History (Re) Photographed:
by Concordia College students in History 112HU, Fall 2016

Olsen Family House, New Sweden, Minnesota

Page

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Version 35

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versionnumberov:versionnumber35
titledcterms:titleOlsen Family House, New Sweden, Minnesota
descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:contentIntroduction

During the nineteenth century America witnessed fundamental changes. Industrialization, consumerism, technological achievements, mass immigration but also slavery and the Civil War were only some of the major events that shaped the country. Society and culture shifted from agricultural and rural, to industrialized and urbanized. The constant mass of immigrants arriving on the shores day to day were a huge influence, not only socially, but also culturally, politically and economically. Due to either devastating and desperate conditions caused by population growth, depressions, famines, revolution and religious persecution, or the desire of adventure and exploration, many Europeans, mainly Irish, Germans, and Scandinavians, left their home in the hope of a better future. Immigration from Europe to the United States continuously increased in the nineteenth century. Many people from Scandinavian countries left their homes behind to start a new life in America, a place about which many only had a vague idea of what to expect. In the 1860s over 71,000 Norwegians left their home country, and in the 1870s, over 95,000. The number of Norwegian immigrants continued to increase until the early twentieth century.[1]

            This was also the case for Mathias Olson who came with his family from Norway to the New World in 1865. Unable to find work in Lillehammer, he decided to make a start in America. Thirty years later, Carl Olson, Mathias’ son, bought land in rural Minnesota, which was originally made available through the Homestead Act in 1862. There he built a home for his family. Since then four generations of his family have lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
 
Norwegian Immigration

Norwegians were the second biggest group after the Irish, who immigrated to the United States. The first ship that brought immigrants from Norway to America set off to the New World in July 1825.[2] Although, for those who stayed in Europe, “many things in America seemed bizarre,”[3] letters and recollections from early immigrants raving to their families back at home about their new lives, often changed Europeans’ views of America.  This was the case for Andreas Ueland, a young boy who did not have many prospects in Norway after his father’s death, and who decided to go to America after being infected with the “American fever.” In his recollections, he remembered:

A farmer from Houston County, Minnesota, returned on a visit the winter of ’70-’71. He infected half the population in that district with what was called the American fever, and I who was then the most susceptible caught the fever in its most virulent form. No more amusement of any kind, only brooding on how to get away to America.[4]

            A common observation that can be made with the Norwegian settlers is that they often stayed together in a community and new Norwegian immigrants tended to join them.[5] The major reason for that was most likely the language. In a new country with an unfamiliar language, after an oftentimes difficult sea journey, it was very nice to be surrounded and welcomed by people who understood you and your background.

            This effect was not restricted to Norwegian immigrants. It can also be seen with immigrants from other countries, such as Germany, the Netherlands, or Sweden, whose dominance in some areas can still be seen today. It was not as much the case with Irish immigrants, as they did not struggle with the language barrier. Therefore, farming was a good start as many immigrants already had the skills. Furthermore, farming only necessitated limited communication in English and provided them with a basic living standard. In a study of frontier farming, geographer John Rice points out: “Almost all had been farmers before they came, and each settler brought a set of values, attitudes and habits from his European homeland.”[6]

            Another important factor was the Homestead Act of 1862 which it provided people who were willing to migrate westwards 160 acres of public land for free.[7] Many settlers made use of the Act thus “virtually all of the land taken by settlers in the late 1860s was claimed under this act”[8].

The Olsen family

One of the many people who left their home country to seek a better future for himself and his family was Mathias Olsen from Lillehammer, Norway. He had been trained and worked as a painter but due to unemployment and economic struggles[9] and having heard and read about the endless possibilities America offered to immigrants, he decided to leave the country.  The family, his wife Martha and six children at that time, arrived in the New World in 1865 where they directly travelled to and settled in St. Peter, Minnesota. Why they chose to go there is unknown, however, it stands to reason that they heard from earlier Norwegian settlers who had settled in this area. Mathias Olsen continued to work as a painter in St. Peter for six years before the family bought land in Lake Prairie, Nicollet county, where they built a house and started to farm the land.[10]

            The agricultural passion was shared by their son Carl, who was born in Norway and came with his parents to America while still an infant. In 1896, thirty years after his arrival, he acquired land close to his parents’ home which originally had become available through the Homestead Act of 1862. Building a house in the prairie at a that time, before automobiles were available for the masses and especially rural people were dependent on animal power, was a complicated process. For example the wood had to be shipped from far away, because there was no useable wood in the prairie.[11] The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only added onto and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought through work in the original building of the house at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater to the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.

            When Carl and his wife Julianne got older, their son Christian took over the farm. Susan Rugh stresses in her entry about rural families in the Midwest that it was usual for the time that “children who inherited the family farm were obligated to care for their aging parents”[12] the Olsens faced the problem of lacking room. To create more space, they built an addition on the east side of the house in September 1929. Unfortunately, the investment was made one month before the American stock market crashed and engulfed the country in the Great Depression crisis. This also led to a long period of financial hardship for the Olsen family. Nevertheless, they were able to keep the farm running. Two factors might have contributed to that. First, with the Great Depression many people lost their jobs and were desperately looking for employment. This applied to urban workers as well as rural ones. During the time, many so-called itinerant laborers were wandering from town to town, trying to find some work in exchange for board and room. The Olsens hired a few itinerant workers during the depression time who also lived in the house, which meant that there were at least ten people sharing the space.

            The outbreak of the second World War, ten years later, posed a problem for many farmers as they oftentimes faced serious shortage of especially male laborers. However, due to health issues or because they were too young or old, none of the Olsen family members went overseas but were able to continue their work on the farm and keep it running. By 1942 they farmed twenty crops.

            Another investment in the future was the installment of electricity around 1940 which replaced the Petro light system they had before.[13] The Olsens were not the only ones to install electricity, due to the Rural Electrification Administration which was established in 1935 within the context of Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal program and resulted in the electrification of 95% of Midwest farms in 1954.[14] Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.

            The farm was a working dairy until 1971, when the then owner Julian Olsen was no longer able to manage the work of the crop farming and caring for the cattle after his own after his father, Christian, had a completely debilitating stroke the previous year[15]. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. Nevertheless, due to various reasons the number of farms has not had dropped constantly since the 1940s.[16] From the aerial perspective, which you can see in the header, it is visible that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment, which are no longer standing today. The land is still owned by the family, who rents it out to farmers. An additional house for the older generation was also built as the addition from 1929 is now used as an extended living room and more bedrooms.

            Furthermore, the screen porch was transformed into a closed porch and the windows next to the porch were remodeled for practical reasons, namely having a door to the garden. Both changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Other smaller, recognizable changes are the chimney, which has been rebuilt, and the color of the exterior siding, which has been repainted from white to green.

            Even though it is just a farm house, it does not only tell the story of a family but also the history of the country. The micro-historical perspective allows us to better understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s lives. Between the two photos, 92 years have passed during which many changes had occurred, but the spirit of the old days can still be seen and felt.
 
