[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Ger-Poland-Volhynia Digest, Vol 47, Issue 21
Aydodger at aol.com
Aydodger at aol.com
Sun Apr 22 10:25:19 PDT 2007
Hello Paul:
An excellent post! Thank you for the information. I have ancestors from
Posen and suspect they originated in Wuerttemberg. I say suspect because I have
not found proof of this. You mention you found info in the archives in Berlin
about your ancestors. Could you outline how/where one could find info on our
ancestors who resettled in Posen, etc.? I reply to the whole list as the
info you provide will no doubt help others with their research.
Barb
Message: 1
Date: Fri, 20 Apr 2007 00:57:19 EDT
From: PnSWork at aol.com
Subject: Re: [Ger-Poland-Volhynia] More on Germans in Poland
To: ger-poland-volhynia at eclipse.sggee.org
Message-ID: <bfe.135ccac0.3359a22f at aol.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
Yes, there is quite a bit of material out there in German on this subject.
I have several books that cover the topic and several self-published
extracts
as well (published by other people, not me). Several date back to the 1940s
and the motivations of the authors may be a little suspect. However, there
is agreement in general on the basics.
Yes, there was a small movement of Germanic people into the area we know as
Poland today from early on. However, this movement was centered around the
Vistula River or close to the borders with the German principalities and
rarely
strayed far from it. There was also some immigration in the middle 1800's
as some new village were founded, but the majority of the immigrants came in
two waves. These waves coincided with the First and Third Partitions of
Poland and were strongly encouraged by the Prussian government. In fact, it
is
highly likely that the Prussian government's sponsorship of these migrations
is
what caused them to grow so large.
The first migration began shortly after the First Partition of Poland. In
this action, Prussia, Russia, and Austria carved out large sections of
Poland.
They didn't get all of it in this first partition, and the Russians (under
Catherine the Great) had already been recruiting Germans for several years
to
settle the areas near the Volga River. However, that is a different story,
so we'll leave that for another time.
The Prussian government set up an ambitious emigration program and sent
recruiters out to all areas of Germany, seeking settlers to come and
populate the
land they had just acquired. In addition, many ethnic Polish people were
displaced when they protested the annexation by Prussia. The Prussian
recruiters were very persuasive, and the Prussian government assisted
prospective
travelers with relocation expenses, a per diem for food and expenses, free
land
and building materials once they arrived, and free livestock.
At the same time, many people in Wuerttemberg were feeling oppressed by high
taxes and poor economic conditions, so they were open to the idea of
emigrating to a new area. During the short time period of 1775 to 1782, it
is
estimated that over 100,000 people emigrated to the Posen and West Prussia
areas.
New villages were founded all over the place and the Prussians kept very
good records of all of them. The archives in Berlin still hold the original
documents showing who arrived from where, how much travel and relocation
money
they were paid, and where they were settled. Several of my ancestors took
part in this first migration. In some cases, the amount of travel money
paid to
settlers was in excess of their annual income. That's how attractive it was.
The second major migration took place after the Third Partition of Poland.
The Second Partition covered a relatively small area compared to the first
and third, and no official recruitment program was in place for that one.
After the Third Partition, Prussia again embarked on an ambitious recruiting
campaign. Again, they offered generous stipends for settlers, free land,
building materials, and livestock. Again settlers came primarily from
Wuerttemberg,
but a sizable number also came from Mecklenburg. More settlers streamed
into the newly acquired areas which were later to be known as Central
Poland.
Again, the Prussians kept excellent documents for all the settlers, and I
have
copies of some of these papers showing how much land my ancestors were
given, how much they were paid for the journey, how large the families were,
and
so forth. Virtually every village in Wuerttemberg lost people to this
settlement, and one in particular lost 10% of its population in one year.
The
church records for these villages are filled with references like "moved to
Poland."
Again, the number of ethnic Germans who immigrated was quite large. This
migration began in earnest in 1798 and reached its peak in 1802-1803.
Napoleon's victories over Prussia in 1806 brought it to a screeching halt.
Even
though the Polish government installed by Napoleon tried to encourage
further
settlement, their incentives fell far short of the assistance the Prussians
had
offered, and the numbers dropped dramatically. A few additional villages
were founded during the middle 1800s, but nothing like the hundreds of
villages
founded between 1798 and 1803.
In my opinion, it was the aggressive recruiting and generous incentives that
the Prussian government offered that caused such large numbers to immigrate
to the area we know today as Poland. Without those two factors, it is
doubtful that one tenth of the number would have made the transition. It
was a
friendly Germanic government offering generous incentives that convinced
people
to move.
Take care,
-Paul
References available upon request. :-)
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