German-language newspapers were founded, beer gardens sprang up in every neighborhood and German was taught in the public schools.
Later she would work for local German-language newspapers where she ultimately found a vehicle to her voice as a poet.
German continued to be widely spoken, and Cullmann himself was the publisher of a German-language newspaper.
From 1941 to 1945, she wrote a column for the German-language Jewish newspaper, Aufbau.
In 1868 he began working there for a German-language daily newspaper, the Westliche Post.
His first serious job was with a German-language newspaper in Pittsburgh.
The mostly working class population supported numerous German-language newspapers that had national as well as local distribution in the early 20th century.
Many German-language newspapers were forced to change to English, or to close.
It is not easy these days for a German-language newspaper to survive in New York.
Today there are eight German-language newspapers in the United States.