Skip to main content

Migration

Locations

34.763611, -96.668333
36.805031, -98.666474
34.181111, -97.129444
36.813611, -100.524167
35.385885, -98.988137
36.801667, -97.289722
35.830833, -96.390556
36.835587, -99.630397
35.356111, -99.176111
36.054958, -98.58835
35.102385, -98.599496
36.754444, -98.356667
35.041111, -97.947222
36.315278, -95.612778
35.509444, -98.974167
35.378709, -98.782017
36.874722, -95.093889
35.9825, -96.764167
36.216703, -98.347573
34.502222, -97.95777
33.999722, -96.384722
35.402778, -99.423889
36.400556, -97.88083
35.291944, -95.586667
36.27061, -98.477017
36.376149, -99.623726
36.315594, -99.757618
36.851944, -100.055833
35.629444, -98.318056
36.19488, -99.9534
35.071098, -98.874374
36.588611, -94.783056
36.682804, -101.481549
36.546389, -98.270556
35.968928, -98.348406
35.026389, -99.09083
36.860026, -101.213495
36.796389, -98.39472
34.000278, -96.721111
36.708056, -99.897222
34.604167, -98.395556
34.837222, -97.6075
36.572778, -100.2172
35.97115, -98.120896
34.872004, -99.504256
34.507113, -98.980911
35.339508, -97.486703
36.882222, -97.053333
36.20282, -99.86429
36.116148, -98.317016
35.431111, -96.305556
35.624444, -95.963333
36.669167, -96.333056
35.976667, -97.031944
36.291389, -97.291111
36.308333, -95.316944
36.953611, -94.789722
35.156389, -99.06
36.801976, -99.490947
35.241111, -96.668333
35.156944, -99.173611
36.275873, -99.881232
34.655253, -98.953302
35.815278, -94.631389
34.509167, -96.97527
35.912778, -94.971389
36.420833, -99.533333
35.747613, -98.74942
36.131389, -95.93722
35.844765, -98.413128
36.584644, -98.878531
35.53841, -98.687247
35.690833, -97.063056
36.433648, -99.390386
35.502222, -97.74916

Oklahoma

The first Volga Germans settled in Oklahoma in 1891 from Kansas. A larger wave of migration came in 1892 with the opening of the Cheyenne and Arapahoe reservations to settlement. The 1893 opening of the Cherokee Strip also brought resettling Volga German families. By 1920, Sallet reports that there were more than 4,000 Evangelical and 30 Catholic Volga Germans of the first and second generation settled in Oklahoma.

Sources

- Egan, Timothy. The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl (New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2006): 67-69.
- Hale, Douglas. The Germans from Russia in Oklahoma. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1980.
- 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.