Source
1950 | 1961 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
States | Expellees in | % | Expellees in | % |
Schleswig-Holstein | 857 | 33.0 | 630 | 27.2 |
Hamburg | 116 | 7.2 | 206 | 11.3 |
Lower Saxony | 1,852 | 27.2 | 1,612 | 24.3 |
Bremen | 48 | 8.6 | 98 | 13.9 |
North Rhine-Westphalia | 1,332 | 10.1 | 2,298 | 14.5 |
Hesse | 721 | 16.7 | 818 | 17.0 |
Rhineland-Palatinate | 152 | 5.1 | 276 | 8.1 |
Baden-Württemberg | 862 | 13.4 | 1,205 | 15.5 |
Bavaria | 1,937 | 21.1 | 1,645 | 17.3 |
Saarland | – | – | 18 | 1.7 |
Berlin (West) | 148 | 6.9 | 151 | 6.9 |
Federal territory | 8,025 | 16.1 | 8,956 | 15.9 |
Expellees are persons of German nationality or ethnicity who, on September 1, 1939, were permanently domiciled abroad or in the eastern territories of Germany that are currently under foreign administration (territorial borders as of December 31, 1937). This category also includes any children born to them after this time. Any persons from abroad who wanted to be recognized as expellees needed to prove that German was their mother tongue. The classification of children followed that of the father; the classification of children born out of wedlock, or those whose fathers had died, followed that of the mother. For the 1950 census, the category expellees also included Germans living in the Saarland as of September 1, 1939. For the 1961 census, however, the only persons counted as expellees were those who had applied for a Federal Expellee Identification Card (A or B). This did not include all those who were eligible. Because of this difference in counting methods, official estimates suggest that the increase in refugee and expellee numbers was actually twice as high as reported.
Source: Gerhard A. Ritter and Merith Niehuss, Wahlen in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland: Bundestags- und Landtagswahlen 1946–1987. Munich: Beck, 1987, p. 31.