Вход на сайт
Немцкие крестьяне и Цари
3057 просмотров
Перейти к просмотру всей ветки
Олменд старожил
в ответ умкa 25.10.04 16:54
"И тут Остапа понесло..."
Угу, я тоже очень удивился, когда узнал об этом на выставке сельского хозяйства США в Казахстане.
Эти американцы уже в застойное время занимались антисоветской агитацией, и все гиды на этой выставке были потомками тех самых немцев, которые выселились из России. И в проспектах было столько подрывной информации... в частности о вкладе переселенцев из России в экономику США, а у власти тогда был Картер. У некоторых гидов даже значки были, с надписью на немецком языке:
"Brüder, wir sind mit euch!".
Это так злило блюстителей советского порядка, но они не могли ничего поделать, и им только оставалось скрежетать зубами...
Когда я читаю ваши постинги, то мне кажется, что я слышу скрежет ваших зубов...
http://alphabetilately.com/US-trains-05.html
On August 16, 1874, Mennonite immigrants from Russia arrived in Marion County, Kansas, with small quantities of a red, Turkish strain of hardy, drought-resistant, heavy-yielding wheat. The strain of wheat, called "Turkey Red" by the Mennonites, has for many years been known as Hard Winter Wheat, and to this day is grown extensively in Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma and other wheat-producing states. This event has been termed "possibly the most significant event in Kansas history" for economic reasons and because "Turkey Red" would make the state a major world granary. The Mennonites who came to help open America's West were hard-working farmers descended from German settlers who, at about the time of America's Revolution, had "pioneered" in the Ukraine at the invitation of the Czarina Catherine the Great who exempted these peaceful people from military service. They immigrated to the United States and Canada in significant numbers between 1873 and 1883 when they were declared eligible for military conscription in the Russian military services.
About Kansas Agriculture:
..The original seed for the hard red winter wheat grown in Kansas was called Turkey Red wheat and first was experimented with in the 1870's in central Kansas. Mennonite immigrants from southern Russia brought the first seed to the state.
Experimentation and research in wheat breeding through the years have improved the original Turkey strain resulting in hard red winter wheat varieties well suited to Kansas. The principle utilization of this hard red winter wheat is commercial bread production.
http://www.swissmennonite.org/feature_archive/2004/200408.html
└The Russian-Germans are most famous for having brought wheat to Kansas, or more specifically the red, winter, hard wheat, called Turkey Red, a strain that was particularly suited for the Great Plains and became the major export of the wheat belt of the central and western states.
...Only winter wheat was generally successful in 1874. [72] And at the time the Volga Germans were settling down around Victoria, the Hays City Sentinel proclaimed that the question was now resolved: winter wheat was the kind to plant. [73]
...The most lasting and important gift of the Russian-Germans to Kansas, however, was their determination to stay. They brought families, invested all their resources, and immediately began the construction of substantial houses and churches, whole communities, many of which have survived for a century. In Ellis county in 1875 only four out of 72 farmers had families. [74] This unstable situation changed drastically with the arrival of the Volga Germans. While many other settlers drifted on from county to county, from state to state, as itinerant homesteaders or tenant farmers, the Russian-Germans stayed on through good times and some of the worst droughts in American history to cultivate the Plains and establish their own particular "good society."
___________________________
~Wer lesen kann, ist im Vorteil~
Угу, я тоже очень удивился, когда узнал об этом на выставке сельского хозяйства США в Казахстане.
Эти американцы уже в застойное время занимались антисоветской агитацией, и все гиды на этой выставке были потомками тех самых немцев, которые выселились из России. И в проспектах было столько подрывной информации... в частности о вкладе переселенцев из России в экономику США, а у власти тогда был Картер. У некоторых гидов даже значки были, с надписью на немецком языке:
"Brüder, wir sind mit euch!".
Это так злило блюстителей советского порядка, но они не могли ничего поделать, и им только оставалось скрежетать зубами...
Когда я читаю ваши постинги, то мне кажется, что я слышу скрежет ваших зубов...
http://alphabetilately.com/US-trains-05.html
On August 16, 1874, Mennonite immigrants from Russia arrived in Marion County, Kansas, with small quantities of a red, Turkish strain of hardy, drought-resistant, heavy-yielding wheat. The strain of wheat, called "Turkey Red" by the Mennonites, has for many years been known as Hard Winter Wheat, and to this day is grown extensively in Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma and other wheat-producing states. This event has been termed "possibly the most significant event in Kansas history" for economic reasons and because "Turkey Red" would make the state a major world granary. The Mennonites who came to help open America's West were hard-working farmers descended from German settlers who, at about the time of America's Revolution, had "pioneered" in the Ukraine at the invitation of the Czarina Catherine the Great who exempted these peaceful people from military service. They immigrated to the United States and Canada in significant numbers between 1873 and 1883 when they were declared eligible for military conscription in the Russian military services.
About Kansas Agriculture:
..The original seed for the hard red winter wheat grown in Kansas was called Turkey Red wheat and first was experimented with in the 1870's in central Kansas. Mennonite immigrants from southern Russia brought the first seed to the state.
Experimentation and research in wheat breeding through the years have improved the original Turkey strain resulting in hard red winter wheat varieties well suited to Kansas. The principle utilization of this hard red winter wheat is commercial bread production.
http://www.swissmennonite.org/feature_archive/2004/200408.html
└The Russian-Germans are most famous for having brought wheat to Kansas, or more specifically the red, winter, hard wheat, called Turkey Red, a strain that was particularly suited for the Great Plains and became the major export of the wheat belt of the central and western states.
...Only winter wheat was generally successful in 1874. [72] And at the time the Volga Germans were settling down around Victoria, the Hays City Sentinel proclaimed that the question was now resolved: winter wheat was the kind to plant. [73]
...The most lasting and important gift of the Russian-Germans to Kansas, however, was their determination to stay. They brought families, invested all their resources, and immediately began the construction of substantial houses and churches, whole communities, many of which have survived for a century. In Ellis county in 1875 only four out of 72 farmers had families. [74] This unstable situation changed drastically with the arrival of the Volga Germans. While many other settlers drifted on from county to county, from state to state, as itinerant homesteaders or tenant farmers, the Russian-Germans stayed on through good times and some of the worst droughts in American history to cultivate the Plains and establish their own particular "good society."
___________________________
~Wer lesen kann, ist im Vorteil~