Antonino |
Catharine | Ellis | Emmeram
| Hartsook/Herzog | Hays
| Munjor | Pfeifer
| Schoenchen | Victoria
| Walker | Volga
Germans
Homesteading in Ellis County
Scouts

In 1874, Russia
passed the military law, which required participation from all
the colonists to the military service. This went against Catherine
the Great's manifest that exempted the German colonists from military
service if they went to live in the Volga region.
The colonists met in Herzog in the spring of 1874 for the purpose
of electing 5 delegates to visit America. The delegates, representing
the different communities, were to look for places that they felt
was best to create new settlements. One of the delegates chosen
was Balthasar Brungardt from Herzog, but he declined and was replaced
by Nicholas Schamne from Graf. Peter Leiker from Obermonjour,
Jacob Ritter from Luzern, Peter Stoecklein from Zug, and Anton
Wasinger from Schoenchen were the other four delegates.
After arriving in New York, they journeyed to Clay County, Nebraska
where they looked over the land for one day. Upon returning to
Russia after being in America for ten days, they reported that
the land was very good and brought with them samples of soil and
prairie grass to show the others. Two more scouts, Joseph Exner
of Obermunjour and Jakob Bissing of Katharinestadt, came to Larned,
Kansas and spent a week looking over the land in December 1874.
Their report was less favorable.
However, after four men from Herzog and twenty-one men from Katharinestadt
were drafted in late November and early December 1874, the emigration
to the United States began. Eventually, four of these scouts emigrated
to the United States to settle in their new homes. Peter Leiker,
Peter Stoecklein, and Anton Wasinger settled in Munjor. Nicholas
Schamne escorted two groups of emigrants to America, but he died
before he could be an emigrant himself.
NOTE: Picture came from the Center for Ethnic Studies
Sources
Dreiling, Norbert R. "Official
Centennial History of the Volga-German Settlements in Ellis and
Rush Counties of Kansas, 1878-1976." Hays, KS: Volga German
Centennial Association, 1976.
Dreiling, B. M. "Golden
jubilee of the German-Russian settlements of Ellis and Rush Counties,
Kansas, August 31, September 1 and 2, 1926." Hays, KS:
Hays Daily News, 1926.
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