About This Book
An essay examines nineteenth-century settlement in Wisconsin, contrasting northeastern American settlers with German immigrants, their geographic concentrations, and how land types shaped agricultural occupation. Drawing on local records and census data, it traces Yankee settlement in prairies and open areas, German concentration in heavily wooded regions, and the gradual transfer of farms and communities between groups. The account highlights resulting social, economic, political, and religious effects and explains how differing attitudes toward land influenced patterns of ownership and community development.
About the Author
You May Also Like
6 picks
"Five-Head" Creek; and Fish Drugging in the Pacific / 1901
by Louis Becke
"Pennsylvania Dutch," and other essays
by Phebe Earle Gibbons
"Sterminator Vesevo" (Vesuvius the great exterminator) / Diary of the Eruption of April 1906
by Matilde Serao
21 Jahre in Indien. Dritter Theil: Sumatra.
by Heinrich Breitenstein
21 Jahre in Indien. Erster Theil: Borneo.
by Heinrich Breitenstein
A Bakony (1. kötet)
by Károly Eötvös