     [1] Kaarin Lillehei-Bakhtiar, “Norwegians,” in American Immigrant Cultures. Builders of a Nation. Vol. 2. K-Z, ed. David Levinson and Melvin Ember (New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1997), 657.
     [2] Lillehei-Bakhtiar, Norwegians, 636.
     [3] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant (New York: Minton, Balch & Company, 1929; Library of Congress): 20, https://www.loc.gov/item/29001450/.
     [4] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant, 22. 
     [5] Robert C. Ostergren, “Land and Family in Rural Immigrant Communities” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, vol. 71, no. 3 (1981): 400, http://www.jstor.org/stable/2562899.
     [6] John G. Rice, “The role of culture and community in frontier prairie farming,” Journal of Historical Geography 3, no. 2 (1977): 155, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0305748877902122.
     [7] Lee Ann Potter and Wynell Schamel, "The Homestead Act of 1862," Social Education 61, 6 (1997), https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/homestead-act.
     [8] Rice, Role of Culture, 158.
     [9] Solveig Langr (great granddaughter of Carl Olsen who presently owns and lives in the house with her family),  telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
     [10] William G. Gresham, History of Nicollet and LeSueur Counties, Minnesota: their people, industries, and institutions: with biographical sketches of representative citizens and genealogical records of many of the old families (Indianapolis: B.F. Bowen, 1916), 48-50.
     [11] Solveig Langr, telephone interview.
     [12] Susan Session Rugh, "Family and Kinship," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1028.
     [13] Solveig Langr, telephone interview. 
     [14] Ronald Kline, “Rural Electrification,” in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1014.
    [15] Solveig Langr, telephone interview. 
    [16] "The Declining Number of Farms 1920-1997," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 997.
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Version 34

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versionnumberov:versionnumber34
titledcterms:titleOlsen Family House, New Sweden, Minnesota
descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:contentIntroduction

During the nineteenth century America witnessed fundamental changes. Industrialization, consumerism, technological achievements, mass immigration but also slavery and the Civil War were only some of the major events that shaped the country. Society and culture shifted from agricultural and rural, to industrialized and urbanized. The constant mass of immigrants arriving on the shores day to day were a huge influence, not only socially, but also culturally, politically and economically. Due to either devastating and desperate conditions caused by population growth, depressions, famines, revolution and religious persecution, or the desire of adventure and exploration, many Europeans, mainly Irish, Germans, and Scandinavians, left their home in the hope of a better future. Immigration from Europe to the United States continuously increased in the nineteenth century. Many people from Scandinavian countries left their homes behind to start a new life in America, a place about which many only had a vague idea of what to expect. In the 1860s over 71,000 Norwegians left their home country, and in the 1870s, over 95,000. The number of Norwegian immigrants continued to increase until the early twentieth century.[1]

            This was also the case for Mathias Olson who came with his family from Norway to the New World in 1865. Unable to find work in Lillehammer, he decided to make a start in America. Thirty years later, Carl Olson, Mathias’ son, bought land in rural Minnesota, which was originally made available through the Homestead Act in 1862. There he built a home for his family. Since then four generations of his family have lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
 
Norwegian Immigration

Norwegians were the second biggest group after the Irish, who immigrated to the United States. The first ship that brought immigrants from Norway to America set off to the New World in July 1825.[2] Although, for those who stayed in Europe, “many things in America seemed bizarre,”[3] letters and recollections from early immigrants raving to their families back at home about their new lives, often changed Europeans’ views of America.  This was the case for Andreas Ueland, a young boy who did not have many prospects in Norway after his father’s death, and who decided to go to America after being infected with the “American fever.” In his recollections, he remembered:

A farmer from Houston County, Minnesota, returned on a visit the winter of ’70-’71. He infected half the population in that district with what was called the American fever, and I who was then the most susceptible caught the fever in its most virulent form. No more amusement of any kind, only brooding on how to get away to America.[4]

            A common observation that can be made with the Norwegian settlers is that they often stayed together in a community and new Norwegian immigrants tended to join them.[5] The major reason for that was most likely the language. In a new country with an unfamiliar language, after an oftentimes difficult sea journey, it was very nice to be surrounded and welcomed by people who understood you and your background.

            This effect was not restricted to Norwegian immigrants. It can also be seen with immigrants from other countries, such as Germany, the Netherlands, or Sweden, whose dominance in some areas can still be seen today. It was not as much the case with Irish immigrants, as they did not struggle with the language barrier. Therefore, farming was a good start as many immigrants already had the skills. Furthermore, farming only necessitated limited communication in English and provided them with a basic living standard. In a study of frontier farming, geographer John Rice points out: “Almost all had been farmers before they came, and each settler brought a set of values, attitudes and habits from his European homeland.”[6]

            Another important factor was the Homestead Act of 1862 which it provided people who were willing to migrate westwards 160 acres of public land for free.[7] Many settlers made use of the Act thus “virtually all of the land taken by settlers in the late 1860s was claimed under this act”[8].

The Olsen family

One of the many people who left their home country to seek a better future for himself and his family was Mathias Olsen from Lillehammer, Norway. He had been trained and worked as a painter but due to unemployment and economic struggles[9] and having heard and read about the endless possibilities America offered to immigrants, he decided to leave the country.  The family, his wife Martha and six children at that time, arrived in the New World in 1865 where they directly travelled to and settled in St. Peter, Minnesota. Why they chose to go there is unknown, however, it stands to reason that they heard from earlier Norwegian settlers who had settled in this area. Mathias Olsen continued to work as a painter in St. Peter for six years before the family bought land in Lake Prairie, Nicollet county, where they built a house and started to farm the land.[10]

            The agricultural passion was shared by their son Carl, who was born in Norway and came with his parents to America while still an infant. In 1896, thirty years after his arrival, he acquired land close to his parents’ home which originally had become available through the Homestead Act of 1862. Building a house in the prairie at a that time, before automobiles were available for the masses and especially rural people were dependent on animal power, was a complicated process. For example the wood had to be shipped from far away, because there was no useable wood in the prairie.[11] The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only added onto and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought through work in the original building of the house at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater to the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.

            When Carl and his wife Julianne got older, their son Christian took over the farm. Susan Rugh stresses in her entry about rural families in the Midwest that it was usual for the time that “children who inherited the family farm were obligated to care for their aging parents”[12] the Olsens faced the problem of lacking room. To create more space, they built an addition on the east side of the house in September 1929. Unfortunately, the investment was made one month before the American stock market crashed and engulfed the country in the Great Depression crisis. This also led to a long period of financial hardship for the Olsen family. Nevertheless, they were able to keep the farm running. Two factors might have contributed to that. First, with the Great Depression many people lost their jobs and were desperately looking for employment. This applied to urban workers as well as rural ones. During the time, many so-called itinerant laborers were wandering from town to town, trying to find some work in exchange for board and room. The Olsens hired a few itinerant workers during the depression time who also lived in the house, which meant that there were at least ten people sharing the space.

            The outbreak of the second World War, ten years later, posed a problem for many farmers as they oftentimes faced serious shortage of especially male laborers. However, due to health issues or because they were too young or old, none of the Olsen family members went overseas but were able to continue their work on the farm and keep it running. By 1942 they farmed twenty crops.

            Another investment in the future was the installment of electricity around 1940 which replaced the Petro light system they had before.[13] The Olsens were not the only ones to install electricity, due to the Rural Electrification Administration which was established in 1935 within the context of Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal program and resulted in the electrification of 95% of Midwest farms in 1954.[14] Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.

            The farm was a working dairy until 1971, when the then owner Julian Olsen was no longer able to manage the work of the crop farming and caring for the cattle after his own after his father, Christian, had a completely debilitating stroke the previous year[15]. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. Nevertheless, due to various reasons the number of farm has not had dropped constantly since the 1940s.[16] From the aerial perspective, which you can see in the header, it is visible that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment, which are no longer standing today. The land is still owned by the family, who rents it out to farmers. An additional house for the older generation was also built as the addition from 1929 is now used as an extended living room and more bedrooms.

            Furthermore, the screen porch was transformed into a closed porch and the windows next to the porch were remodeled for practical reasons, namely having a door to the garden. Both changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Other smaller, recognizable changes are the chimney, which has been rebuilt, and the color of the exterior siding, which has been repainted from white to green.

            Even though it is just a farm house, it does not only tell the story of a family but also the history of the country. The micro-historical perspective allows us to better understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s lives. Between the two photos, 92 years have passed during which many changes had occurred, but the spirit of the old days can still be seen and felt.
 
