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Why Paul Nathan Attacked Albert Ballin: The Transatlantic Mass Migration and the Privatization of Prussia's Eastern Border Inspection, 1886–1914
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 March 2010
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Albert Ballin was one of Imperial Germany's most successful business leaders. He early recognized the impact and possibilities of the expansion and integration of global markets. Within little more than a decade after he had joined the management of the Hamburg-Amerikanische-Paketfahrt-Aktien-Gesellschaft (HAPAG) in 1886, he turned an already significant enterprise into the world's largest steamship line. As a leading manager and later as HAPAG director general, Ballin was a major force behind Hamburg's rise to Imperial Germany's second largest city. Due in no small part to HAPAG's spectacular growth, Hamburg emerged as a key global port for passengers and freight by the turn of the century. But Ballin was not just a gifted business leader in a highly innovative economic sector; he also had access to some of the highest figures in Berlin. Ballin repeatedly met with the Kaiser and government members, and he used his long-standing contacts in England on several diplomatic missions to ease rising tensions between the two powers, albeit without lasting success.
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References
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36 Protokoll über die Verhandlungen des Parteitages der Sozialdemokratischen Partei Deutschlands, Abgehalten zu Bremen (Berlin: Vorwärts, 1904), 137 (motion 138), 322–324 (discussion), Liebknecht quote: 323; Wertheimer, Unwelcome Strangers, 40.
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40 Jahresbericht der HAPAG, Achtundfünfzigstes Geschäftsjahr 1904 (Hamburg: Persiehl, 1905).
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50 Murken, Linienreederei-Verbände, 278–325; German Embassy St. Petersburg (Biermann) to Imperial Chancellor, December 5, 1908, in Auswanderungsamt, II C I 8 (failure of Russian attempts to start a competing passenger service from Libau).
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52 Stenographische Berichte der Verhandlungen des Deutschen Reichstags, 166. Session, Friday, March 17, 1905, 5328; Vorwärts (Berlin), May 1, 1905.
53 Report by Kiliszewki, November 28, 1907, in Auswanderungsamt, II E I 1b Beiheft 2. See also Berliner Tageblatt, May 27, 1907 (a doctor employed by Lloyd lodged a formal complaint against a police officer who had beaten migrants in Ruhleben).
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57 Emigrant Conditions in Europe, in 61st Congress, 3rd Session, Senate, Reports of the Immigrant Commission, presented by Mr. Dillingham (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1911), 93–97 (quote, 93); Steerage Conditions, in ibid., 29–31; Schneider, Dorothee, “The United States Government and the Investigation of European Emigration in the Open Door Era,” in Citizenship and Those Who Leave: The Politics of Emigration and Expatriation, ed. Green, Nancy and Weil, François (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2007), 195–210, here 203–204Google Scholar; for a 1911 inspection of the control stations by the U.S. Consul General at Hamburg, R. P. Skinner, see Annual Report of the Surgeon General of the Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service of the United States, for the Fiscal Year 1911 (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1912), 99–103.
58 Wertheimer, Unwelcome Strangers, 40–42.
59 Wyman, David S., Paper Walls: America and the Refugee Crisis, 1938–1941 (Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press, 1968)Google Scholar; “Paper Walls” already applied in the post-1918 period.
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