CATALOG UPDATES
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Browse Items (3004 total)
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Clifton Junior College catalogue, 1896-1954
Catalogues of a Lutheran school founded at Clifton, Texas, in 1896 as the Lutheran College; later, Clifton College, Clifton Junior College. Closed fall 1953, merging with Texas Lutheran College. Its building was later used by the Bosque County Conservatory of Fine Arts and Clifton Lutheran Sunset Home (founded Feb. 8, 1954). -
Columbia Lutheran College papers, 1911-1915
Bulletins, photographs, clippings, catalogues (1911/12 - 1914/15) and reports of an Everett, Washington, academy founded in 1909. -
Crookston College catalogues, circa 1900
Catalogues of a private business and teachers' training school founded in Crookston, Minnesota, in 1895. Early catalogues with name: Crookston Normal School & Business Institute (or Business College). Later catalogues have "and school of auto, steam and tractor engineering" and Crookston Commercial College. -
Dakota Lutheran Academy papers, circa 1950
Correspondence, brochures, catalogues, journals, and reports of a Minot, North Dakota, school (1948-1964). Yearbook "The Shield" (1956). -
Decorah Institute journals, 1888-1889
A journal published by a secondary school founded by John Breckenridge in 1874 in Decorah, Iowa. The school also offered teacher training and business courses. Also, a one-leaf "1888-9 fifteenth annual circular of the Decorah Institute and the fifth annual circular of the Decorah Business Institute." J. Breckenridge, principal; J.C. Garland, assistant principal; A.W. Rich, principal. -
Evanston Bible School catalogues, circa 1930
Catalogues of an institution of the Norwegian-Danish Educational Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Evanston, Illinois. From "Historical Statement": "At its annual meeting in June, 1932, the Board of Trustees (of the Norwegian-Danish Theological Seminary) decided that the time had come for an expansion…the organization of a Bible School for lay people…The Executive Committee of the Board…decided…Sept. 7th that the school should start operation in Jan. 1933." See also: Norwegian-Danish Theological Seminary. Catalog. P0518. T. Otmann Firing autobiography. P1310.
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Carl G. O. Hansen papers, 1862-1958
History/Biography:
Carl Gustav Otto Hansen was born on March 16, 1871 in Trondheim, Norway to Sivert Christian Hansen (1839-1872) and Marit Megrund (1842-1927). In 1881, Carl, alongside his mother and siblings, emigrated to the United States. They settled in Walnut Grove, Minnesota, where Marit’s parents and siblings settled. In 1882, they moved to Minneapolis. Marit supported the family, as she did in Norway, by producing knitwear. In 1887, she married Halver Olson from Verdalen.
Hansen studied Latin, Green, history and composition at Augsburg Seminary from 1887 to 1889, however he was mostly self-educated. He worked for a time in a print shop and later opened his own place. He married Amalie Marie Edsten (1871-1945), daughter of furniture merchant Aaron Henry Edsten and Johanne Larsdatter Rognerud. Together they had four children: Conrad, Arild, Erling, and Mildred.
From 1897 to 1935, he wrote and edited for Minneapolis Daglig Tidende. From 1935 to 1937, he was in Chicago and employed at Skandinaven. He then edited the Sons of Norway magazine in Minneapolis and served as the educational director (1937-1954). Hansen was a lifelong musician and sang with and directed male chorus groups, including the Norwegian Glee Club of Minnesota (1912-1945). He was also president of the Norwegian-Danish Press Association, and a founder of Det Norske Selskap and of NAHA.Hansen was a music critic, a book reviewer, a biographer of Norwegian Americans, and the author of "My Minneapolis (1956)."
Scope and Content: :
Correspondence, articles, lectures, reports, clippings, scrapbooks, and diaries of a Norwegian-born Minneapolis journalist, musician, lecturer, and author. The papers deal with the activities of Norwegian-American singing societies in Minneapolis and other cities, the tribulations of translators, the cultural creativity of Norwegian Americans, the study of the Norwegian language in the Minneapolis public schools and at St. Olaf College, biographies of Norwegian Americans, and other related subjects. "Sagas of Today" (a "Minneapolis Journal'' column) and "For 50 aar siden," "Det Norske Amerika gjennem Hundred Aar," and "Glimt fra Livet i det Norske Amerika," columns that ran in "Minneapolis Tidende," are among the clippings. The collection contains correspondence from significant authors, journalists, and scholars of the day.
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Lutheran Church papers
Articles, clippings, correspondence, records, scrapbooks, and reports regarding the Lutheran church and its many subsidiary organizations among Norwegian Americans, dealing with bilingualism, doctrine, education, missions, charities, conferences, synodical differences, and history, and with controversial figures like Bjornstjerne Bjornson, Hjalmar H. Boyesen, Bernt J. Muus, and Kristofer Janson. Among the correspondents are Rasmus B. Anderson, Ole A. Buslett, Johannes B. Frich, Severin Gunderson, Ole Juul, Ole L. Kirkeberg, Amund Mikkalsen, Hans G. Stub, and Martin Ulvestad.
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Augsburg College papers, circa 1870-1981
Papers of a Lutheran institution founded at Marshall, Wisconsin, in 1869 and moved to Minneapolis in 1872: journals, pamphlets, catalogues, yearbooks, pictures, and a court record. -
Concordia College papers, circa 1891-1979
Brochures, catalogues, clippings, journals, programs, reports, and history of a Lutheran College, Moorhead, Minnesota, founded in 1891.