1883: Why Germany Banned Swimming
1883’s Josef explained many of the settlers couldn’t swim because swimming was illegal back home – but did Germany really ban swimming as he claimed?
- Swimming was indeed illegal in Germany, although not in the 19th century as 1883 claimed. The ban started in the 1530s and expanded to punish drowned offenders by whipping their bodies before burial.
- Despite Josef’s claim about the swimming ban, it is possible that he was exaggerating to gain sympathy and find a safer place to cross.
- The spinoff series 1923 portrays the immigrants of the time with better historical accuracy, showcasing violent conflicts between established cowboys and immigrant sheep-herders over grazing land, similar to the real frontier.
Taylor Sheridan’s Yellowstone spinoff 1883 is filled with various historical facts about the late 19th century, including how it was illegal to swim in Germany at the time — a seemingly minor detail that ended up causing tragedy for the caravan of German, Romani, and American settlers being led by Shea Brennan (Sam Elliot), Thomas (LaMonica Garrett), and James Dutton (Tim McGraw). In 1883 season 1, episode 3 “The Crossing,” as the caravan prepared to cross the dangerous Brazos River, the laws that prevented the German settlers from learning to swim back home threatened their very survival.
For many of 1883‘s immigrants who lived and struggled through the early Yellowstone timeline, it wasn’t merely illegal to swim back home — it was a grievous and shameful offense. As the leader of the German settlers Josef (Marc Rissmann) explained, the bodies of those who drowned were even whipped before they were buried as punishment. Many of the European immigrants in the show who never learned to swim drowned in the Brazos River and failed to make the crossing, as 1883 is based on true stories of pioneers who barely made it through the late 19th century.