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Migration

Locations

46.533056, -93.710278
43.666667, -92.974722
47.473611, -94.880278
46.358056, -94.200833
45.171944, -93.874722
46.95, -94.32
47.774167, -96.60805
46.786944, -92.098056
43.652222, -94.461111
44.290589, -93.268319
45.664722, -93.909722
47.576389, -95.751389
44.769044, -94.151752
45.586389, -92.974722
44.743889, -94.715556
46.321667, -95.445278
47.417222, -92.938333
44.883333, -94.366667
43.915556, -95.784167
46.886389, -96.094444
44.389444, -93.730278
43.505278, -92.943889
44.446944, -95.788333
46.866667, -96.766667
45.876944, -93.293889
45.866944, -95.152222
46.186667, -92.7825
44.789167, -95.211667
43.652222, -94.726944
44.554428, -94.220813
44.723056, -94.48666
46.4425, -95.136111
43.746111, -93.728889
45.121944, -95.043333
43.866389, -95.116944
43.623889, -95.599167
44.292778, -92.671667

Minnesota

Many Volga Germans immigrated to Minnesota with the development of the sugar beet industry. Sallet reports that by 1920, there were 750 Evangelical Volga German immigrants of the first and second generation settled in Minnesota.

Sources

- Koch, Fred C. The Volga Germans: In Russia and the Americas, from 1763 to the Present (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1977): 215.
- Sallet, Richard. Russian-German Settlement in the United States (Fargo, ND: North Dakota Institute for Regional Studies, 1974): 112.