Thirteen Hutterite families under the leadership of Jacob Wipf (1835–1896) emigrated from
Johannesruh, Ukraine, to
South Dakota in 1877. After their arrival, they formed the Lehrerleut by establishing a community of goods at
Elmspring Colony near
Parkston, South Dakota, thus following the example of the
Schmiedeleut and the
Dariusleut. The group's leader was a teacher (German:
Lehrer), hence their name
Lehrerleut ("teacher people"). Shortly after
World War I, two Hutterite
conscientious objectors from the Lehrerleut branch,
Joseph and Michael Hofer, died in an American prison. This and growing
anti-German sentiment caused the emigration of all four Lehrerleut colonies to
Alberta, Canada, in the following years. In 1945, the Lehrerleut started to form new colonies in
Montana, thus returning to the United States. ==Demography==