Review of "The Danes in America," by Peter L. Petersen

 Review of

The Danes in America, by Peter L. Petersen ISBN 0822510316

Four out of five stars

Brief history of a smaller immigrant group

 According to official statistics compiled by the United States Immigration Service, slightly over 371,000 immigrants arrived from Denmark between 1820 and 1980. When this is contrasted with the 5.5 million from Italy, nearly 6 million from Germany, 4.5 million from Ireland and 3 million from Russia, this number is very small. Since many of the Danish immigrants were farmers, a great deal of them settled in the Midwestern United States and continued to farm.

 This book is a brief description of the causes of the Danish immigration, how they moved, where they settled and how they maintained many of their cultural traditions. The largest urban concentrations of people of Danish extraction were in Chicago and New York, although there were smaller concentrations in Omaha, Nebraska and Racine, Wisconsin. Unlike some of the other ethnic groups, the Danes generally did not form an ethnically defined neighborhood.

 While this book is only a primer on the people of Danish extraction in the United States, it is a good one. The explanations of the causes and consequences are reasonably thorough and some of the most prominent Danish-Americans are mentioned.

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