Portrait of the Trump family, from left to right: Fred, Frederick, Elizabeth, Elizabeth Christ, and John, 1915 AD |
In the letter, Mr Trump described the moment he received the news from the High Royal State Ministry he had to leave as "a lightning strike from fair skies".
Mary Trump (Macleod), Donald J Trump and Fred Trump |
He said: "In this urgent situation I have no other recourse than to turn to our adored, noble, wise, and just sovereign lord, our exalted ruler His Royal Highness, highest of all, who has already dried so many tears, who has ruled so beneficially and justly and wisely and softly and is warmly and deeply loved, with the most humble request that the highest of all will himself in mercy deign to allow the applicant to stay in the most gracious Kingdom of Bavaria."
Friedrich Trump |
He left the country at the age of 16 with little possessions and went to the US in the hope of making fortune. He trained to become a barber and he went on to run a restaurant, bar and allegedly even a brothel and became a wealthy man. Despite his letter, Mr Trump was not allowed to stay in Bavaria and returned to New York, where he settled with his family. More than a 100 years later, his grandson, Donald Trump, imposed new immigration rules that would have kept his grandfather out of the US.
The Trump administration's hard-line immigration stance has also set precedent for the First Lady Melania Trump to be deported. Meanwhile, deportation raids in the US which are part of a crackdown by the Trump administration on all undocumented immigrants have led to a increase in arrests of immigrants who do not have criminal records. In the latest deportation sweep, immigration officers arrested 650 people in communities across the US over a four-day span in July. Among them, 520 had no criminal records. In June, President Trump reversed on his campaign promise to deport immigrants' children, known as "Dreamers", but their parents could still be sent back to their home countries.
Here is Friedrich Trump's letter in full, translated from German by Austen Hinkley: Most Serene, Most Powerful Prince Regent! Most Gracious Regent and Lord! I was born in Kallstadt on March 14, 1869. My parents were honest, plain, pious vineyard workers. They strictly held me to everything good — to diligence and piety, to regular attendance in school and church, to absolute obedience toward the high authority. After my confirmation, in 1882, I apprenticed to become a barber.
Kallstadt Germany Birthplace of the Trump Family |
I obtained American citizenship in 1892. In 1902 I met my current wife. Sadly, she could not tolerate the climate in New York, and I went with my dear family back to Kallstadt. The town was glad to have received a capable and productive citizen. My old mother was happy to see her son, her dear daughter-in-law, and her granddaughter around her; she knows now that I will take care of her in her old age.
But we were confronted all at once, as if by a lightning strike from fair skies, with the news that the High Royal State Ministry had decided that we must leave our residence in the Kingdom of Bavaria. We were paralyzed with fright; our happy family life was tarnished. My wife has been overcome by anxiety, and my lovely child has become sick. Why should we be deported? This is very, very hard for a family. What will our fellow citizens think if honest subjects are faced with such a decree — not to mention the great material losses it would incur. I would like to become a Bavarian citizen again.
In this urgent situation I have no other recourse than to turn to our adored, noble, wise, and just sovereign lord, our exalted ruler His Royal Highness, highest of all, who has already dried so many tears, who has ruled so beneficially and justly and wisely and softly and is warmly and deeply loved, with the most humble request that the highest of all will himself in mercy deign to allow the applicant to stay in the most gracious Kingdom of Bavaria. Your most humble and obedient, Friedrich Trump.
October 19, 1885 AD, the S.S. Eider approached Sandy Hook,
New Jersey, and the Narrows, twelve days after it had departed Bremen, Germany.
As the four-hundred-and-thirty-foot vessel navigated through New York Harbour,
it would have passed Bedloe’s Island, on the port side, where an enormous
pedestal was under construction. The Statue of Liberty was nearby, in crates,
not yet assembled. Like so much of America, she was a work in progress.
“Model of Block on Lower East Side,” from the Tenement House
Exhibition of 1900. According to the
exhibit text that accompanied the model, the thirty-nine tenement houses inside
this block—not the worst in the neighbourhood but merely “typical”—contained
six hundred and five apartments that housed twenty-seven hundred and eighty-one
people. There were only two hundred and sixty-four water closets, and not one
bath on the entire block. Only forty apartments had hot water.
In 1885, the same year that Friedrich Trump arrived, another
immigrant who had entered New York through Castle Garden, in June, 1870, was
wandering the same streets. The son of a Danish schoolteacher, Jacob Riis was
on his way to finding his own method of exposing overcrowding. In a couple of
years, he would discover a new technique of using magnesium to create flashes
of light for photographic purposes, making it possible to give the public a
glimpse of the dark basements that slum dwellers crowded into. Prowling the
streets just to the west of Forsyth, near the angle where Mulberry changed its
course, Riis documented an alley known as the Bandit’s Roost. Next blog 30/11/12