I have been trying to research on this subject with little success-there seems to be more about WW2 on-line
Is it true that German people in the UK would have been - if not arrested- then questioned?
If you were born in Germany but were described as a British national on a census , would any such suspicion fall on a person? One census actually says 'born Germany, Irish Parents' then 'Born Germany, British National' on another.
Or would you be allowed to carry on your trade and life as before? Reason for asking is one ancestor changed his name shortly before war broke out. But reverted to the original some years later.
Results 1 to 10 of 11
Thread: German people in UK WW1
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11-04-2013, 2:11 PM #1ellyjane70Guest
German people in UK WW1
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11-04-2013, 2:54 PM #2
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Have you looked at the National Archives research guide?
It can be found here
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11-04-2013, 2:54 PM #3
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I think that this link might help shed some light on the subject:
https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/p.../espionage.htm
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11-04-2013, 4:01 PM #4malcolm99Guest
This looks useful> https://www.
rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=112434.0
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11-04-2013, 5:50 PM #5ellyjane70Guest
all great links-thankyou
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12-04-2013, 6:26 AM #6lawsueGuest
When WW1 broke out in 1914 our German/Austrian ancestor had been in Australia since 1869. He then applied for naturalisation in August 1914 and was approved. He had fathered 7 sons in Australia, the last born in 1887 and I have wondered why none of the boys ever enlisted. I believe that it was because their father was a German national at the outbreak of war and they would have been turned down.
I also believe that had he not applied and received naturalisation that he would have been interned with some other 7000 German nationals in isolation in NSW.
Sue
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13-04-2013, 5:35 AM #7ellyjane70Guest
Sue, that's really interesting...we do have these riddles and if it's one person, we can say it could be a reserved occupation of disability, but that was quite some family of sons...you now have me wondering how WW1 affected places like Australia...I love research!! I know many people enlisted from Australia and Canada and such, but actually living there..I am now wondering. A local cemetery here has so many Canadian men who died during the last war, as do many cemetries of course but I always stop - and wonder if there was pressure on them or if they felt it was something they had to do.
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13-04-2013, 7:29 AM #8lawsueGuest
I have 2 goes at sending a reply to this post. I will try again later
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13-04-2013, 7:41 AM #9lawsueGuest
Ok lets have another go.
Hi ellyjane70,
Don't forget that back in WW1 we, over here were classed as British subjects so your troubles were ours.
My husband had 2 uncles (brothers) who lost their lives 2 days apart in 1917 in France.
My grandfather was wounded at Gallipoli on 4th May 1915, a disability that he carried for the rest of his life.
My great uncle was in the Light Horse and to return back home, he had to shoot his best friend, a horse that he raised from a foal.
We are commemorating ANZAC Day on the 25th April in remembrance of those that landed at Gallipoli on that day in 1915.
Please have a look at spirits-of-gallipoli.com with the www.
It is great insight into the loss of lives in that campaign.
Sue
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13-04-2013, 4:40 PM #10
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When I was a member of the Anglo-German FHS, several members had very sad stories of what had happened to their German ancestors in WW1 and there were articles in their magazine about the camp on the Isle of Man. There was a family in Liverpool whose shop was attacked and the children (who I think were born here) were permanently affected, my mother told me. Very sad, cicilysmith
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