Abstract

Thus wrote Otto Dorner, a German schoolteacher at Essen, after a visit to the United States in 1928.1 Dorner was one of the hundreds of German travelers who came to the United States after the First World War to observe, to study, and to interpret a country whose entry into the lists against the Fatherland had profoundly shaken German complacency. Among the visitors the intellectuals predominated and a significant number were schoolteachers, many of whom came at the cost of considerable personal sacrifice.

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