CATALOG UPDATES
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Browse Items (3004 total)
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Claus Hoie papers, 1975-1976
A biographical sketch of Hoie, and photographs and descriptions of paintings done by a Norwegian-born artist who emigrated to the United States in 1924. Hoie served in the 99th Infantry of the United States Army in World War II, a battalion composed of Norwegian nationals and U.S. citizens of Norwegian background. Hoie's work has been shown in different museums in the United States. There is a permanent collection of his works at the Brooklyn Museum.
Includes contact sheets (photocopies of photos and artwork) of 99th Infantry Battalion of the U.S. Army in World War II.
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Claus Lauritz Clausen papers, 1841-1988
Papers of and materials about the Danish-born clergyman, the second pastor ordained to serve Norwegian-Americans. Includes his emigration diary, letters, ministerial record books, photographs, clippings, and articles. Clausen served congregations in Racine and Rock counties, Wisconsin, and Boone county, Illinois before he led a colony to settle at St. Ansgar, Iowa. He founded many congregations in northern Iowa and southern Minnesota. -
Claus Magnusen papers, 1952-1977
Clippings, pictures, a pamphlet and copies of articles by a Norwegian-born writer who came from Bodø to New York as a young man and lived later in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Not much is known about him, but he was greatly interested in the Vikings and in music, about which he wrote extensively for the newspapers Nordisk Tidende and Western Viking. -
Clause Hanson Sether family history, 1958
"History of the Clause Hanson Sether Family," telling the story of his father who emigrated from Vardalen, Trondelag, to Goodhue County, Minnesota, in 1868, and later moved to Jackson County, Minnesota.
A pamphlet, "Early History of the Upper Midwest," compiled by Evelyn Wigen Watland is included (from "History of Jackson County") -
Cleng Peerson Memorial Institute papers, 1970-2013
Reports describing the activities and collections of the Institute: Norseman's World-Wide Emigration Archives, in Stavanger, Norway. The institute was established in 1970. -
Cleng Peerson papers, 1824-1994
Correspondence, legal documents, clippings, pictures, and a biography concerning a Norwegian-American pathfinder. The papers include copies and transcripts of Peerson letters, an emigration paper, 1838 indenture, LaSalle Co.,; petition & private act for Telief (1855), and Texas warranty deeds which Peerson signed as a witness, a biography by Rasmus B. Anderson, an article by Theodore C. Blegen, and pamphlets concerning the Bishop Hill colony. Peerson, the founder of the first Norwegian settlements in New York, Illinois, Iowa, and Missouri, spent his last years in Texas, and was buried there in Bosque County. -
Cleofas Christianson family history, 1948
No description available. -
Clifford Larson biography, undated
A biography of Peder Borderud (1818-1890), the author's grandfather, who settled with his family at Kindred, North Dakota, in 1871. Topics treated are the trek from St. Ansgar, Iowa, to the Red River Valley, purchase of land, beginnings of the new settlement and its institutions, and relations with the Indians. Borderud was born in 1819 in Grue, Solor, Hedmark. He died in 1890.
Content:
Clifford Larson Article. (n.d.) -
Cliford H. Swenson family history, undated
Family history materials, primarily of Clifford H. Swensen, Jr.'s grandparents Harold Swensen and Oline Martinson (married Dec. 3, 1891). Swensen emigrated with his brother, Swen Navrude, from Reinli, Valdres, Norway in 1888. For a time he operated a shoe and harness shop in Clinton, Minnesota. Later moving to Kanabec County and remained until 1944. Includes photographic prints.
Formerly part of P539. -
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).