The Good Forest: The Salzburgers, Success, and the Plan for Georgia
By Karen Auman and James F. Brooks
()
About this ebook
Georgia, the last of Britain’s American mainland colonies, began with high aspirations to create a morally sound society based on small family farms with no enslaved workers. But those goals were not realized, and Georgia became a slave plantation society, following the Carolina model. This trajectory of failure is well known. But looking at the Salzburgers, who emigrated from Europe as part of the original plan, providesa very different story.
The Good Forest reveals the experiences of the Salzburger migrants who came to Georgia with the support of British and German philanthropy, where they achieved self-sufficiency in the Ebenezer settlement while following the Trustees’ plans. Because their settlement compriseda significant portion of Georgia’s early population, their experiences provide a corrective to our understanding of early Georgia and help reveal the possibilities in Atlantic colonization as they built a cohesive community.
The relative success of the Ebenezer settlement, furthermore, challenges the inherent environmental, cultural, and economic determinism that has dominated Georgia history. That well-worn narrative often implies (or even explicitly states) that only a slave-based plantation economy—as implemented after the Trustee era—could succeed. With this history, Auman illuminates the interwoven themes of Atlantic migrations, colonization, charity, and transatlantic religious networks.
Karen Auman
KAREN AUMAN is an assistant professor of history at Brigham Young University. She has published her research in Early American Studies. She is also a certified genealogist.
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The Good Forest - Karen Auman
The Good Forest
CARL & SALLY GABLE FUND
for Southern Colonial American History
ADVISORY BOARD
Vincent Brown, Duke University
Cornelia Hughes Dayton, University of Connecticut
Nicole Eustace, New York University
Amy S. Greenberg, Pennsylvania State University
Ramón A. Gutiérrez, University of Chicago
Peter Charles Hoffer, University of Georgia
Karen Ordahl Kupperman, New York University
Mark M. Smith, University of South Carolina
Rosemarie Zagarri, George Mason University
The Good Forest
The Salzburgers, Success, and the Plan for Georgia
KAREN AUMAN
The University of Georgia Press
ATHENS
Published in part with generous support from the
Carl and Sally Gable Fund for Southern Colonial American History
© 2024 by the University of Georgia Press
Athens, Georgia 30602
www.ugapress.org
All rights reserved
Set in 10.5/13.5 Adobe Caslon Pro Regular
by Kaelin Chappell Broaddus
Most University of Georgia Press titles are available from popular e-book vendors.
Printed digitally
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Auman, Karen, author.
Title: The good forest : the Salzburgers, success, and the plan for Georgia / Karen Auman.
Other titles: Early American places.
Description: Athens : University of Georgia Press, [2024] |
Series: Early American places | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2023039681 | ISBN 9780820366104 (hardback) | ISBN 9780820366098 (paperback) | ISBN 9780820366111 (EPUB) | ISBN 9780820366128 (PDF)
Subjects: LCSH: Salzburgers—Georgia—Ebenezer (Effingham County) | Salzburgers—Georgia—Ebenezer (Effingham County)—Politics and government. | German Americans—Georgia—Ebenezer (Effingham County)—History—18th century. | Yuchi Indians—Georgia—Ebenezer (Effingham County) | Creek Indians—Georgia—Ebenezer (Effingham County) | Slavery—Georgia—Ebenezer (Effingham County)—History—18th century. | Ebenezer (Effingham County, Ga.)—Race relations—History—18th century.
Classification: LCC F295.S1 A96 2024 | DDC 975.8/72200431073—dc23/eng/20231213
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2023039681
For my mother Elaine and late father Bill, and for my whole family.
CONTENTS
FOREWORD, BY JAMES F. BROOKS
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 1. Exile
CHAPTER 2. The Georgia Trustees
CHAPTER 3. Protestant Philanthropists
CHAPTER 4. The Good Forest
CHAPTER 5. Subjects
CHAPTER 6. Community
CHAPTER 7. A Moral Economy
CHAPTER 8. Neighbors
EPILOGUE
NOTES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
FOREWORD
At the peak of his career as the preeminent historian of the American frontier, Frederick Jackson Turner turned to the regional specifics of those dynamics that he believed explained American development.
Georgia occupied a particular place in his thinking: What Maine was to the New England states, Georgia was to the southern seaboard, with the difference that it was deeply touched by influences characteristically Western. Because of the traits of her leaders and the rude aggressive policies of her people, Georgia belonged as much to the West as to the South. From colonial times the Georgia settlers had been engaged in an almost incessant struggle against the savages on her border, and had the instincts of a frontier society.