     [1] Kaarin Lillehei-Bakhtiar, “Norwegians,” in American Immigrant Cultures. Builders of a Nation. Vol. 2. K-Z, ed. David Levinson and Melvin Ember (New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1997), 657.
     [2] Lillehei-Bakhtiar, Norwegians, 636.
     [3] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant (New York: Minton, Balch & Company, 1929; Library of Congress): 20, https://www.loc.gov/item/29001450/.
     [4] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant, 22. 
     [5] Robert C. Ostergren, “Land and Family in Rural Immigrant Communities” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, vol. 71, no. 3 (1981): 400, http://www.jstor.org/stable/2562899.
     [6] John G. Rice, “The role of culture and community in frontier prairie farming,” Journal of Historical Geography 3, no. 2 (1977): 155, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0305748877902122.
     [7] Lee Ann Potter and Wynell Schamel, "The Homestead Act of 1862," Social Education 61, 6 (1997), https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/homestead-act.
     [8] Rice, Role of Culture, 158.
     [9] Solveig Langr (great granddaughter of Carl Olsen who presently owns and lives in the house with her family),  telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
     [10] William G. Gresham, History of Nicollet and LeSueur Counties, Minnesota: their people, industries, and institutions: with biographical sketches of representative citizens and genealogical records of many of the old families (Indianapolis: B.F. Bowen, 1916), 48-50.
     [11] Solveig Langr, telephone interview.
     [12] Susan Session Rugh, "Family and Kinship," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1028.
     [13] Solveig Langr, telephone interview. 
     [14] Ronald Kline, “Rural Electrification,” in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1014.
    [15] Solveig Langr, telephone interview. 
    [16] "The Declining Number of Farms 1920-1997," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 997.
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Version 33

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/sophia-beukenhorst.33
versionnumberov:versionnumber33
titledcterms:titleOlsen Family House, New Sweden, Minnesota
descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:contentIntroduction

During the nineteenth century America witnessed fundamental changes. Industrialization, consumerism, technological achievements, mass immigration but also slavery and the Civil War were only some of the major events that shaped the country. Society and culture shifted from agricultural and rural, to industrialized and urbanized. The constant mass of immigrants arriving on the shores day to day were a huge influence, not only socially, but also culturally, politically and economically. Due to either devastating and desperate conditions caused by population growth, depressions, famines, revolution and religious persecution, or the desire of adventure and exploration, many Europeans, mainly Irish, Germans, and Scandinavians, left their home in the hope of a better future. Immigration from Europe to the United States continuously increased in the nineteenth century. Many people from Scandinavian countries left their homes behind to start a new life in America, a place about which many only had a vague idea of what to expect. In the 1860s over 71,000 Norwegians left their home country, and in the 1870s, over 95,000. The number of Norwegian immigrants continued to increase untill the early twentieth century.[1]

            This was also the case for Mathias Olson who came with his family from Norway to the New World in 1865. Unable to find work in Lillehammer, he decided to make a start in America. Thirty years later, Carl Olson, Mathias’ son, bought land in rural Minnesota, which was originally made available through the Homestead Act in 1862. There he built a home for his family. Since then four generations of his family have lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
 
Norwegian Immigration

Norwegians were the second biggest group after the Irish, who immigrated to the United States. The first ship that brought immigrants from Norway to America set off to the New World in July 1825.[2] Although, for those who stayed in Europe, “many things in America seemed bizarre,”[3] letters and recollections from early immigrants raving to their families back at home about their new lives, often changed Europeans’ views of America.  This was the case for Andreas Ueland, a young boy who did not have many prospects in Norway after his father’s death, and who decided to go to America after being infected with the “American fever.” In his recollections, he remembered:

A farmer from Houston County, Minnesota, returned on a visit the winter of ’70-’71. He infected half the population in that district with what was called the American fever, and I who was then the most susceptible caught the fever in its most virulent form. No more amusement of any kind, only brooding on how to get away to America.[4]

            A common observation that can be made with the Norwegian settlers is that they often stayed together in a community and new Norwegian immigrants tended to join them.[5] The major reason for that was most likely the language. In a new country with an unfamiliar language, after an oftentimes difficult sea journey, it was very nice to be surrounded and welcomed by people who understood you and your background.

            This effect was not restricted to Norwegian immigrants. It can also be seen with immigrants from other countries, such as Germany, the Netherlands, or Sweden, whose dominance in some areas can still be seen today. It was not as much the case with Irish immigrants, as they did not struggle with the language barrier. Therefore, farming was a good start as many immigrants already had the skills. Furthermore, farming only necessitated limited communication in English and provided them with a basic living standard. In a study of frontier farming, geographer John Rice points out: “Almost all had been farmers before they came, and each settler brought a set of values, attitudes and habits from his European homeland.”[6]

            Another important factor was the Homestead Act of 1862 which it provided people who were willing to migrate westwards 160 acres of public land for free.[7] Many settlers made use of the Act thus “virtually all of the land taken by settlers in the late 1860s was claimed under this act”[8].

The Olsen family

One of the many people who left their home country to seek a better future for himself and his family was Mathias Olsen from Lillehammer, Norway. He had been trained and worked as a painter but due to unemployment and economic struggles[9] and having heard and read about the endless possibilities America offered to immigrants, he decided to leave the country.  The family, his wife Martha and six children at that time, arrived in the New World in 1865 where they directly travelled to and settled in St. Peter, Minnesota. Why they chose to go there is unknown, however, it stands to reason that they heard from earlier Norwegian settlers who had settled in this area. Mathias Olsen continued to work as a painter in St. Peter for six years before the family bought land in Lake Prairie, Nicollet county, where they built a house and started to farm the land.[10]

            The agricultural passion was shared by their son Carl, who was born in Norway and came with his parents to America while still an infant. In 1896, thirty years after his arrival, he acquired land close to his parents’ home which originally had become available through the Homestead Act of 1862. Building a house in the prairie at a that time, before automobiles were available for the masses and especially rural people were dependent on animal power, was a complicated process. For example the wood had to be shipped from far away, because there was no useable wood in the prairie.[11] The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only added onto and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought through work in the original building of the house at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater to the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.

            When Carl and his wife Julianne got older, their son Christian took over the farm. Susan Rugh stresses in her entry about rural families in the Midwest that it was usual for the time that “children who inherited the family farm were obligated to care for their aging parents”[12] the Olsens faced the problem of lacking room. To create more space, they built an addition on the east side of the house in September 1929. Unfortunately, the investment was made one month before the American stock market crashed and engulfed the country in the Great Depression crisis. This also led to a long period of financial hardship for the Olsen family. Nevertheless, they were able to keep the farm running. Two factors might have contributed to that. First, with the Great Depression many people lost their jobs and were desperately looking for employment. This applied to urban workers as well as rural ones. During the time, many so-called itinerant laborers were wandering from town to town, trying to find some work in exchange for board and room. The Olsens hired a few itinerant workers during the depression time who also lived in the house, which meant that there were at least ten people sharing the space.

            The outbreak of the second World War, ten years later, posed a problem for many farmers as they oftentimes faced serious shortage of especially male laborers. However, due to health issues or because they were too young or old, none of the Olsen family members went overseas but were able to continue their work on the farm and keep it running. By 1942 they farmed twenty crops.

            Another investment in the future was the installment of electricity around 1940 which replaced the Petro light system they had before.[13] The Olsens were not the only ones to install electricity, due to the Rural Electrification Administration which was established in 1935 within the context of Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal program and resulted in the electrification of 95% of Midwest farms in 1954.[14] Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.

            The farm was a working dairy until 1971, when the then owner Julian Olsen was no longer able to manage the work of the crop farming and caring for the cattle after his own after his father, Christian, had a completely debilitating stroke the previous year[15]. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. Nevertheless, due to various reasons the number of farm has not had dropped constantly since the 1940s.[16] From the aerial perspective, which you can see in the header, it is visible that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment, which are no longer standing today. The land is still owned by the family, who rents it out to farmers. An additional house for the older generation was also built as the addition from 1929 is now used as an extended living room and more bedrooms.

