois, 1853–1857, U.S. ambassador to Spain, and one of the original Dreissiger[626]
  • Ferdinand Kuehn – Milwaukee politician[627]
  • Louis Kuehnle – politician; considered a pioneer in the growing resort town of Atlantic City in the late 1880s
  • John Christian Kunkel – former Whig and Republican member of the United States House of Representatives from Pennsylvania
  • Tom Loeffler – former Republican member of the United States House of Representatives from central Texas
  • Richard Lugar – U.S. Senator from Indiana
  • Judy Martz – 22nd Governor of Montana
  • Oscar Marx – mayor of Detroit from 1913 to 1918[628][629][630]
  • Christopher Gustavus Memminger – first Confederate States Secretary of the Treasury, 1861–1864[631]
  • Baron Otfried Hans von MeusebachPrussian bureaucrat, later an American farmer, politician, and member of the Texas Senate
  • Frederick Muhlenberg – minister and politician who was the first Speaker of the United States House of Representatives
  • Peter Muhlenberg – clergyman, a soldier and a politician of the Colonial, Revolutionary, and Post-Revolutionary eras in Pennsylvania
  • Karl E. Mundt – U.S. Senator and Congressman
  • Paul Henry Nitze – Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient[632]
  • Richard Nixon – U.S. President; of English, Irish and German ancestries
  • Barack Obama – U.S. President; mother, Ann Dunham, has German ancestors who arrived in America in 1750[633]
  • Sarah Palin – former Governor of Alaska; Republican nominee for vice president in 2008; both parents are of partial German ancestry
  • Ron Paul – former U.S. Congressman from Texas
  • Henry Paulson – U.S. Secretary of the Treasury
  • Tim Pawlenty – former Governor of Minnesota; mother was of German descent
  • Horace Porter – decorated Union soldier and diplomat; son of David Rittenhouse Porter, a wealthy ironmaster who later served as Governor of Pennsylvania
  • Reince Priebus – chairman of the Republican National Committee and also a previous chair of the Republican Party of Wisconsin[634][635]
  • William C. RauschenbergerRepublican politician who served as mayor of Milwaukee, Wisconsin[636]
  • Luke Ravenstahl – Pittsburgh mayor[637][638]
  • Denny Rehberg – Lieutenant Governor of Montana, 1991–1997 and U.S. representative for Montana's at-large congressional district, 2001–2013
  • Jim Risch – former Governor of Idaho
  • Joseph Ritnereighth Governor of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, elected as a member of the Anti-Masonic Party[639]
  • Nelson Rockefeller – Governor of New York and forty-first Vice President of the United States
  • Winthrop Rockefeller – politician and philanthropist who served as the first Republican Governor of Arkansas since Reconstruction
  • William E. Rodriguez (1879–1970) – socialist politician and lawyer; first Hispanic elected to the Chicago City Council; of Spanish and German descent[640]
  • Brian Roehrkasse – spokesman at the United States Justice Department under the administration of George W. Bush[641]
  • Dana Rohrabacher – Republican member of the United States House of Representatives since 1989, currently representing California's 46th congressional district[641]
  • Mitt Romney – politician, businessman and former presidential candidate who has served as the junior United States senator from Utah since January 2019. He previously served as the 70th governor of Massachusetts from 2003 to 2007 and was the Republican Party's nominee for president of the United States in the 2012 election.[642][643][644]
  • Theodore Roosevelt – U.S. President[645][citation needed]
  • John Hoover Rothermel – member of the United States House of Representatives from Pennsylvania
  • Donald Rumsfeld – former Secretary of Defense
  • Paul Ryan – former Speaker of the United States House of Representatives from Wisconsin[646]
  • Edward Salomon – Governor of Wisconsin during the Civil War
  • Edward S. Salomon – Union brigadier general in the Civil War, later became governor of Washington Territory and a California legislator
  • George E. Sangmeister – Senator and Congressman from Illinois; served in various elected public offices, 1972–1994
  • Harry Sauthoff – lawyer, Wisconsin State Senator, also served in the United States House of Representatives
  • Gustav Schleicher – U.S. Representative from Texas, serving briefly in Texas legislature and veteran of the Confederate Army[647]
  • Solomon Scheu – mayor of Buffalo, New York, in office 1878–1880
  • Steve Schmidt – campaign strategist
  • Gustav A. Schneebeli – former United States Representative from the state of Pennsylvania
  • Frederick A. Schroeder – industrialist and politician[648][649]
  • Terry Schrunk – politician who served as the mayor for the city of Portland, Oregon, 1957–1973
  • Mark S. Schweiker – 44th Governor of the Pennsylvania
  • Richard Schultz Schweiker – former U.S. Congressman and Senator representing the state of Pennsylvania, later the Secretary of Health and Human Services in the Cabinet of President Ronald Reagan
  • Carl Schurz – statesman and reformer, and Union Army general in the American Civil War[650]
  • Sargent Shriver – diplomat, politician and activist, as the husband of Eunice Kennedy Shriver, he was part of the Kennedy family[651]
  • John Andrew Shulze – Pennsylvania political leader and 6th Governor of Pennsylvania, a member of the Muhlenberg family political dynasty
  • Emil Seidel – Mayor of Milwaukee, 1910–1912; the first Socialist mayor of a major city in the United States, and ran as the Vice Presidential candidate for the Socialist Party of America in the 1912 presidential election[652][653]
  • August Siemering – writer, political leader and Forty-Eighter
  • Al Smith – Governor of New York
  • Jackie Speier – U.S. Representative, California's 12th and 14th districts, serving since 2008; father was a German immigrant[654]
  • Harold Edward Stassen[655][656][657][658] was the 25th Governor of Minnesota, 1939–1943
  • Richard Fred Suhrheinrich – judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit[641]
  • Brian Schweitzer – served as the 23rd Governor of Montana
  • Strom Thurmond – U.S. Senator
  • Donald Trump45th President of the United States[659][660]
  • Jesse Ventura – former Governor of Minnesota (1999–2003), his mother is of Hungarian-German descent
  • Ferdinand E. Volz – Mayor of Pittsburgh, 1854–1856
  • Robert F. Wagner – U.S. Senator from New York, 1927–1949[661]
  • Emil Wallber – mayor of Milwaukee from 1884 to 1888, during the Great Labor Strike of 1886[662]
  • Lowell P. Weicker Jr. – politician who has served as a U.S. Representative, U.S. Senator, and Governor of Connecticut
  • Wendell Willkie – lawyer and the Republican nominee for the 1940 presidential election
  • Carl Zeidler – mayor of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, from 1940 to 1942[663]
  • Frank Zeidler – mayor of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, serving three terms from April 20, 1948, to April 18, 1960[663]
  • Robert Zoellick – eleventh president of the World Bank, former United States Deputy Secretary of state and United States Trade Representative

Religious[]

  • Joseph Breuer – leader of the Orthodox Jewish community of Washington Heights, Manhattan; very well known for his involvement in setting up an Orthodox Jewish infrastructure in post-World War II America
  • Conrad Beissel – religious leader who in 1732 founded the Ephrata Community in Pennsylvania[664]
  • Raymond Philip Etteldorf – Roman Catholic Archbishop and author
  • George J. Geis – Baptist missionary in Kachin State, Burma[665]
  • Eugene John Gerberprelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Bishop of Dodge City from 1976 to 1982, and Bishop of Wichita from 1982 to 2001.
  • Robert Graetz – Lutheran clergyman[666]
  • Stanley Hauerwas – theologian, ethicist, and public intellectual[667]
  • Barbara Heck – 1768 – founder of the first Methodist church in New York[668]
  • Joseph J. HimmelCatholic priest and member of the Society of Jesus. For much of his early life, he was a missionary throughout the northeast United States and retreat master. Later in life, he was president of Gonzaga College and Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.[669][670]
  • Samuel Hirsch – philosopher and rabbi
  • Arthur W. Hummel Sr. – Christian missionary to China and Sinologist
  • Johannes Kelpius – pietist, mystic, musician, and writer, interested in the occult, botany, and astronomy, came to believe with his followers in the "Society of the Woman in the Wilderness"
  • Kathryn Kuhlman – 20th-century faith healer and Pentecostal arm of Protestant Christianity[671]
  • Benjamin KurtzLutheran pastor and theologian[672]
  • Barbara Heinemann Landmann – spiritual leader of the Amana Colonies
  • Alexander Mack – Germantown, Pennsylvania New World religious leader[673]
  • Christian Metz – inspirationalist[674]
  • Albert Gregory Meyer – Roman Catholic Archbishop of Chicago
  • Henry K. Moeller – Roman Catholic Archbishop of Cincinnati
  • John Gottlieb Morris – Lutheran minister who played an influential role in the evolution of the Lutheran church in America.[675]
  • Heinrich Melchior Muhlenberg – Lutheran clergyman[676]
  • Richard John Neuhaus – clergyman (first a Lutheran pastor and then a Roman Catholic priest), theologian, and ethicist
  • St. John NeumannBishop of Philadelphia (1852–60) and the first American bishop to be canonized[677]
  • Reinhold Niebuhr – Protestant theologian best known for his work relating the Christian faith to the realities of modern politics and diplomacy
  • William Passavant – Lutheran minister noted for bringing the Lutheran Deaconess movement to the United States[678]
  • George Rapp – founder of the religious sect called Harmonists, Harmonites, Rappites, or the Harmony Society[679]
  • Augustus Rauschenbusch – clergyman[680]
  • Walter Rauschenbusch – theologian and Baptist pastor who taught at the Rochester Theological Seminary[681]
  • Joseph Cardinal Ritter – Roman Catholic Archbishop and Cardinal of the Church, desegregated schools in his two archdioceses in the mid-1940s
  • George Erik Rupp – educator and theologian, the former President of Rice University and later of Columbia University, and president of the International Rescue Committee
  • Theodore Emanuel Schmauk – Lutheran minister, educator, author and Church theologian, one of the organizers of the Pennsylvania Dutch Society (1891)
  • Theodore Schneider – second bishop of the Metropolitan Washington, D.C., synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
  • Francis Xavier Seelos – Roman Catholic missionary priest beatified in 2000[682]
  • Joseph Strub – founder of what is today Duquesne University, which was called the Pittsburgh Catholic College of the Holy Ghost until 1911[683]
  • Billy Sunday – evangelist
  • Paul Tillich – Protestant theologian and Christian existentialist philosopher
  • C. F. W. Walther – Lutheran clergyman, professor, seminary president, editor, and first president of the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod
  • Donald Wuerl – prelate of the Roman Catholic Church[684]
  • Count Nicholas Ludwig von Zinzendorf – founded the town of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where his daughter Benigna organized the school that would become Moravian College[685]
  • Dieter F. Uchtdorf – apostle and current second counselor in the First Presidency within the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; born in the Czech Republic to German parents, Uchtdorf immigrated to the United States as a retired pilot to serve full-time as a general authority for his Church and became an American citizen shortly after joining the First Presidency in 2008

Scientists and inventors[]

Albert Einstein
John Fritz
Maria Goeppert Mayer
J. Robert Oppenheimer
Wernher von Braun
  • David Alter – inventor, physicist and doctor[686]
  • Reinhold Aman – chemical engineer and publisher of Maledicta[687]
  • Othmar Ammann – civil engineer[688]
  • Rudolf Arnheim – author, art and film theorist, and perceptual psychologist; learned Gestalt psychology from studying under Max Wertheimer and Wolfgang Köhler at the University of Berlin and applied it to art[689]
  • Walter Baade – astronomer[690]
  • Earl W. Bascom – inventor of rodeo equipment[691]
  • Max Bentele – pioneer in the field of jet aircraft turbines and mechanical engineering[692]
  • Hans Albrecht Bethe – nuclear physicist who won a Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the nuclear energy sources of stars (1967)
  • Franz Boas – anthropologist and ethnologist best known for his work with the Kwakiutl Indians in British Columbia, Canada
  • Karl Brandt – economist[693]
  • Magnus von Braun – chemical engineer, Luftwaffe aviator, and rocket scientist at Peenemünde, the Mittelwerk, and after emigrating to the United States via Operation Paperclip, at Fort Bliss; brother of Wernher von Braun[694]
  • Wernher von Braunrocket scientist, aerospace engineer, space architect[695]
  • Florian Cajori – mathematician[696]
  • Hermann Collitz – eminent German historical linguist and Indo-Europeanist[697]
  • Werner Dahm – NASA rocket scientist[698][699]
  • Hans Georg Dehmelt – physicist[700]
  • Max Delbrück – biophysicist[701][702]
  • Krafft Arnold Ehricke – rocket-propulsion engineer[703]
  • Ernst R. G. Eckert – scientist[704]
  • Otto Eckstein – economist[705]
  • Albert Einstein – theoretical physicist, philosopher and author of Jewish ethnicity[706]
  • George Engelmann – botanist[707]
  • Katherine Esau – botanist[708]
  • Edmond H. Fischer – biochemist[709]
  • James Franck – physicist[710]
  • John Fritz – pioneer of iron and steel technology[711][712] who has been referred to as the "Father of the U.S. Steel Industry"[713]
  • Frieda Fromm-Reichmann – psychoanalyst, founded William Alanson White Institute[714]
  • Ernst Geissler – NASA aerospace engineer[715]
  • William Paul Gerhard – sanitary engineer
  • William H. Gerstenmaier – senior NASA official who served as NASA's Associate Administrator for Human Exploration and Operations
  • Ivan A. Getting – physicist and electrical engineer, credited (along with Roger L. Easton and Bradford Parkinson) with the development of the Global Positioning System (GPS)
  • Edward Glaeser – economist and Fred and Eleanor Glimp Professor of Economics at Harvard University[716]
  • Heinrich Göbel – precision mechanic and inventor, who was long seen as an early pioneer who independently developed designs for an incandescent light bulb, though this claim is seen as unlikely today
  • Maria Goeppert Mayer – Nobel Prize-winning physicist[717]
  • John P. Grotzinger – Fletcher Jones Professor of Geology at California Institute of Technology under the Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences
  • Martin Gruebelebiophysicist and Computational biologist, currently associated with many departments at University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
  • Dietrich Gruentimepiece or wristwatch maker; founded the Gruen Watch Company in Ohio[718]
  • Helmut Gröttrup – rocket scientist
  • Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht – literary theorist and professor at Stanford University
  • Walter Haeussermann – NASA rocket scientist[719]
  • Ewald Heer – aerospace engineer
  • Michael Heidelberger – regarded as the father of modern immunology
  • Holger Henke – political scientist
  • Herman Hollerith – inventor of tabulating machines[720]
  • Karen Horney – psychoanalyst[721]
  • Edmund C. Jaeger – naturalist
  • Donald J. Kessler – astrophysicist
  • Siegfried Knemeyer – aviation technologist, civilian employee and consultant with the United States Air Force for over twenty years
  • Donald Knuth – computer scientist, known as "The Yoda of Silicon Valley"[722]
  • Wolfgang Köhler – psychologist[723]
  • Heinrich Klüver – psychologist, largely credited with introducing Gestalt psychology to the United States in the early 20th century[724]
  • Alfred Louis Kroeber – cultural anthropologist
  • Polykarp Kusch – physicist[725]
  • Berthold Laufer – anthropologist, historical geographer
  • Willy Ley – science writer and space advocate who helped popularise rocketry and spaceflight[726][727]
  • Jacques Loeb – biologist, Nobel Prize candidate
  • Leo Loeb – biologist, pathologist
  • Ottmar Mergenthalerlinotype inventor[728]
  • Hugo Münsterberg – psychologist, pioneered applied psychology
  • Emmy Noether – mathematician
  • Robert Oppenheimer – physicist and director of the Manhattan Project, also known as "The Father of the Atomic Bomb"[729]
  • Robert F. Overmyer – test pilot and USAF and NASA astronaut[730]
  • Linus Carl Pauling – chemist, biochemist, peace activist, author, educator[731]
  • Charles Francis Richter – seismologist, inventor of the Richter magnitude scale
  • Jesco von Puttkameraerospace engineer, senior manager at NASA, and a pulp science fiction writer[732]
  • David Rittenhouse – astronomer, inventor, mathematician, surveyor, scientific instrument craftsman, public official and first director of the United States Mint[733][734]
  • Eileen Rockefeller Growald – founder and former president of the Institute for the Advancement of Health
  • Gunther E. Rothenberg – military historian, professor at Purdue University and elsewhere, of Jewish descent[735]
  • Otto Schaden – Egyptologist[736]
  • Vincent Schaeferchemist and meteorologist who developed cloud seeding
  • Hermann Irving Schlesinger – inorganic chemist, working in boron chemistry, co-discovered sodium borohydride in 1940
  • Frank Schlesinger – astronomer[737]
  • Alfred Schütz – philosopher/sociologist[738]
  • Rusty Schweickart – astronaut
  • Lewis David de Schweinitz – botanist and mycologist, "Father of American Mycology"
  • Frederick Seitz – physicist, co-inventor of the Wigner-Seitz unit cell, which is an important concept in solid state physics[739]
  • Herbert A. Simon – political scientist[citation needed]
  • Lyman Spitzer – theoretical physicist, astronomer and mountaineer
  • Charles Proteus Steinmetz – electrical engineer, fostered development of alternating current[citation needed]
  • Adam Steltzner – NASA engineer who works for the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), flight projects including Galileo, Cassini, Mars Pathfinder, Mars Exploration Rovers[740]
  • Joseph Strauss – structural engineer and designer, chief engineer of the Golden Gate Bridge[741]
  • Otto Stern – physicist and Nobel laureate, known for his studies of molecular beams[742]
  • Frederick Traugott Pursh – botanist[743]
  • George Waldbott – physician, allergy and fluoride specialist
  • David Wechsler – psychologist[744]
  • Hellmuth Walter – engineer who pioneered research into rocket engines and gas turbines[745]
  • Victor Frederick Weisskopf – World War II physicist of German-Jew ethnicity<r, working at Los Alamos on the Manhattan Project to develop the atomic bomb, and later campaigned against the proliferation of nuclear weapons; medal received in 1979[746]
  • Günter Wendt – mechanical engineer noted for his work in the U.S. human spaceflight program[747]
  • Gustave Whitehead – aviation pioneer, built first motorized plane[748]
  • Gerould Wilhelm – botanist and lichenologist who developed the Floristic Quality Assessment system for analyzing plant communities in the United States and Canada.
  • Eckard Wimmervirologist, Distinguished Professor of molecular genetics and microbiology at Stony Brook University; known for the first chemical synthesis of a viral genome capable of infection and subsequent production of live viruses
  • Louis Wirth – sociologist
  • Caspar Wistar – physician and anatomist
  • Albert Wohlstetter – nuclear scientist[citation needed]
  • Hans Zinsser – American bacteriologist, physician and author.
  • Max August Zorn – algebraist, group theorist, and numerical analyst[citation needed]