¹
A long view of the state’s history lends substantial support to his claim. Yet that distant aspect neglects to recognize that the colony, if not the state, came into being around high principles unusual for the time, however much it also served as a defensive buffer to Spanish Florida. The fact that the founding Trustees sought to settle England’s increasingly landless and desperate poor on free
lands that would allow them to pursue the independence associated with yeoman farmers is well known, both in principle and in its rapid dissolution. So, too, the short-lived ban on enslavement. Less appreciated, and perhaps more instructive as a case of high intentions gone unremarked, is that of the Ebenezer colony.
Karen Auman’s The Good Forest: The Salzburgers, Success, and the Plan for Georgia tells a different story of the state, at least across its early decades. The forty-five German Lutherans who arrived on the coast in 1734 were a different sort of desperate than the 114 English whom Oglethorpe had disembarked near what would become Savannah in the winter of 1733. Persecuted for their Protestant faith in Catholic Salzburg, the Georgia Trustees’ promise of fifty-acre freeholds by which to pursue competency seemed biblical in promise. Much more than their English neighbors, the Salzburger colonists embraced to the colony’s founding principles and proved themselves worthy.
The swiftness with which the Trustees’ humanitarian vision gave way to the South Carolina
model of intensive slave-based monocropping (rice, then cotton) and competitive emulation of that colony’s cynical Indian policies, forged in the deer hide and Indian slave trade, Auman argues, discredits both the presence and the principles that defined the Salzburger settlements. In fact, Auman suggests that the successes of the Salzburger colonists in establishing farms, towns, mills, and even an orphanage, as well as what is now the oldest (European) remaining house of worship in the state puts the lie to our widespread assumption that climate and environment made anything but a slave-based plantation society impossible.
Auman’s graceful prose and compelling argumentation suggest a very different, if unrealized, narrative of early Georgia. Pious, self-sufficient, industrious, and less arrogant in their Indian policy than their English neighbors, under the leadership of pastor Johann Martin Boltzius, Ebenezer colony’s founding exiles offer a different origin story than the failure narrative associated with their English neighbors. That they hewed to their Lutheran principles even in the face of slavery’s capacity to produce wealth, just across the Savannah River, attests to their general character. Even the title Auman employs, The Good Forest, surprises the reader with the Salzburgers’ capacity to see what Puritans were then calling the wilderness
as a place perhaps perilous but also capable of challenge, communion, and spiritual growth.
The Salzburgers also seem to have respected Indigenous culture and boundaries more than their English neighbors. The Yuchi, living north of the original colony on the west bank of the Savannah River, served as guides when the good forest
became refuge for wandering livestock. Living in close proximity to Yuchis and Muskogees, the colonists sometimes practiced the kind of intimate interpersonal frontier diplomacy with which more famous figures like Oglethorpe, Tomochichi, and Mary Musgrove are associated. Yet Salzburgers would grow wary of their Indigenous neighbors as tensions between the colony and the backcountry intensified, especially as Savannah granted Yuchi lands for expanding colonial footprints, and in time turned away from missionary work toward Christian conversion.
After the failure of the Trustee’s original vision and success of the Malcontents
in forcing the legalization of slavery into the colony’s economy, the Salzburger colony wrestled with its conscience—and lost. Allowing the enslavement of fellow human beings seems beyond Christian conscience today, but Pastor Boltzius accommodated the practice with the provision that enslavers must be limited to no more than four enslaved people, must baptize them, and must treat them as Christian brethren.
That the Salzburger experiment with colonization, however much shaped by Christian principles, would founder in time on the shoals of American slavery, will surprise no one. But Karen Auman’s insightful and sensitive book deepens our understanding of the promise lost in those early decades and our appreciation for the richness of early Georgia history. I am delighted to add the Gable Endowment name to this fine book.
James F. Brooks
Gable Chair in Early American History
University of Georgia
The Good Forest
INTRODUCTION
The first Salzburgers stepped off their boats and onto the Georgia shore on March 12, 1734. ¹ They had first spotted land five days earlier, a sight so wonderful after eight weeks of difficult sailing that the group of German Lutherans broke into the hymn Lord God We Praise Thee!
² The winds, tides, and a sandbar kept the people on the ship for a few days after seeing land, but when they could finally begin to disembark they were greeted by a shout of joy and the firing of several cannon from nearly all the people of Savannah. ³ As they reached the ground along the shores of the Savannah River, the Salzburgers found the American landscape beautiful and began the difficult venture of establishing a new town in the Georgia forest.
