Difference between revisions of "Zaporizhia (Ukraine)"
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Zaporizhia (Zaporozhe), formerly Alexandrovsk, located on the left bank of the Dnieper River in the [[Ukraine|Ukraine]], 45 miles (70 km) south of Dnepropetrovsk, below the Dneprostroi Dam, on the main railroad from [[Moscow (Russia) |Moscow]] to Sevastopol, had in the early 1950s a population of approximately 300,000. It was a significant industrial center with metallurgical plants and chemical works. Mennonites from the [[Chortitza Mennonite Settlement (Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Chortitza settlement]] founded the village of [[Schönwiese (Chortitza Mennonite Settlement, Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Schönwiese]] near this city and soon developed a large-scale milling industry and factories that became the nucleus of its industrial significance. | Zaporizhia (Zaporozhe), formerly Alexandrovsk, located on the left bank of the Dnieper River in the [[Ukraine|Ukraine]], 45 miles (70 km) south of Dnepropetrovsk, below the Dneprostroi Dam, on the main railroad from [[Moscow (Russia) |Moscow]] to Sevastopol, had in the early 1950s a population of approximately 300,000. It was a significant industrial center with metallurgical plants and chemical works. Mennonites from the [[Chortitza Mennonite Settlement (Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Chortitza settlement]] founded the village of [[Schönwiese (Chortitza Mennonite Settlement, Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Schönwiese]] near this city and soon developed a large-scale milling industry and factories that became the nucleus of its industrial significance. | ||
− | Among the early Mennonite firms of Schönwiese, now a part of Zaporizhia, were Lepp and Wallmann, [[Koop, Abraham Jacob (1838-1920)|A. J. Koop]], [[Niebuhr, Hermann Abramovitch (1830-1906)|Hermann Niebuhr]], and Hildebrandt and Pries. The strategic location on the Dnieper River and the need for agricultural machinery speeded the rapid growth. The Lepp and Wallmann factory had an annual production of 900,000 rubles and the A. J. Koop factory of 610,000 (1911). The largest milling industry was Niebuhr & Co. After the Revolution the industries were nationalized and developed by the Soviets. | + | Among the early Mennonite firms of Schönwiese, now a part of Zaporizhia, were [[Lepp and Wallmann]], [[Koop, Abraham Jacob (1838-1920)|A. J. Koop]], [[Niebuhr, Hermann Abramovitch (1830-1906)|Hermann Niebuhr]], and Hildebrandt and Pries. The strategic location on the Dnieper River and the need for agricultural machinery speeded the rapid growth. The Lepp and Wallmann factory had an annual production of 900,000 rubles and the A. J. Koop factory of 610,000 (1911). The largest milling industry was Niebuhr & Co. After the Revolution the industries were nationalized and developed by the Soviets. |
− | The first combines in [[Russia|Russia]] were produced by Mennonite engineers in former Mennonite factories of Zaporizhia. [[Dyck, Peter Johann (1884-1937)|Peter Dyck]], [[Hamm, Gerhard Christian (1883-1937)|Gerhard Hamm]], Kornelius Pauls, and others, mostly sons of Mennonite industrialists who had studied in [[Germany|Germany]], started to build combines in 1925. (Hamm went to the [[United States of America|United States]] to study American industries.) Their success was reported to the industrial headquarters in [[Moscow (Russia) |Moscow]]. In 1927 after a commission had examined the combines Kalinin himself bestowed the Order of Lenin on the Mennonite engineers and the director of the factory. From now on the "Kummunar" factory received priority till the output reached 10,000 per year. During the wave of exiles in 1933 the Mennonite engineers were sent into exile. When Hitler's army invaded the [[Ukraine|Ukraine]], the Mennonites who were working in large numbers in these industries were also evacuated. Miraculously some escaped this evacuation and came to North and [[South America|South America]] after World War II. It can be assumed that some of the evacuated Mennonites found their way back to Zaporizhia, although little information | + | The first combines in [[Russia|Russia]] were produced by Mennonite engineers in former Mennonite factories of Zaporizhia. [[Dyck, Peter Johann (1884-1937)|Peter Dyck]], [[Hamm, Gerhard Christian (1883-1937)|Gerhard Hamm]], Kornelius Pauls, and others, mostly sons of Mennonite industrialists who had studied in [[Germany|Germany]], started to build combines in 1925. (Hamm went to the [[United States of America|United States]] to study American industries.) Their success was reported to the industrial headquarters in [[Moscow (Russia) |Moscow]]. In 1927 after a commission had examined the combines Kalinin himself bestowed the Order of Lenin on the Mennonite engineers and the director of the factory. From now on the "Kummunar" factory received priority till the output reached 10,000 per year. During the wave of exiles in 1933 the Mennonite engineers were sent into exile. When Hitler's army invaded the [[Ukraine|Ukraine]], the Mennonites who were working in large numbers in these industries were also evacuated. Miraculously some escaped this evacuation and came to North and [[South America|South America]] after World War II. It can be assumed that some of the evacuated Mennonites found their way back to Zaporizhia, although little information was available at the time this article was written (1959). |
See also [[Industry Among Mennonites in Russia (and Prussia)|Industry Among the Mennonites in Russia and Ukraine]] | See also [[Industry Among Mennonites in Russia (and Prussia)|Industry Among the Mennonites in Russia and Ukraine]] |
Latest revision as of 22:12, 28 April 2015
Zaporizhia (Zaporozhe), formerly Alexandrovsk, located on the left bank of the Dnieper River in the Ukraine, 45 miles (70 km) south of Dnepropetrovsk, below the Dneprostroi Dam, on the main railroad from Moscow to Sevastopol, had in the early 1950s a population of approximately 300,000. It was a significant industrial center with metallurgical plants and chemical works. Mennonites from the Chortitza settlement founded the village of Schönwiese near this city and soon developed a large-scale milling industry and factories that became the nucleus of its industrial significance.
Among the early Mennonite firms of Schönwiese, now a part of Zaporizhia, were Lepp and Wallmann, A. J. Koop, Hermann Niebuhr, and Hildebrandt and Pries. The strategic location on the Dnieper River and the need for agricultural machinery speeded the rapid growth. The Lepp and Wallmann factory had an annual production of 900,000 rubles and the A. J. Koop factory of 610,000 (1911). The largest milling industry was Niebuhr & Co. After the Revolution the industries were nationalized and developed by the Soviets.
The first combines in Russia were produced by Mennonite engineers in former Mennonite factories of Zaporizhia. Peter Dyck, Gerhard Hamm, Kornelius Pauls, and others, mostly sons of Mennonite industrialists who had studied in Germany, started to build combines in 1925. (Hamm went to the United States to study American industries.) Their success was reported to the industrial headquarters in Moscow. In 1927 after a commission had examined the combines Kalinin himself bestowed the Order of Lenin on the Mennonite engineers and the director of the factory. From now on the "Kummunar" factory received priority till the output reached 10,000 per year. During the wave of exiles in 1933 the Mennonite engineers were sent into exile. When Hitler's army invaded the Ukraine, the Mennonites who were working in large numbers in these industries were also evacuated. Miraculously some escaped this evacuation and came to North and South America after World War II. It can be assumed that some of the evacuated Mennonites found their way back to Zaporizhia, although little information was available at the time this article was written (1959).
See also Industry Among the Mennonites in Russia and Ukraine
Bibliography
Epp, D. H. "P. H. Lepp." Der Bote (1928): No. 10-13.
Krahn, Cornelius. "Agriculture Among the Mennonites of Russia." Mennonite Life 10 (1955).
Krahn, Cornelius. "Mennonite Industry in Russia." Mennonite Life 10 (1955): 21.
Author(s) | Cornelius Krahn |
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Date Published | 1959 |
Cite This Article
MLA style
Krahn, Cornelius. "Zaporizhia (Ukraine)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1959. Web. 25 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Zaporizhia_(Ukraine)&oldid=131490.
APA style
Krahn, Cornelius. (1959). Zaporizhia (Ukraine). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 25 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Zaporizhia_(Ukraine)&oldid=131490.
Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 4, pp. 1017-1018. All rights reserved.
©1996-2024 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.