The Pennsylvania Dutch (perhaps more strictly Pennsylvania Deutsch or Pennsylvanian German) are descendants of German speaking immigrants who came to Pennsylvania in the early 1700s. Pennsylvania Dutch were historically speakers of the Pennsylvania German language. They are a people of various religious affiliations, often of Anabaptist origins, living primarily in southeastern Pennsylvania (but sometimes in adjacent states like Maryland and Virginia), with cultural traditions dating back to the German immigrations to America in the 17th and 18th centuries.
Despite the name, the people are not from the Netherlands, but rather are from various parts of southwest Germany, Alsace and Switzerland. The word "Dutch" here is left over from an archaic sense of the English word, which once referred to all people speaking a West Germanic language on the European mainland.
Mass emigration of Palatines began out of Germany. In the spring of 1709, Queen Anne had granted refuge to about 7,000 Palatines who had sailed the Rhine to Rotterdam. From here about 3,000 were sent to America either directly, or through England, bound for William Penn’s colony. The remaining refugees were sent to England to strengthen the Protestant presence in the county. By 1710, large groups of Palatines had sailed from London, the last group of which was bound for New York. There were 3,200 Palatines on 12 ships that sailed for New York and approximately 470 died en route to America. In New York, under the new Governor, Robert Hunter, Palatines worked for British authorities and produced tar and pitch for the Royal Navy in return for their safe passage. They also served as a buffer between the French and Natives on the frontier and the English colonies. In 1723, some 33 Palatine families, humiliated under Governor Hunter’s rule, migrated from Schoharie, NY, to Tupelhocken, Berks County, PA, where other Palatines has settled.
Pennsylvania culture | People from Pennsylvania | German diaspora | Ethnic groups in the United States | German American history
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"Pennsylvania Dutch".
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