            Furthermore, the screen porch was transformed into a closed porch and the windows next to the porch were remodeled for practical reasons, namely having a door to the garden. Both changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Other smaller, recognizable changes are the chimney, which has been rebuilt, and the color of the exterior siding, which has been repainted from white to green.

            Even though it is just a farm house, it does not only tell the story of a family but also the history of the country. The micro-historical perspective allows us to better understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s lives. Between the two photos, 92 years have passed during which many changes had occurred, but the spirit of the old days can still be seen and felt.
 
     [1] Kaarin Lillehei-Bakhtiar, “Norwegians,” in American Immigrant Cultures. Builders of a Nation. Vol. 2. K-Z, ed. David Levinson and Melvin Ember (New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1997), 657.
     [2] Lillehei-Bakhtiar, Norwegians, 636.
     [3] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant (New York: Minton, Balch & Company, 1929; Library of Congress): 20, https://www.loc.gov/item/29001450/.
     [4] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant, 22. 
     [5] Robert C. Ostergren, “Land and Family in Rural Immigrant Communities” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, vol. 71, no. 3 (1981): 400, http://www.jstor.org/stable/2562899.
     [6] John G. Rice, “The role of culture and community in frontier prairie farming,” Journal of Historical Geography 3, no. 2 (1977): 155, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0305748877902122.
     [7] Lee Ann Potter and Wynell Schamel, "The Homestead Act of 1862," Social Education 61, 6 (1997), https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/homestead-act.
     [8] Rice, Role of Culture, 158.
     [9] Solveig Langr (great granddaughter of Carl Olsen who presently owns and lives in the house with her family),  telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
     [10] William G. Gresham, History of Nicollet and LeSueur Counties, Minnesota: their people, industries, and institutions: with biographical sketches of representative citizens and genealogical records of many of the old families (Indianapolis: B.F. Bowen, 1916), 48-50.
     [11] Solveig Langr, telephone interview.
     [12] Susan Session Rugh, "Family and Kinship," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1028.
     [13] Solveig Langr, telephone interview. 
     [14] Ronald Kline, “Rural Electrification,” in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1014.
    [15] Solveig Langr, telephone interview. 
    [16] "The Declining Number of Farms 1920-1997," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 997.
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descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:contentIntroduction

During nineteenth century America witnessed fundamental changes. Industrialization, consumerism, technological achievements, mass immigration but also slavery and the Civil War were only some of the major events that shaped the country. Society and culture shifted from agricultural and rural, to industrialized and urbanized. The constant mass of immigrants arriving on the shores day to day were a huge influence, not only socially, but also culturally, politically and economically. Due to either devastating and desperate conditions caused by population growth, depressions, famines, revolution and religious persecution, or the desire of adventure and exploration, many Europeans, mainly Irish, Germans, and Scandinavians, left their home in the hope of a better future. Immigration from Europe to the United States continuously increased in the nineteenth century. Many people from Scandinavian countries left their homes behind to start a new life in America, a place about which many only had a vague idea of what to expect. In the 1860s over 71,000 Norwegians left their home country, and in the 1870s, over 95,000. The number of Norwegian immigrants continued to increase untill the early twentieth century.[1]

            This was also the case for Mathias Olson who came with his family from Norway to the New World in 1865. Unable to find work in Lillehammer, he decided to make a start in America. Thirty years later, Carl Olson, Mathias’ son, bought land in rural Minnesota, which was originally made available through the Homestead Act in 1862. There he built a home for his family. Since then four generations of his family have lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
 
Norwegian Immigration

Norwegians were the second biggest group after the Irish, who immigrated to the United States. The first ship that brought immigrants from Norway to America set off to the New World in July 1825.[2] Although, for those who stayed in Europe, “many things in America seemed bizarre,”[3] letters and recollections from early immigrants raving to their families back at home about their new lives, often changed Europeans’ views of America.  This was the case for Andreas Ueland, a young boy who did not have many prospects in Norway after his father’s death, and who decided to go to America after being infected with the “American fever.” In his recollections, he remembered:

A farmer from Houston County, Minnesota, returned on a visit the winter of ’70-’71. He infected half the population in that district with what was called the American fever, and I who was then the most susceptible caught the fever in its most virulent form. No more amusement of any kind, only brooding on how to get away to America.[4]

            A common observation that can be made with the Norwegian settlers is that they often stayed together in a community and new Norwegian immigrants tended to join them.[5] The major reason for that was most likely the language. In a new country with an unfamiliar language, after an oftentimes difficult sea journey, it was very nice to be surrounded and welcomed by people who understood you and your background.

            This effect was not restricted to Norwegian immigrants. It can also be seen with immigrants from other countries, such as Germany, the Netherlands, or Sweden, whose dominance in some areas can still be seen today. It was not as much the case with Irish immigrants, as they did not struggle with the language barrier. Therefore, farming was a good start as many immigrants already had the skills. Furthermore, farming only necessitated limited communication in English and provided them with a basic living standard. In a study of frontier farming, geographer John Rice points out: “Almost all had been farmers before they came, and each settler brought a set of values, attitudes and habits from his European homeland.”[6]

            Another important factor was the Homestead Act of 1862 which it provided people who were willing to migrate westwards 160 acres of public land for free.[7] Many settlers made use of the Act thus “virtually all of the land taken by settlers in the late 1860s was claimed under this act”[8].

The Olsen family

One of the many people who left their home country to seek a better future for himself and his family was Mathias Olsen from Lillehammer, Norway. He had been trained and worked as a painter but due to unemployment and economic struggles[9] and having heard and read about the endless possibilities America offered to immigrants, he decided to leave the country.  The family, his wife Martha and six children at that time, arrived in the New World in 1865 where they directly travelled to and settled in St. Peter, Minnesota. Why they chose to go there is unknown, however, it stands to reason that they heard from earlier Norwegian settlers who had settled in this area. Mathias Olsen continued to work as a painter in St. Peter for six years before the family bought land in Lake Prairie, Nicollet county, where they built a house and started to farm the land.[10]

            The agricultural passion was shared by their son Carl, who was born in Norway and came with his parents to America while still an infant. In 1896, thirty years after his arrival, he acquired land close to his parents’ home which originally had become available through the Homestead Act of 1862. Building a house in the prairie at a that time, before automobiles were available for the masses and especially rural people were dependent on animal power, was a complicated process. For example the wood had to be shipped from far away, because there was no useable wood in the prairie.[11] The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only added onto and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought through work in the original building of the house at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater to the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.

            When Carl and his wife Julianne got older, their son Christian took over the farm. Susan Rugh stresses in her entry about rural families in the Midwest that it was usual for the time that “children who inherited the family farm were obligated to care for their aging parents”[12] the Olsens faced the problem of lacking room. To create more space, they built an addition on the east side of the house in September 1929. Unfortunately, the investment was made one month before the American stock market crashed and engulfed the country in the Great Depression crisis. This also led to a long period of financial hardship for the Olsen family. Nevertheless, they were able to keep the farm running. Two factors might have contributed to that. First, with the Great Depression many people lost their jobs and were desperately looking for employment. This applied to urban workers as well as rural ones. During the time, many so-called itinerant laborers were wandering from town to town, trying to find some work in exchange for board and room. The Olsens hired a few itinerant workers during the depression time who also lived in the house, which meant that there were at least ten people sharing the space.

            The outbreak of the second World War, ten years later, posed a problem for many farmers as they oftentimes faced serious shortage of especially male laborers. However, due to health issues or because they were too young or old, none of the Olsen family members went overseas but were able to continue their work on the farm and keep it running. By 1942 they farmed twenty crops.

