CATALOG UPDATES
Hei hei! NAHA is currently undating our archival catalog. Some finding aids are currently unavailable. Please contact the NAHA archivist with any questions.
Browse Items (3004 total)
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Hans and Carolyn S. Hogstad family collection, 1994
Hans (1879-1970) and Carolyn Stenstadvold Hogstad (1884-1948) family pedigree (photocopy), apparently created by Stacy and Heidi Wirtjes. -
Hans and Danielle Nesse family history, 2014
Hans and Danielle Nesse: Their Lives as Missionaries in China (2014). Chapters include: Early Years in China, 1909-1918; War Reaches Sinyang, 1926-1927; Evacuation and Furlough, 1927-1928; Return to China and the War Years, 1936-1945; Revolution, 1947-1949; Evacuation to Hankow, 1949-1951; and Leaving China, 1951. -
Hans and Fredricka Varpness family history, undated
No description available. -
Hans and Ingeborg Arnesen Anderson Naversaeter family genealogy, 2005
Family history prepared by Wed Anderson, Valley City, ND, April 2005) -
Hans and Ingebret Larson family papers, 1824-1889
Correspondence and personal papers of two Ashippun, Wisconsin, families, including those of father-in-law Ole Tollefson, born 1794, emigrated 1862 of Racine, Wisconsin.
Includes 1860 mortgage to Hans and Mary Larson, and Ingebret (Englebert) and Anne Mary Larson. The second couple was born Gjerpen/Skien 1825 and 1833, emigrated 1855. Includes letters from family in Norway, and an incomplete letter of Nov. 26, 1859 from Kenyon, MN, which mentions arrival of B.J. Muus. -
Hans and Olina Halvorson genealogy, 2006
Halvorson Heritage: The Ancestors and Descendants of Hans and Olina Halvorson, (256 p.) compiled by Garth Ulrich, Connie McConechy, and Terry Scriven -
Hans Andreas Stub letters, 1881-1931
Speeches, articles, lectures, clippings, and a photograph of a Lutheran clergyman: "Foreningens gang," 1916, 48 pages; "Svar paa Pastor Ellestads og hans partis pamflet," 1889, 36 pages; "Hva staar iveien for det Kirkelige enighedsarbeide blandt os," 1911, 47 pages; "What Can Be Done to Awaken Greater Spiritual Life in Our Churches," 1922, 20 pages. Includes: letter from Stub to C.G.O. Hansen (May 13, 1922); reprint ("Decorah Posten," Oct. 24-Nov. 14, 1922) of Stub's account of his parents, first published in "Symra," 1907; clippings 1906-1932; program "Dr. Hans Gerhard Stub ...1872-1922."
Added 1998, transf. from Library collection: Foredrag om den norsk-lutherske mission i Utah, holdt i Kristiania lode April 1894; udgivet efter opfordring of missionens bestyrelse i Kristiania. 16 p. What can be done to awaken greater spiritual life in our churches? Augsburg, 1922. 20 p. (Lutheran Book Mission Booklets, no. 20) Bibliographical note: see his article "Fra fars og mors liv" in "Symra," 3 (1907) pp. 14-42.A photocopy of this article is included here. "Foreningssagens gang:' Supplement to Evang. Luthersk Kirketidende, April 19, 1916. 48 p. "Svar paa Pastor Ellestads og hans partis pamflet paa Scandinavia menigheds vegne." Minneapolis, trykt i Felt Raabet Job-trykkeri, 1889. 36 p. "Hvad staar iveien for det kirkelige enighedsarbeide blandt os? Aftryk av "Evangelisk Luthersk Kirketidende." Decorah, Iowa, Luth. Publ. House, 1911. 47p. "Om naadevalget...et foredrag. Decorah, Iowa, Den Norske Synodes Bogtrykkeri, 1881. 41p. -
Hans Anton Andersen family papers, undated
Hans A. Andersen was born in Larvik, Norway, on May 14, 1840. He emigrated in 1860 to La Crosse, Wisconsin, where he established a hardware business. In 1888 he returned to Norway, but emigrated again and established a hardware store in Minneapolis. He died in 1903. A son Arnt E. Andersen became a doctor in Minneapolis.
Includes: Photocopies of correspondence, obituaries, and family records, with English translations. -
Hans Boe family history, 1995
No description available. -
Hans C. Heg papers, 1849-1998
Biography/History:
Hans Christian Heg was a known abolitionist, journalist, anti-slavery activist, politician and soldier. He was born in Lier, Buskerud, Norway (December 21, 1829). He was the eldest of the four children of Even Hansen Heg (1790–1850) and his wife Sigrid "Siri" Olsdatter Kallerud Heg (1799–1842). The family moved to America in 1840, settling in the Muskego Settlement in Wisconsin.
He joined the "Forty-Niners" and spent two years prospecting for gold in California. Upon the death of his father, he returned to the Muskego area in 1851. He married Gunhild Einong (1833–1922). With the outbreak of the Civil War, Heg was appointed by Governor Alexander Randall as colonel of the 15th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment. He died of the wounds he received at the Battle of Chickamauga.
Scope and Content:
A typescript copy of a letter by Heg; a letter by Olaf I. Rove to Waldemar Ager, quoting August Reymert concerning Heg's contribution to the Civil War effort; a speech by Julius E. Olson; clippings concerning the Heg monument in Madison, Wisconsin; genealogies; Historic Heg Memorial Park, pamphlet, 1975; typescript copy of a Heg letter from Weaverville, California, October 7, 1849; Photo of a monument to the 15th Wisconsin at Chicamauga Creek; and photocopies of an article by Kevin Die-Zimmel about Heg's contact with Sherman M. Booth, an abolitionist opponent of the Fugitive Slave Law, and transcriptions of contemporary newspaper articles concerning the "Booth affair." "The Civil War Letters of Colonel Hans Christian Heg" was published by NAHA in 1936.