1838 SANGERVEREIN SONG CLUB MEERANE SAXONY GERMANY DEUTSCHES VOLK SILVER MEDAL






GREETINGS, FEEL FREE

TO

"SHOP NAKED."©

  

 

We deal in items we believe others will enjoy and want to purchase.

 We are not experts.

We welcome any comments, questions, or concerns.

WE ARE TARGETING A GLOBAL MARKET PLACE.

Thanks in advance for your patronage.


 

Please Be sure to add WDG to your favorites list!



 


 

NOW FOR YOUR VIEWING PLEASURE…

 

 

 

 

SANGERVEREIN MEERANE

GEGR. 1838

FUR 25 JAHRIGE

TREUE

DIENSTE

 

DUETSCHES VOLK

DEUTSCHES LIED

DASS DICH EWIG

GOTTBEHUT

 


LOOSLEY TRANSLATED: 

SINGER CLUB MEERANE
Founded. 1838
FOR 25 jahrige FAITHFUL SERVICE

GERMAN PEOPLE
GERMAN SONG
THAT YOU FOREVER
GOD BE HAT


26mm MEDAL / AWARD

FROM MEERANE, A TOWN IN THE ZWICKAU DISTRICT OF SAXONY, GERMANY. IT LIES MIDWAY BETWEEN THE TOWNS OF ALTENBURG & ZWICKAU, WEST OF CHEMNITZ.

 

 

 

----------------------------------------------

FYI



Sangerfest, also Sangerbund-Fest, Sangerfeste, or Saengerfest, meaning singer festival, is a competition of Sangerbunds, or singer groups, with prizes for the best group or groups. Such public events are also known as a Liederfest, or song festival. Participants number in the hundreds and thousands, and the fest is usually accompanied by a parade and other celebratory events. The sangerfest is most associated with the Germanic culture. Its origins can be traced back to 19th century Europe. Swiss composer Hans Georg Nageli and educator Carl August Zeller, both proteges of Swiss educator Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi, established sangerbunds to help foster social change throughout Germany and Prussia. University students began to choose the art form as an avenue for political statements. As the sangerfest concept gained popularity and spread around the world, it was adapted by Christian churches for spiritual worship services. European immigrants brought the tradition in a non-political form to the North American continent. In the early part of the 20th century, sangerfest celebrations drew devotees in the tens of thousands, and included some United States presidents among their audiences. Sangerbunds are still active in Europe and in American communities with Germanic heritage.

Students of Swiss educator Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi, a proponent of social reform, applied his teachings when founding some singing groups as an instrument for cultural change. One of his students was Carl August Zeller, who helped establish the sangerbund movement throughout Prussia in 1809. Pestalozzi's protege Hans Georg Nageli was a composer, music teacher and songbook publisher who made numerous journeys across Germany from 1819 to encourage the formation of male singing groups for social reform. Nageli established several sangerbunds in Switzerland, which became the inspiration for the 1824 establishment of the Stuttgarter Liederkranz. Following the 1819 Carlsbad Decrees in Germany, male-only choral celebrations with hundreds or thousands of vocalists were popular with the masses and often part of political events.

Composer Friedrich Silcher was directly influenced by Pestalozzi and Nageli. He began using large choirs to express political viewpoints at least as early as 1824 when he and a group of Tübingen University students performed La Marseillaise to commemorate the storming of the Bastille. In 1827 at Plochingen, Baden-Württemberg, several male-voiced choirs combined for a regional liederfest. Sangerfests were part of the Hambach Festival of 1832.

Christian church organizations known as Christlicher sangerbunds adapted the sangerfest for religious gatherings and helped spread its popularity throughout Europe, North America and Australia. They became popular in late 19th century Russia among Mennonite congregations. On 30 May 1893, a sangerfest of seven choirs was held in Rückenau in Molotschna, Ukraine. On Sunday, 29 May 1894, the all-day Russische Saengervereinigung was held in Rückenau under the direction of Polish conductor Friedrich Schweige with assistance from Aron Gerhard Sawatsky, director of the Andreasfeld Mennonite Brethren Church. Beginning on 3 May, Schweiger traveled across Russia rehearsing choirs. On 29 May there were breakfasts for attendees, an estimated 50 vocal presentations by individual choirs, prayer services and sermons, lunch for 2,000 people and afternoon snacks.

North America
Mennonites established the northwest Philadelphia section of Germantown in 1683. The Philadelphia Mannerchor founded by German immigrant Phillip Matthias Wohlseiffer in 1835 was the first German-American singing society organized in the United States where the sangerfest began to evolve as a form of civic entertainment. In 1836, Wohlseiffer founded the Baltimore Liederkranz, which became the first to accept women members (1838). In 1846, the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania group and the Baltimore, Maryland group performed together at a public sangerfest. The "Brooklyn Daily Eagle Almanac" of 1891 listed numerous sangerbunds in the Brooklyn, New York area. On 21 June 1901, the Nord-Amerikanischer Sangerbund presented a sangerfest in Buffalo, New York at the famous Pan-American Exposition (where 25th President William McKinley was shot by Leon Czolgosz in a reception line in September 1901). A group in Buffalo hoped to help pay the expenses of the fest by forming the Buffalo Sangerfest Company, selling 1,600 shares of stock at $25 each.