            Another investment in the future was the installment of electricity around 1940 which replaced the Petro light system they had before.[13] The Olsens were not the only ones to install electricity, due to the Rural Electrification Administration which was established in 1935 within the context of Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal program and resulted in the electrification of 95% of Midwest farms in 1954.[14] Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.

            The farm was a working dairy until 1971, when the then owner Julian Olsen was no longer able to manage the work of the crop farming and caring for the cattle after his own after his father, Christian, had a completely debilitating stroke the previous year[15]. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. Nevertheless, due to various reasons the number of farm has not had dropped constantly since the 1940s.[16] From the aerial perspective, which you can see in the header, it is visible that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment, which are no longer standing today. The land is still owned by the family, who rents it out to farmers. An additional house for the older generation was also built as the addition from 1929 is now used as an extended living room and more bedrooms.

            Furthermore, the screen porch was transformed into a closed porch and the windows next to the porch were remodeled for practical reasons, namely having a door to the garden. Both changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Other smaller, recognizable changes are the chimney, which has been rebuilt, and the color of the exterior siding, which has been repainted from white to green.

            Even though it is just a farm house, it does not only tell the story of a family but also the history of the country. The micro-historical perspective allows us to better understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s lives. Between the two photos, 92 years have passed during which many changes had occurred, but the spirit of the old days can still be seen and felt.
 
     [1] Kaarin Lillehei-Bakhtiar, “Norwegians,” in American Immigrant Cultures. Builders of a Nation. Vol. 2. K-Z, ed. David Levinson and Melvin Ember (New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1997), 657.
     [2] Lillehei-Bakhtiar, Norwegians, 636.
     [3] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant (New York: Minton, Balch & Company, 1929; Library of Congress): 20, https://www.loc.gov/item/29001450/.
     [4] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant, 22. 
     [5] Robert C. Ostergren, “Land and Family in Rural Immigrant Communities” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, vol. 71, no. 3 (1981): 400, http://www.jstor.org/stable/2562899.
     [6] John G. Rice, “The role of culture and community in frontier prairie farming,” Journal of Historical Geography 3, no. 2 (1977): 155, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0305748877902122.
     [7] Lee Ann Potter and Wynell Schamel, "The Homestead Act of 1862," Social Education 61, 6 (1997), https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/homestead-act.
     [8] Rice, Role of Culture, 158.
     [9] Solveig Langr (great granddaughter of Carl Olsen who presently owns and lives in the house with her family),  telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
     [10] William G. Gresham, History of Nicollet and LeSueur Counties, Minnesota: their people, industries, and institutions: with biographical sketches of representative citizens and genealogical records of many of the old families (Indianapolis: B.F. Bowen, 1916), 48-50.
     [11] Solveig Langr, telephone interview.
     [12] Susan Session Rugh, "Family and Kinship," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1028.
     [13] Solveig Langr, telephone interview. 
     [14] Ronald Kline, “Rural Electrification,” in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1014.
    [15] Solveig Langr, telephone interview. 
    [16] "The Declining Number of Farms 1920-1997," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 997.
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Version 31

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descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:contentIntroduction
During nineteenth century America witnessed fundamental changes. Industrialization, consumerism, technological achievements, mass immigration but also slavery and the Civil War were only some of the major events that shaped the country. Society and culture shifted from agricultural and rural, to industrialized and urbanized. The constant mass of immigrants arriving on the shores day to day were a huge influence, not only socially, but also culturally, politically and economically. Due to either devastating and desperate conditions caused by population growth, depressions, famines, revolution and religious persecution, or the desire of adventure and exploration, many Europeans, mainly Irish, Germans, and Scandinavians, left their home in the hope of a better future. Immigration from Europe to the United States continuously increased in the nineteenth century. Many people from Scandinavian countries left their homes behind to start a new life in America, a place about which many only had a vague idea of what to expect. In the 1860s over 71,000 Norwegians left their home country, and in the 1870s, over 95,000. The number of Norwegian immigrants continued to increase untill the early twentieth century.[1]

            This was also the case for Mathias Olson who came with his family from Norway to the New World in 1865. Unable to find work in Lillehammer, he decided to make a start in America. Thirty years later, Carl Olson, Mathias’ son, bought land in rural Minnesota, which was originally made available through the Homestead Act in 1862. There he built a home for his family. Since then four generations of his family have lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
 
Norwegian Immigration

Norwegians were the second biggest group after the Irish, who immigrated to the United States. The first ship that brought immigrants from Norway to America set off to the New World in July 1825.[2] Although, for those who stayed in Europe, “many things in America seemed bizarre,”[3] letters and recollections from early immigrants raving to their families back at home about their new lives, often changed Europeans’ views of America.  This was the case for Andreas Ueland, a young boy who did not have many prospects in Norway after his father’s death, and who decided to go to America after being infected with the “American fever.” In his recollections, he remembered:

A farmer from Houston County, Minnesota, returned on a visit the winter of ’70-’71. He infected half the population in that district with what was called the American fever, and I who was then the most susceptible caught the fever in its most virulent form. No more amusement of any kind, only brooding on how to get away to America.[4]

            A common observation that can be made with the Norwegian settlers is that they often stayed together in a community and new Norwegian immigrants tended to join them.[5] The major reason for that was most likely the language. In a new country with an unfamiliar language, after an oftentimes difficult sea journey, it was very nice to be surrounded and welcomed by people who understood you and your background.

            This effect was not restricted to Norwegian immigrants. It can also be seen with immigrants from other countries, such as Germany, the Netherlands, or Sweden, whose dominance in some areas can still be seen today. It was not as much the case with Irish immigrants, as they did not struggle with the language barrier. Therefore, farming was a good start as many immigrants already had the skills. Furthermore, farming only necessitated limited communication in English and provided them with a basic living standard. In a study of frontier farming, geographer John Rice points out: “Almost all had been farmers before they came, and each settler brought a set of values, attitudes and habits from his European homeland.”[6]

            Another important factor was the Homestead Act of 1862 which it provided people who were willing to migrate westwards 160 acres of public land for free.[7] Many settlers made use of the Act thus “virtually all of the land taken by settlers in the late 1860s was claimed under this act”[8].

The Olsen family

One of the many people who left their home country to seek a better future for himself and his family was Mathias Olsen from Lillehammer, Norway. He had been trained and worked as a painter but due to unemployment and economic struggles[9] and having heard and read about the endless possibilities America offered to immigrants, he decided to leave the country.  The family, his wife Martha and six children at that time, arrived in the New World in 1865 where they directly travelled to and settled in St. Peter, Minnesota. Why they chose to go there is unknown, however, it stands to reason that they heard from earlier Norwegian settlers who had settled in this area. Mathias Olsen continued to work as a painter in St. Peter for six years before the family bought land in Lake Prairie, Nicollet county, where they built a house and started to farm the land.[10]

            The agricultural passion was shared by their son Carl, who was born in Norway and came with his parents to America while still an infant. In 1896, thirty years after his arrival, he acquired land close to his parents’ home which originally had become available through the Homestead Act of 1862. Building a house in the prairie at a that time, before automobiles were available for the masses and especially rural people were dependent on animal power, was a complicated process. For example the wood had to be shipped from far away, because there was no useable wood in the prairie.[11] The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only added onto and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought through work in the original building of the house at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater to the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.

            When Carl and his wife Julianne got older, their son Christian took over the farm. Susan Rugh stresses in her entry about rural families in the Midwest that it was usual for the time that “children who inherited the family farm were obligated to care for their aging parents”[12] the Olsens faced the problem of lacking room. To create more space, they built an addition on the east side of the house in September 1929. Unfortunately, the investment was made one month before the American stock market crashed and engulfed the country in the Great Depression crisis. This also led to a long period of financial hardship for the Olsen family. Nevertheless, they were able to keep the farm running. Two factors might have contributed to that. First, with the Great Depression many people lost their jobs and were desperately looking for employment. This applied to urban workers as well as rural ones. During the time, many so-called itinerant laborers were wandering from town to town, trying to find some work in exchange for board and room. The Olsens hired a few itinerant workers during the depression time who also lived in the house, which meant that there were at least ten people sharing the space.

