Estimation of German settlers: German settlers were arrested by Poland in Germany. 1923 Permanent Court of the International Court of Justice Facts: On June 28, 1919, the Peace Treaty between the Allied Forces and the United Nations and Germany was signed in Versailles. On 10th January 1920, Germany approved the state of the independent Poland and transferred the rights and title of a particular region to Poland (Article 87). According to the Treaty of Versailles (Article 256), the lease and territory contracts of all German countries were transferred to the state of Poland.
The history of German immigration to the United States began in the 1600s when German settlers visited British colonies on the east coast of North America. The first settlers in the UK and Germany had the same Protestant religion, and the majority of American immigrants shared this belief. In 1607, British settlers set up Jamestown settlements in the Virginia colony. Immigration includes the first German American Dr. Johannes Fleischer, a botanist trained in a higher educated physician.
The colony was mainly the area of commerce and planting, and it did not attract many of the German settlers. The majority of German immigrants chose North America as the destination rather than a colony - between 887 and 1906, 1,085,124 immigrants, 1,007,574 visited the United States. When 22,000 soldiers settled in West Africa and invited from the Imperial Government to suppress Helis to provide financial aid, only 5% accepted it. In 1903, the German colony had a population of 5,125 people and in 1913 it had a population of 23,500 people. In 1913, German former World War I colonies included 19,696 Germans in Africa and the Pacific colony in 1913. In Africa (1913), 12,292 Germans lived in South-West Africa, 4,107 lived in East Africa, 1,643 lived in Cameroon. In the 1913 Pacific colony, there were 1,645 Germans