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DANISH AMERICANS


'Danish Americans' are people born in the United States with Danish ancestry. There are approximately 1,500,000 Americans of Danish origin or descent.
According to the United States Census of 2000, the states with the largest populations of Danish Americans are as follows:

California - 207,030

Utah - 144,713

Minnesota - 88,924

Wisconsin - 72,160

Washington - 72,098
The states with the smallest populations of Danish Americans are as follows:

West Virginia - 1,317

Delaware - 1,585

Rhode Island - 1,811

Vermont - 2,522

Mississippi - 2,617
If it were a state, Washington, D.C. would have the smallest Danish American population, with 1,047 counted in 2000.[2]
Distribution of Danish Americans according to the 2000 census.


Contents
Culture
Education
Religious life
Danish American communities
See also
External links

Culture


The Library of Congress has noted that Danish Americans, more so than other Scandinavian Americans, "spread nationwide and comparatively quickly disappeared into the melting pot....the Danes were the least cohesive group and the first to lose consciousness of their origins."[3] Historians have pointed to the higher rate of English use among Danes, their willingless to marry non-Danes, and their eagerness to become naturalized citizens as factors that contributed to their rapid assimilation, as well as their interactions with the already more assimilated German American community.[4]
As the Danes came to America, they brought some of their traditional foods with them. Popular Danish foods among Danish Americans are kringle, æbleskiver, frikadeller (Danish meatballs), and risengrød, a rice pudding with almonds.
In 1872, Danish Americans in Omaha, Nebraska founded the ''Danish Pioneer'', an English-Danish newspaper. Now published in Hoffman Estates, Illinois, it is the oldest Danish American newspaper in publication.[5]
Education

Like many other immigrant groups, Danish Americans also schools to educate their youth. Traditional Danish "folk schools," which focused more on learning outcomes than grades or diplomas, were operated primarily between the 1870s and 1930s in heavily Danish communities such as Elk Horn, Iowa; Ashland, Michigan; West Denmark, Wisconsin; Nysted, Nebraska; Tyler, Minnesota; Kenmare, North Dakota; and Solvang, California.[6]
The two major still-operating historically Danish American colleges are Dana College in Blair, Nebraska and Grand View College in Des Moines, Iowa, both of which are home to large collections of Danish American archives.
Religious life

Most Danish Americans classify themselves as religious. Like other groups of Americans of Scandinavian descent, many of them are Lutherans. The oldest Danish-Lutheran congregation is Emmaus Lutheran Church in Racine, Wisconsin, founded August 22, 1851. Nearby Kenosha is home to the second oldest Danish-Lutheran congregation, St. Mary's Lutheran Church, which is the largest congregation in the Greater Milwaukee Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.
Of the Danish Americans that are not Lutheran, a large number converted to Mormonism. This is in contrast with Norwegian and Swedish Americans, also of Scadinavian ancestry, who did have not made the conversion in such large numbers.
Nebraska, Iowa and Wisconsin have the largest concentrations of non-Mormon Danish Americans. The states with the largest Mormon Danish American populations are Utah and Idaho, particularly the southeastern part of the state.
Smaller but significant numbers of Danish Americans have also become Methodists, Baptists, and Seventh Day Adventists.[7]

Danish American communities


Racine, Wisconsin claims to be the home to the largest group of Danish Americans in the United States. A number of other communities were founded by Danish Americans or have a large Danish American community:

Ames, Iowa

Askov, Minnesota

Blair, Nebraska

Dagmar, Montana

Danevang, Texas

Dannebrog, Nebraska

Denmark, Wisconsin

Elk Horn, Iowa

Kenmare, North Dakota

Kenosha, Wisconsin

Madison, Wisconsin

Minneapolis, Minnesota

Racine, Wisconsin

Solvang, California

Tyler, Minnesota

Viborg, South Dakota

Washington Island, Wisconsin
Additionally, Danish Americans helped settle Montcalm County, Michigan.

See also



List of Danish Americans

External links



Danish Immigrant Museum

★ ''The Danish Pioneer''

Danish American Center

Danish Sisterhood of America

Danish American Trivia

Danish American Population Figures

Danish American Heritage Society

National Danish-American Genealogical Society

Multicultural America: Danish Americans

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