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Stuyvesant Falls, Columbia Co., New York

In 1891, Volga Germans from Neu-Straub arrived in the United States headed towards Kansas, when they lost all their money and had to find work in New York. Some of them went north, up the Hudson River, and settled in the village of Stuyvesant Falls in Columbia County. By 1930 there were about 25 families working in and around Stuyvesant mostly in the cotton and paper factories.

Today Stuyvesant Falls is a hamlet in the southeast part of the town of Suyvesant at Kinderhook Creek.

Sutton, Clay Co., Nebraska

The first German from Russia to settle in Sutton were from the Black Sea villages of Worms and Rohrbach in September 1873.

Eight families from the Volga German colony of Balzer resettled to Sutton in 1875 from Red Oak, Iowa. They were followed by immigrants from Frank and Norka.

A large group from Norka arrived on 11 June 1878 by train. Included in the group were the families of:

Scottsbluff, Scotts Bluff Co., Nebraska

Settlers from Brunnental arrived in Scottsbluff in 1909 and Sallet reports that by 1910 about 35% of Scottbluff's population of 7,000 were Volga Germans.

In 1910, a sugar refinery was constructed in Scottsbluff and sugarbeet companies sent agents into the neighboring large cities to hire Volga Germans as beet workers. In the spring of 1910, they began to arrive from Loveland (original colonists from Frank), Sterling, Denver, and Lincoln.

The Scottsbluff Sugar Company built a factory in Scottsbluff in 1910. It was acquired that same year by Great Western Sugar.