(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h7yIvYFRsqY)
seen from El Salvador

seen from Netherlands

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Saudi Arabia

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seen from United Kingdom
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seen from United Kingdom
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seen from United Kingdom
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h7yIvYFRsqY)
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=da1W9A8O7po)
Sängerfest badges, Frederick Crane Collection
The processing of Fred Crane’s collection has turned up another gem! Tucked inside this PowerBook battery case (which is a magnificent relic in its own right) were two ribbons from Sängerfests held around the turn of the century.
Burlington, IA, 1900
Davenport, IA 1890s?
Sängerfests were competitions for Sängerbunds, or chorus societies, largely formed by German immigrants to the United States after 1850. They were immensely popular and could draw tens of thousands of singers to a single, regional location for the ultimate sing-off. Männerchor (men’s choruses) were the core of the Sängerbunds, and could be found throughout the U.S., but primarily in the Northeast, Pacific Northwest, Midwest, and Texas.
There are still Männerchor performing today, but their heyday was in the latter half of the nineteenth century leading up to the outbreak of World War I. The most comprehensive study on the topic is a dissertation written right here at the University of Iowa; Suzanne Snyder’s “The Männerchor Tradition in the United States,” completed in 1991 under the supervision of...Dr. Frederick Crane! It’s 576 pages on the choruses and the festivals, including discussions of where the festivals were held, the buildings - temporary and permanent - constructed to house them, local arrangements that sound akin those used for Iowa’s RAGBRAI, musical repertoire of the Männerchor, and even a section on “Alcohol at Sängerfests” where Snyder talks about how liquor and the festivals were portrayed in the media.
...this extensive coverage of Sängerfest picnics...gave the journalist (and the reader) the chance to reinforce some preconceived ideas linking the Germans as an ethnic group with excessive indulgence in alcoholic beverages. Although this stereotyping usually took the form of good-natured ribbing...it was nonetheless effective in painting a picture of the immigrants in which the bottle and the keg were vividly represented.
But seriously, that PowerBook battery case!
männerchor is singing this for spring music fest! i'm so excited! our director had to leave rehearsal early today so we broke up in sections and met back up at the end of rehearsal and put it all together by ourselves and it sounds AWESOME! i can't even imagine how good it's gonna sound when dr brown gets all the little stuff fixed. i can't wait for spring music fest :D