Sports[]

Baseball professionals[]

Bill Dahlen
Lou Gehrig
Orel Hershiser
Carl Hubbell
Erskine Mayer
Barney Pelty
Babe Ruth
Max Scherzer
Mike Schmidt
Frank Schulte
Honus Wagner
  • Chris von der Ahe – owner of the St. Louis Brown Stockings of the American Association, now the St. Louis Cardinals[749]
  • Nick Altrock – professional baseball player and coach[750]
  • Trevor Bauer – MLB pitcher
  • Chris BeckChicago White Sox pitcher
  • Heinz Becker – MLB first baseman who played for the Chicago Cubs (1943, 1945–46) and Cleveland Indians (1946–47)[751]
  • Zinn Beck – MLB third baseman, shortstop and first baseman; minor league manager and baseball scout[752]
  • Heinie Beckendorf – former MLB catcher
  • Joe Benz – former pitcher for the Chicago White Sox; threw a no-hitter[753]
  • Lou Bierbauer – former MLB second baseman during the late 1880s and 1890s; credited with giving the Pittsburgh Pirates their name[754]
  • Mike Blowers – former MLB third baseman and first baseman; current Seattle Mariners radio commentator
  • Brennan Boesch – MLBoutfielder[755]
  • Ted Breitenstein – former MLB pitcher and part of the "Pretzel Battery" with Heinie Peitz[756]
  • Clay Buchholz – MLB pitcher for the Boston Red Sox
  • Taylor Buchholz – MLB pitcher
  • Mark Buehrle – MLB pitcher
  • Fritz Buelow – former MLB
  • Jay Buhner – former MLB player
  • Madison Bumgarner – MLB pitcher for the San Francisco Giants[757]
  • Roger Clemens – former MLB pitcher[758]
  • Bill Dahlen – former MLB shortstop[759]
  • Babe Danzig – MLB first baseman[760]
  • Ross Detwiler – MLB pitcher
  • Mel Deutsch – former MLB pitcher[761]
  • Bill Dietrich – MLB pitcher[762]
  • Derek Dietrich – MLB 2nd baseman[763]
  • Barney Dreyfuss – baseball executive[764][765]
  • Ryne Duren – former relief pitcher in MLB
  • Justin Duchscherer – MLB pitcher
  • David Eckstein – MLB player and 2006 World Series MVP[766]
  • Mose Eggert – second baseman in Major League Baseball[767]
  • Hack Eibel – utility player in Major League Baseball[768]
  • Jim Eisenreich – former MLB outfielder
  • Kid Elberfeld – "The Tabasco Kid", former shortstop in MLB[769]
  • Jacoby Ellsbury – center fielder
  • Joe Engel – former left-handed pitcher and scout in MLB who spent nearly his entire career with the Washington Senators
  • Oscar Emil "Happy" Felsch – center fielder for the Chicago White Sox, best known for his involvement in the 1919 Black Sox Scandal[770]
  • David Freese – 2011 National League Championship Series MVP Award and the 2011 World Series MVP Award winner[771]
  • Frank Frisch – former MLB player and manager[772]
  • Bruce Froemming – MLB umpire, then special assistant to the vice president on umpiring[773]
  • Gene Garber – former MLB player
  • Ron Gardenhire – former New York Mets player and current Minnesota Twins manager
  • Lou Gehrig – MLB player[774]
  • Charlie Gehringer – MLB second baseman, played 19 seasons (1924–1942) for the Detroit Tigers[173]
  • Charlie "Pretzels" Getzien – former MLB pitcher[775][776]
  • Troy Glaus – former MLB third baseman
  • Paul Goldschmidt – MLB first baseman
  • Zack Greinke – MLB pitcher
  • Charlie Grimm – former MLB player[777][778]
  • Justin Grimm – MLB relief pitcher
  • Heinie Groh – third baseman for the Cincinnati Reds and New York Giants
  • Travis HafnerCleveland Indians designated hitter
  • Noodles Hahn – former MLB pitcher
  • Ian Happ – second baseman for the Chicago Cubs[779]
  • Roy Hartzell – MLB player 1906–1916
  • Arnold Hauser – former MLB shortstop
  • Harry Heilmann – Hall of Fame MLB player and World War I Veteran[780]
  • Fred Heimach – former MLB pitcher and part of the "Murderers' Row" Yankee teams
  • Tommy Henrich – MLB player nicknamed "The Clutch" and "Old Reliable"[781]
  • Tom Herr – former MLB second baseman
  • August Herrmann – MLB executive[782][783]
  • Orel Hershiser – former MLB pitcher[784]
  • Buck Herzog – MLB infielder and manager
  • Whitey Herzog – MLB outfielder, scout, coach, manager, general manager and farm system director
  • Shea Hillenbrand – baseball player
  • Dick Hoblitzel – MLB first baseman[785]
  • Billy Hoeft – former MLB pitcher
  • Barbara Hoffman – All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player
  • Glenn Hubbard – former Atlanta Braves and player and current Braves' coach
  • Carl Hubbell – MLB Hall of Fame screwball pitcher
  • John Hummel – former MLB utility player
  • Brock Huntzinger – MLB free agent
  • Jason Isringhausen – MLB relief pitcher
  • Edwin Jackson – MLB pitcher
  • Derek Jeter – former MLB shortstop, played 20 season[786]
  • Jeff Karstens – MLB pitcher
  • Pop Kelchner – college professor who spoke seven languages; prolific MLB scout[787]
  • Alex Kellner – MLB pitcher[788]
  • Walt Kellner – MLB pitcher[788]
  • Dean Kiekhefer – MLB relief pitcher
  • Chuck Klein – former MLB outfielder
  • Johnny Kling – former MLB catcher
  • Bob Knepper – former MLB all-star pitcher[789]
  • Chuck Knoblauch – former MLB second baseman
  • Mark Koenig – former MLB shortstop for the New York Yankees, 1925–1936[192]
  • Howie Koplitz – baseball player, pitcher for the 1961 Tigers and then the Senators until 1966[790]
  • Rick Kranitz – MLB pitching coach
  • Gene Krapp – MLB pitcher[791]
  • Erik Kratz – MLB catcher
  • Harvey Kuenn – player, coach and manager in MLB[792]
  • Randy Keisler – former MLB pitcher
  • Dallas Keuchel – MLB pitcher
  • Bowie Kuhn – former commissioner of MLB[793]
  • Kenesaw Mountain Landis – while serving as a Federal judge, Landis, an ardent baseball fan, was selected as chairman of a new National Commission of baseball
  • Charley Lau – American League catcher and hitting coach, authored How to Hit .300[794]
  • Charlie Leibrandt – former MLB pitcher[795]
  • Craig Lefferts – former MLB pitcher
  • Jon Lieber – MLB pitcher
  • Jesse Litsch – MLB pitcher
  • Hans Lobert – infielder, coach, manager and scout in MLB
  • Kyle Lohse – MLB pitcher
  • Chuck Machemehl – former Cleveland Indians pitcher[796]
  • Heinie Manush – Hall of Fame left-fielder in MLB
  • Nick Markakis – outfielder for the Baltimore Orioles[797]
  • Erskine Mayer – MLB pitcher[434]
  • Heinie Meine – sometimes "Heinie" Meine, professional baseball player[798]
  • Fred Merkle – first baseman in Major League Baseball, 1907–1926[799]
  • Bob Meusel – former MLB shortstop
  • Emil Meusel – former MLB outfielder
  • Bill Mueller – retired MLB third baseman
  • Freddie Muller – infielder in Major League Baseball[800]
  • Les Mueller – former MLB pitcher[801]
  • Walter Mueller – former professional baseball player who played outfield in MLB 1922–1926
  • Fritz Mollwitz – born in Germany, former Major League Baseball first baseman[802][803]
  • Chris Nabholz – former starting pitcher in MLB
  • Jeff Niemann – pitcher for the Tampa Bay Rays
  • Brett Oberholtzer – MLB pitcher
  • Ross Ohlendorf – MLB pitcher
  • Daniel Ortmeier – MLB pitcher
  • Fritz Ostermueller – pitcher in MLB 1934–1948
  • Barney Pelty – MLB pitcher
  • Heinie Peitz – former MLB catcher and part of the "Pretzel Battery" with Ted Breitenstein[804][805][806][807]
  • Dick Radatz – "The Monster" or "Moose", relief pitcher in MLB
  • Rick Reuschel – former MLB pitcher
  • Rick Rhoden – former Pittsburgh Pirate pitcher and current golf professional
  • John Rocker – former MLB reliever and controversial figure
  • Oscar Roettger – first baseman and right-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball[808][809]
  • Wally Roettger – outfielder in Major League Baseball[808][809]
  • Trevor Rosenthal – MLB Pitcher
  • Babe Ruth – MLB player 1914–1935[810]
  • Adley Rutschman – catcher for the Oregon State Beavers, seen as a top prospect for the 2019 MLB Draft
  • Germany Schaefer – former second baseman in MLB who played fifteen seasons[811][812]
  • Jordan Schafer – MLB player
  • Ray Schalk – MLB catcher
  • Bobby Shantz – MLB pitcher
  • Scott Schebler – outfielder in the Los Angeles Dodgers organization
  • Bob Scheffing – baseball player, coach, manager and front-office executive
  • Carl Scheib – right-handed pitcher for the Philadelphia Athletics and St. Louis Cardinals of Major League Baseball[813]
  • Max Scherzer – MLB pitcher[814]
  • Curt Schilling – MLB pitcher
  • Ryan Schimpf – former LSU Tigers baseball and MLB infielder[815]
  • Gus Schmelz – MLB manager
  • Jason Schmidt – MLB baseball pitcher
  • Mike Schmidt – former Philadelphia Phillies third baseman and Hall of Famer[816]
  • Frank Schneiberg – pitcher in Major League Baseball[817]
  • Brian Schneider – MLB catcher
  • Red Schoendienst – former player, coach and manager in MLB
  • Scott Schoeneweis – MLB relief pitcher
  • Marge Schott – managing general partner, president and CEO of Major League Baseball's Cincinnati Reds franchise, 1984–1999
  • Paul Schrieber – MLB umpire
  • Al Schroll – MLB baseball pitcher[818]
  • Heinie Schuble – former MLB infielder
  • John Schuerholz – general manager of the Atlanta Braves
  • Frank Schulte – right fielder in Major League Baseball[819]
  • Joe Schultz – catcher, coach and manager in MLB
  • Joe Schultz Sr. – Joe "Germany" Schultz, outfielder and farm system director in MLB and a manager in minor league baseball
  • Skip Schumaker – outfielder for the St. Louis Cardinals
  • Ralph SchwambSt. Louis Browns pitcher and convicted murderer
  • Kyle Schwarber – MLB catcher[820]
  • Bob Shawkeybaseball pitcher who played fifteen seasons in Major League Baseball[821]
  • J. B. Shuck – outfielder for the Chicago White Sox
  • John Smoltz – pitcher for the Atlanta Braves[822]
  • Travis Snider – outfielder in MLB
  • Warren Spahn – Hall of Fame pitcher in MLB
  • Justin Speier – relief pitcher
  • Rusty Staub – MLB player for 23 seasons (1963–1985)
  • Terry Steinbach – former catcher in MLB
  • Hank Steinbrenner – art-owner and Senior Vice President of the New York Yankees, along with his brother Hal Steinbrenner
  • Harry Steinfeldt – MLB utility infielder[823]
  • Casey Stengel – MLB player and manager, early 1910s–1960s
  • Stephen Strasburg – MLB pitcher
  • Gus SuhrMajor League Baseball first baseman[824]
  • Bruce SutterHall of Fame right-handed relief pitcher in MLB
  • Nick Swisher – infielder in MLB
  • Duke Snider – Hall of Fame MLB center fielder[825]
  • Jake Thielman – MLB pitcher[826]
  • Jack Thoney – reserve outfielder / infielder in Major League Baseball who played from 1902 through 1911[827]
  • Peter Ueberroth – executive, served as commissioner of MLB, 1984–1989[828]
  • Bob Uecker – former MLB player and award-winning sportscaster, comedian, and actor
  • Jim Umbricht – former MLB pitcher[829]
  • Frank Viola – former starting pitcher in MLB
  • Chris von der Ahe – entrepreneur and owner of the St. Louis Browns of the National League, now known as the Cardinals
  • Fritz Von Kolnitz – MLB third baseman[830]
  • Doug Waechter – MLB pitcher, currently a free agent
  • Billy Wagner – MLB closer
  • Heinie Wagner – former MLB shortstop for the New York Giants and the Boston Red Sox
  • Honus Wagner – former Pittsburgh Pirate Hall of Fame shortstop, manager and hitting instructor[831]
  • Bill Wambsganss – second baseman in MLB[832]
  • Duke Welker – MLB pitcher
  • Jayson Werth – MLB outfielder
  • Vic Wertz – former MLB first baseman and outfielder
  • Hoyt Wilhelm – Hall of Fame knuckleball pitcher in MLB
  • Nick Wittgren – pitcher with the Miami Marlins
  • Shawn Wooten – former MLB player
  • Michael Wuertz – MLB pitcher
  • Christian Yelich – MLB outfielder, great-grandson of Fred Gehrke[833]
  • Ryan Zimmerman – MLB player
  • Jordan Zimmermann – MLB pitcher
  • Ben Zobrist – MLB second baseman
  • Bill Zuber – MLB pitcher, 1936–1947

Basketball[]

