Wisconsin Emigration and Immigration: Difference between revisions

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*They were joined by settlers from '''southern and eastern Europe, especially Poles and Czechs''', and by smaller groups of '''Russians, Yugoslavs, Italians, and Greeks'''.  
*They were joined by settlers from '''southern and eastern Europe, especially Poles and Czechs''', and by smaller groups of '''Russians, Yugoslavs, Italians, and Greeks'''.  
*At the beginning of World War I in 1914, the majority of Wisconsin residents were of '''German''' origin or descent.
*At the beginning of World War I in 1914, the majority of Wisconsin residents were of '''German''' origin or descent.
== Records  ==
*Current, Richard Nelson. "A German State?" in ''Wisconsin: A Bicentennial History''. New York: Norton,1977. (Family History Library book {{FHL|28955|title-id|disp=977.5 H2cr}}.)
*Minert, Roger P., Jennifer A. Anderson; et al. ''German Immigrants in American Church Records. v. 2, Wisconsin Northwest Protestant''. Rockland, ME: Picton Press, 2007.
*Minert, Roger P., Jennifer A. Anderson; et al. ''German Immigrants in American Church Records. v. 3, Wisconsin Northeast Protestant''. Rockland, ME: Picton Press, 2007.
*Minert, Roger P., Jennifer A. Anderson; et al. ''German Immigrants in American Church Records. v. 4, Wisconsin Southwest Protestant''. Rockland, ME: Picton Press, 2007.
*Minert, Roger P., Jennifer A. Anderson; et al. ''German Immigrants in American Church Records. v. 5, Wisconsin Southeast Protestant''. Rockland, ME: Picton Press, 2007.
*Sachtjen, Maude. ''Immigration to Wisconsin: A Thesis''. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin, 1928. (Family History Library book {{FHL|185811|title-id|disp=977.5 W2s}}; film {{FHL|185811|title-id|disp=844952 item 4}}.)


==Immigration Records==
==Immigration Records==
318,531

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