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  2. Koshkonong Settlement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koshkonong_Settlement

    The following year, Norwegian settlers from the Jefferson Prairie Settlement and the Fox River Settlement arrived. By 1850, more than half of Wisconsin's Norwegian population of 5,000 lived in the Koshkonong Settlement, which served for a time as the largest Norwegian-American community in the U.S. [ 5 ] It was the sixth Norwegian settlement in ...

  3. Muskego Settlement, Wisconsin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muskego_Settlement,_Wisconsin

    This barn, the first home in America for many Norwegian immigrant, became a social and religious center in the frontier area. His spacious barn played a prominent part in the early history of the settlement, both as an assembly place and as a social and religious center for the Muskego community of Norwegian immigrants. [6] [dead link ‍]

  4. Jefferson Prairie Settlement, Wisconsin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jefferson_Prairie...

    Jefferson Prairie Settlement was a pioneer colony of Norwegian-Americans located in the Town of Clinton, in Rock County, Wisconsin, United States.This site and the nearby Rock Prairie settlement outside Orfordville served as centers for both Norwegian immigration and developments within the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. [1]

  5. Fox River Settlement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fox_River_Settlement

    He died of cholera on the homestead near Norway, Illinois in July 1849; his widow, Caroline, survived him three years. Jacob Slogvig married Serena, daughter of Thomas Madland, in March 1831. He became one of the founders of the Norwegian settlement in Lee County, Iowa, in 1840, later went to California, where he died in May 1864. The widow ...

  6. Norway Grove, Wisconsin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norway_Grove,_Wisconsin

    Norway Grove is an unincorporated community located in the town of Vienna in Dane County, Wisconsin. [1] Dating from 1844, immigrant settlers principally from the traditional district of Sogn in Western Norway, came to the townships of Windsor and Vienna in Dane County. They settled in a region lying in the northwestern part of Windsor township ...

  7. Norwegian diaspora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_diaspora

    In the 1500s and 1600s there was a small scattering of Norwegian people and culture as Norwegian tradesmen moved along the routes of the timber trade. [2] The 19th century wave of Norwegian emigration began in 1825. The Midwestern United States, especially the states of Wisconsin and Minnesota, was the destination of most people who left Norway ...

  8. Early white settlers were witness to early Sheboygan County ...

    www.aol.com/early-white-settlers-were-witness...

    Early white settlers were witness to early Sheboygan County Native American villages. ... Wisconsin (1889). Giddings, was born in 1806 in Ipswich, Massachusetts and died in 1900 at age 94 in ...

  9. Norwegian Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_Americans

    There was a Norwegian presence in New Amsterdam in the early part of the 17th century. Hans Hansen Bergen, a native of Bergen, Norway, was one of the earliest settlers of the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam, having immigrated in 1633. Another early Norwegian settler, Albert Andriessen Bradt, arrived in New Amsterdam in 1637.