Jon Leuer
Dirk Nowitzki
Adolph Rupp
  • Uwe Blab – former NBA center
  • Buddy Boeheim – Syracuse University guard[834]
  • Jim BoeheimSyracuse University NCAA basketball coach[834]
  • Carlos Boozer – professional basketball player born in West Germany in a U.S. Army base
  • Shawn Bradley – former center in the NBA and for the German national basketball team
  • Carl Braun – professional basketball player and coach
  • Jon Brockman – professional basketball player
  • Jud Buechler – former guard/forward with the NBA Chicago Bulls
  • Jon Diebler – professional basketball player
  • Demond Greene – professional basketball player for the German national team
  • Isaiah Hartenstein – NBA Power Forward / Center[835]
  • Tom Heinsohn – professional basketball player and color commentator[836]
  • Fred Hetzel – retired NBA basketball player
  • Kirk Hinrich – NBA guard for the Chicago Bulls
  • Phil JacksonNew York Knicks team president, former NBA player and coach; Jackson's mother was part of a German Mennonite family[837]
  • Chris Kaman – center for the Los Angeles Clippers in the NBA and for the German national basketball team (dual citizen of the United States and of Germany)[838]
  • Lon Kruger – professional and college basketball coach
  • Jon Leuer – professional basketball player
  • Rebecca Lobo – television basketball analyst and a former player in the professional Women's National Basketball Association[839]
  • Drew Neitzel – All-American NCAA basketball player
  • Jeff NeubauerWestern Kentucky University NCAA basketball coach
  • Johnny Neumann – professional basketball player and coach
  • Dirk Nowitzki – German player for Dallas Mavericks in NBA who applied for U.S. citizenship in 2011
  • Greg Ostertag – NBA center
  • Steve Prohm – college basketball coach[840]
  • Anthony Randolph – professional basketball player born in West Germany in a U.S. Army base
  • Adolph Rupp – college basketball coach and Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame member[841]
  • Fred Schausbasketball player, head coach and athletic director
  • Detlef Schrempf – former NBA All-Star forward
  • Akeem Vargas – professional basketball player for the German national team
  • Jeff Walz – head coach of the women's basketball team at the University of Louisville

American Football[]

Tom Brady
John Heisman
Ray Nitschke
The Nesser brothers in the early 1920s. (L–R:) Ted, John, Frank, Fred, Phil, and Al
Mitchell Schwartz
Roger Staubach
Brian Urlacher
Carson Wentz
  • John Alt – former offensive tackle in the NFL
  • Jay Berwanger – the first recipient of the "," later dubbed the Heisman Memorial Trophy.[842]
  • Kroy Biermann – NFL defensive end
  • Tom Brady – quarterback, one of only two players to win five Super Bowls[843]
  • Dave Butz – NFL defensive lineman, selected to the NFL 1980s All-Decade Team
  • Gunther CunninghamAmerican football head coach[844]
  • Fritz Crisler – NCAA football coach
  • David Diehl – football player and NFL offensive lineman[845]
  • Dan Dierdorf – former NFL football player and current television sportscaster
  • Conrad Dobler – former offensive lineman
  • Chris Doering – former college and professional football player; wide receiver in the NFL[846]
  • Dave Duerson – safety in the NFL, two-time Super Bowl Champion
  • Zach Ertz – tight end in the NFL[847]
  • Kirk Ferentz – head coach of University of Iowa Hawkeyes football
  • Fred Gehrke – NFL halfback / defensive back and executive; great-grandfather of Milwaukee Brewers left fielder, Christian Yelich
  • Jared Goff – quarterback[848]
  • Bob Griese – Hall of Fame quarterback
  • Al Groh – NCCA Virginia football head coach and former NFL coach
  • Hinkey Haines – NFL player and MLB player
  • Don Hasselbeck – NFL
  • Matt Hasselbeck – NFL football player
  • Tim Hasselbeck – ESPN analyst and former professional quarterback
  • Keith Heinrich – NFL tight end
  • John Heisman – football player, coach, and namesake of the Heisman Trophy[849]
  • Kirk Herbstreit – former Ohio State University quarterback and analyst for ESPN's College GameDay
  • Elroy "Crazy Legs" Hirsch – running back and receiver for the Los Angeles Rams and Chicago Rockets, nicknamed for his unusual running style
  • Domenik Hixon – NFL wide receiver
  • Jeff Hostetler – former NFL quarterback[850]
  • Harvey Jablonsky – football player and U.S. Army Veteran who was a 'highly decorated veteran' of both World War II and later in his career the Vietnam War, elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1978[851][852]
  • Brett Keisel – defensive end for the Pittsburgh Steelers
  • Don Klosterman – quarterback
  • Jonathan Klinsmann – son of Jürgen Klinsmann, goalkeeper for LA Galaxy
  • Dan Kreider – fullback in the NFL
  • Dave Krieg – former NFL Seattle Seahawks quarterback
  • Clint Kriewaldt – linebacker in the NFL
  • Luke Kuechly – linebacker in the National Football League[853]
  • John Kuhn – fullback, currently playing for the Green Bay Packers
  • Kory Lichtensteiger – NFL center
  • Lex Luger – former football player and professional wrestler
  • Todd Marinovich – former NFL American and Canadian football quarterback
  • Zach Mettenberger – LSU and NFL quarterback
  • Christian Mohr – NFL defensive end
  • Nesser brothers – group of football playing brothers who helped make up the most famous football family in the United States, 1907–mid-1920s
    • John Nesser: born April 25, 1875, in Triere, Germany, and died August 1, 1931, in Columubus, Ohio
    • John Peter Nesser: born October 22, 1877, in Triere, Germany, and died May 29, 1954, in Columbus, Ohio
    • Philipp Gregory Nesser: born December 10, 1880, in Triere, Germany, and died May 9, 1959, in Columbus, Ohio
    • Theodore H. (Ted) Nesser: born April 8, 1883, in Dennison, Ohio, and died June 7, 1941, in Columbus, Ohio
    • Frederick William Nesser: born September 10, 1887, in Columbus, Ohio, and died July 2, 1967, in Columbus, Ohio
    • Francis Raymond (Frank) Nesser: born June 3, 1889, in Columbus, Ohio, and died January 1, 1953, in Columbus, Ohio
    • Alfred Louis Nesser: born June 6, 1893, in Columbus, Ohio, and died March 11, 1967, in Columbus, Ohio
    • Raymond Joseph Nesser: born March 22, 1898, in Columbus, Ohio, and died September 2, 1969, in Columbus, Ohio[854][855]
  • Rick Neuheisel – football coach
  • Ray Nitschke – Hall of Fame football player
  • Brock Osweiler – NFL quarterback
  • Tyler Ott – long snapper[856]
  • Jim Otto – former Oakland Raider offensive lineman
  • Robin Pflugrad – college football coach[857]
  • Ricky Proehl – former NFL wide receiver, two-time Super Bowl Champion
  • George Ratterman – former player in the All-America Football Conference and the NFL
  • Ben Roethlisberger – Pittsburgh Steelers Quarterback of Swiss-German descent, two-time Super Bowl Champion
  • Rudy Ruettiger – former player at Holy Cross College (1972–1974) and Notre Dame
  • George Sauer – former American football player, coach, college sports administrator, and professional football executive[858]
  • George Sauer Jr. – wide receiver who played six seasons for the American Football League's New York Jets[859]
  • Matt Schaub – NFL quarterback
  • Bo Schembechler – former NCAA football coach at the University of Michigan
  • Anthony Schlegel – former linebacker[860]
  • Cory Schlesinger – NFL fullback
  • Blake Schlueter – former American football and NCAA TCU center
  • Francis Schmidt – college football coach inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame
  • Joe Schmidt – former 1950s NFL football player and coach
  • Owen Schmitt – NFL fullback
  • John Schneider – professional American football player in the Ohio League and the early National Football League for the Columbus Panhandles
  • John Schneider – professional American football executive
  • Joe Schobert – linebacker[861]
  • Turk Schonert – former NFL quarterback
  • Jay Schroeder – former professional quarterback in the NFL
  • Geoff Schwartz – NFL offensive lineman
  • Mitchell Schwartz – NFL offensive tackle
  • Jim Schwartz – NFL head coach
  • Stephen Spach – NFL tight end[862]
  • Matt Spaeth – tight end for the Pittsburgh Steelers
  • Roger Staubach – Heisman Trophy winner and Hall of Fame quarterback for the Dallas Cowboys[863]
  • Eric Steinbach – NFL offensive lineman
  • Zach Strief – NFL offensive lineman
  • Harry Stuhldreher – football player, coach, and college athletics administrator[864]
  • Zach Sudfeld – NFL tight end
  • Nate Sudfeld – quarterback
  • Mike Tannenbaum – professional football executive, who is currently the Executive Vice President of Football Operations for the Miami Dolphins and former general manager for the New York Jets
  • Jim Tressel – college head football coach
  • Brian UrlacherPro Bowl linebacker for the Chicago Bears
  • Sebastian Vollmer – NFL offensive Lineman
  • Kimo von Oelhoffen – NFL linebacker
  • Uwe von Schamann – former NFL kicker
  • Mike Wagner – safety for the Pittsburgh Steelers, 1971–1980; member of the famed Steel Curtain defense; played in two Pro Bowls
  • Charlie Weis – NFL football coach
  • Wes Welker – NFL wide receiver, punt returner, and kick returner
  • Carson Wentz – football quarterback for the North Dakota State Bison[453]
  • Björn Werner – NFL linebacker[865]
  • Matt Wilhelm – NFL linebacker
  • Danny Wuerffel – former NFL quarterback and 1996 Heisman Trophy winner
  • Zach Zenner – NFL running back
  • Jim Zorn – Seattle Seahawks quarterback

Golf[]

Jack Nicklaus
  • Jason Dufner – professional golfer and 2013 PGA Championship winner[866]
  • Walter Hagen – golf legend
  • Jack Nicklaus – professional golfer; won 18 career major championships on the PGA Tour over a span of 24 years[867]
  • Jordan Spieth – professional golfer, 2015 Masters Tournament winner with a score of 18 under par[868]
  • Tom Weiskopf – professional golfer

Ice hockey[]

  • David Backes – professional NHL hockey player[869]
  • Mathew Dumba – professional NHL hockey player
  • Christian Ehrhoff – professional NHL hockey player
  • Jack Eichel – professional NHL hockey player[870]
  • Gabe Guentzel – professional ice hockey player[871]
  • Jake Guentzel – professional NHL hockey player[872]
  • Chris Kreider – hockey player[873]
  • Cody Lampl – professional ice hockey player[874]
  • Jamie Langenbrunner – NHL and U.S. Olympic hockey player
  • Peter Mueller – professional NHL hockey player[875]
  • Jed Ortmeyer – professional hockey player
  • Rob Schremp – professional hockey player
  • Jordan Schroeder – ice hockey player
  • Dennis Seidenberg – professional NHL hockey player
  • Tim Schaller – professional NHL hockey player[876]
  • R. J. Umberger – professional NHL hockey player[877]

Soccer[]

Sigi Schmid
  • Walter Bahr – long-time captain of the U.S. national team, played in the 1950 FIFA World Cup when the U.S. defeated England 1–0[878]
  • Nicole Barnhart – Olympic medalist and professional soccer player
  • Kyle Beckerman – midfielder
  • Justin Braun – forward for Chivas USA
  • Eric Brunner – soccer player who currently plays for Portland Timbers in Major League Soccer
  • Rachel Buehler – Olympic medalist and professional soccer player
  • Timothy Chandler – right back for Eintracht Frankfurt in the Bundesliga[879]
  • Jimmy Conrad – center back
  • Dietrich Albrecht – U.S. national team
  • Thomas Dooley – long-time member and former captain of the United States national team
  • Greg Eckhardt – American soccer player in Finland
  • Whitney Engen – professional soccer player
  • Brad FriedelU.S. National Team, Premier League goalkeeper for Aston Villa
  • Julian Green – professional soccer player
  • Marcus Hahnemann – soccer goalkeeper for the U.S. National Team and Wovlerhampton Wanderers in the Premier League[880]
  • Aaron Hohlbein – soccer player who currently plays for Fort Lauderdale Strikers in the North American Soccer League
  • David Horst – soccer player currently playing for Portland Timbers in Major League Soccer
  • Kasey Keller – goalkeeper
  • Jerome Kiesewetterforward currently playing for VfB Stuttgart in the Bundesliga in Germany[881]
  • Meghan Klingenberg – professional soccer player
  • Jonathan Klinsmann – son of Jürgen Klinsmann, player for LA Galaxy
  • Jürgen Klinsmann – professional football manager notably, Bundesliga club Bayern Munich and the United States national team and former player, a naturalized U.S. citizen.[882]
  • Ali Krieger – professional soccer player
  • Fabian Johnson – professional soccer player for the U.S. national team; born and raised in Berlin
  • Steven Lenhart – soccer player for the Columbus Crew
  • Joanna Lohman – professional soccer player
  • Fred Lutkefedder – member of the U.S. soccer team at the 1936 Summer Olympics and Philadelphia German-Americans of the American Soccer League[883]
  • Chris Rolfe – American soccer player playing in Denmark
  • Sigi Schmid – Major League Soccer manager[884]
  • Chris Seitz – goalkeeper for the Philadelphia Union
  • Jonathan Spector – soccer (football) player for the U.S. National Team and West Ham United in the Premier League[885][886]
  • Seth Stammler – plays for the New York Red Bulls
  • Zack Steffen – goalkeeper for Manchester City
  • Taylor Twellman – retired professional soccer player
  • Abby Wambach – Olympic medalist and professional soccer player
  • Andrew Wiedeman – currently plays for FC Dallas in Major League Soccer
  • Josh Wolff – forward, currently a free agent

Tennis[]

  • Bob Falkenburg – tennis player and 1948 Wimbledon Champion
  • Liezel Huber – professional tennis player
  • Sam Warburg – tennis player
  • John Whitlinger – former professional tennis player
  • Tami Whitlinger – former professional tennis player

Boxing, Mixed Martial Arts, Wrestling[]

Max Baer
Harry Greb
  • Max Baer – boxer, heavyweight boxing champion of the world[887]
  • Shayna Baszler – professional wrestler and mixed martial artist, her father is of German descent
  • Mac Danzig – professional mixed martial arts fighter and instructor, and is a former lightweight champion for the King of the Cage and Gladiator Challenge mixed martial arts organizations
  • Ted DiBiase – former professional wrestler
  • Ted DiBiase Jr. – former professional wrestler
  • Harry Greb – professional boxer, nicknamed "The Pittsburgh Windmill", he was the American Light Heavyweight Champion, 1922–1923 and World Middleweight Champion, 1923–1926[888]
  • April Hunter – professional wrestler, professional wrestling valet and fitness and glamour model
  • Nia Jax – professional wrestler[889]
  • Brock Lesnar – professional wrestler and MMA fighter
  • Mercedes Kaestner-Varnado – professional wrestler known in the WWE as "Sasha Banks" and formerly known as "Mercedes KV"[890]
  • David Schultz – retired professional wrestler, known by his ring name "Dr. D"
  • Ryan Schultz – professional mixed martial arts (MMA) fighter, currently fighting for the Portland Wolfpack of the International Fight League
  • Chael Sonnen – professional mixed martial arts (MMA) fighter, politician and actor
  • Gus Sonnenberg – professional wrestler and boxer[891]
  • Seth Rollins – professional wrestler
  • Jon Heidenreich – former professional wrestler and former football player

Other sports[]

  • Lisa Aukland – professional bodybuilder and powerlifter
  • Earl W. Bascom – professional rodeo cowboy, inductee in several rodeo halls of fame
  • Tony Bettenhausen and his race-driving sons Gary, Tony Jr., and Merle; Tony was at times nicknamed "Der Panzer" due to his ancestry and driving style
  • Jana Bieger – two-time World Champion artistic gymnast
  • Gretchen Bleiler – professional halfpipe snowboarder and pioneer
  • Greg Bretz – Olympic snowboarder
  • George Brosius – gymnastics teacher associated from 1854 to 1915 with the Milwaukee Turnverein, he served in the Union Army from 1861 to 1864[892]
  • Dale Earnhardt – race car driver in NASCAR's top division[893]
  • Dale Earnhardt Jr. – semi-retired professional stock car racing driver, team owner, author analyst for NASCAR on NBC[893]
  • Gertrude Ederle – Olympic Gold Medal winner and first woman to swim the English Channel[894]
  • George Eyser – gymnast who competed in the 1904 Summer Olympics with a wooden leg
  • Bobby Fischerchess grandmaster and World Chess Champion between 1972 and 1975
  • Christopher Fogt – Army captain who won a bronze medal at the 2014 Olympic Games in Sochi as a member of the famed Team Night Train[895]
  • Gretchen Fraser – alpine ski racer; first American to win an Olympic gold medal for skiing
  • Archie Hahnsprinter in the early 20th century
  • Hans Halberstadt – Olympic fencer[896]
  • J. R. HildebrandFormula One and IndyCar Series race car driver
  • Margaret Hoelzer – Olympic swimmer
  • Katie Hoff – Olympic medal-winning swimmer
  • Mark Geiger – soccer referee in Major League Soccer in the United States and Canada, as well as CONCACAF and the World Cup
  • Harry Greb – professional boxer, nicknamed "The Pittsburgh Windmill", he was the American Light Heavyweight Champion, 1922–1923 and World Middleweight Champion, 1923–1926[888]
  • Kasey Kahnedirt track racing driver and former professional stock car racing driver
  • Evel Knievel – motorcycle daredevil[897][898]
  • Henry Laskau – racewalker
  • Helene Mayer – Olympic champion fencer
  • Kimmie Meissner – U.S. national champion figure skater
  • Josef Newgarden – IndyCar Series driver, driving the 21 car for Ed Carpenter Racing
  • Jordan Niebrugge – amateur golfer currently playing collegiate golf at Oklahoma State University[899]
  • Robert Oberst – professional strongman
  • Michael Phelps – swimmer; has won 16 Olympic medals[900]
  • Craig Sager – sports journalist for TBS and TNT
  • Allison Schmitt – swimmer
  • Lacy Schnoor – Olympic skier[901]
  • Mark Spitz – swimmer and Olympic gold medalist
  • Sara Studebakerbiathlete who has competed on the World Cup circuit
  • Dana Vollmer – swimmer and Olympic gold medalist
  • Lindsey Vonn – alpine skier
  • Thomas Vonn – alpine skier
  • Rudolph "Minnesota Fats" Wanderone (1913–1996) – perhaps the best known pool player in the United States[902]
  • Dick Weber – bowling professional and a founding member of the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA), father of Pete Weber
  • Pete Weber – bowling professional on the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour
  • Richard Weiss – slalom canoer
  • Johnny Weissmuller – swimmer, Olympic gold medalist
  • Rasa von Werder – bodybuilder
  • Waldemar von Zedtwitz – German-born American bridge player and administrator[903]

