Austrian Americans Explained
Group: | Austrian Americans Österreichamerikaner |
Population: | 646,438 (2019)[1] |
Popplace: | New York, California, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Florida, Illinois, Wisconsin, New Jersey, Connecticut, Kansas |
Langs: | German, American English |
Rels: | Roman Catholic, Protestant; Jewish and other minorities |
Related: | Dutch Americans German Americans Swiss Americans German diasporas |
Austrian Americans (pronounced as /de/) are Americans of Austrian descent, chiefly German-speaking Catholics and Jews. According to the 2000 U.S. census, there were 735,128 Americans of full or partial Austrian descent, accounting for 0.3% of the population. The states with the largest Austrian American populations are New York (93,083), California (84,959), Pennsylvania (58,002) (most of them in the Lehigh Valley), Florida (54,214), New Jersey (45,154), and Ohio (27,017).[2]
This may be an undercount since many German Americans, Czech Americans, Polish Americans, Slovak Americans, and Ukrainian Americans, and other Americans with Central European ancestry can trace their roots from the Habsburg territories of Austria, the Austrian Empire, or Cisleithania in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, regions which were major sources of immigrants to the United States before World War I, and whose inhabitants often assimilated into larger immigrant and ethnic communities throughout the United States.[3] [4]
Migration history
Early migrations
The Austrian migration to the U.S. probably started in 1734, when a group of 50 families from the city of Salzburg, Austria, migrated to the newly founded Georgia. Having a Protestant background, they migrated because of Catholic repression in their country.
Most of these newly immigrated Austrians were cosmopolitan and were left-wing. They found employment in Chicago stockyards and in Pennsylvania, in jobs related to cement and steel factories. Many of them, more than 35 percent, returned to Austria with the savings that they had made by their employment.
World War II & Post-War Migrations
In the late 1930s, more and more Austrians migrated to the United States, most of which were Jews fleeing the Nazi persecution that started with the Annexation of Austria in 1938. In 1941, some 29,000 Jewish Austrians had emigrated to the United States. Most of them were doctors, lawyers, architects and artists (such as composers, writers and stage/ film directors).[5] After WW II had ended, some further 40,000 Austrians emigrated to the United States (1945-1960).
Present day
Since the 1960s, however, Austrian immigration has been very small, mostly because Austria is now a developed nation, where poverty and political oppression are scarce. According to the 1990 U.S. census, 948,558 people identified their origins in Austria.[6] Most of the present-day immigrants who currently live in the United States who were born in Austria identify themselves as being of Austrian ancestry, but the percentage who identify themselves as being of German ancestry is larger than the one expected on the basis of the opinion polls in Austria. According to the United States Census Bureau, in 2015, there were 26,603 individuals living in the U.S. born in Austria who identified themselves as being of Austrian ancestry.[7] By contrast, in the same year, there were 6,200 individuals living in the U.S. born in Austria who identified themselves as being of German ancestry.[8] Most of the immigrants from South Tyrol in Italy to the United States identify themselves as being of German rather than Austrian ancestry. According to the United States Census Bureau, in 2015, there were 365 individuals living in the U.S. born in Italy who identified themselves as being of Austrian ancestry. By contrast, in the same year, there were 1040 individuals living in the U.S. born in Italy who identified themselves as being of German ancestry.
Assimilation
Austrian immigrants adapted quickly to American society because the Austro-Hungarian Empire had also been a melting pot of many cultures and languages. On the other hand, despite the rejection that Austrians feel toward the behavior of the Germans, regarded by Austrians as less tolerants and cosmopolitans, they have suffered the same damages and discrimination that German immigrants have faced in the United States. They were considered by Americans to be the same because of their language and both world wars.[6]
Religion
The emigration of other religious groups from Austria to the United States, especially the Jews from Vienna after 1938, has also contributed to strengthen religious variety in the United States.[6] [9] Isidor Bush (1822–98) emigrated from Vienna in 1849 and became a leading Jewish citizen of the city of St. Louis and the state of Missouri through his business ventures, religious work, and political activities. His vineyards were famous and profitable.[10]
Austrian-American communities in the United States
The U.S. communities with the highest percentage of self-professed Austrian Americans are:[11]
U.S. communities with the most residents born in Austria
The U.S. communities where born Austrians make up more than 1% of the total population are:[12]
- Hillside Lake, New York 1.4%
- Redway, California 1.3%
- Black Diamond, Florida 1.2%
