Posted on 08/26/2007 2:04:22 PM PDT by Dysart
AUSTIN --Although stories of der Cowboy and die Stinkkatze mayno longer get told in Texas, Germanic linguistics professor Hans Boas wants to make sure nobody forgets them.
Boas, an assistant professor at the University of Texas, is the founder and manager of the Texas German Preservation Project. Every month or so Boas ventures forth from his campus office in Austin to small towns like Boerne, Fredericksburg and Crawford to conduct interviews with the dwindling number of old-timers who speak the odd mixture of English and 19th-century German.
It's a dialect unique to the Lone Star State, and most of the 8,000 or so remaining speakers are in their 60s, 70s or 80s. Their numbers are expected to dwindle precipitously over the next few years, and Boas says that by 2040, the dialect will probably be gone.
And so die Stinkkatze -- the Texas German word for skunk -- and der Cowboy will become just a memory.
"The Texas German Dialect Project I started right after I got [to the University of Texas] in September 2001," Boas said. "The main reason was because no one else has been interested in Texas German from an academic point of view. But there are fewer and fewer speakers, and in 30 years it will be gone. I thought it would be a good idea to record the remaining speakers who are left."
Boas says he has interviewed more than 200 Texas German speakers and recorded more than 350 hours of the conversations. Interviewers are typically UT students who ask about childhood memories, games, social interactions -- anything, really, that will get Texas German speakers to provide a window into their lives.
'The culture's legacy'
Boas has preserved audio recordings of these interviews on an Internet database, which also includes video recordings and written text. Besides helping to preserve the dialect, the archive will allow further study of the linguistic features and grammar of Texas German. "It also is important to create a popular account of Texas German to share with local schools, preservation societies and museums -- the dialect is part of the culture's legacy, but it is rapidly eroding," Boas said.
Der Cowboy is Texas German for "cowboy" -- it's basically the English word spoken with a German accent. "Die Stinkkatz" literally means "stinky cat"; that is, it's the Texas German word for "skunk." Boas explains that because there were no skunks in their native country, German immigrants invented their own word.
The word "Luftschiff" is also unique to Texas German -- or at least, it's unique the way Texas German speakers use the term. During a vacation some years back in Germany, New Braunfels resident Bill Moltz used "Luftschiff" to describe his long flight across the Atlantic. For speakers of Texas German, "Luftschiff" means airplane.
But in modern German, "Luftschiff" means "airship." Texas Germans have been using the word since before the invention of the airplane and never updated it to reflect a post-Wright Brothers world.
"I remember people looked at us in Germany like we were nuts -- they said you flew here in a dirigible?" recalls Moltz, 68, still laughing about the incident. "But that's what happened. We use those terms."
Although fewer than 10,000 speakers remain, at one time as much as 20 percent of the Texas population may have spoken the language. Moltz said that many German settlers arrived in Galveston and spread out during the mid-1800s, and now a swath of German communities can be found running north and south down the middle of the state.
The immigrants settled in dozens of towns like Fredericksburg, New Braunfels and Boerne. At one time there were more than 150 German-language newspapers in Texas, and in many towns German was spoken almost exclusively.
Wars brought decline
But the dialect began to fade during World War I, Boas said.
"A little before World War I, there was a big nativist movement in the U.S. and [the idea] was that if you're in the United States, then you better speak English -- there just wasn't a lot of tolerance for people who speak differently," Boas explained.
He said there was another steep decline during World War II and that the last of the monolingual Texas German speakers are pretty much gone. Those who are left -- fifth-generation Texans like Moltz -- spoke the dialect as kids, but also speak English.
The Texas German Dialect Project has been funded through grants, although that funding expired at the end of last year, Boas said. He said it costs about $35,000 a year to maintain the program.
It also accepts contributions though a University of Texas endowment.
"Every time we lose a language, we lose a data set -- if researchers have more data, we can create and test theories about how language works more accurately," Boas said.