See also[]

References[]

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  49. ^ [23]"Josef Muench (Marc's grandfather) was born in Schweinfurt, Bavaria on February 8, 1904."
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  132. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on January 18, 2010. Retrieved January 15, 2010.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "William E. Boeing was born in Detroit to Wilhelm and Marie Boeing in 1881. His father, who arrived in the United States in 1868, had come from an old and well-to-do family in Hohenlimburg, Germany, and had served a year in the German army. He had a lust for adventure, however, and left his family, emigrating to the United States when he was 20 years old."
  133. ^ [62] "Bonwit, Paul J. (29 September 1862 – 11 December 1939), retail merchant, was born Paul Joseph (or Josef) Bonwit near Hanover, Germany, the son of Bernard Bonwit."
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  136. ^ Chance, Carl. "CLYDE VERNON CESSNA".
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  144. ^ a b [67] "Emigration from Lippe to the USA"
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  146. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on January 9, 2006. Retrieved March 19, 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "William Filene"
  147. ^ [69] "The Firestone family goes back to German immigrants named Feuerstein. Harvey Firestone's great-great-great grandfather was Hans Nikolaus Feuerstein, born March 25, 1712 in Berg, Alsace, a German-speaking region now in France. Hans and his wife Catharina arrived in America in September 1753 and Hans is believed to have died in Pennsylvania in 1763."
  148. ^ a b [70] Archived December 17, 2010, at the Wayback Machine "The grandson of German and Italian immigrants, he embodies the entrepreneurial spirit of risking it all for a shot at success."
  149. ^ a b c [71] "Germanic Surname Lexikon (Gerber)"
  150. ^ "His father was a stern, yet kind German immigrant. Hy's mother was highly respected for her gentle and kindhearted nature". Archived from the original on September 25, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2018.
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  154. ^ a b "Yahoo!". celebrity.aol.com. Archived from the original on July 5, 2006. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  155. ^ [74] Father: Augustus Holver Hilton (Norwegian) – Mother: Mary Laufersweiler (German)
  156. ^ [75] "George Albert Hormel, the son of German immigrants, used the knowledge, skills, and values he learned from his family to succeed as an independent meatpacker in an industry dominated by corporate giants."
  157. ^ [76] Archived October 6, 2011, at the Wayback Machine "When a baby was born to the 23-year-old Jandali – now known as John – and his 23-year-old German-American girlfriend, Joanne Schieble, in 1955, there was no chance he'd be able to grow up with his biological parents."
  158. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on May 13, 2008. Retrieved August 13, 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Having made a fortune in the pharmaceutical industry, he endowed the Max Kade foundation with the goal of promoting the mutual understanding of the people and cultures of Germany and the United States."
  159. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on March 9, 2006. Retrieved May 18, 2006.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Born a middle-class, assimilated German Jew ..."
  160. ^ [77] "Otto Kahn was the son of banker Bernard Kahn in Mannheim, southwestern Germany."
  161. ^ [78] "German: nickname from Middle High German kec 'lively', 'active' (cognate of English quick), which later changed its meaning to 'bold', 'forward', 'fresh'."
  162. ^ East Tennessee Historical Society, Mary Rothrock (ed.), The French Broad-Holston Country: A History of Knox County, Tennessee (Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society, 1972), p. 436.
  163. ^ [79] "Kluge, a German-born billionaire, donated a whopping $60 million to start the ..."
  164. ^ [80] "Born in Bremen in Germany, Kleinfeld began his career as a marketing consultant in 1982 but before long had joined Siemens, the global engineering and technology services firm, and one of Germany's greatest companies."
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  166. ^ "Lynne Koplitz – Out of the Pink". Lynnekoplitzcomedy.com. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  167. ^ "Company Spotlight: Kraft Foods, Inc". The Fundraising Journal (January 2010).
  168. ^ [82] "Kroger was born in Cincinnati, Ohio the fifth of ten children in a family of German immigrants."
  169. ^ [83] "When he was 13, in the Panic of 1873, Bernard Kroger's German immigrant father's Cincinnati dry goods store failed."
  170. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on February 8, 2012. Retrieved March 18, 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Johan Adam Lemp was born in Gruningen, Germany"
  171. ^ a b [84] "It's a bit of an irony that the Blue Note label — synonymous with jazz, the seminal American music form — was created by two German immigrants. In Blue Note Records, The Biography, author Richard Cook tells the story of Alfred Lion and Francis Wolff, who formed the label in 1939."
  172. ^ "The Founding Father". Flying Magazine: 76. August 1976.
  173. ^ a b c [85] Archived May 29, 2009, at the Wayback Machine "Famous German-Americans"
  174. ^ [86] Archived September 12, 2009, at the Wayback Machine "Bausch & Lomb Incorporated, one of the oldest continuously operating companies in the U.S. today. Bausch & Lomb traces its roots to 1853, when John Jacob Bausch, a German immigrant, set up a tiny optical goods shop in Rochester, New York."
  175. ^ Roberts, Gary Boyd (April 18, 2008). "No. 83 Royal Descents, Notable Kin, and Printed Sources: A Third Set of Ten Hollywood Figures (or Groups Thereof), with a Coda on Two Directors". New England Historic Genealogical Society. Archived from the original on October 18, 2014.
  176. ^ [87] "Ludens"
  177. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on April 17, 2008. Retrieved January 30, 2008.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Among the black-and-whites is a shot of a burly German man. That would be Great Uncle Peter – more specifically, Peter Luger, who in 1887 opened a beer garden in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, New York, that started off selling sandwiches and steak tidbits before graduating to full-fledged steak dinners."
  178. ^ Scheiffarth, Engelbert: "Der New Yorker Gouverneur Nelson A. Rockefeller und die Rockenfeller im Neuwieder Raum". Genealogisches Jahrbuch, 9 (1969), pp. 16–41.
  179. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on December 22, 2007. Retrieved January 8, 2008.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Soon Oscar's brother Gottfried, a "wurstmacher" (or sausage-maker) from Nuremberg, Germany, would join Oscar in the states, and together they leased the Kolling Meat Market on Chicago's north side. Before long, customers in their German neighborhood were standing in line for Mayer specialties like bockwurst, liverwurst, and weisswurst. By the time a third brother, Max, joined them from Germany, the brothers had moved into their own establishment."
  180. ^ "Carrie Marcus Neiman (1883–1953)". Immigrant Entrepreneurship: German-American Business Biographies.
  181. ^ Slider, Mark. "Doug Oberhelman, Caterpillar Inc. Chairman and CEO, to be honored as 2015 Distinguished German-American of the Year". German Life. Archived from the original on August 16, 2017. Retrieved August 16, 2017.
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  183. ^ "The Pagenstecher Family: From Rags To Riches". Archived from the original on October 5, 2011.
  184. ^ "Database Debunkings – About". Archived from the original on February 3, 2007. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  185. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on May 10, 2017. Retrieved May 10, 2017.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "In 1849, a young German chemist, Charles Pfizer, and his cousin Charles Erhart, who had come to America seeking new opportunities, founded the business that bears the Pfizer name."
  186. ^ Jerome Anthony Watrous (1909). Memoirs of Milwaukee County: From the Earliest Historical Times Down to the Present, Including a Genealogical and Biographical Record of Representative Families in Milwaukee County. Western Historical Association. pp. 777–778.
  187. ^ [89] "Son of John Augustus Reitz, born on December 17, 1815, in Dorlar, Prussia. He grew up in a German family that emphasized skill, thrift, and hard work. He came to the United States in the 1830s when many other Germans came, and for the same reasons: to find better business opportunities and a more "republican" form of government."
  188. ^ [90] "John Augustus Reitz was born on December 17, 1815, in Dorlar, Prussia. He grew up in a German family that emphasized skill, thrift, and hard work. He came to the United States in the 1830s when many other Germans came, and for the same reasons: to find better business opportunities and a more "republican" form of government."
  189. ^ [91] "William Rittenhouse was born in what is now Germany, near the Dutch border. His name was then Wilhelm Rittenhausen, later changed in America"
  190. ^ "German American Corner: ROEBLING, John Augustus (1806–69)". Germanheritage.com. July 21, 1926. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  191. ^ [92] "Pittsburgher of the Year: Jim Rohr"
  192. ^ a b Harvey Frommer. "1927 New York Yankees: The Greatest Baseball Team Ever". Archived from the original on February 7, 2008. Retrieved July 8, 2008. The team had a pronounced German-American flavor from its owner beer baron Jacob Ruppert to Lou Gehrig, Babe Ruth, Mark Koenig, Bob Meusel, George Pipgras, Dutch Ruether and half Germans Waite Hoyt and Earle Combs.
  193. ^ [93] "Popular, wealthy, and well-connected within the German-American community, Ruppert was a natural for politics."
  194. ^ [94]"The son of German immigrants Jacob Ruppert and Anna Gillig, Ruppert was born August 5, 1867, attended Columbia Grammar School in New York, and went to work in the small Jacob Ruppert's family brewery in 1887."
  195. ^ Brendan I. Koerner (September 29, 2006). "The Other Trojan War – What's the best-selling condom in America?". Slate. Retrieved July 21, 2007. Jules Schmid, a onetime sausage-maker who'd started making lamb-gut condoms in the 1880s; by the time Trojan debuted, he was manufacturing rubber condoms under the Ramses and Sheik brand names. Schmid's packages often featured romantic Egyptian or Arab images....
  196. ^ "Julius Schmid". PBS. Retrieved September 25, 2011. Born into poverty in Schorndorf, Germany, in 1865, the half-paralyzed Jewish immigrant arrived in New York at the age of 17 to make his fortune....
  197. ^ [95] "Pauline Farabaugh and John Schwab, both of whose parents were German-born Catholics, were married in western Pennsylvania a week after the president appealed for volunteers to put down the rebellious Southern states. John wanted to join the Union Army with his pals. Pauline talked him out of it."
  198. ^ a b "Norton Area History". Archived from the original on December 13, 2010. Retrieved March 2, 2011.
  199. ^ a b When Nathan Seiberling settled in Norton he brought with him some of the German ability to build something better mechanically.
  200. ^ a b History of The Seiberling Family by John Frederick Seiberling
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  202. ^ [97] "Middle High German spiegel, German Spiegel 'mirror' (via Old High German from Latin speculum, a derivative of specere 'to look')."
  203. ^ "Modie J. Spiegel (1871–1943)". Immigrant Entrepreneurship: German-American Business Biographies.
  204. ^ [98] Archived May 18, 2006, at the Wayback Machine "Claus Spreckels was born on July 9, 1828 and started off as a poor German immigrant who first settled in North Carolina upon arriving in America in 1846."
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  207. ^ [101] "the founder of the modern day denim industries"
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  210. ^ [104] "German-born Swiss pioneer settler and colonizer in California..."
  211. ^ O'Dea, Meghan. "Peter Thiel." Archived December 4, 2018, at the Wayback Machine In Immigrant Entrepreneurship: German-American Business Biographies, 1720 to the Present, vol. 5, edited by R. Daniel Wadhwani. German Historical Institute. Last modified July 24, 2015.
  212. ^ "Peter Thiel's application for New Zealand citizenship" (PDF). New Zealand Department of Internal Affairs. p. 65. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 18, 2019.
  213. ^ Mike Reilly, Uihlein Family History (The Milwaukee Brewing Family) Archived March 11, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, Sussex-Lisbon Area Historical Society, Inc., 1/17/00
  214. ^ ""Members of the Wisconsin Legislature 1848–1999 State of Wisconsin Legislative Bureau. Information Bulletin 99–1, September 1999. p. 118" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on December 9, 2006. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  215. ^ [105]"German immigrants prospered in other industries too. Guido Pfister and Frederick Vogel owned the largest of Milwaukee's numerous tanning companies in the late nineteenth century."
  216. ^ a b "Our Story". Vons.
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  218. ^ [106]"...descendant of a Westphalian named Wistinghausen"
  219. ^ "MSOE's presidents – Only four in 100 years". Milwaukee School of Engineering. 2003. Archived from the original on March 14, 2007. Retrieved April 17, 2007.
  220. ^ [107] "1914 – ...Frederick Weyerhaeuser, German-born lumber king, dies. His fortune: $300,000,000."
  221. ^ [108] "Rudolph Wurlitzer (born January 30, 1831, Schöneck, Saxony [Germany]—d. January 14, 1914, Cincinnati, Ohio), emigrated to the United States in 1853, settling in Cincinnati."
  222. ^ [109] "German-born American cofounder of the firm later to be known as Anheuser-Busch Companies, Inc., one of the largest breweries in the world."
  223. ^ [110] "Valentin was a German-American brewer and banker. He was born in Bavaria and worked at his father's brewery in his youth. He started a brewery which became home to Blatz Beer. Valentin was one of the many "beer barons" of Milwaukee. So many, in fact, that there is a section at Forest Home Cemetery in Milwaukee called 'Beer Baron's Hill' which houses a few of these men."
  224. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on August 10, 2006. Retrieved May 18, 2006.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Adolphus Busch, was a Corporal Co. E 3rd Regiment US Reserve Infantry Corps (3 months, 1861) after the war became St. Louis most famous German immigrant."
  225. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on March 9, 2016. Retrieved May 10, 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "And so it was with Adolph Coors, the young German immigrant who founded Coors Brewing Company..."
  226. ^ John M. Haffen The Bronx and its people A History 1609–1927 Board of Editors: James L. Wells, Louis F. Haffen Josiah A. Briggs. Historian: Benedict Fitspatrick Publisher: The Lewis Historical Publishing Co., Inc. New York 1927
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  228. ^ * John J. Raskob – Businessman who developed the Empire State Building [112] Archived December 5, 2007, at the Wayback Machine "The history of Penn Brewery making great German beers began with Tom Pastorius' great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandfather, Franz Daniel Pastorius. Today considered the father of German-Americans, Franz Daniel Pastorius was an idealistic scholar..."
  229. ^ [113] "'F. & M.', as most breweriana buffs know, stands for Frederick and Maximilian, the brothers who founded Schaefer. Frederick Schaefer, a native of Wetzlar, Prussia, Germany, emigrated to the US in 1838. When he arrived in New York City on October 23rd he was 21 years old and had exactly $1.00 to his name. There is some doubt as to whether or not he had been a practicing brewer in Germany, but there is no doubt that he was soon a practicing brewer in his adopted city."
  230. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on May 12, 2008. Retrieved April 23, 2008.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Schaefer Center at the 1939 World's Fair
  231. ^ "Schlitz – Go for the Gusto". Archived from the original on July 6, 2008. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  232. ^ [114] "Kosmos Spoetzl, a German immigrant brewmaster, learned of the Shiner operation and coleased the facility with Oswald Petzold with an option to buy in 1915."
  233. ^ [115] "According to Texas historian Patrick J. Wagner, an organization founded by German investors known as the Shiner Brewing Association wanted to drink home brew, rather than city brew. "So they recruited Kosmos Spoetzl, a Bavarian brewmaster with an old-world brewing recipe that had been in his family for generations." "
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  235. ^ "Mrs M. Rohnert's Uncle Is Dead. August Uihlein, of Milwaukee, is Suddenly Stricken in Switzerland". Detroit Free Press. Detroit, Michigan. October 12, 1911. p. 1. Retrieved May 29, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
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  239. ^ [120] "Johanna (mother) had been born in Omaha, but her parents, David Geilus and Wilhelmina Klaatke, were German-speaking, Lutheran immigrants from East Prussia and Alsace"
  240. ^ [121] "It's a small but serious and intriguing museum (trace their ancestry and you find that Fred Astaire, Babe Ruth and Herbert Hoover were German Americans),"
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  242. ^ "Earl Bascom". IMDb.
  243. ^ "Kim Basinger". IMDb. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
