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  1. Unlike other ethnic groups, however, German ethnic identity was not just transplanted from Europe but rather was a product of Wisconsin: immigrants at first thought of themselves as “Prussians,” “Bavarians,” or “Rhinelanders,” not as “Germans.”

  2. Aug 8, 2019 · By exploring the different motivations and calculations by which different groups of Barbadians came to view migration as desirable after both 1834 and 1865, this essay shows how 1865 instead served as a point of continuity for different social classes in Barbados who had long used mobility to vigorously reimagine and transgress the boundaries ...

    • Caree Ann Marie Banton
    • 2019
  3. A hand-colored map of Wisconsin showing distribution ethnic groups based on the 1885 state census. The various nationalities are color-coded and include: Italians, Welsh, Dutch, Belgian, Polish, Bohemian, German, Irish, American, French, and Scandinavian.

    • 1890
    • 94K
    • Roeseler, John S.
    • Wisconsin
  4. This map shows the location of major settlement regions for various ethnic groups. Includes a legend in lower left hand corner. Sparse settlement is represented by white. Diverse Nationalities (No majority of nationalities, Indian) are represented in blue.

  5. The most geographically concentrated groups in Wisconsin are racial and ethnic minority groups: African Americans, followed by Native Americans, Hispanics and Asians Americans. The Hispanic population in Wisconsin is far less geographically "clustered" than the African-American population.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BarbadiansBarbadians - Wikipedia

    Ethnic groups. Most Barbadians are of African or mixed-race descent. They are descendants of enslaved people brought from West Africa. Mixed-race Barbadians are descendants of Europeans, Africans, and other ethnic groups. White Barbadians are mainly of British and Irish descent.

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  8. Barbadian (or Bajan) Americans are Americans of full or partial Barbadian heritage. The 2000 Census recorded 53,785 US residents born on the Caribbean island [ 2] 52,170 of whom were born to non-American parents [ 3] and 54,509 people who described their ethnicity as Barbadian. [ 4]