On 20 Nov 99, 1:22, Gad Alexander wrote:

> I read for years that for many years (perhaps for apprx. 150 yars) it
> was thought to make the Hebrew the official language in the United
> States. Could it be that there is something about it in internet?
> However where?

This is what Cecil Adams of "The Straight Dope" says:

cited and unabashedly copied from:
http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a4_026.html

<quote>

There was some discussion just after the Revolution about switching to 
a language other than English, but it's not known how serious this was--
probably not very.   Nonetheless there's a 150-year-old legend that 
English was almost replaced, not by Hebrew but by German. Supposedly it 
lost by one vote, cast by a German-speaking Lutheran minister named 
Frederick Muhlenberg. Some say the vote took place in the Pennsylvania 
legislature and that Muhlenberg voted against it because he didn't want 
Pennsylvania to be isolated from the rest of the nation. Another 
version, commonly heard in Germany, says the proposal would have passed 
except that a German-speaking legislator went to the toilet at the 
crucial moment. 

It never happened, of course. In the 18th century German speakers 
constituted a significant fraction of the population only in 
Pennsylvania (remember the Pennsylvania Dutch?), and even the most 
fanatical British haters weren't crazy enough to think they could 
change the national language by legislative fiat. But the story isn't 
pure invention. Here's what really happened, courtesy of Dennis Baron, 
professor of English at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign:

In 1794 a group of German speakers in Virginia petitioned Congress to 
publish federal laws in German as well as English. The intention was 
not to supplant English but simply to supplement it. A House committee 
recommended publishing German translations of the laws, but on January 
13, 1795, "a vote to adjourn and sit again on the recommendation" 
(apparently an attempt to keep the measure alive rather than killing it 
immediately) failed by a vote of 42-41. Frederick Muhlenberg (1750-
1801) was in fact Speaker of the House at the time, but how he voted is 
unknown. Tradition has it that he stepped down to cast a negative vote, 
apparently being the German-speaking equivalent of an Oreo. Not that it 
mattered. The vote was merely procedural; its success would not have 
guaranteed passage of the measure, and in any case German translations 
of federal statutes are a far cry from making the German the official 
language of the U.S. A similar measure came up a month later and was 
also voted down, as were subsequent attempts in later years. 

The Muhlenberg story was widely publicized by Franz Loher in his 1847 
History and Achievements of the Germans in America. He wrongly set the 
event in the Pennsylvania legislature, over which Muhlenberg had 
previously presided, and also wrongly claimed that Muhlenberg was 
reviled by his fellow German speakers for selling them out. Germans did 
get on Muhlenberg's case for later casting the deciding vote in favor 
of the Jay Treaty, which was viewed as anti-German; his brother-in-law 
stabbed him and he lost the next election in 1796. Loher conflated this 
genuine controversy with the trivial language debate and the legend has 
survived ever since. 

The truth is that the U.S. has never had an official language. Several 
states have declared English official at one time or another, most 
recently in response to the influx of Spanish speakers. The so-called 
English Language Amendment (ELA) to the U.S. Constitution, which would 
give English official status, has been before Congress since 1981, and 
given the country's sour mood it may yet pass. But even if one concedes 
the usefulness of a common language in unifying the country, one might 
as well attempt to legislate the weather.

<endquote>

Gad, you might also enjoy visiting and reading the following site:

Urban Legend: German almost became the official language of the US

http://www.cs.purdue.edu/~lutterdc/scg/german-by-one-vote.html

One further interesting site, although it has less to address your 
question and more of a modern approach to the issues of modern language 
and culture:

CENTER FOR MULTILINGUAL, MULTICULTURAL RESEARCH

http://www-rcf.usc.edu/~cmmr/Policy.html

Alan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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