- Smallwood, New York 1.2%
- Highland Beach, Florida 1.2%
- Cordova, Maryland 1.2%
- Keystone, Colorado 1.2%
- North Lynbrook, New York 1.1%
- Cedar Glen Lakes, New Jersey 1.1%
- Center City, Minnesota 1.1%
- Scotts Corners, New York 1.0%
- Killington, Vermont 1.0%
- Lexington, New York 1.0%
- Tuxedo Park, New York 1.0%
Notable people
Entertainment
- Woody Allen – (born Allan Stewart Konigsberg) actor, director, screenwriter, comedian, author, playwright, and musician[13] [14]
- Gabrielle Anwar – actress[15]
- Adele Astaire – dancer, actress, sister of Fred Astaire
- Fred Astaire – dancer, actor[16]
- Sean Astin – actor
- Bibi Besch – actress[17]
- Theodore Bikel – actor, singer, musician
- Peter Bogdanovich – director, writer, actor, producer, critic and film historian
- Hans Conried – actor
- Ricardo Cortez – silent film actor, of Austrian Jewish descent[18]
- Stanley Cortez – cinematographer
- Billy Crystal – actor, comedian
- Robert von Dassanowsky – academic, writer and film producer[19]
- Max Fleischer – animator
- Richard Fleischer – director, son of Max Fleischer
- Teri Garr – actress, comedian, dancer and voice artist[20]
- Jeff Goldblum – actor
- Alex Hafner – actor
- Mark Harmon – actor
- Kurt Kasznar – Austrian-born American actor
- Stanley Kubrick – director, producer, screenwriter
- Hedy Lamarr – actress, inventor, and producer; from an Austrian Jewish family[21]
- Elissa Landi – actress[22]
- Fritz Lang – director
- Peter Lorre – actor
- Joe Manganiello – actor, grandmother was of Austrian descent
- Samantha Mathis – actress, daughter of Bibi Besch
- Paul Muni – actor
- Arthur Murray – dancer, entrepreneur
- Natalie Portman – actress, born to a Jewish family, some of whom came from Austria
- Otto Preminger – director
- Leah Remini – actress, mother has Austrian Jewish descent[23] [24]
- Don Rickles – actor and comedian, of Jewish descent
- Fritzi Scheff – actress
- Joseph Schildkraut – actor
- Arnold Schwarzenegger – actor and 38th Governor of California[25]
- Patrick Schwarzenegger – actor, son of Arnold, brother of Katherine Schwarzenegger
- Harry Shearer – actor
- Lilia Skala – actress[26]
- Walter Slezak – actor[27]
- Eric Stonestreet – actor, original family name before World War I was Steingassner
- Edgar G. Ulmer – director
- Erich von Stroheim – director
- Josef von Sternberg – director
- Tessa Gräfin von Walderdorff – American socialite, writer, and actress who is a member of the Austrian noble family Walderdorff
- Billy Wilder – director, of Jewish descent[28]
- Shelley Winters – actress, of Jewish descent
- Elijah Wood – actor
- Fred Zinnemann – director
Science and medicine
- Godfrey Edward Arnold – medical doctor and researcher
- Bruno Bettelheim – child psychologist, psychoanalyst and concentration camp survivor
- Carl Djerassi – chemist, novelist, and playwright
- Kurt Gödel – logician, mathematician, philosopher
- Friedrich von Hayek – Austrian-born economist and philosopher
- Hans Holzer – paranormal researcher and author[29] [30]
- Heinz von Foerster – scientist combining physics and philosophy, originator of Second-order cybernetics
- Eric Kandel – neuroscientist
- Karl Landsteiner – biologist and physician, best known for having distinguished the main blood groups
- Ludwig Heinrich Edler von Mises – economist, philosopher, author and classical liberal
- Ignatz Leo Nascher – doctor and gerontologist
- Wilhelm Reich – psychiatrist[31]
- Wolfgang Pauli – physicist[32]
- Alfred Schütz – philosopher/sociologist[33]
- Joseph Warkany – pediatrician
- Paul Watzlawick – psychologist, communications theorist, and philosopher[34]
- Victor Frederick Weisskopf – physicist of Jewish descent. During World War II, he worked at Los Alamos on the Manhattan Project to develop the atomic bomb, and later campaigned against the proliferation of nuclear weapons; medal received in 1979[35]
Music
Arts & literature
Law and politics
Business and technology
Sports
Journalism
See also
Further reading
- Jones, J. Sydney. "Austrian Americans." Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 1, Gale, 2014), pp. 189–202. online
- Pochmann, Henry A. German Culture in America: Philosophical and Literary Influences 1600–1900 (1957). 890pp; comprehensive review of German influence on Americans esp 19th century. online
- Pochmann, Henry A. and Arthur R. Schult. Bibliography of German Culture in America to 1940 (2nd ed 1982); massive listing, but no annotations.
- Spaulding, E. Wilder. The Quiet Invaders: The Story of the Austrian Impact upon America (Vienna: Österreichische Bundesverlag, 1968).
- Thernstrom, Stephen, ed. Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups (1980) pp 164–170. Online free to borrow
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: 2019 American Community Survey - 1-Year Estimates - Table B04006. 14 March 2021. data.census.gov.
- https://archive.today/20200212212423/http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=DEC_00_110S_QTP13&prodType=table American Fact Finder
- Jones (2014)
- Spaulding, (1968)
- Book: Multicultural America: A Multimedia Encyclopedia. 307. 978-1-4522-7626-7 . Cortés . Carlos E. . August 15, 2013 . SAGE Publications .
- http://www.everyculture.com/multi/A-Br/Austrian-Americans.html Everyculture:Austrian-Americans
- Web site: Explore Census Data .