            The outbreak of the second World War, ten years later, posed a problem for many farmers as they oftentimes faced serious shortage of especially male laborers. However, due to health issues or because they were too young or old, none of the Olsen family members went overseas but were able to continue their work on the farm and keep it running. By 1942 they farmed twenty crops.

            Another investment in the future was the installment of electricity around 1940 which replaced the Petro light system they had before.[13] The Olsens were not the only ones to install electricity, due to the Rural Electrification Administration which was established in 1935 within the context of Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal program and resulted in the electrification of 95% of Midwest farms in 1954.[14] Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.

            The farm was a working dairy until 1971, when the then owner Julian Olsen was no longer able to manage the work of the crop farming and caring for the cattle after his own after his father, Christian, had a completely debilitating stroke the previous year[15]. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. Nevertheless, due to various reasons the number of farm has not had dropped constantly since the 1940s.[16] From the aerial perspective, which you can see in the header, it is visible that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment, which are no longer standing today. The land is still owned by the family, who rents it out to farmers. An additional house for the older generation was also built as the addition from 1929 is now used as an extended living room and more bedrooms.

            Furthermore, the screen porch was transformed into a closed porch and the windows next to the porch were remodeled for practical reasons, namely having a door to the garden. Both changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Other smaller, recognizable changes are the chimney, which has been rebuilt, and the color of the exterior siding, which has been repainted from white to green.

            Even though it is just a farm house, it does not only tell the story of a family but also the history of the country. The micro-historical perspective allows us to better understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s lives. Between the two photos, 92 years have passed during which many changes had occurred, but the spirit of the old days can still be seen and felt.
 
     [1] Kaarin Lillehei-Bakhtiar, “Norwegians,” in American Immigrant Cultures. Builders of a Nation. Vol. 2. K-Z, ed. David Levinson and Melvin Ember (New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1997), 657.
     [2] Lillehei-Bakhtiar, Norwegians, 636.
     [3] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant (New York: Minton, Balch & Company, 1929; Library of Congress): 20, https://www.loc.gov/item/29001450/.
     [4] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant, 22. 
     [5] Robert C. Ostergren, “Land and Family in Rural Immigrant Communities” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, vol. 71, no. 3 (1981): 400, http://www.jstor.org/stable/2562899.
     [6] John G. Rice, “The role of culture and community in frontier prairie farming,” Journal of Historical Geography 3, no. 2 (1977): 155, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0305748877902122.
     [7] Lee Ann Potter and Wynell Schamel, "The Homestead Act of 1862," Social Education 61, 6 (1997), https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/homestead-act.
     [8] Rice, Role of Culture, 158.
     [9] Solveig Langr (great granddaughter of Carl Olsen who presently owns and lives in the house with her family),  telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
     [10] William G. Gresham, History of Nicollet and LeSueur Counties, Minnesota: their people, industries, and institutions: with biographical sketches of representative citizens and genealogical records of many of the old families (Indianapolis: B.F. Bowen, 1916), 48-50.
     [11] Solveig Langr, telephone interview.
     [12] Susan Session Rugh, "Family and Kinship," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1028.
     [13] Solveig Langr, telephone interview. 
     [14] Ronald Kline, “Rural Electrification,” in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1014.
    [15] Solveig Langr, telephone interview. 
    [16] "The Declining Number of Farms 1920-1997," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 997.
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Version 30

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titledcterms:titleOlsen Family House, New Sweden, Minnesota
descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:contentDuring 19th century America witnessed fundamental changes. Industrialization, consumerism, technological achievements, mass immigration but also slavery and the Civil War were only some of the major events that shaped the country. Society and culture shifted from agricultural and rural, to industrialized and urbanized.  

            The constant mass of immigrants arriving on the shores day to day were a massive influence, not only socially, but also culturally, politically and economically. Due to either devastating and desperate conditions caused by population boom, depressions, famines, revolution and religious persecution, or the desire of adventure and exploration, many Europeans, mainly Irish, Germans, and Scandinavians, left their home in the hope of a better future. Immigration from Europe to the U.S. continuously increased in the 19th century. Many people from Scandinavian countries left their home behind to start a new life in America, a place which many only had a vague idea of what to expect. In the 1860s over 71,000 Norwegians left their home country, and in the 1870s, over 95,000. The number of Norwegian immigrants continued to increase till the early 1900s.[1]

            This was also the case for Mathias Olson who came with his family from Norway to the New World in 1865. Unable to find work in Lillehammer, he decided to make a start in America. Thirty years later, Carl Olson, Mathias’ son, bought land in rural Minnesota, which was originally made available through the Homestead Act in 1862. There he built a home for his family. Since then four generations of his family have lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
 
Norwegian Immigration

Norwegians were the second biggest group after the Irish, who immigrated to the U.S.. The first ship that brought immigrants from Norway to America set off to the New World in July, 1825.[2] Although, for those who stayed in Europe, “many things in America seemed bizarre,”[3] letters and recounts from early immigrants raving to their families back at home about their new lives, often changed Europeans’ viewsof America.  This was the case for Andreas Ueland, a young boy who did not have many prospects in Norway after his father’s death, and who decided to go to America after being infected with the “American fever.” In his recollections, he remembers:

A farmer from Houston County, Minnesota, returned on a visit the winter of ’70-’71. He infected half the population in that district with what was called the American fever, and I who was then the most susceptible caught the fever in its most virulent form. No more amusement of any kind, only brooding on how to get away to America.[4]

            A common observation that can be made with the Norwegian settlers is that they often stayed together in a community and new Norwegian immigrants tended to join them.[5] The major reason for that was most likely the language. In a new country with an unfamiliar language, after an oftentimes horrible passage, it was very nice to be surrounded and welcomed by people who understood you and your background.

            This effect was not restricted to Norwegian immigrants. It can also be seen with immigrants from other countries, such as Germany, the Netherlands, or Sweden, whose dominance in some areas can still be seen today. It was not as much the case with Irish immigrants, as they did not struggle with the language barrier. Therefore, farming was a good start as many immigrants already had the skills. Furthermore, farming only necessitated limited communication in English and provided them with a basic living standard. Rice points out: “Almost all had been farmers before they came, and each settler brought a set of values, attitudes and habits from his European homeland.”[6]

            Another important pull factor of the Homestead Act of 1862 was that it provided people who were willing to migrate westwards 160 acres of public land for free.[7] Many settlers made use of the Act thus “virtually all of the land taken by settlers in the late 1860s was claimed under this act”[8].

The Olsen family

One of the many people who left their home country to seek a better future for himself and his family was Mathias Olsen from Lillehammer, Norway. He had been trained and worked as a painter but due to unemployment and economic struggles[9] and having heard and read about the endless possibilities America offered to immigrants, he decided to leave the country.  The family, his wife Martha and six children at that time, arrived in the New World in 1865 where they directly travelled to and settled in St. Peter, Minnesota. Why they chose to go there is unknown, however, it stands to reason that they heard from earlier Norwegian settlers who had settled in this area. Mathias Olsen continued to work as a painter in St. Peter for six years before the family bought land in Lake Prairie, Nicollet county, where they built a house and started to farm the land.[10]

            The agricultural passion was shared by their son Carl, who was born in Norway and came with his parents to America while still an infant. In 1896, thirty years after his arrival, he acquired land close to his parents’ home which originally had become available through the Homestead Act of 1862. Building a house in the prairie at a that time, before automobiles were available for the masses and especially rural people were dependent on animal power, was connected with complicating factors. For example the wood had to be shipped from far away, because there was no useable wood in the prairie.[11] The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only added onto and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought through work in the original building of the house at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater to the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.

