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The Jan. 1956 issue includes Fluid power engineering index, 1931-55.
Now for the first time, German family researchers will have a homeland directory from the heart of America's most German state! Extracted from marriage and naturalization records in these three central Wisconsin counties, this book offers an alphabetized listing of those Prussian and German immigrants who gave their homeland birthplaces. These listings are broken down, within each Wisconsin county, into the Prussian county or other German state from which they came. It is from where they came that makes these Prussian Netzelanders unique, for, unlike other German regional groups, their ancestral homeland no longer exists. To explain why this is so, a background text begins the book by providing details on the linguistic, religious, and socio-economic traits peculiar to this part of the former German Empire. The Slavic influence upon these German families is also duly noted, plus the further migration of some to Minnesota. While other books have touched on passenger lists and Germans in colonial America, this is one of the most detailed breakdowns of immigrants in America's German heartland.
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Johann Freidrich Heuer was born 18 April 1808 in Neides, Kreis Greifenberg, Pommern, Prussia. His parents were Martin Heuer and Louise Brockhaus. He married Friederike Louise Ruhnje (1804-1832) in 1829. He married Catharina Sophia Ruhnke (1808-1899) in 1832. They emigrated and settled in Wisconsin.
Decisions of the Board of Land Appeals, Office of Hearings and Appeals, Dept. of the Interior.