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Belgians in Michigan

Bernard A. Cook

Bernard A. Cook, who began his teaching career at Northern Michigan University, is Provost Distinguished Professor of History at Loyola University in New Orleans. He has directed Loyola University's s...

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Belgians in Michigan

Bernard A. Cook


At the beginning of the twenty-first century, Michigan was home to the second-largest
Belgian population in the United States, and Detroit had one of the largest Belgian populations in the nation. Although immigration declined after World War I, the Belgian- American
community is still prominent in the state. Political, religious, and economic conditions,
including a nineteenth- century economic depression, helped motivate the move to America. Belgians brought with them the ability and willingness to innovate, as well as a tradition of hard work and devotion. The Gazette van Detroit, a Flemish-language newspaper first printed in Detroit in 1914, continues to be produced and distributed to subscribers throughout the United States and overseas. Belgian-Americans continue to incorporate traditional values with newfound American values, enabling them to forever preserve their heritage.


Discovering the Peoples of Michigan


Paperback Edition:

Photographs, references, index
World Rights
96 pp., 5.5 " x 8.5 ", December 2007
paper, $12.95
0-87013-812-X
978-0-87013-812-6

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