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Migration

Locations

48.630563, -98.704849
46.808333, -100.783611
48.488611, -99.204444
46.420833, -101.5669
46.883611, -102.788889
48.862056, -103.143222
46.40219, -97.814823
46.877222, -96.789444
47.652778, -101.416667
48.416111, -97.410556
47.296944, -101.623611
46.000833, -102.633333
46.358611, -98.293611
46.441634, -97.68121
46.828889, -100.891111
48.233056, -101.292222
48.666667, -98.833333
48.69, -97.178056
48.716393, -99.457921
48.024722, -101.960556
47.551493, -101.002012
47.456111, -101.139722
47.291389, -101.027778

North Dakota

Sallet reports that by 1920, there were 500 Evangelical and 85 Catholic Volga German immigrants of the first and second generation settled in North Dakota.

Sources

- Sallet, Richard. Russian-German Settlement in the United States (Fargo, ND: North Dakota Institute for Regional Studies, 1974): 112.