User talk:Bbookworm8262

German Americans and World War I
you did good jobs on Shermans in Minnesota and World War I, But in a single article covering the entire history of the German-American experience, we cannot allow so much space for discontinuous episodes in one state. You only mentioned attacks on Germans, and not the actual German response in terms of language use, adjusting schools and churches, enlisting the resisting the draft, and changing their voting behavior to vote against Democrats. I think you should try your hand at a new separate article on German-Americans across the country in World War I, You can include all the Minnesota material and here are some citations. I recommend:
 * 1) Child, Clifton J. “German-American Attempts to Prevent Exportation of Munitions.” The Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 12, no. 3. (December 1938): 351-368. in JSTOR
 * 2) Craig, Sarah M. "The Hun in the heartland: three Missouri German-American communities during the great war. Diss. 2015. online
 * 3) DeWitt, Petra. Degrees of Allegiance: Harassment and Loyalty in Missouri’s German American Community During World War I Ohio University Press, 2012.
 * 4) Detjen, David W. "The Germans in Missouri, 1900-1918: prohibition, neutrality, and assimilation." University of Missouri Press (MU) (1985).
 * 5) Divjak, Helen, and Lee Ann Potter. "Alien enemy registration during World War I.(Teaching with Documents)." Social Education 66.5 (2002): 263-269.
 * 6) Fischer, Gerhard. Enemy aliens: internment and the homefront experience in Australia, 1914-1920. Univ of Queensland Pr, 1989.
 * 7) Geldmacher, Achim. Die Deutschen in Ann Arbor: eine Studie über das Leben deutscher Einwanderer in den USA, 1810-1918. Vol. 11. Verlag Die Blaue Eule, 1993.
 * 8) Gibbs, Christopher C. The Great Silent Majority: Missouri’s Resistance to World War I  University Missouri Press, 1988.
 * 9) Hegi, Benjamin Paul.  “‘Old Time Good Germans’: German-Americans in Cooke County, Texas, during World War I.”  The Southwestern Historical Quarterly 109, no. 2 (October 2005): 234-257.
 * 10) Hofmeister, Rudolf A. The Germans of Chicago. Stipes Pub Llc, 1976.
 * 11) Kazal, Russell A. Becoming Old Stock: The Paradox of German-American Identity.  Princeton University Press, 2004.
 * 12) Keller, Phyllis. States of Belonging: German-American Intellectuals and the First World War. Harvard University Press, 1979.
 * 13) Lewis, Michael. "Access to saloons, wet voter turnout, and statewide prohibition referenda, 1907–1919." Social Science History 32.03 (2008): 373-404.
 * 14) Luebke, Frederick C. Bonds of Loyalty: German-Americans and World War I. Northern Illinois University Press, 1974  the single most important book
 * 15) McCaffery, Robert Paul. Islands of Deutschtum: German-Americans in Manchester, New Hampshire and Lawrence, Massachusetts, 1870-1942. (Peter Lang 1996.)
 * 16) Miller, Liesl K. "The Great War: Ethnic Conflict for Chicago's German-Americans." OAH Magazine of History 2.4 (1987): 46-52.
 * 17) Nagler, Jorg.  “Victims of the Home Front: Enemy Aliens in the United States during the First World War.”  In Minorities in Wartime: national and Racial Groupings in Europe, North America and Australia during the Two World Wars, edited by Panikas Panay, 191-215.  Oxford: Berg Publishers Ltd., 1993.
 * 18) Probst, George Theodore, and Eberhard Reichmann. The Germans in Indianapolis, 1840-1918. German-American Center & Indiana German Heritage Society, 1989.
 * 19) Tischauser, Leslie V.  The Burden of Ethnicity: The German Question in Chicago, 1914-1941 (1992):
 * 20) Tolzmann,  Don H. ed., German-Americans in the World Wars, 5 vols. (K.G. Saur, 1995–1998), ISBN 3-598-21530-4  vol. 1: The Anti-German Hysteria of World War One; vol. 2: The World War One Experience; vol. 3: Research on the German-American Experience of World War One.
 * 21) Wasserman, Ira M. "Prohibition and ethnocultural conflict: The Missouri Prohibition referendum of 1918." Social Science Quarterly 70.4 (1989): 886.
 * 22) Wittke, Carl.  “American Germans in Two World Wars.”  The Wisconsin Magazine of History 27, no. 1 (September 1943): 6-16.
 * 23) You can include Internment of German Americans. Good luck with it Rjensen (talk) 06:41, 15 December 2016 (UTC)