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Draft talk:Old Riverside Hutterite Colony

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James River (Dakotas) Hutterite colonies

Hutterites at one of the Jim River colonies were described in the diary of Laura Ingalls Wilder. It was mentioned by Rose Wilder Lane, daughter of Laura Ingalls Wilder, that...

The Ingalls came through De Smet, South Dakota (44°23′9″N 97°33′6″W / 44.38583°N 97.55167°W / 44.38583; -97.55167 (De Smet, South Dakota)), Howard, South Dakota (44°0′38″N 97°31′35″W / 44.01056°N 97.52639°W / 44.01056; -97.52639 (Howard, South Dakota), in Miner County, South Dakota), Bridgewater, South Dakota 43°33′1″N 97°30′1″W / 43.55028°N 97.50028°W / 43.55028; -97.50028 (Bridgewater, South Dakota), and Yankton, South Dakota (42°52′54″N 97°23′33″W / 42.88167°N 97.39250°W / 42.88167; -97.39250 (Yankton, South Dakota))

Members (as of July 2022) of Category:Hutterites in the United States

From Hutchinson County, South Dakota article:

Mennonites and Hutterites: Hutchinson County is the most heavily Mennonite-populated county of South Dakota. German-speaking Mennonites from Russia settled in the county beginning in 1874 until the early 1880s.[1] South Dakota has the nation's largest population of Hutterites,[2] a communal Anabaptist group that emigrated also from Russia during the same period as the Mennonites, with whom they share the Anabaptist faith. Hutterites live in communities each of about 150 people. Wolf Creek Colony is in Hutchinson County, where the Wolf meets the James River. This colony is west of Freeman and north of Olivet and Menno.[3] Other Hutterite communities in the county are Maxwell Colony, New Elm Spring Colony, Old Elm Spring Colony, and Tschetter Colony.

As of July 2022 there were 135 members of Category:Hutterite communities, most in the U.S. but Nonington one in Dover, England, and some other non-US ones.

NRHP-listed ones:


FloridaArmy (talk) 19:48, 9 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

  1. ^ Unruh, J. D. (1956). "Hutchinson County (South Dakota, USA)". Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
  2. ^ "Color them plain but successful". The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Retrieved 14 December 2008.
  3. ^ Johnson, Dirk (November 25, 1987). "Wolf Creek Journal; Idealists With a Knack For Being Prosperous". The New York Times. Retrieved June 20, 2015.