Their trip across the Atlantic from England had taken two months, but really their journey began much earlier, in the alpine valleys south of the city of Salzburg. There, living as Protestants, they were expelled by their prince archbishop ruler by a November 1731 decree that required all who were not Roman Catholic to leave their homeland. With uncertain futures, the Salzburger refugees had walked to towns in Saxony and Bavaria, seeking aid and hoping for a permanent place to stay. Those Salzburgers who settled in the American South migrated because they were swayed by the Georgia Trustees’ promise of free transport, land, and provisions to the refugees. While most exiled Salzburgers remained in German lands, a few risked all to settle in America in a new society on the southern fringe of the British mainland colonies. After the initial group, another six transports of Georgia Salzburgers and other Germans migrated to America and together established a series of settlements along the Savannah River.
The new British American colony was chartered in 1732 as a charity run by the Trustees for the Establishment of the Colony of Georgia in America, commonly known as the Georgia Trustees. These men strove to create a new kind of colony, and a new kind of society, in the American Lowcountry. Their plan was for a colony of fifty-acre family farms, without slavery, that would provide a new beginning for Britain’s worthy poor and the persecuted Protestants of Europe. The Salzburgers’ shared experience of being forcibly removed from their homes for the sake of the Protestant religion convinced the Trustees that these refugees were the sort of people they had in mind when they pictured helping the worthy poor. The religious overtones of sending an exiled people to the American wilderness to be saved fit neatly with the Salzburgers’ background. The Georgian forest would save them, physically and spiritually.
Although many Georgia Salzburgers died within the first few years of arriving, by the early 1740s the German settlements were on firm footing and growing. By the end of Trustee rule in 1752 the Salzburgers, settling along the Savannah River, had built three towns, three churches, a gristmill, sawmills (for the lumber market), and an orphanage. They had cleared the forest to create farms that went on for miles
around their main town Ebenezer, successfully feeding themselves by the late 1730s; they were also the largest producers of silk in Georgia.⁴ Salzburger settlements radiated north and south from Ebenezer, forming a German zone along the river beginning about twenty miles upstream from the town of Savannah. Though never wealthy, the Salzburgers—and the other Germans who settled with them—were the Trustees’ success story.
During the Trustee period, the Salzburgers’ town of Ebenezer was the second largest in the colony after Savannah and probably the largest in 1752 at the end of the Trustee period, though it is very difficult to estimate population in early Georgia. Although we have good ship manifests for the colonists sent by the Trustees, including the Salzburgers and other Germans, we do not have thorough records of births, deaths, marriages, and departures in early Georgia. There are reports and estimates of numbers given by some Trustees as well as by those who were unhappy with Trustee rule. Each, obviously, had motives for over- or understating the population size as they argued about the success of the colony. Estimates of the Georgia population in 1750 are between 2,900 and 5,000; the Salzburgers composed three congregations, which supports estimates of between 1,200 and 1,500 residents and makes this self-sustaining community of Lutherans about one-third to one-half of the total Georgia population in the early 1750s.⁵
The early history of Georgia is often characterized as one of failure, with the Trustees painted as too idealistic, trying to establish a sort of small farm utopia through the strong arm of paternalism. The Salzburgers’ experience should cause us to reconsider efforts to paint Georgia with a broad brush of failure and force us to entertain a more nuanced understanding of the colonial period.
Saying that the Salzburger story matters is not to say that the Georgia Trustees’ project was an unquestioned and glorious success. There were serious failures in Georgia by the Trustees, and by all accounts large numbers of English-speaking settlers voted with their feet and left the colony. A group of disaffected colonists, known as the Malcontents, challenged the Trustees to change their rules in a bid to make Georgia more like neighboring South Carolina. That group eventually won the battle in Parliament and in British public opinion, causing the funding for the Trustees’ experiment to dry up. In America, the Georgia Salzburgers were perhaps the only settlers who worked to fully implement the Trustees’ plans, and they were the Trustees’ bright hope and evidence that the Trustees’ ideas could work. The Salzburgers needed the support of the Trustees to advance their settlement, and the Trustees promoted the success of the Salzburgers in marketing their plan for Georgia. Despite Salzburger success, the Malcontents’ message dominated, and support for the Trustees’ plans dwindled. The Georgia Trustees met for the last time in June 1752, when they defaced their official seal; Georgia entered a new era as a royal colony.⁶
Because the Malcontents won the dispute, the long-standing standard narrative for colonial Georgia emerged in which the Trustee years (1732–1752) were a failure, with success achieved only after the territory became a royal colony that operated with plantation slavery. The theme of Trustee failure has been used as the framing device for understanding events in colonial Georgia on a wide range of topics, sometimes explicitly invoked and other times implied.⁷ Many of the best-known histories of Georgia adopt the failure model for understanding important matters such as the introduction of slavery, colonial economics, and the role of British imperial rivalries, each accepting the assumption that it was ridiculous from the start to think of founding a colony in the Lowcountry region that did not include slavery.⁸ In doing so, these histories accept the Malcontents’ main arguments that only a slave-based plantation society could prosper in the American Southeast.