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  245. ^ Stated on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, September 18, 2008
  246. ^ [123]"Zazie Olivia Beetz is an actress. Born in Berlin, Germany, to a German father and an African-American mother, she was raised in Manhattan (New York City) speaking both German and English at home."
  247. ^ "Ancestry of Halle Berry". January 16, 2013. Archived from the original on January 16, 2013. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
  248. ^ [124] In this interview, he states that his surname's origin is German.
  249. ^ "Jessica Biel: Actress". People. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
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  251. ^ "julie bowen". ancestry.com. Archived from the original on August 10, 2011. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  252. ^ [126] "Born Hans Gudegast, Eric Braeden emigrated to the US in 1959 from the port city of Kiel, West Germany and became a naturalized citizen while attending college. In 1989, Eric served as a member of the German-American Advisory Board along with the likes of Dr. Henry Kissinger. Eric has also been awarded the Federal Medal of Honor by the President of Germany for promoting a "positive, realistic image of Germans in America."
  253. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October 24, 2007. Retrieved January 11, 2008.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Hans Gudegast (a.k.a. Eric Braeden) is a German-born actor whose career has been very different from that of most other German-speaking actors who have made it big in Hollywood."
  254. ^ "#78 Royal Descents, Notable Kin, and Printed Sources: Ten Further Hollywood Figures (or Groups Thereof)". New England Historic Genealogical Society. Archived from the original on January 13, 2009. Retrieved February 6, 2009.
  255. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on January 1, 2010. Retrieved February 6, 2009.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "After going through professional nursing school, she married my father, who was an American of German and English descent, and had five kids."
  256. ^ Ernst Klee. Das Kulturlexikon zum Dritten Reich. Wer war was vor und nach 1945. S. Fischer, Frankfurt am Main 2007, pp. 73–74.
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  258. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on February 6, 2007. Retrieved January 25, 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "...Bruckner is definitely German"
  259. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on June 24, 2006. Retrieved May 18, 2006.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "The half-German, half-Alabaman Bullock was born in Washington, D.C. ...
  260. ^ Sarah Chalke "Her mother is originally from Rostock, Germany. According to a Scrubs commentary track, she used to attend the German school in her hometown twice a week."
  261. ^ [128] "Her grandfather was Nordic-German ..."
  262. ^ "RetroCRUSH interviews Claudia Christian". retroCRUSH. 2007. Archived from the original on May 4, 2012. Retrieved October 19, 2016.
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  264. ^ "FRANKENSTEIN RISING - The RANDAL MALONE interview by dancingskeleton.com". Archived from the original on March 3, 2012. Retrieved February 18, 2009. "... I would learn later, after she had passed away, that her name was really Klotz! And I don't ever remember her telling me that herself, you know, that's kind of a German name, but she would always say, 'Well, I'm half Irish.'"
  265. ^ Eig, Jonathan (September 1, 1992). "The voice of experience Stormy life lends emotion to Clooney's singing". The Dallas Morning News.
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  267. ^ [130] "Ancestry of Tom Cruise"
  268. ^ [131] Archived September 19, 2007, at the Wayback Machine "...the 19-year-old was then able to get to safety in America."
  269. ^ [132] "though as it happens, Doris Day, née Doris Kappelhoff, is purebred German. "And I have a beautiful shitsu called Wesley Winfield.""
  270. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on July 20, 2007. Retrieved July 5, 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Doris Day (Doris Mary Ann von Kappelhoff, 1924– ; some bios claim she was born in 1922) – American film actress and TV personality born in the Cincinnati suburb of Evanston, Ohio in her family's house, "attended by a good German midwife." Both her parents were children of German immigrants. (Her maternal grandfather Welz came from Berlin.) Despite being Catholics, Doris' parents separated over William von Kappelhoff's extramarital affair when Doris was eleven, and later divorced. In the 1940s in California, the singer began to use the stage name Doris Day."
  271. ^ Levy, Shawn (2014). De Niro: A Life. Crown Archetype. ISBN 978-0307716798.
  272. ^ "About Johnny". www.johnnydepp-zone.com. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
  273. ^ "Cameron Diaz: Hollywood crowd-pleaser". BBC News. July 29, 2005. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
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  275. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on May 9, 2006. Retrieved May 20, 2006.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "He's half-German, half-Italian."
  276. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on March 23, 2006. Retrieved April 5, 2006.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "His dad, George DiCaprio, half German and half Italian, is an underground comic book artist.... DiCaprio's mother, Irmelin Indenbirken (sometimes spelled In Den Birken), was born in a German air raid shelter in the midst of a World War II air raid. After the war, in the 1950s, she emigrated to the US with her parents as a young child.... DiCaprio's maternal grandparents, Wilhelm and Helene Indenbirken, continued to live in the US for many years before returning to Germany to enjoy their retirement."
  277. ^ [133] Archived December 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine "How did you choose the name Leonardo Wilhelm? My daughter Irmelin's husband is Italian. Leonardo goes well with the last name DiCaprio. But so he would also have something German about him, we added the name of my husband Wilhelm. His roots, by the way, lie far to the east where our ancestors come from."
  278. ^ Sheridan, Patricia (July 13, 2009). "Patricia Sheridan's Breakfast With ... Angie Dickinson". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. I came from a German Catholic family in the Depression era.
  279. ^ "VinDiesel explains why Glasgow was perfect to shoot Fast 6". May 15, 2013. Archived from the original on June 18, 2013. Retrieved June 29, 2013.
  280. ^ [134] "German-American motion-picture actress whose aura of sophistication and languid sensuality made her one of the most glamorous of all film stars."
  281. ^ [135] "German its actually von dinklage (dink-lager)".
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  283. ^ Call Me Anna: The Autobiography of Patty Duke. Bantam Books. 1987. p. 8. ISBN 978-0553272055.
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  285. ^ "Shore Leave". People. June 6, 1994. [Her father] Rolf Eggert, a German-born executive...
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  441. ^ [201] "Milwaukee-born Heinz Roemheld followed a circuitous route to a career as a film composer. At age four he was identified as a piano prodigy; he later studied with Ferruccio Busoni and Egon Petri in Berlin, and performed as a guest soloist with the Berlin Philharmonic at 23."
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  456. ^ See Zuckermann (1968), as well as [209], in which an acquaintance writes "When he came to the United States, he told me he changed his name from Wolfgang Joachim Zuckermann to Wallace to Americanize it. Friends further Americanized it by calling him Wally." Zuckermann later published primarily under the name Wolfgang; only his column for Harpsichord (see below) is signed Wallace.
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  462. ^ [212] "German-American motion-picture director"
  463. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on July 6, 2007. Retrieved July 5, 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Ernst Lubitsch (1892–1947) came to Hollywood from his native Berlin in 1922—at the request of Mary Pickford. It was in the German film capital that he began to develop what would later be known simply as "the Lubitsch Touch." In the American film capital his success would be phenomenal."
  464. ^ [213] Archived August 10, 2007, at the Wayback Machine "Born Emil Anton Bundmann. German-American director. (Sullivan's Travels, Border Incident, Winchester '73, The Glenn Miller Story, God's Little Acre, El Cid)"
  465. ^ [214] "Big Bosoms and Square Jaws: The Biography of Russ Meyer, King of the Sex Film – 'Certainly Lydia's most significant betrothal was to William Arthur Meyer, a Missouri-born East Oakland cop of German heritage ...'"
  466. ^ [215] F. W. Murnau Facts
  467. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October 24, 2007. Retrieved July 5, 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "(1897–1961, aka Nebenzal) – German-American film producer born in New York, educated there and in Berlin, Germany. Together with his father Heinrich Nebenzahl (died 1938), Seymour founded film companies and produced many of the classic movies of the Weimar period, including PANDORA'S BOX with Louise Brooks and M with Peter Lorre. In Hollywood Seymour worked as a producer at MGM and his own Nero Films."
  468. ^ [216] Archived April 26, 2006, at the Wayback Machine "German-born director Kurt Neumann came to the US in the early talkie era, hired to direct German-language versions of Hollywood films."
  469. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October 7, 2006. Retrieved May 18, 2006.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Mike Nichols, the German-born director of HBO's Angels in America, tells the Washington Post his feel for Yiddish rushed back in a skit when Elaine May ..."
  470. ^ [217] "Yahoo! Movies Biography"
  471. ^ [218] "Pfister: South German and Swiss German: occupational name for a baker, from Middle High German pfister 'baker' (from Latin pistor)."
  472. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October 24, 2007. Retrieved July 5, 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "... came to the US at the age of 19. The second son of Max Reinhardt (below), Gottfried was born in Berlin but lived in both Germany and the US before he died in Los Angeles in 1994."
  473. ^ "Ringling Brothers". Encyclopædia Britannica, 2014.
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  475. ^ [220] Archived August 10, 2007, at the Wayback Machine "German-American cinematographer and inventor of the "Schüfftan process" for optical special effects, used until it was replaced by the simpler matte method. Camera work: Menschen am Sonntag (1929), The Hustler (1961, Acad. Award), Lilith (1964)."
  476. ^ [221] Archived August 10, 2007, at the Wayback Machine "German director and actor. After a long career in Germany that included directing and writing the screenplay for Viktor und Viktoria (1933, remade by Blake Edwards in 1982), Schünzel came to the U.S. in 1938. In Hollywood he acted (Hangmen Also Die, The Hitler Gang, Notorious, Golden Earrings, Berlin Express) and directed (Rich Man Poor Girl, Ice Follies of 1939, New Wine)."
  477. ^ [222] Archived August 10, 2007, at the Wayback Machine "German director and brother of Hollywood screenwriter, Curt Siodmak. Although born in Memphis, Tenn., Robert grew up and was educated in Germany. He began his film career at the German UFA studios in 1925"
  478. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on February 17, 2008. Retrieved January 14, 2008.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Wim Wenders was born Ernst Wilhelm Wenders on August 14, 1945 in Düsseldorf, Germany. After living in Los Angeles for eight years, the director returned to his homeland to make his first German-language film since moving to the US The German director has made most of his films in English in the US He has been living in Los Angeles since the 1980s, although he spends part of each year in Germany and Berlin (his favorite city)."
  479. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October 9, 2007. Retrieved January 11, 2008.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "... born in Mülhausen (Mulhouse), Alsace-Lorraine (then German, now part of France) on the first day of July 1902. ... Wyler became a US citizen in 1928."
  480. ^ John Arthur Garraty and Mark Christopher Carnes (eds.), American National Biography, Vol. 24. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999, pp. 239–240.
  481. ^ "Michael Ian Black Biography (1971–)". Film Reference. Retrieved March 15, 2013.
  482. ^ "Ancestry of David Letterman"
  483. ^ [223] "16 Things You Didn't Know About Daniel Tosh"
  484. ^ Cooper, Wilhelmina (1978). The New You. New York: Simon and Schuster. p. 9. ISBN 0-671-22487-5.
  485. ^ "Twitter/CindyCrawford". June 4, 2010.
  486. ^ Valle, Arthur Elgort, Jane Keltner de (October 30, 2012). "At Home with Supermodel Karlie Kloss and Her Sisters". Archived from the original on May 4, 2018. Retrieved May 3, 2018.
  487. ^ "Karlie Kloss: Model Profile". New York. Archived from the original on July 8, 2016. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
  488. ^ Von Kühn, Alexander (February 27, 2012). "Isch geh als isch". Spiegel Online (in German). Retrieved February 18, 2014.
  489. ^ "Ancestry of Uma Thurman". William Addams Reitwiesner Genealogical Services. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  490. ^ [224] "Ancestry: German, Welsh, English, Irish; Lucretia Garfield's parental great-grandfather immigrated to Pennsylvania (in a part that is now Delaware) from Württemberg, Germany. Her mother's family all originated in New England, the latest immigrating from England six generations before her own. Among her American ancestors were James and Mary Chilton, Pilgrims on the Mayflower."
  491. ^ [225] "Brigitte Wambsganß, "Buzz Aldrin: Mond-Mann mit Trupbacher Wurzeln", Der Westen (Germany), July 17, 2009." Archived August 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  492. ^ [226]"Unsung Partner against Crime: Harry J. Anslinger and the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, 1930–1962"
  493. ^ [227]"Anslinger's zeal for law and order manifested early. He was born in Altoona, Pennsylvania, in 1892 to Swiss German parents."
  494. ^ "Neil Armstrong grants rare interview to accountants organization", CBC News, May 24, 2012. Retrieved May 24, 2012.
  495. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on January 24, 2011. Retrieved February 14, 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "German-born George Atzerodt immigrated to the United States with his family in 1843, at the age of eight."
  496. ^ [228]"Meta Schlichting was born in Milwaukee in 1873 to parents who came to the city from Germany during their childhood. Schlichting's father, Bernard, who served on Milwaukee's school board, hired Victor Berger to teach German."
  497. ^ a b [229] "Ethnicity Swiss/German"
  498. ^ [230] "Hitz Name Meaning German: from a pet form of a Germanic personal name formed with the first element hild 'strife', 'battle'."
  499. ^ [231] "Willard Erastus Christiansen was born in Ephraim, Utah to a Swedish father and German mother – both Mormon converts."
  500. ^ [232] "This biography joins the ranks of several others on second-echelon German-American political and intellectual figures such as Frederick Hecker and Francis Hoffmann that have recently appeared."
  501. ^ [233] "The ancestral home of the Earhart family is in the German province of Bavaria. Earhart is a German nickname surname. Such names came from eke-names, or added names, that described their initial bearer through reference to a physical characteristic or other attribute."
  502. ^ [234] "In Texas, there were several substantial waves of German immigration. The first, when Friedrich Ernst, "Father of German Immigration to Texas", arrived in Texas in 1831 and received a grant of more than 4,000 acres (16 km²) in what is now Austin County. He set about encouraging other Germans to join him. This tract of land formed the nucleus of what is now known as the German Belt."
  503. ^ [235] "The German Belt is the product of concepts and processes well known to students of migration, particularly the concept of "dominant personality", the process called "chain migration", and the device of "America letters." Voluntary migrations generally were begun by a dominant personality, or "true pioneer." This individual was forceful and ambitious, a natural leader, who perceived emigration as a solution to economic, social, political, or religious problems in his homeland. He used his personality to convince others to follow him in migration. In the case of the Texas Germans, Friedrich Diercks, known in Texas under his alias, Johann Friedrich Ernst, was the dominant personality."
  504. ^ Reitwiesner, William Addams. "Ancestry of Bobby Fischer (Extracts from the U.S. Federal Decennial Census)". ancestry.com. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
  505. ^ Quinn, Ben; Alan Hamilton (January 28, 2008). "Bobby Fischer, chess genius, heartless son". The Sunday Times. Retrieved September 14, 2008.(subscription required)
  506. ^ [236] "... born in Kassel, Hesse, in 1805. He left Europe late in 1833 and spent a year each in London and New York and two years in New Orleans. In 1837 or early 1838 he came to Houston, Texas, where he was consul for the Hanseatic League (modern-day Germany). He became interested in the exploration and colonization of the San Saba area and in 1839 was acting treasurer of the San Saba Company, which was later reorganized as the San Saba Colonization Company."