            When Carl and his wife Julianne got older, their son Christian took the farm over. As it was usual for the time that “children who inherited the family farm were obligated to care for their aging parents”[12] the Olsen’s faced the problem of lacking room. To create more space, they built an addition on the east side of the house in September 1929. Unfortunately, the investment was made one month before the American stock market crashed and engulfed the country in the Great Depression crisis. This also led to a long period of financial hardship for the Olsen family. Nevertheless, they were able to keep the farm running. Two factors might have contributed to that. First, with the Great Depression many people lost their jobs and were desperately looking for employment. This applied to urban workers as well as rural ones. During the time, many so-called itinerant laborers were wandering from town to town, trying to find some work in exchange for board and lodge. The Olsen’ hired a few itinerant workers during the depression time who also lived in the house, which meant that there were at least ten people sharing the space.

            The outbreak of the second World War, ten years later, posed a problem for many farmers as they oftentimes faced serious shortage of especially male laborers. However, due to health issues or because they were too young or old, none of the Olsen family members went overseas but were able to continue their work on the farm and keep it running. By 1942 they farmed 20 crops.

            Another investment in the future, was the installment of electricity around 1940 which replaced the Petro light system they had before.[13] The Olsen’s were not the only ones to install electricity, due to the Rural Electrification Administration which was established in 1935 within the context of Franklin D. Roosevelts’ New Deal program and resulted in the electrification of Midwest farms of 95% in 1954.[14] Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.

            The farm was a working dairy until 1971, when the then owner, Julian Olsen, was no longer able to manage the work of the crop farming and caring for the cattle after his own after his father, Christian, had a completely debilitating stroke the previous year[15]. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. Nevertheless, due to various reasons the numbers of farms in the Midwest had dropped constantly since the 1940s.[16] From the aerial perspective one can also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment, which are no longer standing today. The land is still owned by the family, who rents it out to farmers. An additional house for the older generation was also built as the addition from 1929 is now used as an extended living room and more bedrooms.

            Furthermore, the screen porch was transformed into a closed porch and the windows next to the porch were remodeled for practical reasons, namely having a door to the garden. Both changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Other smaller, recognizable changes are the chimney, which has been rebuilt, and the color of the exterior siding, which has been repainted from white to green.

            Even though it is just a farm house, it does not only tell the story of a family but also the history of the country. The micro-historical perspective allows us to better understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life. Between the two photos, 92 years have passed during which many changes had happened, but the spirit of the old days can still be seen and felt.
 
     [1] Kaarin Lillehei-Bakhtiar, “Norwegians,” in American Immigrant Cultures. Builders of a Nation. Vol. 2. K-Z, ed. David Levinson and Melvin Ember (New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1997), 657.
[2] Kaarin Lillehei-Bakhtiar, “Norwegians,” in American Immigrant Cultures. Builders of a Nation. Vol. 2. K-Z, ed. David Levinson and Melvin Ember (New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1997), 636.
[3] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant (New York: Minton, Balch & Company, 1929; Library of Congress): 20, https://www.loc.gov/item/29001450/.
[4] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant (New York: Minton, Balch & Company, 1929; Library of Congress): 22, https://www.loc.gov/item/29001450/.
[5] Robert C. Ostergren, “Land and Family in Rural Immigrant Communities” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Vol. 71, no. 3 (1981): 400, http://www.jstor.org/stable/2562899.
[6] John G. Rice, “The role of culture and community in frontier prairie farming.” Journal of Historical Geography 3, no. 2 (1977): 155. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0305748877902122.
[7] Lee Ann Potter and Wynell Schamel, "The Homestead Act of 1862," Social Education 61, 6 (1997). https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/homestead-act.
[8] Rice, Role of Culture, 158.
[9] Solveig Langr (great granddaughter of Carl Olsen who presently owns and lives in the house with her family), telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
[10] Applicable for the whole paragraph: William G. Gresham, History of Nicollet and LeSueur Counties, Minnesota: their people, industries, and institutions: with biographical sketches of representative citizens and genealogical records of many of the old families (Indianapolis: B.F. Bowen, 1916), 48-50.
[11] Solveig Langr, telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
[12] Susan Session Rugh, "Family and Kinship," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1028.
[13] Solveig Langr, telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
[14] Ronald Kline, “Rural Electrification,” in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1014.
[15] Solveig Langr, telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
[16] "The Declining Number of Farms 1920-1997," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 997.
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Version 29

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titledcterms:titleOlsen Family House, New Sweden, Minnesota
descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:contentDuring 19th century America witnessed fundamental changes. Industrialization, consumerism, technological achievements, mass immigration but also slavery and the Civil War were only some of the major events that shaped the country. Society and culture shifted from agricultural and rural, to industrialized and urbanized.  

            The constant mass of immigrants arriving on the shores day to day were a massive influence, not only socially, but also culturally, politically and economically. Due to either devastating and desperate conditions caused by population boom, depressions, famines, revolution and religious persecution, or the desire of adventure and exploration, many Europeans, mainly Irish, Germans, and Scandinavians, left their home in the hope of a better future. Immigration from Europe to the U.S. continuously increased in the 19th century. Many people from Scandinavian countries left their home behind to start a new life in America, a place which many only had a vague idea of what to expect. In the 1860s over 71,000 Norwegians left their home country, and in the 1870s, over 95,000. The number of Norwegian immigrants continued to increase till the early 1900s.[1]

            This was also the case for Mathias Olson who came with his family from Norway to the New World in 1865. Unable to find work in Lillehammer, he decided to make a start in America. Thirty years later, Carl Olson, Mathias’ son, bought land in rural Minnesota, which was originally made available through the Homestead Act in 1862. There he built a home for his family. Since then four generations of his family have lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
 
Norwegian Immigration

Norwegians were the second biggest group after the Irish, who immigrated to the U.S.. The first ship that brought immigrants from Norway to America set off to the New World in July, 1825.[2] Although, for those who stayed in Europe, “many things in America seemed bizarre,”[3] letters and recounts from early immigrants raving to their families back at home about their new lives, often changed Europeans’ viewsof America.  This was the case for Andreas Ueland, a young boy who did not have many prospects in Norway after his father’s death, and who decided to go to America after being infected with the “American fever.” In his recollections, he remembers:

A farmer from Houston County, Minnesota, returned on a visit the winter of ’70-’71. He infected half the population in that district with what was called the American fever, and I who was then the most susceptible caught the fever in its most virulent form. No more amusement of any kind, only brooding on how to get away to America.[4]

            A common observation that can be made with the Norwegian settlers is that they often stayed together in a community and new Norwegian immigrants tended to join them.[5] The major reason for that was most likely the language. In a new country with an unfamiliar language, after an oftentimes horrible passage, it was very nice to be surrounded and welcomed by people who understood you and your background.

            This effect was not restricted to Norwegian immigrants. It can also be seen with immigrants from other countries, such as Germany, the Netherlands, or Sweden, whose dominance in some areas can still be seen today. It was not as much the case with Irish immigrants, as they did not struggle with the language barrier. Therefore, farming was a good start as many immigrants already had the skills. Furthermore, farming only necessitated limited communication in English and provided them with a basic living standard. Rice points out: “Almost all had been farmers before they came, and each settler brought a set of values, attitudes and habits from his European homeland.”[6]

            Another important pull factor of the Homestead Act of 1862 was that it provided people who were willing to migrate westwards 160 acres of public land for free.[7] Many settlers made use of the Act thus “virtually all of the land taken by settlers in the late 1860s was claimed under this act”[8].