While the adoption of slavery in 1750 and the rapid Carolinization
of Georgia after 1752 into a plantation economy is an important part of the colony’s story, the historiographic model carries with it an implication that only a slave society was feasible in the Lowcountry. It is true that Georgia struggled economically under Trustee rule and then blossomed after slavery was allowed. This is largely because after 1752 settlers eager to form large plantations poured in from South Carolina and brought enslaved Africans to create the large Lowcountry zone, economically and socially similar to other plantation societies in the Chesapeake and Caribbean. Yet to fully accept the idea that because a slave-based society thrived in post-Trustee Georgia meant it was necessarily the only way to succeed is to accept a sort of environmental determinism. The notion hearkens to the racist idea that only people of African descent could work in the hot, humid Georgia climate, an idea current at the time (and seen in the Malcontents’ arguments) and that sadly has persisted throughout much of U.S. history. The Salzburgers actively pushed back against that idea, noting that they, Europeans, worked their own fields and fed themselves.
Further, the framing that Georgia failed under the Trustees and was a success only after the introduction of slavery belies an unspoken assumption that economic systems were the primary motors of change within the colony. While economics are an important part of understanding the social systems of any British colony, the Salzburgers and the Trustees were also concerned with the moral character of the settlement.
More recent work on early Georgia by Noeleen McIlvenna refreshingly moves away from the success-failure ties to slavery, arguing that class struggles were the important change agents. In this analysis, the worthy poor
would not submit to wealthier colonists and also Trustee domination. They simply would not conform to Trustees’ plans for them to labor on small farms.⁹ This rejection of a servile stance by the poor led the wealthy to more actively demand the right to use the labor of enslaved Africans.¹⁰ Yet, unlike the English-speaking settlers convincingly analyzed by McIlvenna, the Salzburgers did mostly conform to the Trustee plans. Because the Salzburgers were helped by philanthropists in Germany and England who were allied with the Trustees, the Germans actively worked to follow the colony’s rules, such as to encourage continued charitable support from the philanthropic elites.
The Salzburgers left many records from Colonial Georgia, so they appear frequently in historical works but often in quotes about conditions and less often as figures of analysis. Part of the reason for this is that the Salzburgers preferred to deal with the Trustees and other Protestant philanthropic sponsors rather than be involved in local debates directly. Ebenezer’s geographic position and the presence of the Salzburgers figure in histories of Georgia’s Indian relations.¹¹ Additionally, Salzburger pastor Johann Martin Boltzius had direct interactions with important religious figures who passed through colonial Georgia. His influence as part of the history of evangelists George Whitefield and John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, has been studied.¹² While these works help to integrate the Germans with the broader colony, they do not explain the Salzburger community.
Relatively few academic works focus on the Salzburgers and their settlements. Perhaps the best known was written by George Fenwick Jones, a professor of German. He dedicated much of his academic work to transcribing and translating the diaries written by the Salzburger pastors, a great service to all scholars of early Georgia. He used his extensive knowledge of their experience to write The Salzburger Saga (1984), a narrative history.¹³ The book tells their story but does not carry a strong argument or attempt to integrate the Salzburgers into the historiography of Trustee Georgia. His is an informative recounting of the story.
James Van Horn Melton brings updated research and insight into the Salzburgers’ experience in his 2015 book Religion, Community, and Slavery on the Colonial Southern Frontier.¹⁴ Using archives in Salzburg, Melton researched the lives of several of the first exiles, discovering that the first group consisted mostly of mining families from the Gastein region of Salzburg. His book supplements our dependence upon the pastors’ official diaries with the experiences of some of the actual Salzburgers. The first half of the book analyzes their European experiences, while the second half centers the debate over slavery in Georgia and its effects on and within the Salzburgers’ settlements.
