The khutor (farmstead) of Trippelsdorf was located on the Wiesenseite, 15 kilometers east-northeast of the railroad station at Gmelinskaya. Following Soviet collectivization, it grew to became a large Collective Farm.
Today, what remains of the former Volga German colony of Trippelsdorf is part of the Russian village of Verkhnya Vodyanka.
There were no known religious structures in Trippelsdorf.
Year
|
Households
|
Population
|
||
---|---|---|---|---|
Total
|
Male
|
Female
|
||
1897 |
|
|
|
|
1910 |
|
|
|
|
1920 |
23*
|
151
|
|
|
1924 |
|
568**
|
|
|
1926 |
27
|
160***
|
83
|
77
|
1931 |
|
1,488****
|
|
|
*Of which 20 households were German.
**Of whom 543 were German.
***Of whom 149 were German (24 households: 78 male & 71 female).
****Of which 1,327 were German.
- Trippelsdorf (wolgadeutsche.net) [in Russian]
- Diesendorf, V.F. Die Deutschen Russlands : Siedlungen und Siedlungsgebiete : Lexicon. Moscow, 2006.
- Preliminary Results of the Soviet Census of 1926 on the Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (Pokrovsk, 1927): 28-83.
50.4, 47.1
Migrated From
No results
Immigration Locations
Map showing Trippelsdorf (1935).