Vygoda (Ukraine)

Wyhoda (Ukrainian Вигода; Russian Выгода / Wygoda, Polish Wygoda ) is located in western Ukraine in the Ukrainian Vorkarpatenland urban-type settlement about 70 kilometers west of the Oblasthauptstadt Ivano-Frankivsk on the river and its tributary Switscha Misunka located. The place is known primarily for his forest path.

The village was founded in the 19th century when Baron Leopold Popper of Podhragy in since 1966 eingemeindeten after Wyhoda village Pacyków (today Ukrainian Pazykiw ) in 1873 opened a timber and sawmill. For the supply a railway between Dolyna and Wygoda was because of the instability and inefficiency of the delivery in 1883 built (see railway Stry - Ivano-Frankivsk ), this year is also considered the official founding year of the present settlement. Around the turn of the century, the place due to its good infrastructure developed very fast, it was also a chemical plant opened. After the end of the First World War it became part of Poland and was occupied during the Second World War only by the Soviet Union and from 1941 to 1944 from Germany. During the first occupation by the Soviet Union in 1940 Wyhoda received the status of an urban-type settlement.

1945, the city again came to the Soviet Union, where they became part of the Ukrainian SSR, since 1991 a part of today's Ukraine.

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