Yes. Luncheon meat is known as devon and/or belgium in the eastern States - and, possibly due to the large number of German settlers there, it's known as fritz in South Australia. Back to you.
I'll never know where these ideas come from - the name Fritz doesn't even appear in the first 100 first names in Germany and in over 30 years here I've not met one actually called that
It is indeed an alternative to Friedrich BB - but even Friedrich isn't that common any more. The most used names here are Peter, Michael, Wolfgang, Helmut and Jürgen - though names go in and out of fashion - names like Heinrich and Friedrich are disappearing fast here, not that Friedrich was ever that common. A lot of kids of a certain age group in Hamburg are called Kevin (after Keegan was at HSV).
The German settlement in South Australia started around 1840 - so I dare say it was common back then.
He saved a penalty with his first touch of the ball in the first minute of his Football League debut?
Is it that he was the only signing for Sir Alex Ferguson, who never made it off the bench? (He might not be the only one, I don’t know, but quite unusual I suppose!)
"An orphan apprenticed to a tyrannical owner of a mercantile, has a sudden abrupt change of life when his wealthy grandfather dies and leaves him a pile of money". This is the storyline of a book by a famous author. Who was he, and what was the film called that was inspired by it?