Migration
-
Longitude: -106.701110Latitude: 44.347500
-
Longitude: -106.313081Latitude: 42.866632
-
Longitude: -104.820246Latitude: 41.139981
-
Longitude: -108.391780Latitude: 44.505789
-
Longitude: -108.730673Latitude: 42.833014
-
Longitude: -104.345508Latitude: 42.136354
-
Longitude: -108.389561Latitude: 44.837453
-
Longitude: -108.757352Latitude: 44.753841
-
Longitude: -108.380104Latitude: 43.024959
-
Longitude: -106.956179Latitude: 44.797194
-
Longitude: -108.212043Latitude: 43.646067
-
Longitude: -104.184394Latitude: 42.062465
-
Longitude: -104.952750Latitude: 42.054414
-
Longitude: -107.955372Latitude: 44.016901
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.