In 1838, the Cincinnati Deustcher Gesangverein was formed in Ohio, followed by the Cincinnati Deutsch Liedertafel in 1844. The Gesang und Bildungsverein Deutscher Arbeiter formed in 1846 and was the first Cincinnati group that allowed women. Groups from Ohio, Kentucky, Maryland and Indiana created the Nord-Amerikanischer Sangerbund in 1849 for a sangerfest hosted by Cincinnati, featuring the music of German composers. By 1908, it was estimated that 250,000 German Americans belonged to musical organizations, and 50,000 of those belonged to the Nord-Amerikanischer Sangerbund. The first post-Civil War sangerfest in Columbus, Ohio took place 29 August – 1 September 1865 at Schreiner's Hall and the Opera House. Each arriving sangerbund was escorted to the hall by the Eighteenth regiment of the United States Infantry. There were an estimated 400 singers entertaining 12,000 to 15,000 attendees. The closing day was celebrated with pomp and circumstance.

The first sangerfest in Texas was held in 1853 in New Braunfels, and was held annually until 1860 when conflicting loyalties about, and participation in, the American Civil War caused a 10-year gap in the events. The San Antonio Mannergesang-Verein was formed in 1847, the New Braunfels Gesangverein Germania formed in 1850, and the Austin Mannerchor formed in 1852. On 4 July 1853 in San Antonio, the San Antonio Mannergesang-Verein sponsored an Independence Day celebration attended by the New Braunfels Gesangverein and the Austin Mannerchor. The New Braunfels Gesangverein invited everyone to meet in New Braunfels on 16–17 October 1853 for its first Texas Sangerfest. In 1854, the aggregate sangerbunds formed the Texas State Sangerbund. The San Antonio Beethoven Mannerchor was organized in 1867 by Wilhelm Thielepape, assistant conductor of the San Antonio Mannergesang-Verein. After the surrender of the Confederacy in 1865, Thielepape raised the Union flag of the "Stars and Stripes" over the historic Texan battle site and former church mission, the Alamo in San Antonio and distributed wine and songbooks. The all-male Houston Sangerbund was founded on 6 October 1883 and chartered in 1890. It affiliated itself with Der Deutsch-Texanische Sangerbund. In 1887, founding member Carl C. Zeus served as principal of the organization's German-English school.

22nd and 24th President Grover Cleveland, his wife, and guests took a special train from Washington, D.C. on "Independence Day", 4 July 1888, forty miles northeast to see a Baltimore event. Cleveland had friends who were members of the sangerbunds. 27th President William Howard Taft attended the 1 July 1912 event in Philadelphia. On 15 June 1903, 26th President Theodore Roosevelt and Ambassador Herman Speck von Sternberg attended a sangerfest of 6,000 individual singers at Baltimore's Armory Hall. All 9,000 seats were sold out. President Roosevelt delivered an address praising the German culture and the sangerfest tradition. The Northeastern Sangerbund presented selections by composers Herman Spielter, David Melamet, Carl Friedrich Zollner, E.S. Engelsberg, Felix Mendelssohn and Richard Wagner.

When Newark, New Jersey, hosted the 21st National Sangerfest, held on 1–4 July 1906 in Olympic Park, 25,000 people showed up to hear the music, many arriving on chartered trains. Only a few thousand were able to get into the hall, and 2,000 were standing. Five thousand singers from more than a hundred sangerbunds representing forty cities from New Jersey, New York, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Delaware competed for a $20,000 prize offered by Kaiser Wilhelm II. Park vendors offered souvenirs, refreshments, games, and a carousel.

Germans began emigrating to Canada through Nova Scotia, where they helped found the town of Lunenburg in 1753. The sangerfests were first performed in Kitchener, Ontario, in 1862. The community events included the standard concerts and meals, with drama presentations and athletic entertainment sponsored by the local Turnvereine clubs. For the next 40 years, sangerbunds and sangerfests spread throughout Ontario.[48] Pennsylvania Mennonites began settling in Ontario in the late 19th century. Alberta and Saskatchewan host annual Mennonite sangerfestes.

In 1916 at his sentencing for bigamy, Count Max Lymer Louden related another misdeed from his past. Louden claimed he had been hired by a group of wealthy German Americans with a secret fund of $16,000,000 to take 150,000 German reservists, disguised as sangerbunds, across the Canada–United States border for a coup d'etat of Canada, on behalf of Kaiser Wilhelm II. If they drew suspicion, they were prepared to "sing at a moment's notice." It was his loyalty to America, he claimed, which caused him to desert the Kaiser's singing invasion force.

 

 

(THIS PICTURE FOR DISPLAY ONLY)


---------------------------




Thanks for choosing this sale. You may email for alternate payment arrangements. We combine shipping. Please pay promptly after the auction. The item will be shipped upon receipt of funds.  Also, INTERNATIONAL CUSTOMS is the international buyers obligation and must be aware of their own customs laws. We cannot be responsible for seized or quarantine purchases. If your shipping costs seems high, it is because we ensure that your purchase is well packed, quickly delivered, and insured to arrive safe and sound.  WE ARE GOING GREEN, SO WE DO SOMETIMES USE CLEAN RECYCLED MATERIALS TO SHIP. 

Please leave feedback when you have received the item and are satisfied. Please respond when you have received the item * If you were pleased with this transaction, please respond with all 5 stars! If you are not pleased, let us know via e-mail. Our goal is for 5-star service. We want you to be a satisfied, return customer.

Please express any concerns or questions. More pictures are available upon request. The winning bid will incur the cost of S/H INSURED FEDEX OR USPS. See rate calculator or email FOR ESTIMATE. International Bidders are Welcome but be mindful if your country is excluded from safe shipping.





 

 Thanks for perusing THIS and ALL our auctions.


Please Check out our other items!


 

WE like the curious and odd.

 




BUY, BYE!!


I