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Book |
DVD |
The Glückstalers in
New Russia and North America: A Bicentennial Collection of History,
Genealogy & Folklore
Heaven Is Our Homeland: The Glückstalers
in New Russia and North America
Glückstal Colonies Research Association, Redondo
Beach, California, 800 pages, includes two CD-ROMS [searchable data
discs included in slip-case in back cover of book], hardcover book;
DVD, 60-minute documentary
The Germans from Russia Heritage Collection is pleased to provide
this most important book and documentary sponsored by the Glückstal
Colonies Research Association (www.glueckstal.org)
commemorating the years from 1804 to 2004.
Homer Rudolf, Editor, writes in the Introduction: "This collection
of bicentennial publications is intended to document and commemorate
the German colonists who settled in what were known as the Glückstal
Colonies of South Russia, as well as all their descendants throughout
the world."
The Glückstal District mother colonies are: Bergdorf, Glückstal,
Kassel and Neudorf.
The book includes: 1) Illustrations; 2) Time lines; 3) Maps; 4)
Points of
origin summary table ; 5) Stumpp passport lists - Glückstalers;
6) Mother
and daughter colonies - histories; 7) Mobility or wanderlust of
the
Glückstal colonists; 8) Wolost structure; 9) Parish structure;
10) Report
on 1804 arrivals; 11) Crop report of 1820-21; 12) Statistical report
of
1825; 13) Kassel Annahme - 1830; 14) Inheritances from abroad; 15)
Monthly
chores in South Russia during the 1880s; 16) Voter’s lists;
17)
Agricultural & consumer associations; 18) The colonist wife;
19) Seals and
stamps on Russian documents; 20) Reports on persons living outside
of
their colony in 1851 & 1859; 21) The church in the Glückstal
colonies and
Hoffnungstal; 22) Travel from South Russia to the U.S. and Canada;
23) Early Glückstal colonist settlements in the U.S.; 24) Third
migration
in the U.S. and Canada; 25) The Trek; 26) Einwandererzentralstelle
(EWZ)
documents - introduction; 27) Military history through WW I; 28)
Farming
on the steppes and the prairies; 29) The women and their lives;
30) Handwork of the women; 31) Midwifery; 32) Brauche – the
faith healing
tradition; 33) Causes of death; 34) Light side, dark side –
glimpses of
Germans from Russia life; 35) Church, school and holiday traditions;
36) Some research tools for Germans from Russia; and 37) Researching
federal land records.
The searchable CD-ROMs include: 1) Complete EWZ tables; 2) Current
master
Gedcom table for Glückstal colonists & their descendants;
3) Index to all
letters in the Ashley Tribune and Wishek News through 1938; 4) Index
of
all letters from Glückstalers in South Russia published in
the
Staats-Anzeiger; 5) Index of all obits in the Ashley Tribune and
Wishek
News through 1938; 6) Complete points of origin table; 7) Ship records
of
Glückstalers arriving in the U.S. and Canada; 8) Reproductions
of the
signatures of early Glückstal colonies heads of households;
9)
Translations of selected letters published in the Staats-Anzeiger;
and
10) Reproductions of all submitted photos and documents.
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| Glückstal Lutheran Church.
Photo courtesy of Gerhard Walter. |
Bergdorf Lutheran Church. Photo
courtesy of Gerhard Walter. |
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| Johann and Anna Marie
Huft Becker. Courtesy of Sharon Becker Beck. |
Ashley, North Dakota Main
Street. |
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| Eureka, South Dakota Main
Street. |
Wishek, North Dakota Main
Street. |

The
60-minute DVD titled, The
Glückstalers in New Russia and North America, is also available.
Comments about the book
I'm writing to praise the Glueckstalers book. I was reading the
"Brauche,
Healing and Home Remedies Chapter" when I was pleasantly surprised
to read
about my Aunt on my Dad's side of the family, Katharine Weber Reich.
She
was my Dad's oldest sister who was two years older that my dad,
Joacob
Weber. He had another sister Catherine Weber Neiffer who was born
after my
grandfather Johann Weber died a month before Catherine's birth.
My Dad took the family to Wishek on a number of occasions when we
lived in
Isabel, South Dakota. Aunt Katherine spoke only German and didn't
say
much to me, at least I don't remember what she said. Our family
moved to
Washington state in 1936 and I never did see the Reich family after
that.
I read with great interest the story on page 695 about the treatment
of
Angewachse. The story: "In the 1960s, a rural Wishek, North
Dakota, woman
remembers making middle-of-the-night journeys with her screaming
infants to the
Wishek home of Katharine Weber Reich, a well-respected Brauchere.
There is
another memtion of Aunt Katharine on page 696. At any rate I wanted
to say
thanks for the marvelous book.
--- Edward Weber
The Glückstalers in New Russia and North America &
Heaven Is Our Homeland
Book and the DVD is $95.00 plus Shipping
& Handling
Book alone is $68.00 plus Shipping & Handling
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