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History of Tramping Lake, Saskatchewan, Canada
Rose Simon, editor, photos courtesy of Jerome Hoffart and Hilda
Mitzel. 75th Anniversary Committee, Tramping Lake, Saskatchewan,
no date, 65 pages, softcover.
The Germans from Russia Heritage Collection is pleased to provide
this publication which shares the history of Tramping Lake in Saskatchewan
especially important to the settlement of German-Russians immigrating
from the Catholic villages of the Kutschurgan District, South Russia
(today near Odessa, Ukraine). Tramping Lake is situated in the eastern
part of St. Joseph's Colony.
As stated in the section of "The First Settlers": "In 1905, Bernhard
Hoffart Sr. came out to the Tramping Lake District to look over
the land and take up a homestead. He came from North Dakota by train,
to Saskatoon, then by team to Tramping Lake. On his way back to
the U.S, he met Anton Gutenberg Sr., John Jahner, George Reiter,
and Paul Fuller, who were also come to Canada in search of a new
home. They filed claims for homesteads, paying $2, before returning
to the States for their families."
In the spring of 1906, thirty four families came out to the Tramping
Lake District including Peter Bertsch, Sebastian Bohn, Andrew Burckhardt,
Stanley and Charles Froehlich, Nels Heidt, Frank Hoffart, Philip
Hummel, Roy Kraft, Lawrence Meier, Wendelin Schwab, Philip Senger,
Carl Tuchscherer, Peter Volk, Joseph Wagner, Kasmer Weber and others.
Book sections include "Our Ancestors", "The First Homes", "Personal
Memories from Our Ancestors", "Recreation and Social Life" and "The
Community in Two World Wars". Photographs include St. Michael's
Catholic Church and various photos of Tramping Lake.
History of Tramping Lake
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