The Forty-Eighters were intellectual liberal abolitionists who enjoyed conversing in Latin and believed in utopian ideals that guaranteed basic human rights to all. They reveled in passionate conversations about literature, music and philosophy.[3]
In 1853, Siemering was elected Secretary, and Ernst Kapp[4] the President, of the Freethinker abolitionist organization Die Freie Verein[5] (The Free Society),[6] which called for a meeting of abolitionist German Texans
[7] in conjunction with the May 14, 1854 Staats-Saengerfest (State Singing Festival) in San Antonio, Texas. The convention adopted a political, social and religious platform,[8] including:
1) Equal pay for equal work; 2) Direct election of the President of the United States; 3) Abolition of capital punishment; 4) Slavery is an evil, the abolition of which is a requirement of democratic principles...; 5) Free schools – including universities - supported by the state, without religious influence; and 6) Total separation of church and state.
Teaching
In 1856, Siemering became a teacher[9] at the first public school in Fredericksburg, Texas a Catholic school.
Military service
Abolitionist Siemering was drafted into the Confederate States Army in 1861, serving three years before resigning his commission as a lieutenant.[6] He referred to that war as "...a nightmare."
Publisher
The San Antonio Express News was first published by Siemering in 1865, along with co-publisher H. Palmer.[10] Siemering and Palmer also published the German language newspaper Die Freie Presse für Texas.[11]
Public service
In 1866, Siemering was appointed Chief Justice of Bexar County, but only served until August of that year, when an act of the legislature changed the office to an elected office of County Judge.[6] He chose not to run for election for the position. He was, however, the Republican Party's candidate for Lieutenant Governor in 1880, losing to Democrat J.D. Sayers.
Personal life and death
During his tenure as a teacher in Fredericksburg, Siemering met his future wife Clara Schütze, daughter of another teacher. They married in 1859.
Siemering died September 9, 1883.
Works by Siemering
Siemering, August. Texas als Ziel deutscher Auswanderung. OCLC25812235.
Siemering, August (1856). Lebensbilder aus den Süden (Life Images from the South). New York. OCLC29977390.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Siemering, August (1982). The Hermit of the Cavern; a Novel of the Early Sixties. San Antonio, TX: Naylor Print. Co. ISBN9781426350443. OCLC2733954.
Siemering, August; Burrier, William Paul; Dietert, Helen; Pue, Ronnie (2013). August Siemering's Die Deutschen in Texas waehrend des Buergerkrieges = The Germans in Texas during the Civil War. Tamarac, FL: Llumina Press. ISBN9781605949994.
^ Jordan, Terry G: Kapp, Ernest from the Handbook of Texas Online. Retrieved 9 May 2010. Texas State Historical Association
^Goyne, Minetta Algelt (1982). Lone Star and Double Eagle: Civil War Letters of a German-Texas Family. Texas Christian Univ Press. p. 14. ISBN978-0-912646-68-8.