Texas German Dialect Project: www.tgdp.org
A different dialect
A sampling of unique Texas German words and their translations in European German and English:
Airplane
das Luftschiff -- Texas German
das Flugzeug -- European German
Blouse
die Taille -- Texas German
die Bluse -- European German
Car
die Car (pronounced Kaa) -- Texas German
das Auto (pronounced otto) -- European German
Little town
die kleine Stadt -- Texas German
das Dorf -- European German
Piano
das Piano -- Texas German
das Klavier -- European German
Truck (semi)
der grosse Truck -- Texas German
der Lastwagen -- European German
Skunk
die Stinkkatze -- Texas German
das Stinktier --European German
Squirrel
die Eichkatze --Texas German
das Eichhörnchen -- European German
Socks
die Strumpf --Texas German
die Sökchen -- European German
Source: Texas German Preservation Project
"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus
Thanks for the link, but it doesn’t work for me. Is the festival in the Hill Country?
Now, if someone could just teach people not to call it “New Brownsville.” Drives me nutzo.
My father is descended from a group of Germans who came from the Volga River in Russia in the late 1800s. In addition to English he spoke a dialect of German called Swabish. During WW II he was in high school and the feds came through and made all of the Roman Catholic nuns start teaching the kids in English. For the most part he had no accent but the kitchen “sink” was always called the “zink”.
Squirrel
die Eichkatze —Texas German
das Eichhörnchen — European German
Oarchskatzle - Bayern.
Oarchskaettzleschwarf - Austrian.
German changes every time you cross a hill. I had some ass tell me I can’t speak german, a few months ago, in Germany.
(I am a certified German Linguist)
How would one say, “it’s all Bush’s fault,” in German?
*Far a-cross the blue water
Lives an old German’s daughter,
By the banks of the old river Rhine ...
Where I loved her and left her,
But I can’t forget her -
I miss my pretty Fraulein.
Fraulein, Fraulein
Walk down by the river,
Each night when the stars start to shine.
By the same stars above you,
I swear that I love you ...
You are my pretty Fraulein.
In my moments of glory,
A face comes before me ...
The face of a girl I left behind.
I loved her and left her,
But I can’t forget her ...
I miss my pretty Fraulein.
Fraulein, Fraulein
Walk down by the river,
Each night when the stars start to shine.
By the same stars above you,
I swear that I love you
You are my pretty Fraulein ... *
“Der Bush is daran schuld.”
Achtung, the best of the wurst! I had a friend who got a ticket there for WWI. He was “walking while intoxicated” during Wurstfest. True story.
Landa Park is where I was talking the other day in a post about seeing enormous concrete picnic tables up in the tops of trees after a bad flood.
Where is Wurstfest? (The link doesn’t work)
One German restaurant I love to revisit is The Altdorf in Fredericksburg. I have the recipe for their hot potato salad...DELICIOUS~!!!
Have you tried Luchenbach too?
I spent a lot of time many years ago all through the little towns from about Bellville, New Ulm, La Grange, Fayetteville, and on west.
They still had (and may still have) turne vereins where people held dances on the weekends - whole families came, babies and great-grandparents - and the only music on the little country radio stations was polka music.
I also spent a lot of time in New Braunfels, Groene, Fredericksburg, Luckenbach, and points west. Stopping to eat the local sausage at every smokehouse we encountered, too. There’s a sausage for every German dialect, and then some!
“New Brownsville” lol.
Aka “New Braunfels,” named for the Duke of Braunfels who owned all the land between there and Houston (exaggerating a little here) a couple of hundred years ago. He started a lot of the settlements, bringing people over from the Old Country - I think he was Bavarian, but could be wrong about that.
http://www.oktoberfestinfbg.com/
It’s not long until Oktoberfest in Fredericksburg!
October 5 - 6 - 7
Even though I was born in Houston I’ve only been back in Texas(DFW area) for just over twelve years and I’ve never even visited the Hill Country so, no, I haven’t tried Luchenbach. I have much exploring to do someday when I have the opportunity.
I believe Castroville was their destination...
A German Prince brought his people with him, and founded New Braunfels. Is there a Braunfels region of Germany? On an interesting note, the Prince couldn’t take the weather and went home, and left the people here.
I’ve read that during WW1 and again in WW2 many Germans named Mueller changed their names to Miller due to harassment of Germans.
doesn’t anyone know that the only culture worth saving is hispanic. Germans? they’ve got to be kidding. sarc/
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