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Education and Ethnicity:
The Relationship between Russian
Mennonites and School District
Formation in Buhler and
Goessel, Kansas
TAMMY PARKER
IN 1874, 786 MEMBERS of the
Russian Mennonite community of Alexanderwohl emigrated from the Molotschna
colony of New Russia to the plains of central Kansas. Once in Kansas they
created two communities less than thirty miles apart, within the arc of
land between the Cottonwood and Little Arkansas Rivers that would, in
the following decade, become home to most of the Mennonite immigrants
to Kansas. These communities were based around the two sister churches
that they established soon after their arrival, namely the Alexanderwohl
Mennonite Church and the Hoffnungsau Mennonite Church. Two towns were
later formed by members of their respective communities: Goessel (near
Alexanderwohl) and Buhler (near Hoffnungsau). In the one and a quarter
centuries since their arrival in Kansas, Russian Mennonites in Goessel
and Buhler have adapted and adopted elements of American culture in their
efforts to create a community that enables them to sustain their ethnic
heritage. This study examines that process of adaptation and adoption
as it has involved formal education and Russian Mennonite ethnicity in
Buhler and Goessel.
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