Talk:Minnesota

United States   Minnesota Welcome to the Minnesota page, Land of 10,000 LakesMost unique genealogical features:
 * MN was formerly claimed by France, Spain, the United Kingdom, Quebec, unorganized U.S., Northwest, Indiana, Louisiana, Illinois, Michigan, Missouri, Iowa, and Wisconsin territories.

Counties
Click on the map below to go to a county page. Hover over a county to see its name. To see a larger version of the map, click here. Extinct or Renamed Counties: Andy Johnson | Big Sioux | Breckenridge | Buchanan | Davis | Doty | Mankahto | Manomin | Midway | Monongalia | Newton | Pembina | Pierce | St. Croix | Superior | Toombs | Wahnata

Major Repositories
Minnesota Historical Society· Minnestoa Genealogical Society· Iron Range Research Center· National Archives Great Lakes Region (Chicago)· Mid-Continent Public Library· Newberry Library

Migration Routes
Lake Superior· Mississippi River· St. Croix River· Minnesota River· Dubuque-Fort Snelling Road· Fort Snelling-Superior Road· St. Paul-Pembina Road· Northern Pacific Railway· Great Northern Railway (U.S.)

Research Tools

 * The Minnesota GenWeb Project provides county information about formation date, parent county, county seat, bibliography, cemeteries, census, churches, towns, history, look ups, obituaries, queries, repositories, surname registry, and many Internet links.
 * Family History 101 - My Minnesota Genealogy contains Minnesota state history, links to counties, county histories, where to find records in each county and online links.
 * Minnesota State Archives immigration resources, birth index 1900-1934, death index 1904-2001, state census indexes for 1865, 1875, 1885, 1895, and 1905.
 * Minnesota Official Marriage System is an index to marriages from 1850 to present (varies by county).

Did you know?
The largest ethnic groups in Minnesota are Germans, Swedes, and Norwegians. By 1880 the foreign-born population in Minnesota included nearly 108,000 Scandinavians, many of whom were Norwegians; 66,000 Germans; and about 39,000 British, most of whom were Irish. Nearly 30,000 Minnesotans had come from Canada, most of whom were British and French Canadians. There were nearly 8,000 Bohemians (mostly Czechs) and 1,000 or 2,000 each from Switzerland, Poland, Russia, and France.

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