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  1. Nordic and Scandinavian Americans are Americans of Scandinavian and/or Nordic ancestry, including Danish Americans (estimate: 1,453,897), Faroese Americans, Finnish Americans (estimate: 653,222), Greenlandic Americans, Icelandic Americans (estimate: 49,442), Norwegian Americans (estimate: 4,602,337), and Swedish Americans (estimate: 4,293,208).

  2. Aug 1, 2020 · Let's take a look at the reason so many Americans claim Scandinavian heritage–and how they choose to celebrate it. Because of mass migration more than 100 years ago, around 11 million Americans claim Scandinavian ancestry today.

  3. May 31, 2024 · A thorough and lavishly illustrated textbook for genealogical research in Sweden, with occasional information on how to trace emigrants who went to America. Gives advice on interviewing family members, finding family mementos, and putting information together to create charts of relationships.

  4. As immigrants from Scandinavia flooded into sparsely populated areas of the U.S., they helped create a particularly Scandinavian way of life, melding the varied religious, culinary, literary, and linguistic traditions that they brought with them with those that they found in their new country.

  5. Nordic immigration to North America encompasses the movement of people from the Nordic countries of Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Iceland, and Finland to the North America, mainly the United States and Canada, from the 17th to the 20th centuries.

  6. Nordic and Scandinavian Americans are Americans of Scandinavian and/or Nordic ancestry, including Danish Americans, Faroese Americans, Finnish Americans, Greenlandic Americans, Icelandic Americans, Norwegian Americans, and Swedish Americans.

  7. May 31, 2024 · Documented Norwegian migration to North America began on July 4, 1825, with the sailing of the sloop Restauration, from Stavanger, bound for New York City. Norwegian Americans have meticulously documented their migration movements, lives of the immigrants, and the developed settlements.

  8. May 7, 2024 · Bibliography of Danish-American emigration to the Unites States from 1840 to 1920 and Danish-American history to 1983. Includes official histories and statistics, personal diaries, letters, travelers' logs, handbooks, Danish settlements arranged by state, Danish churches and schools, and ethnic societies.

  9. Before the 19th century, the people of the Scandinavian lands—Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, and Iceland—had often visited North America. Some came for exploration, some came to launch colonial adventures, and some came to stay and follow their faith.

  10. Scandinavian immigrants were generally welcome in nineteenth-century America and most settled in the Midwest or Pacific Northwest. Swedes came to America with the lifting of restrictions on emigration in the 1850s and headed for the Midwest, with Illinois as a favored destination.

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