The historiography of slavery in Georgia is long and often calls upon the Salzburger diaries because of their support for the Trustees’ ban. Betty Wood’s Slavery in Colonial Georgia, 1730–1775 is considered a classic on the topic.¹⁵ While Wood presents the Salzburgers and their opinions, she stays focused on the broader colonial issue of slavery. Other works about slavery in Georgia and the Lowcountry, as well as about plantation economies in the British American South, inform this book.¹⁶
Although the slavery debates are critical to understanding Georgia, The Good Forest argues that the moral, social, religious, and cultural elements of establishing the Germanic settlements on the Savannah River remove the success-failure
paradigm associated with the slavery ban as a way of understanding Trustee Georgia. The experiences of the Salzburger community need to be integrated into our understanding of early Georgia. Yes, many early settlers wanted to own slaves and therefore left, leaving behind a depleted colony. However, with few exceptions, the Germans stayed and built a self-sustaining community. In many ways for the Salzburger settlements the introduction of slavery led to more difficulty for the group as cultural rifts developed between the poor and the few wealthy who accumulated land and slaves. The story of the Salzburgers reveals the possibilities and limits of colonization and helps us rethink the Trustees’ experiment.
This book is situated in the pre-Revolutionary years in Georgia, focused primarily on Georgia’s Trustee years (1732–1752). The first section, comprising chapters 1 through 3, describes the plan for Georgia and the Salzburgers’ role in it, with a discussion on how they came to be the Salzburger exiles
who were sponsored by British and German philanthropies. Because the Salzburgers became the Trustees’ ideal settlers, it is important to understand what the plan for Georgia entailed. The chapter on the Trustees argues that they were not naïve or ill prepared but were responding to the challenges they faced in British society in the years leading up to the founding of the colony. Chapter 3 argues that without support from a transnational and transatlantic network of Protestant philanthropists the Salzburger settlement in Georgia would have never even happened. The German Lutheran philanthropists formed an informal network of Pietist believers who supported the Georgia Salzburgers, and their strong ecumenical partnership with the British Anglican philanthropy the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (SPCK) made possible the Salzburger community’s success in Georgia.
The subsequent chapters focus on the settlement project in Georgia and how the Salzburgers built their community and economy. The Georgia Germans took an alternative approach to establishing settlements on colonial frontiers than the other colonizers sent by the Trustees to America. The Salzburgers had the advantage of settling as a group, initially organizing their work cooperatively and later creating economic projects that benefited all of them, such as a mill complex. The Georgia Germans’ community was also different from those of more studied German groups such as the Moravians, the Dunkers, and other peace churches
who typically settled in the Mid-Atlantic. For example, the Moravians, a well-studied group of German Pietists who arrived in Georgia in 1735, at the same time as the second transport of Salzburgers, created a strongly hierarchical, controlled society. By 1741 most of the Moravians had left Georgia for Pennsylvania’s Lehigh Valley, where they held land communally, built group homes segregated by gender, and managed economic programs with a top-down administration. To preserve their tight-knit society, the Moravians remained mostly separate from Anglo settlers. Other small groups of Germans, such as the Dunkers and Amish, also kept separate from Anglo settlers but did not pursue the types of communal economic programs as the Moravians.¹⁷
Understanding the Georgia Salzburgers’ settlements adds to our knowledge of German colonizing in British North America. The settlers at Ebenezer chose to build their community in a very different manner from other Georgia colonists and from Germans in British America, in part because of the singular and capable leadership of their first pastor, Johann Martin Boltzius (1703–1765), and because they took on the task of incorporating Germans throughout the Lowcountry. Ebenezer began as a group of exiled Salzburgers, but it soon after accumulated persecuted Protestants
out of a variety of German-speaking kingdoms and principalities.¹⁸ The colonizing project quickly became focused on establishing a functioning community that included Protestant Germans from throughout central Europe. Chapter 4 addresses the ways the Salzburgers came to know, live, and survive in the Georgia environment, a world very different from their alpine and central European homelands. Their understanding of the Lowcountry environment was heavily freighted with religious ideas of God’s people being preserved and refined in a wilderness.
The following three chapters turn to how the Salzburgers imagined themselves as subjects in the British Empire, built a sense of community in Georgia, and developed economic projects. As part of the 111,000 German immigrants who arrived in America in the first half of the eighteenth century, the Salzburgers formed a portion of the first large wave of free political aliens
in the British colonies.¹⁹ Contrary to our standard understanding of Germans in America remaining apart from Anglo politics, the Salzburgers were engaged and active members of the British Empire who worked to influence British policy and the administration of Georgia. The result in Ebenezer was a group who upheld a strong loyalty to the British monarch, King George II, as well as a shared sense of civic responsibility to the empire and community that included sometimes criticizing English settlers for not being good subjects.
