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Migration

Locations

42.6, -73.966667
41.333333, -74.366667
41.401944, -74.323056
41.519722, -74.021389
43.455346, -76.510497
41.297872, -74.459324
43.165556, -77.611389
43.219444, -75.463333
43.083056, -73.784444
42.814167, -73.93722
43.046944, -76.144444
41.253056, -74.356944
42.903611, -76.859444
43.975611, -75.906389

New York

Colonists immigrating from Yagodnaya Polyana to Kansas ran out of money when they reached New York City in 1888. They managed to find employment in Orange County, New York, and founded the town of Pine Island there.

A group of colonists from Neu-Straub arrived in New York City in 1891 and was swindled out of its money. They had been en route to Kansas, but went instead to work for some German farmers in Stuyvesant Falls, New York. Later, many of them found jobs in cotton mills and paper factories.

Sources

- Koch, Fred C. The Volga Germans: In Russia and the Americas, from 1763 to the Present (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1977): 216.
- Sallet, Richard. Russian-German Settlement in the United States (Fargo, ND: North Dakota Institute for Regional Studies, 1974): 49.