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  2. Norwegian Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_Americans

    Although today Norway is relatively secular, [27] Norwegian-Americans are among the most religious ethnic groups in the United States, with 90% acknowledging a religious affiliation in 1998. [26] Because membership to the State Church was mandatory until the 19th century in Norway, all ethnic Norwegians have traditionally been Lutheran.

  3. Nordic and Scandinavian Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nordic_and_Scandinavian...

    For Sale: Minnesota. Organized Promotion of Scandinavian Immigration, 1866–1873 (1971). Nelson, O. N. History of the Scandinavians and Successful Scandinavians in the United States (2 vol 1904); 886pp online full text also online review; Norman, Hans, and Harald Runblom. Transatlantic Connections: Nordic Migration to the New World After 1800 ...

  4. Norwegian Minnesotan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_Minnesotan

    Of Minnesota's population in the year 2000, 850,742 said that they have Norwegian ancestry.Of them 414,901 (48.8%) were male, and 435,841 (51.2%) were female. As of 2008, the median age was 36, in contrast to 35 for the whole Minnesotan population, 36.7 for the whole American population, and 39.4 for Norway's population.

  5. Nordic immigration to North America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nordic_immigration_to...

    Norway, with its 1920 population pegged at 2,691,855, saw 693,450 Norwegians setting sail for American shores, constituting 32.4% of the Scandinavian influx. Denmark, home to 3,268,907 people in 1920, chipped in with 300,008 immigrants, forming 14.1% of the Scandinavian immigration to the US across that century.

  6. Norwegian Canadians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_Canadians

    Of the 6,507 immigrants who arrived in that year there were 100 deaths. In 1859, however, emigration dropped off with only 16 vessels arriving from Norway carrying 1,756 passengers. Of the over 28,460 Norwegians who came to Canada in the 1850s it is estimated that only 400 remained in Canada the majority moved on into the American west.

  7. Culture of Minnesota - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Minnesota

    The culture of Minnesota is a subculture of the United States with influences from Scandinavian Americans, Finnish Americans, Irish Americans, German Americans, Native Americans, Czechoslovak Americans, among numerous other immigrant groups. They work in the context of the cold agricultural and mining state. People In the Heart of the Beast Puppet and Mask Theatre May Day Parade, Minneapolis ...

  8. Swedish Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_Americans

    For Sale: Minnesota. Organized Promotion of Scandinavian Immigration, 1866–1873 (1971). Lundström, Catrin. "Embodying exoticism: gendered nuances of Swedish hyper-whiteness in the United States." Scandinavian Studies 89.2 (2017): 179–199. online; McKnight, Roger. "Those Swedish Madmen Again: The Image of the Swede in Swedish-American ...

  9. New Finland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Finland

    The C.P.R. immigration department then encouraged Finnish settlers of the Minnesota and Dakota region in the United States to emigrate to Canada. [8] [9] With this in mind, delegates from the American Finnish districts travelled to New Finland, North-West Territories and were well pleased with what they had surveyed. [6]