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Migration

Locations

44.378889, -108.043056
44.3475, -106.70111
42.866632, -106.313081
41.139981, -104.820246
44.523333, -109.057222
42.756111, -105.384444
44.505789, -108.39178
41.263333, -110.964722
44.282778, -105.505278
42.503056, -105.025278
44.491389, -108.053611
41.9325, -104.146389
43.475278, -110.769167
42.833014, -108.730673
41.311111, -105.5936
42.728333, -110.929167
42.136354, -104.345508
44.837453, -108.389561
43.853056, -104.209444
41.179444, -104.068611
44.753841, -108.757352
41.790278, -107.234167
43.024959, -108.380104
41.454474, -106.808413
44.797194, -106.956179
42.062465, -104.184394
42.054414, -104.95275
44.016901, -107.955372

Wyoming

Sallet reports that by 1920, there were 1,900 Evangelical (Lutheran) Volga German immigrants of the first and second generation settled in Wyoming.

Sources

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