  507. ^ [237] "Meyer, though a native speaker of German, was Swiss-German."
  508. ^ a b [238] "Peter Gusenberg (Gusenberger) 'Goosey'. 434 Roscoe St. Born September 28, 1888 in Chicago, Illinois. Married to Myrtle Coppleman Gorman. He tells her he is salesman and uses the last name Gorman. His father was named Peter Gusenberg also. He was from Germany."
  509. ^ [239] "German-born American carpenter and burglar"
  510. ^ Alfons Heck (1985). A Child of Hitler: Germany in the Days when God Wore a Swastika. p. 23. ISBN 9780939650446.
  511. ^ "German American Corner: HECKER, Friedrich Karl Franz (1811–1881)". Germanheritage.com. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  512. ^ [240] "A Pennsylvania German named Michael Hillegas was the first Continental Treasurer. "
  513. ^ Levitt, Morton; Levitt, Michael (1979). A Tissue Of Lies: Nixon vs. Hiss. New York: McGraw Hill. pp. 255–56. ISBN 9780070373976.
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  515. ^ "German American Bund". Ushmm.org. June 10, 2013. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  516. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on July 17, 2006. Retrieved June 29, 2006.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Lederer, a German-born physician"
  517. ^ [242] "The unknown interior of the latter colony was first explored by a young German scholar, Johann Lederer. who, born in Hamburg, came to Jamestown in 1668."
  518. ^ [243] "German-born Jacob Leisler"
  519. ^ "Hume, Edgar Erskine, "The German Artist Who Designed the Confederate Flag and Uniform". The American-German Review, August 1940."
  520. ^ [244] "Miller, Benjamin Kurtz"
  521. ^ [245] "German-American"
  522. ^ [246] "Charles Mohr (1824–1901), German-born Mobile pharmacist and botanist, is best known for the monumental Plant Life of Alabama"
  523. ^ [247] "Irish, German; Pat Nixon's mother immigrated from the Ober Rosbach region of Germany ..."
  524. ^ "Hessen is the Official Partner State of the 51st Annual German-American Steuben Day Parade in NYC". Business Wire. 2008.
  525. ^ EUM. "German-American Steuben Parade of New York". Germanparadenyc.org. Archived from the original on May 22, 2014. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  526. ^ "Bonnie Parker's Genealogy". Censusdiggins.com. Archived from the original on December 17, 2013. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  527. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on December 20, 2015. Retrieved November 8, 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "In 1683 Francis Daniel Pastorius was commissioned by the Frankfort Land Company and a group of merchants from Crefeld, Germany to form a settlement in America. They purchased fifteen thousand acres in Pennsylvania and Germantown was born."
  528. ^ Timothy R Smith (December 11, 2010). "A Local Life: William Addams Reitwiesner, 56; genealogist of presidents, kings and thousands of commoners". The Washington Post. Retrieved February 3, 2011.
  529. ^ [248] "In future years many leaders of American labor were German American, including Walter Reuther"
  530. ^ Chace, James (December 21, 2000). "The Age of Schlesinger by James Chace". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved December 20, 2011.
  531. ^ [249] "The founder, August Schrader was a creative and inventive German immigrant"
  532. ^ [250] "Carl Schurz, one of the most celebrated German Americans"
  533. ^ [251] "the Schwarzkopfs emigrated to the US long before the rise of Nazism, are not known to have voiced Nazi leanings, and were a respected part of the substantial German-American community in New Jersey."
  534. ^ [252] "Dutch Schultz (August 6, 1902 – October 25, 1935) was a New York City-area gangster of the 1920s and 1930s. Born Arthur Flegenheimer into a German Jewish family in the Bronx, he made his fortune in bootlegging illegal alcohol and the numbers racket in Harlem."
  535. ^ The Five Families. MacMillan. September 5, 2006. ISBN 978-0-312-36181-5. Retrieved June 22, 2008.
  536. ^ [253] "Prolific mob hitman Frank "the German" Schweihs has been indicted for alleged involvement with organized crime, including 19 unsolved homicides."
  537. ^ [254] "German-born Swiss pioneer settler and colonizer in California"
  538. ^ [255] "Accordingly, in May 1842 the association sent two of its members, counts Joseph of Boos-Waldeck and Victor August of Leiningen-Westerburg-Alt-Leiningen to Texas to investigate the country firsthand and purchase a tract of land for the settlement of immigrants."
  539. ^ [256] "The Baron told the curt his grandfather was a count in Czarist Russia and that his father is a German nobleman."
  540. ^ [257] Archived September 9, 2006, at the Wayback Machine "In 1910, a German immigrant, Paul Warburg"
  541. ^ Paul A. W. Wallace, Conrad Weiser, 1696–1760, Friend of Colonist and Mohawk. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1945. Reprinted Wennawoods, 2001, ISBN 1-889037-06-0
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  543. ^ [259]"Murdered German-American Mobsters: Frank Gusenberg, Peter Gusenberg, Gus Winkler, Andrew Von Etter"
  544. ^ [260] Articles on American Mobsters of German Descent, Including: Frank Gusenberg, Peter Gusenberg, Gus Winkler, Andrew Von Etter, John Dillinger, Adam Wort
  545. ^ [261] "Wurzelbach (from Wurzel = root and Bach = creek) is a town in Germany. Wurzelbacher just means person from Wurzelbach."
  546. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on April 20, 2008. Retrieved April 15, 2008.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "German immigrant printer named John Peter Zenger"
  547. ^ Judy Putnam (January 12, 2018). "Ingham judge has creative life off the bench with new crime thriller". Lansing State Journal. [Aquilina's] father was born in Malta, a Mediterranean country near Sicily, and her mother in Germany.
  548. ^ "Antietam: Maj Johann August Heinrich Heros von Borcke". Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved April 29, 2007. "German-Prussian officer, served under General Jeb Stuart"
  549. ^ George Armstrong Custer "Originally his ancestry came from Westphalia in Northern Germany. They emigrated and arrived in America in the 17th century. The original family name was 'Küster'."
  550. ^ a b Wert, Jeffry D. (1996). Custer: The Controversial Life of George Armstrong Custer. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-81043-0., p. 15.
  551. ^ a b Connell, Evan S. (1984). Son Of The Morning Star. San Francisco, California: North Point Press. ISBN 978-0-86547-160-3., p. 352.
  552. ^ "Originally his ancestry came from Westphalia in Northern Germany. They emigrated and arrived in America in the 17th century. The original family name was 'Küster'."
  553. ^ Webpage for Dilger Archived June 8, 2011, at the Wayback Machine "Dilger was born march 5, 1836 in Eugen, a Black Forest town. Named Hubert Anton Casimir Dilger, taking the two middle names from the boys paternal and maternal grandparents."
  554. ^ "Cazoo.org: German-American Cultural Center". Archived from the original on October 18, 2007. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  555. ^ Koster, John P. (April 9, 2007). "Survivor Frank Finkel's Lasting Stand". Historynet.com. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  556. ^ "Gruenther, Alfred Maximilian". WW2 Gravestone. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  557. ^ "German-American History". Delawaresaengerbund.org. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  558. ^ Archiv der Franckeschen Stiftungen, AF St/S B I 94 I, 575–577
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  560. ^ [263]"Peter Osterhaus was born in Germany in 1823. After graduating from military school in Berlin Osterhaus took part in the 1848 German Revolution and was afterwards forced to flee the country. Osterhaus emigrated to the United States and became a bookkeeper in Missouri."
  561. ^ [264] Archived May 15, 2006, at the Wayback Machine "Notable among many German-Americans who have shaped our military to meet later challenges were John J. Pershing, whose ancestral family name was Pfoerschin."
  562. ^ [265]"Alexander Schimmelfennig was born in Germany in 1824. A graduate of the German military academy he joined Franz Sigel, Carl Schurz, August Willich, Peter Osterhaus, Max Weber in taking part in the failed 1848 German Revolution. Schimmelfennig emigrated to America and on the outbreak of the American Civil War he joined the Union Army."
  563. ^ [266] "Schoonmaker, German..."
  564. ^ Tom, Todd. "Tom's Tombstone Travels: Al Sieber" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 5, 2016. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
  565. ^ [267] Archived November 4, 2006, at the Wayback Machine "military officer/Union general"
  566. ^ Sohn: "a German word meaning "son""
  567. ^ Boatner III, Mark M. (1996). The Biographical Dictionary of World War II. Presidio. pp. 518–519. ISBN 978-0891415480.
  568. ^ [268] Archived December 28, 2018, at the Wayback Machine "German-Prussian General who served with George Washington in the American Revolutionary War and is credited with teaching the Continental Army the essentials of military drill and discipline. He reorganised the Continental Army and guided it to victory."
  569. ^ "University of Cincinnati website". Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  570. ^ Ricks, Thomas E. (March 18, 2002). "Battle Brings Soldier Closer to His Ethnic Roots". Washington Post.
  571. ^ Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1889). "Weber, Max" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  572. ^ Eicher p.558
  573. ^ "Antietam: BGen Max Weber". antietam.aotw.org. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  574. ^ [269] "Weitzel was born on November 1, 1835, in Germany. His family moved to Cincinnati, Ohio when he was quite young. He was educated in public schools and received an appointment to the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1851."
  575. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on December 2, 2013. Retrieved November 27, 2013.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "His last real name was von Willich. His father was an officer in the Prussian army. He was born in Braunsberg, Prussia in 1810."
  576. ^ [270]"August Willich was born in Germany in 1810. A graduate of the German military academy he joined Franz Sigel, Carl Schurz, Peter Osterhaus, Alexander Schimmelfennig, Max Weber in taking part in the failed 1848 German Revolution."
  577. ^ Seifrit, William C. (1987), Charles Henry Wilcken, an Undervalued Saint, 55, Utah Historical Quarterly, pp. 308–321
  578. ^ Hart, John L. (August 20, 1994), Soldier finds peace, not war, in Utah, Deseret News
  579. ^ [271] "Jurgen Wilson was born in Hamburg, Germany, on 18th December, 1836. His parents were English and he lived for a time in Norway before emigrating to America in 1858. He settled in Madison, Wisconsin, and found work as a clerk in a drug store."
  580. ^ [272]"He was born in 1838 in Bremen, Germany, and came to the U.S. with his family in 1844."
  581. ^ Heinrich Hartmann Wirz Archived June 10, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
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  583. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on February 13, 2006. Retrieved June 29, 2006.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Felix Adler, a German-American educator"
  584. ^ Liukkonen, Petri. "Hannah Arendt". Books and Writers (kirjasto.sci.fi). Finland: Kuusankoski Public Library. Archived from the original on February 6, 2007.. Quote: "Arendt, a Jew, gained fame as a German-Jewish refugee scholar"
  585. ^ [274] "Rudolf Carnap, a German-born philosopher and naturalized US citizen"
  586. ^ [275] "Francis Lieber German-born US political philosopher"
  587. ^ Edward S. Kerstein, Milwaukee's All-American Mayor: Portrait of Daniel Webster Hoan. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1966; pg. 73.
  588. ^ Torrence, Robert McIlvaine (August 6, 1961). The Barnitz family. Baltimore. p. 9. Retrieved August 6, 2019 – via Internet Archive.
  589. ^ [276]"A family genealogy reports that John George Carl Barnitz was the son of John Leonard Barnitz. John George Carl Barnitz born at Falkenstein, Germany on August 14, 1722, as stated in his will, dated October 12, 1796, probated January 4, 1797 (York County Will 1-J-235). However, the will of Charles Barnitz, with the dates noted, was recorded, but the recorded version makes no mention of the birthplace of Charles."
  590. ^ [277] "1806 – ...Martin Baum, riverboat pioneer on the Ohio and Mississippi, becomes mayor of Cincinnati"
  591. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on May 16, 2008. Retrieved May 2, 2008.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Beginning in 1795, when Martin Baum, a Maryland German industrialist, came to Cincinnati and quickly established himself as one Cincinnati's wealthiest and most influential citizens. Through his agents in Baltimore, New Orleans and Philadelphia, Baum attracted even greater numbers of German immigrants to work in his various enterprises – steamboats, a sugar refinery, a foundry and real estate. Soon, Cincinnati's German population began to soar."
  592. ^ [278] ""It was Play Or Starve": Acting in the Nineteenth Century American Popular Theatre, Pg. 90"
  593. ^ [279] Rep. John Boehner Gets Huge Overnight
  594. ^ [280]"John L. Bohn, the son of German Luthern immigrants..."
  595. ^ [281] "1842 – William Bouck (Bauk) becomes Governor of New York"
  596. ^ "Philip Becker". Through The Mayor's Eyes, The Only Complete History of the Mayor's of Buffalo, New York, Compiled by Michael Rizzo. The Buffalonian is produced by The Peoples History Union. May 27, 2009. Archived from the original on September 26, 2011. Retrieved May 29, 2019.
  597. ^ [282]"Racial Origin, German"
  598. ^ [283] In Indiana Senate race, Republican Mike Braun avoids Trump's bravado but stays close on policy
  599. ^ Earl C. Kaylor Jr. 1996. Martin Grove Brumbaugh: A Pennsylvanian's Odyssey from Sainted Schooman to Bedeviled World War I Governor, 1862–1930. Teaneck, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson Press, p. 311.
  600. ^ "Ancestry of George W. Bush (b. 1946)". Wargs.com. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  601. ^ "Missouri State Treasurer's Office – William Quintilis Dallmeyer". www.treasurer.mo.gov. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  602. ^ Reitwiesner, William. "The Ancestors of Tom Daschle". Retrieved November 6, 2007.
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  604. ^ Eickhoff (1847-1901) obituary in the New York Times.png "Anthony Eickhoff" Check |url= value (help). The New York Times. November 7, 1901. Retrieved July 6, 2015. Anthony Eickhoff, aged seventy-four, ex-Fire Commissioner and ex-Coroner, who lived at 118 West Ninety-fourth Street, died Tuesday at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Miehling, 854 West End Avenue. ...
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  606. ^ [286] She is of Southeast Asian (25.6%) French and German (24.6%), and Polynesian descent—as well as a mixture of 9 other ethnicities.
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  612. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on November 14, 2007. Retrieved August 7, 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Hagel's name is German."
  613. ^ Bill Twomey South Bronx pages 77, 78 Picturing America
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  619. ^ "Dr. Franz Huebschmann, Company". Archived from the original on December 5, 2014. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  620. ^ "Wisconsin Historical Society-Franz Huebschmann". Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  621. ^ [293]"The most important Democratic leader in the early German community, physician Franz Hübschmann, championed the cause of voting rights for white immigrant men who were not citizens, believing that they should be able to vote as long as they had lived in the state for a year and had begun the naturalization process."
  622. ^ eMediaMillWorks (December 12, 2001). "Transcript: Issa on Bomb Plot". The Washington Post (On Politics). Retrieved September 7, 2013. Following is the full transcript of a press conference held by Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) on the reported plot to bomb his California offices. Rep. Issa is the grandson of Lebanese immigrants. Other speakers: Rep. Tom Lantos (D-Calif.), Rep. Benjamin A. Gilman (R-N.Y.), Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.), Rep. Gary L. Ackerman (D-N.Y.) and Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.).
  623. ^ [294]"Charles Frederick Kirschler was born in Beaver County in 1864 to a two-generation family of German immigrant farmers from Gemmingen in the Duchy of Baden."
  624. ^ "Born in Fürth, Germany to Jewish parents. Naturalized as US citizen in 1943"
  625. ^ Men of Progress, Wisconsin. 1897, pages 596–597.
  626. ^ Fuhrig, Wolf D (April 24, 2010). "Gustav Koerner, a German-American Liberal". New Harmony, Indiana: 34th Symposium of the Society of German-American Studies. Belleville Heritage Society. Archived from the original on October 4, 2013. Retrieved August 17, 2013.
  627. ^ 'Memoirs of Milwaukee County,' vol. 1, Jerome Anthony Watrous, Historical Associates: 1909, biographical sketch of Ferdinand Kuehn, pg. 134–135
  628. ^ Clarence Monroe Burton; William Stocking; Gordon K. Miller (1922). The city of Detroit, Michigan, 1701–1922; Volume 3. The S. J. Clarke publishing company. p. 608.
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  642. ^ Mahoney, The Story of George Romney, pp. 52, 70.
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  645. ^ Reynier Tyson, born in Krefeld, Germany is the 4th great-grandfather of American President Theodore Roosevelt.
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  665. ^ American anthropologist, Volume 10 (1908), American Anthropological Association
