So I just spent the past couple of hours going though the thread and I now realize that I never explained the "Sauerkraut Bend" in the thread title.
If y'all didn't put it together, or google it already:
The King William Historic District dates back to the 1790s, when the land that once belonged to the Mission San Antonio de Valero (now known as The Alamo) was made available for native settlers in the area or sold at auction.
In the 1860s, the area was divided into lots and sectioned by present-day streets. Soon after, German nationals who immigrated to Texas began to settle in the area. The area developed as the King William district when Ernst Altgel, a German immigrant who later became a businessman in San Antonio, named its main street after King Wilhelm I, the king of Prussia in the 1870.
But the King William district didn't always have its current title. It was once known as the "Sauerkraut Bend," a derogatory name given to the German community. And during World War I, when anti-German sentiment ran high, it was named Pershing Avenue to honor U.S. Army Gen. John J. Pershing.
The King William name was restored after the war.
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