[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] (no subject)
Detlef Gutzmann
detlef.gutzmann at tu-clausthal.de
Wed Sep 14 08:48:20 PDT 2011
Till the beginning of WW I, Volhynia belonged to the
Russian empire, after 1914 situation depended on the
military situation.
As far as I know, from 1914 a lot of Volhynian Germans
were withdrawn from that region to the kaukasian front,
in the sence of a military district (which must not mean
military fighting).
Russian and Ukrainian people told me, that a lot of people
leaved Russia via Odessa at about October-revolution time
and just before.
Detlef
Am 14.09.2011 14:23, schrieb DANWWAGNER at aol.com:
> Art,
>
> I can't really answer your question, except to share some family
> history. My grandfather and his family left Volhynia through Germany to Chicago
> in 1910-1912. My grandfather and a cousin came first, and they stayed
> permanently (except for my grandfather's trip back to Elsenau, Germany, to
> bring over his finance in 1914). Then, in an example of chain migration, my
> grandfather assisted three brothers and their father to join him. Since
> two brothers and the father had families back in Volhynia, they returned home
> after some months or a year or so of work. (PS, I would love to find
> records of their return to Volhynia. Passenger lists I've seen only record
> their coming to America.) The other brother died in Chicago in an accident.
> Back in Volhynia, the whole family got caught up in WWI, with the two
> brothers drafted into the German and Russian armies respectively, followed by
> the Bolshevik revolution and continued fighting between the Ukrainians and
> Russians. My grandfather's brothers were not able to leave again until they
> emigrated to Canada in the late 1920's.
>
> I believe they began leaving Volhynia in 1910 mainly because the
> Russians were reneging on the promises made to get Germans to settle there over
> the preceding 150 years. Importantly, Russia began conscripting ethnic
> Germans into the growing army as the world headed toward world war. Of
> course, the New World also promised jobs, cheap land, and a better life.
>
> Dan Wagner
>
>
>
> In a message dated 9/13/2011 4:52:54 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
> schrota at shaw.ca writes:
>
> Good afternoon
>
>
>
> Is anyone familiar with the exodus of German Volhynians from the region
> between 1910 and 1917. I have a note in an archive (by Bernhart Forbau)
> that
> my grandparents escaped to Germany through the Middle East. I cannot find
> any historical data to support this.
>
>
>
> My relatives would include the Schrot, Betke, Brenner and perhaps Forbau
> who
> were living near Mitzk, Volhynia in the early part of 1900. My father and
> uncle were born in Germany
>
> In 1917 and 1920 in the Pasewalk area. My father remembers being in the
> Greifswald forest.
>
>
>
> Any help would be much appreciated. Thanks
>
>
>
> Art Schrot
>
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