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  1. The Refugee Act of 1953 and the Acts of 1960 and 1965 brought thousands more of new Serbian immigrants. The total number of Yugoslav citizens who immigrated to the United States between 1946 and 1968 was 99,152 of which 16,000 were not Slavs but Volksdeutsches born in Yugoslavia. Serbian Immigration to Other Countries

  2. First Immigration. The history of American immigration by Serbs can be divided into two periods: 'early immigration' from 1820, when the immigration of immigrants was introduced, until 1880, and 'later immigration' after 1880.

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  4. The distribution of Serbian immigrants who came after World War II was similar to the former. Most of them settled at first in the well-organized Serbian colonies of Pennsylvania, Illinois, Ohio and California. Later on they moved to other states according to job availability.

  5. Jan 16, 2024 · The Statistical Yearbook of the Immigration and Naturalization Service External is another good source of information on the number of Serbs and Montenegrins who came to the United States, but the INS continued to count them as part of Yugoslavia until 2003, when they started to count Serbian and Montenegrin immigrants separately. Beginning in ...

  6. THE YUGOSLAV IMMIGRANTS IN AMERICA. Yugoslavs did not begin to immigrate in large numbers until after I890. Most of them came from the provinces formerly belonging to Austria-Hungary. In I930 the. state in the Union. The Chicago region has the greatest number of any urban area- between 40,ooo and 6o,ooo.

  7. Until the dissolution of Yugoslavia beginning in 1991, the newest immigrants had come and gone freely between America and Serbia. Some worked for American companies, some for Yugoslav companies in the United States, and many, after staying abroad for a number of years went back to Yugoslavia with hard currency and marketable skills.

  8. Aug 11, 2022 · 1820–1880 — First period of immigration. 1880–1914 — Second period; between the Civil war and World War I (WWI) 1918–1939 — The third period; the Interwar period. 1945–1965 — Fourth period; after World War II (WWII) 1965–1990 — Fifth period; from 1965 until the War in Yugoslavia started. 1990–today — Sixth period — from the 90s until today.

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