"1683-1920". Frederick Franklin Schrader
href="#u6f28087c-7217-57ec-be38-462f265c04ba">Franz Daniel Pastorius and German, Dutch and English Colonization.
Propaganda in the United States.
Representation in Congress, 1779-1912.
Rhodes’ Secret Will and Scholarships, Carnegie Peace Fund and Other Pan-Anglican Influences.
Roosevelt and Taft Praise the Kaiser as an Agent of Peace.
Submarine Sinkings of Enemy Merchant Ships.
Schell, Johann Christian and His Wife.
Steuben, Baron Frederick William von.
Sutter, the Romance of the California Pioneer.
“Swordmaker of the Confederacy.”
Commercial Treaty with Germany and How it Was Observed.
War Lies Repudiated by British Press.
Wirtz, Captain H., of Andersonville Prison.
Ziegler, David, Revolutionary Soldier and Indian Fighter.
Zenger, John Peter, and the Freedom of the Press.
PREFACE
With the ending of the war many books will be released dealing with various questions and phases of the great struggle, some of them perhaps impartial, but the majority written to make propaganda for foreign nations with a view to rendering us dissatisfied with our country and imposing still farther upon the ignorance, indifference and credulity of the American people.
The author’s aim in the following pages has been to provide a book of ready reference on a multitude of questions which have been raised by the war. It is strictly American in that it seeks to educate those who need education in the truth about American institutions and national problems.
A blanket indictment has been found against a whole race. That race comprises upward of 26 per cent. of the American people and has been a stalwart factor in American life since the middle of the seventeenth century. This indictment has been found upon tainted evidence. As is shown in the following pages, a widespread propaganda has been, and is still, at work to sow the seeds of discord and sedition in order to reconcile us to a pre-Revolutionary political condition. This propaganda has invaded our public schools, and cannot be more effectively combatted than by education.
The contingency that the book may be decried as German propaganda has no terrors for the author, and has not deterred him from his purpose to deal with facts from an angle that has not been popular during