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Sterling, Logan Co., Colorado

Sterling was founded in 1873, but it was not until the arrival of the Union Pacific Railroad in 1887 that the community began to grow. The construction of a Great Western Sugar Refinery in 1905 brought many Volga German immigrants to Sterling.

Many of the Catholic Volga Germans came from Pfeifer to settle in Sterling. In addition Volga Germans from Dietel, Grimm, Holstein, Nieder-Monjou, Rothammel, Schilling, Sewald, and Unterdorf settled in the area.

Severance, Weld Co., Colorado

Founded in the late 19th century as an agricultural community, Severance remained primarily a small rural farming community based on the raising of cattle, sugar beets, potatoes, and onions. Growth began in the 1990s with construction of new residential subdivisions in the nearby rural areas of Weld County.

Volga Germans began settling in the area along with the development of the sugar beet industry.

Montrose, Montrose Co., Colorado

Montrose officially became a town in 1882. The Denver & Rio Grande Railroad Co. built its narrow gauge mainline railroad through Montrose (connecting Denver and Salt Lake City). Standard gauge was completed in 1906. The Gunnison Tunnel, constructed to provide irrigation water to the valley, opened in 1909.

Volga German families have been living in the Uncompahgre Valley for more than 100 years.

Milliken, Weld Co., Colorado

Milliken has its beginnings as the community of Hillsboro which was organized in 1905. In 1908, a town called Milliken (named in honor of Judge John David Milliken, the President of the Northwestern Land and Iron Company) was established right next to Hillsboro, and on 1 October 1910, Hillsboro was annexed by Milliken. Volga German families came to the area to work in the sugar beet industry. They settled in and around Milliken.

Loveland, Larimer Co., Colorado

Loveland is one of the oldest Colorado settlements of Volga Germans. Many of them came to Loveland directly from the colonies of Frank, Ober-Monjou, and Rosenberg while another large group came from McCook, Nebraska, where they had settled earlier.

Volga Germans arrived in Larimer County in large numbers shortly after Loveland's sugar factory opened in 1901. In the Spring of 1902, "chartered" trains sponsored by the sugar companies brought hundreds of Volga German families from Nebraska and Kansas to northern Colorado to work in the sugar beet industry.