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  667. ^ [303]"The Hauerwas Family migrated from Germany."
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  677. ^ Curley, Michael (1952). Venerable John Neumann, C.SS.R.: Fourth Bishop of Philadelphia. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press. p. 10.
  678. ^ The Passavant House (Zelienople Historical Society) http://www.zelienoplehistoricalsociety.com/index.html
  679. ^ Robert Paul Sutton, Communal Utopias and the American Experience: Religious Communities (2003) p. 38
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  684. ^ [309] "Wuerl Surname"
  685. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on August 3, 2007. Retrieved August 6, 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Zinzendorf himself visited St. Thomas, and later visited America. There he sought to unify the German Protestants of Pennsylvania, even proposing a sort of "council of churches" where all would preserve their unique denominational practices, but would work in cooperation rather than competition. He founded the town of Bethlehem, where his daughter Benigna organized the school which would become Moravian College."
  686. ^ [310] "German-Swiss Heritage"
  687. ^ [311] Archived December 22, 2008, at the Wayback Machine "Reinhold Albert Aman was born on April 8, 1936, in Fürstenzell (Bavaria), Germany. He grew up in Straubing and Oberschneiding, studied chemical engineering in Augsburg, and worked in Frankfurt and Munich."
  688. ^ "Persons". Structurae. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  689. ^ "CABINET // The Intelligence of Vision: An Interview with Rudolf Arnheim". cabinetmagazine.org. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  690. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on November 3, 2005. Retrieved June 29, 2006.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Baade wanted to go there to observe with it himself, but his German citizenship prevented him"
  691. ^ "Rodeo – Earl Bascom". www.theinventors.org. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  692. ^ [312][permanent dead link] "Dr. Max Bentele (born Ulm, Germany January 15, 1909 – died New York May 19, 2006, at age 97) was a pioneer in the field of jet aircraft turbines and mechanical engineering"
  693. ^ [313] "German-born American citizen"
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  696. ^ NOAA Central Library Archived February 8, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  697. ^ [315] German Marylanders: "Herman Collitz was born in the town of Bleckede, Hanover, Germany."
  698. ^ [316] "Werner K. Dahm, an internationally recognized rocket pioneer whose work in Germany and the United States made important contributions to the nation's ballistic missile programs ..."
  699. ^ [317] "Werner K. Dahm, an internationally recognized rocket pioneer whose work in Germany and the United States."
  700. ^ [318] "German-born American physicist who shared one-half of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1989 with the German physicist Wolfgang Paul"
  701. ^ [319] "Max Delbruck German-born US biologist, a pioneer in the study of molecular genetics."
  702. ^ [320] Archived October 29, 2008, at the Wayback Machine "The MDC is named after the German-American Nobel Prize winner Max Delbrück."
  703. ^ "Encyclopedia Astronautica Index: 1". Archived from the original on October 19, 2010. Retrieved August 29, 2010. "Krafft Arnold Ehricke American Engineer. Born 24 March 1917. Died December 1984. Personal: Male, Married, Three daughters. Born in Berlin, Germany. BEng"
  704. ^ [321][permanent dead link] "Nationality: United States, Germany"
  705. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on January 4, 2009. Retrieved December 2, 2008.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "German-born Harvard economist and developer of large-scale macroeconometric models (for which he founded a forecasting corporation, Data Resources Inc. (DRI))"
  706. ^ "Albert Einstein – Biographical". Nobelprize.org. April 18, 1955. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  707. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on September 1, 2006. Retrieved June 29, 2006.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "German-born botanist"
  708. ^ [322] "The city was named originally after Katherine the Great who promoted agriculture in the steppes of the Ukraine by inviting settlers from Germany, among them the Mennonites. Dr. Esau's family is Mennonite. Dr. Esau's great-grandfather Aron Esau immigrated to the Ukraine In 1804 from Prussia"
  709. ^ "Edmond Fischer". University of Washington. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
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  711. ^ explorepahistory.com John F. Fritz [engineer]
  712. ^ Sandra E. Duffy (2012)Fritz Lab: Not Just for Chicks Archived October 18, 2014, at the Wayback Machine from Pennsylvania State University
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  714. ^ [325] "Born in Karlsruhe, Germany, in 1890, Frieda Fromm-Reichmann graduated from medical school at Königsberg, Eastern Prussia, in 1913."
  715. ^ "Encyclopedia Astronautica Index: 1". Archived from the original on October 19, 2010. Retrieved August 29, 2010. "German engineer in WW2, member of the Rocket Team in the United States thereafter."
  716. ^ "Memorials: GLAESER, LUDWIG", The New York Times, September 27, 2007
  717. ^ [326] "German-born American physicist"
  718. ^ "pixel panache | design, illustration, photography, websites – Cincinnati, Ohio". Pixelp.com. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  719. ^ "Encyclopedia Astronautica Index: 1". Archived from the original on July 15, 2010. Retrieved August 29, 2010. "German-American engineer. Worked on V-2 gyro platform at Peenemünde 1939–1942. Returned to von Braun's team in US in 1948, working on Hermes II and Redstone guidance systems, becoming Director, Guidance and Control Division, at Huntsville."
  720. ^ [327] Archived August 13, 2006, at the Wayback Machine "Herman Hollerith was the German American who first automated US census information"
  721. ^ [328] "German-American psychiatrist"
  722. ^ Roberts, Siobhan (December 17, 2018). "The Yoda of Silicon Valley". The New York Times.
  723. ^ [329] "German psychologist"
  724. ^ [330] "Heinrich Klüver, son of Wilhelm and Dorothes (Wübbers) Klüver, was born on May 25, 1897, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. He arrived in the United States in 1923, married Cessa Feyerabend on February 4, 1927, and was naturalized as a US citizen in 1934."
  725. ^ [331] "Naturalized US Citizen – Birthplace: Blankenburg, Germany"
  726. ^ "Encyclopedia Astronautica Index: 1". Archived from the original on December 20, 2008. Retrieved December 20, 2008. "Willy Ley was an extremely effective populariser of the idea of space flight – first in Germany and then in the United States. Ley was born in Berlin. Fluent in German, English, Italian, French, and Russian, he studied astronomy, physics, zoology, and paleontology at the University of Berlin."
  727. ^ [332] "German engineer who was a founder of the German Rocket Society. In 1934, he emigrated to the United States rather than pursuing military applications of rocketry. In the U.S., he became a popularizer of space exploration and travel, writing many popular books."
  728. ^ [333] "Ottmar Mergenthaler, a German inventor"
  729. ^ [334] "Julius Robert Oppenheimer was born in New York City on April 22, 1904. His parents, Julius S. Oppenheimer, a wealthy German textile merchant, and Ella Friedman, an artist, were of Jewish descent but did not observe the religious traditions."
  730. ^ [335] "The Ancestry of Overmire Tifft Richardson Bradford Reed"
  731. ^ "The Ancestry of Linus Pauling". The Special Collections & Archives Research Center – Oregon State University Libraries. Retrieved July 29, 2019.
  732. ^ Jesco von Puttkamer: Nasa engineer who worked with Wernher von Braun. (2103, January 2). In The Independent. [336]
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  734. ^ "William Rittenhouse". Ushistory.org. July 4, 1995. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  735. ^ "Gunther Eric Rothenberg". Contemporary Authors Online (fee, via Fairfax County Public Library) |format= requires |url= (help). Detroit: Gale. 2001. Gale Document Number: GALE|H1000085240. Retrieved February 1, 2014. Biography in Context.
  736. ^ [338] Archived July 23, 2011, at the Wayback Machine "German to English definition of schaden"
  737. ^ Frank Schlesinger: "Asked how to say his name, he told The Literary Digest "The name is so difficult for those who do not speak German that I am usually called sles'in-jer, to rime with messenger. It is, of course, of German origin and means 'a native of Schlesien' or Silesia. In that language the pronunciation is shlayzinger, to rime with singer." (Charles Earle Funk, What's the Name, Please?, Funk & Wagnalls, 1936.)"
  738. ^ Knudsen, Christian (February 1, 2004). "Alfred schutz, Austrian Economists and the Knowledge Problem – Knudsen". Rationality and Society. Sage Publications. 16 (1). doi:10.1177/1043463104036622. S2CID 14323542.
  739. ^ [339] "Seitz grew up in San Francisco, where he was born on July 4, 1911, to a German immigrant baker."
  740. ^ Bilger, Burkhard (April 22, 2013). "The Martian Chroniclers". The New Yorker. Retrieved April 15, 2013.
  741. ^ [340] "Two of San Francisco's best-known landmarks were built by Germans: Joseph Strauss designed the 1937 Golden Gate Bridge, and Bernard Maybeck, son of a German immigrant, designed the Palace of Fine Arts."
  742. ^ [341] "Stern was born in Sorau, Germany (now Zary, Poland), and educated at the University of Breslau. He taught at Technische Hochschule in Zürich and at the universities of Frankfurt and Hamburg. In 1933 he moved to the U.S., accepting the position of research professor of physics at the Carnegie Institute of Technology (now Carnegie-Mellon University) in Pittsburgh, Pa."
  743. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on November 29, 2014. Retrieved November 15, 2014.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "German botanist"
  744. ^ "what is wais Who is wais For? What does 'Wais'... – Q&A". Faqs.org. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  745. ^ [342] "In 1960 he emigrated to the United States and joined the Worthington Biochemical Corporation in Harrison, New Jersey, eventually becoming vice-president. During his life he was awarded numerous scientific medals and awards, and he published over 200 patents. Hellmuth Walter died on 16 December 1980."
  746. ^ [343] "Growing up in Vienna in a well-to-do Jewish family ..." [344] "One of the most brilliant Jewish scientists to be driven from Germany by Nazi persecution ..."
  747. ^ Farmer, Gene; Dora Jane Hamblin (1970). First On the Moon: A Voyage With Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr. Boston: Little, Brown and Co. pp. 51–54. Bibcode:1970fomv.book.....F. Library of Congress 76-103950.
  748. ^ [345] "Gustave Whitehead, a poor, German immigrant"
  749. ^ [346] CHRIS VON DER AHE – A MAGNATE FOR SUCCESS
  750. ^ ghostsofdc (January 4, 2012). "Nick Altrock: A Columbia Heights Major Leaguer | Ghosts of DC". Retrieved January 1, 2020.
  751. ^ [347] "Heinz Becker, the only German-born big-leaguer who played during the years of World War II."
  752. ^ [348] "Zinn is the German word for tin"
  753. ^ [349] "The Benz family was of German Catholic stock, Joe's grandfather, also named Michael, having emigrated from the Grand Duchy of Baden in 1849."
  754. ^ The American Game. SIU Press. 2002. p. 30. ISBN 9780809389094. Retrieved August 6, 2019 – via Internet Archive. lou bierbauer german.
  755. ^ [350] "German origins of the Boesch surname"
  756. ^ "Breitenstein, 65, Dies; Once Noted Pitcher" (PDF). The New York Times. May 4, 1935.
  757. ^ [351] "The Bumgarners began arriving from southwest Germany a couple of hundred years ago."
  758. ^ "FamilySearch". FamilySearch. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  759. ^ [352] "His father, Daniel, was a German immigrant; his mother, Rosina (née Shellhorn), was the daughter of a German immigrant."
  760. ^ [353] "Father Peter Danzig emigrated to the United States in 1880, he was considered and listed himself in the 1900 census as German"
  761. ^ [354] "His father, Fred, was a salesman at a drugstore in Burleson, Texas, in 1920. Ten years later the 1930 census shows him as a salesman in a garage. Fred was a native Texan, too, but his father had been born in Berlin and his mother was Moravian. Both German and Bohemian were spoken in the household."
  762. ^ Bill Dietrich at Society for American Baseball Research (SABR)
  763. ^ "Dietrich Name Meaning & Dietrich Family History at Ancestry.com®". www.ancestry.com. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  764. ^ Barney Dreyfuss at the SABR Baseball Biography Project, by Sam Bernstein, Retrieved November 8, 2013., "Not bad press for a man who just twenty-four years before had arrived from Freiburg, Germany with just a few dollars in his pocket."
  765. ^ Big and Little Poison: Paul and Lloyd Waner, Baseball Brothers
  766. ^ [355] "David Eckstein was born to German-American parents in Sanford, Florida. He is an MLB shortstop and current leadoff hitter for the St. Louis Cardinals. Eckstein was named the World Series MVP in 2006."
  767. ^ [356] "Elmer Albert Eggert was born and died in Rochester, New York – born on January 29, 1902 to parents of German ancestry. His mother Theresa Felgner Eggert had been born in Rochester, and his father Fred was born in New York City to two German parents."
  768. ^ Society for American Baseball Research"Henry Eibel was born to foreign-born parents. His father, Henry, had come from Germany to America in 1870 and worked as a blacksmith in 1900 and a baker in 1910. His mother, Elizabeth, had been born in England, but to two German parents; she came to America in 1864. "
  769. ^ "BGS The Report Card – December 8, 2006". Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  770. ^ [357] "Oscar Emil Felsch, who grew up to be arguably the best baseball player ever produced by Milwaukee's north side, was born in 1891 in a German working-class neighborhood – Reference: Felsch's Application for Social Security Account Number, December 3, 1943; Wisconsin Original Certificate of Death #'64 024373; and 1900 and 1930 United States Censuses."
  771. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on February 10, 2015. Retrieved February 10, 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "The Guy Richard Freese Family Home Page"
  772. ^ [358] "1929 — ...baseball stars: Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Honus Wagner, Frank Frisch, all of German descent"
  773. ^ [359] "Froemming Name Meaning North German (Frömming): patronymic from Fromm."
  774. ^ [360] "Lou Gehrig's life, from the poor German boy in Yorkville to the famous star playing America's favorite pastime."
  775. ^ "Sketch of the Men Who Now wear the Dauvray Medals" (PDF). The Sporting Life. 1887.
  776. ^ [361] "Pretzels Getzien"
  777. ^ Society of Baseball Research / SABR "Grimm’s German-born father wanted him to join the family painting business, but young Charlie had other ideas."
  778. ^ Major League Baseball Players of 1916: A Biographical Dictionary
  779. ^ "Happ Name Meaning & Happ Family History at Ancestry.com®". www.ancestry.com. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  780. ^ Heilmann surname
  781. ^ [https://books.google.com/books?id=P63_5PFD5S8C&pg=PA47&lpg=PA47 "German Americans comprised of 30% of the U.S. Armed Forces, among them such high profile players such as Charlie Gehringer, Tommy Henrich, Pete Reiser and Red Ruffing."
  782. ^ [362] "German American assistants Rudolph Hynicka and August Hermann"
  783. ^ [363] "Young August, a good Cincinnati German, worked for another good Cincinnati German..."
  784. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on November 29, 2014. Retrieved August 26, 2013.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "...He wasn't angry, but true to his German roots..."
  785. ^ Dick Hoblitzell at the SABR Baseball Biography Project, by Tom Simon, Retrieved November 8, 2013., "Richard Carleton Hoblitzell... his father, Henry Hoblitzell, whose ancestors hailed from the oft-disputed Alsace-Lorraine region, was part German, Swiss, and French."
  786. ^ [364] "part German mother"
  787. ^ [365] " Charles Schaeffer Kelchner ...was the son of Martin and Maria (Schaeffer) Kelchner, of Pennsylvania Dutch (German) descent."
  788. ^ a b [366] "His paternal great-grandfather, Johann Justus Kellner, a German immigrant."
  789. ^ [367] "The Knepper Family... accompanied their founder, Alexander Mack, from Europe to Pennsylvania was a certain Wilhelm Knepper... 'Bob' Knepper, the noted baseball player, is a descendant"
  790. ^ "Howie Koplitz Baseball Stats by Baseball Almanac". Baseball Almanac. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  791. ^ [368]"Eugene Hamlet Krapp was born to Frederick “Fritz" and Bertha (Hettig) Krapp on May 12, 1887, in Rochester, New York. His father was born in Wurtemberg, Germany in 1854 and came to the United States three years later. His mother was a native New Yorker whose family had come from the same area in Germany."
  792. ^ [369] "The Kuenns were the typical German-American blue-collar family that so heavily populated Milwaukee."
  793. ^ Goldstein, Richard (March 16, 2007). "Bowie Kuhn, 80, former baseball commissioner". The New York Times. Retrieved November 8, 2013.
  794. ^ [370] The Art of Hitting .300
  795. ^ [371] "Leibrandt Surname"
  796. ^ "MLB – Chuck Machemehl Player Page". Sports Illustrated.
  797. ^ [372] "Markakis, who is half Greek and half German, led the Greek Olympic team..."