Key themes run throughout the book. The first is the explication of how the Salzburgers colonized. They built a tight-knit community and a self-sustaining society that was a draw for German-speaking migrants. The group created settlements unlike those in the Carolinas and the rest of the colonial South, at a time when the Georgia Malcontents claimed that was impossible. The Salzburger experience in Georgia thus adds to our understanding of how European settlement worked in eighteenth-century America, particularly in contact zones such as Ebenezer, which bordered Yuchi and Muskogee lands and was the farthest south, least developed colony in mainland British North America.
Any study of the Salzburgers must include a discussion of the role of the Pietist religious network in the colonization, a second theme. Ebenezer was an important node in a web of Pietist faith, an outpost firmly planted in American soil by God’s design to bless the lives of Atlantic Germans.²⁰ For example, in 1742, when Halle Pietists arranged to send to Pennsylvania their first Lutheran minister, Heinrich Melchior Mühlenberg, they had him first stop at Ebenezer to learn about life and religion in America. The network also aided chain migration to America, as settlers communicated within their groups about the colonial opportunity.
This Lutheran network expands our understanding of the way webs of exchange operated in the British Atlantic and builds upon recent work that examines trade, travel, and knowledge-building networks.²¹ The Pietists were important beyond merely adding to the material or religious comfort of the Salzburgers, as these Germans were necessary partners with the British for the colonial project to succeed. German Lutherans provided key funding when British resources were insufficient and were a prime source for recruiting Protestant settlers. The Trustees so relied on this German network that in the 1740s two Augsburg men were made Trustees: Samuel Urlsperger, a man who already had strong ties to London, and Christian von Münch, an Augsburg banker and merchant.
The Pietist connection to America has received special interest in recent decades, as the records of the Francke Foundations in Halle have become more widely available after the reunification of Germany. In the eighteenth century Francke’s Pietist Lutheranism had profound impacts on several other religious groups, including the Moravians (whose leaders Count Zinzendorf and Bishop Spangenberger trained at Halle), the Quakers in England, and John Wesley’s Methodists. Skilled historians have traced these influences in America, with a strong focus on Pennsylvania and the Mid-Atlantic.²² This book builds on our understanding of the role of the German networks in America by incorporating the South.
Closely related to the importance of religious networks was the outsized role of British and German Protestant philanthropy in supporting the Salzburgers. One of the Georgia Malcontents’ complaints was that the people at Ebenezer received more aid and support than the other settlers, and this was likely true. The Salzburgers benefited from a robust Protestant philanthropic network with the SPCK in London and the Pietist Lutheran network centered around the Francke Foundations in Halle, Saxony—known today as Halle (Saale) to differentiate it from Halle in western Germany. Working in concert with the Trustees, these charities paid for ministers and schoolteachers; sent food, clothing, shoes, and other material goods; and funded large construction projects such as mills, a silk filature, and the Lutheran church in Ebenezer. This extra aid reminds us that colonizing was a very expensive proposition and nearly always required more resources than the founding projectors originally anticipated. It also demonstrates the ways the British used religious philanthropy to build their empire.
As a by-product of their philanthropy, Germans who did not intend to migrate to America invested heavily in this British colony and empire. As Ebenezer became more securely established, some of the German backers began to invest in the Georgia plan for economic gain. For example, Christian von Münch, an Augsburg banker and charitable supporter of the Salzburgers, also dabbled in the American silk trade and sent staff to investigate business opportunities for him. The commitment by Germans to the British cause can be partly explained because the king of England, George II, was himself a German-born Lutheran as well as the Elector of Hannover in the Holy Roman Empire. His personal links to German Protestantism may have encouraged other support.
The story of the Georgia Salzburgers begins in late 1731, with an expulsion order targeted at those who would not renounce their Protestant faith. The timing of their exile in the early 1730s coincided with the founding of Georgia. The existing links between German and English philanthropists brought the two together, and soon the Georgia Trustees incorporated support for religious exiles—nearly always referred to as Poor Persecuted Protestants
—in their marketing and colonizing plans. The first transport of Salzburgers brought just forty-five men, women, and children to Georgia in March 1734, but it was soon followed by many more who established a home along the banks of the Savannah River.