HISTORY
In 1881, a group of Volga German families from Rush and Barton Counties in Kansas decided to move to the Pacific Northwest. They took advantage of reduced fares on the Union Pacific and took a train to San Francisco where steamers of the Oregon Steamship Company transported them to Portland. After spending a year working in the Portland area, most of these families decided to move to Eastern Washington, and in September 1882 left Portland by covered wagon for Walla Walla. From there they headed north into the Palouse Country arriving in Whitman County four miles east of Endicott on 12 October 1882.
Endicott had been platted in 1882 and named for William Endicott Jr. of the Oregon Improvement Company. It was officially incorporated on 11 February 1905.
VOLGA GERMAN CONGREGATIONS
Evangelical Lutheran Congregational Church
Zion Lutheran Church
The following Volga German families are known to have settled in and around Endicott:
Aschenbrenner
Bafus
Daubert
Grün (Green)
Helm
Hergert from Yagodnaya Polyana
Kleweno
Konschu
Langlitz
Lautenschlager
Litzenberger
Lust
Morasch from Yagodnaya Polyana
Ochs
Pfaffenroth
Reich
Reinke
Repp
Scheuermann from Yagodnaya Polyana
Schmick
Schreiber
Schultz
Weitz from Yagodnaya Polyana
Dusty Cemetery (findagrave.com)
Endicott Cemetery (findagrave.com)
Zion Lutheran Cemetery (findagrave.com)
Zion Lutheran Cemetery (Washington State Archives - Digital Library)
Scheuerman, Richard D. & Clifford E. Trafzer. The Volga Germans: Pioneers of the Northwest. Moscow, ID: University of Idaho Press, 1985.
Endicott, Washington (Wikipedia)