  798. ^ [373] "Henry William Meine was born on May 1, 1896 in an unincorporated area called Luxemburg in the predominantly German neighborhood known as Carondelet bordering the Mississippi River in south St. Louis, Missouri. Meine's parents were both children of German immigrants; Henry (born in 1864) and Louisa (nee Kulhman, born in 1873) married in 1891 and had seven children, Lilly, Henry, Edwin, Arthur, Charles, Ferdinand, and Walter, born between 1892 and 1908."
  799. ^ "Wisconsin, Births and Christenings". familysearch.org. Retrieved July 29, 2013.
  800. ^ [374] "Frederick William Muller was born on December 21, 1907, a son of German immigrants George and Mary Muller."
  801. ^ Les Mueller at the SABR Baseball Biography Project, by Jim Sargent, Retrieved November 8, 2013.
  802. ^ "Fritz Mollwitz Stats". Baseball-Almanac.com. Retrieved May 21, 2011.
  803. ^ Fritz Mollwitz "Frederick August Mollwitz – Born: 6/16/1890 at Koburg (Germany)"
  804. ^ Mike Eisenbath and Stan Musial. Cardinals Encyclopedia. pp. 258–259.
  805. ^ Census entry for Henry Peitz, ball-player, born November 1870. Ancestry.com. 1900 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Census Place: Cincinnati Ward 23, Hamilton, Ohio; Roll: T623_1279; Page: 10A; Enumeration District: 193.
  806. ^ Census entry for Henry Peitz and family. Ancestry.com and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. 1880 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Census Place: Saint Louis, Saint Louis, Missouri; Roll: 733; Family History Film: 1254733; Page: 509C; Enumeration District: 306; Image: 0189.
  807. ^ "Heinie Peitz Is A Favorite". The Pittsburgh Press. March 16, 1905.
  808. ^ a b [375] "Roettger surname from Hesse, DE"
  809. ^ a b [376] "Roettger Name Meaning North German (also Röttger): variant of Rudiger or Roger."
  810. ^ [377] "... born George Herman Ruth in Baltimore, Maryland to parents of German background. His mother, Katie Schaumberger, was the daughter of Pius and Anna Schaumberger, both born in Germany. Babe Ruth's father, saloon owner George Ruth, had German grandparents. Although Babe Ruth's German background is certain ..."
  811. ^ Germany Schaefer at the SABR Baseball Biography Project, by Dan Holmes, Retrieved November 13, 2013., "Herman A. Schaefer was born to German immigrant parents in Chicago's South Side Levee District, on February 4, 1876."
  812. ^ Dan Holmes (2006). "Germany Schaefer". Deadball Stars of the American League. Potomac Books, Inc. Retrieved May 28, 2012.
  813. ^ Wonder Boy – The Story of Carl Scheib: The Youngest Player in American
  814. ^ [378] "to PRer free7694, "Scherzer" is German for "joker". If Mad Max doesn't catch on, what about The Joker?"
  815. ^ "Schimpf Family History", Oxford University Press, 2013. Retrieved on January 16, 2016.
  816. ^ MIKE SCHMIDT HAS CREDENTIALS TO RATE WITH BEST "Schmidt is of German extraction."
  817. ^ Bill Lamb. Frank Schneiberg. Society for American Baseball Research.
  818. ^ Bill Nowlin. Al Schroll. Society for American Baseball Research.
  819. ^ [379] "...to German immigrant John Schulte"
  820. ^ Cahill, Dan (July 22, 2015). "Kyle Schwarber: 7 things you might not know". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  821. ^ Society for American Baseball Research / SABR"James Robert “Bob" Shawkey was born on December 4, 1890, in Sigel, Pennsylvania. He was descended from German immigrants named Schaake."
  822. ^ [380] "Americans of German descent, like John Smoltz"
  823. ^ Harry Steinfeldt at the SABR Baseball Biography Project, by Tom Simon, Retrieved November 8, 2013., "The son of a German immigrant, Henry M. Steinfeldt was born on September 29, 1877, in St. Louis."
  824. ^ Biographical Dictionary of American Sports: Q-Z
  825. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on December 8, 2008. Retrieved December 2, 2008.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Ed (his mother never calls him Duke, a nickname coined by his father when the boy was five) is named Edwin Donald and has German-Dutch bloodlines on the paternal side and Scotch-Irish on the maternal side."
  826. ^ [381] "He was born in St. Cloud, Minnesota, on May 20, 1879, to Leonard and Mary Thielman. Leonard was a hardware dealer at the time of the 1900 census, a German immigrant who had come to the United States around 1858. Mary had been born in New York to German immigrant parents."
  827. ^ [382] "Elias Thoeny was a painter, a German immigrant as was his wife. National boundaries have, of course, changed over time. The Thoenys appear to have come from the southern part of current Germany..."
  828. ^ [383] "His father, Victor, half German and half Viennese, with his hearty manner and curious mind, was the biggest influence in his life, says Ueberroth."
  829. ^ [384] "James “Jim" Umbricht was born in Chicago on September 17, 1930, to Mr. and Mrs. Eduard Umbricht. Eduard's parents were from Illinois and he was born and raised in the state. Jantina Frank, Eduard's wife, was born in Holland to a Dutch mother and German father. She was a native German speaker."
  830. ^ [385] "The story of Alfred Holmes "Fritz" Von Kolnitz illustrates ethnic ambivalence. Sensitive to his obviously Prussian-sounding name, he used the name "R. H. Holmes" when entering professional baseball in 1913..."
  831. ^ [386] Archived May 15, 2006, at the Wayback Machine "In sports there have been such memorable figures as baseballers Honus Wagner, Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, and Casey Stengel ..."
  832. ^ [387] "The Wambsganss name was German in origin, though the best a German professor at Concordia College in Fort Wayne, Indiana, could tell him was that it seemed to combine components of the word for overcoat, or at least a word that might have been used as overcoat in early 20th century German usage."
  833. ^ Rodriguez, Juan C. (March 4, 2014). "Marlins notes: Yelich branches off family football tree". Sun Sentinel. Retrieved July 3, 2016.
  834. ^ a b [388]"The Boeheims were German in an Italian neighborhood, but honestly, it's not like my family celebrated their cultural heritage much."
  835. ^ [389] "Notes: He is the son of Florian Hartenstein, a German former professional basketball player and basketball coach... His mother is American and he was born in Eugene, Oregon ... He lived in USA until 2008, when he followed his family in Germany where his father was playing professionally... He has been a member of the German junior national teams since 2014, when he was 16 years old."
  836. ^ [390]"A government official told the players about anti-German sentiment in Poland, one of their main stops of the 21-game tour. Heinsohn, with his unmistakably German last name, was a bit wary, but he didn't think much of it. He was just going to play basketball anyway."
  837. ^ Phil Jackson, "Sacred Hoops", p. 27
  838. ^ "Clippers' Kaman becomes German citizen for Olympics". Los Angeles Times. July 3, 2008.
  839. ^ [391]"...described herself as German..."
  840. ^ [392] "Prevalence of Prohm Surname in Deutschland"
  841. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on March 12, 2009. Retrieved April 21, 2009.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Unlike some coaches, Mr. Rupp rarely played the role of a substitute father to his players. He was not the chummy sort. He had stern and demanding qualities, inherited from his German-immigrant father. He had reverence for order and precision and demanded it from his players. To some person, he appeared to be a mean old man."
  842. ^ "Heisman Trophy – Jay Berwanger – Heisman Winners". heismantrophy.com. Retrieved January 5, 2021.
  843. ^ "Tom Brady's roots run deep into 19th-century Boston". Boston Globe. Retrieved February 18, 2018.
  844. ^ [393] "Born: June 19, 1946 (Age: 70-313d) in Munich, Germany"
  845. ^ [394] "Chronicle: Dave, you are Croatian American, tell us about your background? Diehl: I grew up on the south side of Chicago. I'm fifty percent Croatian and fifty percent German. I went to grammar school and High School (Brother Rice) with some Croatian friends. So I have been following Croatian heritage ever since I can remember. That's why people couldn't figure out why I have Diehl as my last name and Croatian GRB tattooed on my left arm. I grew up going to St. Jerome's Croatian Catholic Church with my Grandmother. Her maiden name was Semanic and she was from one of the Croatian islands. I remember going to St. Jerome's and having palacinke for breakfast. My grandmother married Grandpa who was Ante Bekavac from small village Bekavci near Lovrec in Imotski, Dalmacija, Croatia. My father Jerry who passed away in August was hundred percent German on both sides."
  846. ^ [395] "Thuringia region (located between Hessen and Lower Saxony in the west and Saxony in the east). Doering name is an ethnic name for someone from Thuringia (German Thüringen). The region is named from its former occupation by the T(h)uringii, a Germanic tribe. The meaning is from a personal name based on cognate of the German turren, or 'to dare'."
  847. ^ [396] "Ertz Name Meaning German: variant of Ersch, from a pet form of Aro or Arez."
  848. ^ [397] Archived October 2, 2015, at the Wayback Machine "... the Goff name comes from the Old German term 'goff', which means a priest, god-like person or a powerful warrior."
  849. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 6, 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Born Johann Wilhelm Heisman on October 23, 1869, in Cleveland, Ohio, he was the son of John M. Heisman and Sara Lehr. The name John William was later adopted in order to make less apparent the fact that he was the son of immigrants. His father was the estranged son of German aristocrats and husband to his lower-class wife, for whom he gave up his family, inheritance, and surname."
  850. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on August 21, 2007. Retrieved August 6, 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Hostelter is a descendant of the Amish-Mennonite immigrant Jacob Hochstetler."
  851. ^ http://azstrong.tripod.com/harry_alice/legacy/1109.htm
  852. ^ 1900 Census, St. Louis, Missouri, FHL Film No. 1,240,888, Central Twp, E. D. 119, Sheet 5A, Family 105 at Lines 28–33.
  853. ^ [398] "Kuechly Surname : 19th Century Germanic Immigrants to USA"
  854. ^ [399] The Man Who Built the National Football League: Joe F. Carr, page 29 et seq.
  855. ^ [400] Archived May 14, 2008, at the Wayback Machine "Their father, Theodore Nesser, was lured from Germany by the railroad and designed the steam engine the Pennsy used for years"
  856. ^ [401] "Ott is a family name with Bavarian roots."
  857. ^ [402] "Pflugrad Surname Distribution"
  858. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on November 17, 2015. Retrieved November 16, 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Norka – a German colony in Russia"
  859. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on November 17, 2015. Retrieved November 16, 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Norka – a German colony in Russia"
  860. ^ [403] "German: from Middle High German slegel 'hammer', 'tool for striking' (Old High German slegil, a derivative of slahan 'to strike'), hence a metonymic occupational name for a smith or mason, or a nickname for a forceful person."
  861. ^ [404] "German Surname – (Schöbert): variant of Schober.variant of Schubert."
  862. ^ [405] "Spach Family Name"
  863. ^ [406] The Family Tree German Genealogy Guide: How to Trace Your Germanic Ancestry
  864. ^ Sperber, Murray (July 29, 2014). Onward to Victory: The Creation of Modern College Sports. Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 9781466876453. Retrieved August 6, 2019 – via Google Books.
  865. ^ Gustke, Axel (December 31, 2012). "Berliner Mauer vor dem Durchbruch". Der Tagesspiegel (in German).
  866. ^ [407] "German: variant of Duffner."
  867. ^ [408] "Golden wonder"
  868. ^ "Germans to America Passenger Data file, 1850–1897, Ship Normannia, departed from Hamburg, arrived in New York, New York, New York, United States, NAID identifier 1746067, National Archives at College Park, Maryland". FamilySearch.org. Retrieved June 23, 2015.
  869. ^ [409] "Backes is a surname of German immigrants to America."
  870. ^ [410] "German: topographic name of uncertain origin, possibly related to modern German Eichel 'acorn'. German: habitational name for someone who lived at a house distinguished by the sign of an acorn."
  871. ^ [411]"...became a U.S.-German dual citizen before the move."
  872. ^ It's a small hockey world for Guentzel
  873. ^ "Kreider Family Crest and History". Houseofnames.com. November 26, 2013. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  874. ^ "Die Kultfigur bei den Pinguins – Sport in Bremen – WESER-KURIER". www.weser-kurier.de. Archived from the original on February 13, 2016. Retrieved February 13, 2016.
  875. ^ [412] "German (Müller) and Jewish (Ashkenazic): occupational name for a miller, Middle High German müller, German Müller. In Germany Müller, Mueller is the most frequent of all surnames; in the U.S. it is often changed to Miller."
  876. ^ [413] "German: nickname from Middle High German schallære 'braggart', 'orator', 'babbler'. Jewish (Ashkenazic): occupational name for a trumpeter or a shofar player, from an agent derivative of Yiddish shaln 'to sound'."
  877. ^ [414] "German: topographic or habitational name of unexplained origin."
  878. ^ Hanc, John. "Walter Bahr reflects on the day the US beat England and stunned the so..." AARP. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  879. ^ "Chandler Emerging at FC Nurnberg". Yanks Abroad. January 26, 2011. Archived from the original on January 29, 2011. Retrieved March 5, 2011.CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  880. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on January 2, 2008. Retrieved December 11, 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Marcus' surname comes from his German roots, with his parents leaving Hamburg 35 years ago"
  881. ^ "VfB sign Jerome Kiesewetter". VfB Stuttgart. May 16, 2012. Archived from the original on May 30, 2015. Retrieved September 28, 2012.
  882. ^ Ballard, Chris (May 16, 2018). "The Reflection, Future and Duality of Post-USMNT Jurgen Klinsmann". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
  883. ^ "Philadelphia German Americans win the 1936 US Open Cup". September 3, 2014. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  884. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on March 17, 2010. Retrieved January 3, 2009.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Born in Tübingen, West Germany, he moved with his family to America at the age of four."
  885. ^ "Mature beyond his years". Yanks Abroad. November 9, 2005. Retrieved August 20, 2012.
  886. ^ Winner, Andrew (September 19, 2005). "Spector aims to boost World Cup credentials". ESPN FC. Retrieved May 17, 2015. Archived from the original on May 15, 2010.
  887. ^ [415] "Maximillian Adelbert Baer, was born in Omaha, Nebraska, to German immigrant parents. His father was a butcher, and Baer often credited his powerful shoulders to working as a butcher."
  888. ^ a b Paxton, Bill (November 29, 2014). The Fearless Harry Greb: Biography of a Tragic Hero of Boxing (ebook). McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers. p. 260. ISBN 9781476613833.
  889. ^ "An XL model mixes up the WWE stars". Sport1. Retrieved February 20, 2019.
  890. ^ Jericho, Chris. "TIJ – EP168 – Sasha Banks". Talk is Jericho (Podcast). Podcastone. Event occurs at 48:09. Retrieved February 2, 2016.
  891. ^ Sonnenberg (disambiguation) "German for 'sunny hill'"
  892. ^ [416]"Turnen is simply the German word for gymnastics, but the Turner movement has been defined by its compelling combination of physical exercise, cultural activity, and civic engagement. The German-American group played a leading role in the public life of Milwaukee, especially in the late nineteenth century."
  893. ^ a b "Ancestry of Dale Earnhardt Jr".
  894. ^ [417] "was the first woman to swim the English Channel. The German-American swimming champ was born on October 23, 1905 in New York City, one of six children. Her father was a butcher from Germany. When Gertrude was eight, while visiting her grandmother in Germany, she fell into a pond, a fateful experience that led her to learn to swim. At the Paris Olympics in 1924 she won gold in the 400-meter freestyle relay, and bronze in the 100 m and 400 m individual freestyle events. In her 1926 Channel swim she beat the men's record by more than two hours. She held the women's record until 1950, when Florence Chadwick crossed the Channel in 13 hours and 20 minutes."
  895. ^ [418] "Recorded in several forms including Fogt, Foit, Vogt, Vogts, Veogt, Voigt and Voight, this is a German surname, but of pre 5th century Roman (Latin) origins. It derives from the ancient word "advocatus.""
  896. ^ "Hans Halberstadt at the 1928 Olympics," West Coast Fencing Archive.
  897. ^ [419] Archived January 14, 2019, at the Wayback Machine "Robert Craig "Evel" Knievel was the first of two children born to Robert E. and Ann Keough "Zippy" Knievel. His surname is of German origin; his great-great-grandparents on his father's side emigrated to the United States from Germany and on his mother's side from Ireland."
  898. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on December 5, 2007. Retrieved March 11, 2008.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Knievel"
  899. ^ "Niebrugge Name Meaning & Niebrugge Family History at Ancestry.com®". www.ancestry.com. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  900. ^ "michael phelps". ancestry.com. Archived from the original on August 8, 2012. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  901. ^ "Schnoor Family Crest and History". Houseofnames.com. September 25, 2012. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  902. ^ [420] "The Wanderones were German-Swiss"
  903. ^ "Von Zedtwitz, Waldemar" Archived May 31, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. Hall of Fame. ACBL. Retrieved December 4, 2014.
Bibliography

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