- Web site: Explore Census Data .
- Melissa Jane Taylor, "Family matters: the emigration of elderly Jews from Vienna to the United States, 1938-1941." Journal of Social History 45.1 (2011): 238-260. online
- Siegmar Muehl, "Isidor Bush and the Bushberg Vineyards of Jefferson County," Missouri Historical Review (1999) 94#1 pp 42-58.
- Web site: Ancestry Map of Austrian Communities . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20080708222904/http://www.epodunk.com/ancestry/Austrian.html . 8 July 2008 . 2008-08-13 . Epodunk.com.
- Web site: Top 101 cities with the most residents born in Austria (population 500+) . 2008-08-13 . city-data.com.
- Book: Baxter, John. John Baxter (author). 1998. Woody Allen: A Biography. New York. Carroll & Graf. 11. 978-0786708079.
- Book: Encyclopedia of American Jewish history – Stephen Harlan Norwood, Eunice G. Pollack – Google Books . July 24, 2013. 9781851096381 . Norwood . Stephen Harlan . Pollack . Eunice G. . 2008 . Bloomsbury Academic .
- News: It's a Jungle Out There. The State. 6 October 1990. 22 October 2010.
- http://btobsearch.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbninquiry.asp?z=y&btob=Y&pwb=1&ean=9780743225397
- http://www.probertencyclopaedia.com/cgi-bin/res.pl?keyword=Bibi+Besch&offset=0
- http://movies2.nytimes.com/gst/movies/filmography.html?p_id=15158
- http://www.uccs.edu/~ur/media/mediawatch/view_article.php?y=mediawatch_articles&article_id=15278
- By Teri Garr, Henriette Mantel
- http://britneyspears.ac/physics/intro/hedy.htm
- http://elissa.org/landi.shtml
- News: Brady . James . October 26, 2003 . Leah Remini (TV and film actress) . . https://web.archive.org/web/20100323000030/http://www.parade.com/articles/editions/2003/edition_10-26-2003/in_step_with_0 . March 23, 2010.
- Book: Remini . Leah . Troublemaker: Surviving Hollywood and Scientology . Troublemaker: Surviving Hollywood and Scientology . Paley . Rebecca . Ballantine Books . 2015 . 978-1-2500-9693-7 . 4.
- http://www.schwarzenegger.it/mro/schwarzenegger.html
- https://movies.yahoo.com/movie/contributor/1800046364/bio
- http://www.members.tripod.com/erika_slezak/ESFC/losttouch.htm
- http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/apr2002/wild-a03.shtml
- https://books.google.com/books?id=L25ycEzuXxIC&dq=Martha+Stransky+Leo+Holzer&pg=PA942 Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature Vol 2, Volume 2
- Web site: Hans Holzer . 2009-06-17 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20230427091210/https://www.theguardian.com/global/2009/jun/18/obituary-hans-holzer . 2023-04-27 . live .
- http://www.orgonelab.org/wrhistory.htm
- http://www.nobel-winners.com/Physics/wolfgang_pauli.html Wolfgang Pauli
- http://rss.sagepub.com/cgi/content/short/16/1/45 Alfred schutz, Austrian Economists and the Knowledge Problem - Knudsen 16 (1): 45 - Rationality and Society
- Wendel . Ray A. . 2007 . In Honor Of Paul Watzlawick . Journal of Marital & Family Therapy . 33.3 (2007) . 293–294.
- http://www.nap.edu/readingroom/books/biomems/vweisskopf.html
- http://www.powells.com/biblio?isbn=0714831557
- Book: Rudhyar, Dane . The Magic of Tone and the Art of Music . Shambhala Publications, Inc. . 1982.
- Web site: Insight on the News: Painting for Posterity - comments on the portraits of former presidents - Brief Article . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20041109001625/http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1571/is_13_15/ai_54359965 . 2004-11-09 . 2006-05-17. "sat for Austrian native Greta Kempton five times in 1947..."
- Web site: Joseph Keppler . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080122133700/http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/ARTkeppler.htm . 2008-01-22 . 2008-01-24. "Joseph Keppler was born in Vienna, Austria, on 1st February, 1838."
- Web site: MacDonald . Kerri . 2016 . A Peek Into Vivian Maier's Family Album . April 6, 2018 . Lens Blog . en-US.
- http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=E000111
- https://archive.today/20130118111253/http://wwwa.britannica.com/eb/article-9045034
- Web site: National Building Museum: Windshield: Richard Neutra's House for the John Nicholas Brown Family . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20060424054657/http://www.nbm.org/Exhibits/current/Neutra.html . 2006-04-24 . 2006-05-17. "Austrian-American modernist architect Richard Neutra."
- Obituary of Schuschnigg in The Times, London, 19 November 1977
- Web site: WolfgangPuck.com:Company . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20060912141426/http://www.wolfgangpuck.com/company/bio.php?id=11 . 2006-09-12 . 2006-08-31. "The Austrian-born Puck began..."; WolfgangPuck.com (2005); retrieved 2006-08-31