The Olsen family

One of the many people who left their home country to seek a better future for himself and his family was Mathias Olsen from Lillehammer, Norway. He had been trained and worked as a painter but due to unemployment and economic struggles[9] and having heard and read about the endless possibilities America offered to immigrants, he decided to leave the country.  The family, his wife Martha and six children at that time, arrived in the New World in 1865 where they directly travelled to and settled in St. Peter, Minnesota. Why they chose to go there is unknown, however, it stands to reason that they heard from earlier Norwegian settlers who had settled in this area. Mathias Olsen continued to work as a painter in St. Peter for six years before the family bought land in Lake Prairie, Nicollet county, where they built a house and started to farm the land.[10]

            The agricultural passion was shared by their son Carl, who was born in Norway and came with his parents to America while still an infant. In 1896, thirty years after his arrival, he acquired land close to his parents’ home which originally had become available through the Homestead Act of 1862. Building a house in the prairie at a that time, before automobiles were available for the masses and especially rural people were dependent on animal power, was connected with complicating factors. For example the wood had to be shipped from far away, because there was no useable wood in the prairie.[11] The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only added onto and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought through work in the original building of the house at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater to the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.

            When Carl and his wife Julianne got older, their son Christian took the farm over. As it was usual for the time that “children who inherited the family farm were obligated to care for their aging parents”[12] the Olsen’s faced the problem of lacking room. To create more space, they built an addition on the east side of the house in September 1929. Unfortunately, the investment was made one month before the American stock market crashed and engulfed the country in the Great Depression crisis. This also led to a long period of financial hardship for the Olsen family. Nevertheless, they were able to keep the farm running. Two factors might have contributed to that. First, with the Great Depression many people lost their jobs and were desperately looking for employment. This applied to urban workers as well as rural ones. During the time, many so-called itinerant laborers were wandering from town to town, trying to find some work in exchange for board and lodge. The Olsen’ hired a few itinerant workers during the depression time who also lived in the house, which meant that there were at least ten people sharing the space.

            The outbreak of the second World War, ten years later, posed a problem for many farmers as they oftentimes faced serious shortage of especially male laborers. However, due to health issues or because they were too young or old, none of the Olsen family members went overseas but were able to continue their work on the farm and keep it running. By 1942 they farmed 20 crops.

            Another investment in the future, was the installment of electricity around 1940 which replaced the Petro light system they had before.[13] The Olsen’s were not the only ones to install electricity, due to the Rural Electrification Administration which was established in 1935 within the context of Franklin D. Roosevelts’ New Deal program and resulted in the electrification of Midwest farms of 95% in 1954.[14] Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.

            The farm was a working dairy until 1971, when the then owner, Julian Olsen, was no longer able to manage the work of the crop farming and caring for the cattle after his own after his father, Christian, had a completely debilitating stroke the previous year[15]. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. Nevertheless, due to various reasons the numbers of farms in the Midwest had dropped constantly since the 1940s.[16] From the aerial perspective one can also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment, which are no longer standing today. The land is still owned by the family, who rents it out to farmers. An additional house for the older generation was also built as the addition from 1929 is now used as an extended living room and more bedrooms.

            Furthermore, the screen porch was transformed into a closed porch and the windows next to the porch were remodeled for practical reasons, namely having a door to the garden. Both changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Other smaller, recognizable changes are the chimney, which has been rebuilt, and the color of the exterior siding, which has been repainted from white to green.

            Even though it is just a farm house, it does not only tell the story of a family but also the history of the country. The micro-historical perspective allows us to better understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life. Between the two photos, 92 years have passed during which many changes had happened, but the spirit of the old days can still be seen and felt.
 
[1] Kaarin Lillehei-Bakhtiar, “Norwegians,” in American Immigrant Cultures. Builders of a Nation. Vol. 2. K-Z, ed. David Levinson and Melvin Ember (New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1997), 657.
[2] Kaarin Lillehei-Bakhtiar, “Norwegians,” in American Immigrant Cultures. Builders of a Nation. Vol. 2. K-Z, ed. David Levinson and Melvin Ember (New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1997), 636.
[3] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant (New York: Minton, Balch & Company, 1929; Library of Congress): 20, https://www.loc.gov/item/29001450/.
[4] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant (New York: Minton, Balch & Company, 1929; Library of Congress): 22, https://www.loc.gov/item/29001450/.
[5] Robert C. Ostergren, “Land and Family in Rural Immigrant Communities” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Vol. 71, no. 3 (1981): 400, http://www.jstor.org/stable/2562899.
[6] John G. Rice, “The role of culture and community in frontier prairie farming.” Journal of Historical Geography 3, no. 2 (1977): 155. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0305748877902122.
[7] Lee Ann Potter and Wynell Schamel, "The Homestead Act of 1862," Social Education 61, 6 (1997). https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/homestead-act.
[8] Rice, Role of Culture, 158.
[9] Solveig Langr (great granddaughter of Carl Olsen who presently owns and lives in the house with her family), telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
[10] Applicable for the whole paragraph: William G. Gresham, History of Nicollet and LeSueur Counties, Minnesota: their people, industries, and institutions: with biographical sketches of representative citizens and genealogical records of many of the old families (Indianapolis: B.F. Bowen, 1916), 48-50.
[11] Solveig Langr, telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
[12] Susan Session Rugh, "Family and Kinship," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1028.
[13] Solveig Langr, telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
[14] Ronald Kline, “Rural Electrification,” in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1014.
[15] Solveig Langr, telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
[16] "The Declining Number of Farms 1920-1997," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 997.
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Version 28

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/sophia-beukenhorst.28
versionnumberov:versionnumber28
titledcterms:titleOlsen Family House, New Sweden, Minnesota
descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

REPHOTOGRAPHY PROJECT- DRAFT
 
Olsen family house, County Road 15, New Sweden, Minnesota
During 19th century America witnessed fundamental changes. Industrialization, consumerism, technological achievements, mass immigration but also slavery and the Civil War were only some of the major events that shaped the country. Society and culture shifted from agricultural and rural, to industrialized and urbanized.  
            The constant mass of immigrants arriving on the shores day to day were a massive influence, not only socially, but also culturally, politically and economically. Due to either devastating and desperate conditions caused by population boom, depressions, famines, revolution and religious persecution, or the desire of adventure and exploration, many Europeans, mainly Irish, Germans, and Scandinavians, left their home in the hope of a better future. Immigration from Europe to the U.S. continuously increased in the 19th century. Many people from Scandinavian countries left their home behind to start a new life in America, a place which many only had a vague idea of what to expect. In the 1860s over 71,000 Norwegians left their home country, and in the 1870s, over 95,000. The number of Norwegian immigrants continued to increase till the early 1900s.[1]
            This was also the case for Mathias Olson who came with his family from Norway to the New World in 1865. Unable to find work in Lillehammer, he decided to make a start in America. Thirty years later, Carl Olson, Mathias’ son, bought land in rural Minnesota, which was originally made available through the Homestead Act in 1862. There he built a home for his family. Since then four generations of his family have lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
 
Norwegian Immigration
Norwegians were the second biggest group after the Irish, who immigrated to the U.S.. The first ship that brought immigrants from Norway to America set off to the New World in July, 1825.[2] Although, for those who stayed in Europe, “many things in America seemed bizarre,”[3] letters and recounts from early immigrants raving to their families back at home about their new lives, often changed Europeans’ views of America.  This was the case for Andreas Ueland, a young boy who did not have many prospects in Norway after his father’s death, and who decided to go to America after being infected with the “American fever.” In his recollections, he remembers:
A farmer from Houston County, Minnesota, returned on a visit the winter of ’70-’71. He infected half the population in that district with what was called the American fever, and I who was then the most susceptible caught the fever in its most virulent form. No more amusement of any kind, only brooding on how to get away to America.[4]
            A common observation that can be made with the Norwegian settlers is that they often stayed together in a community and new Norwegian immigrants tended to join them.[5] The major reason for that was most likely the language. In a new country with an unfamiliar language, after an oftentimes horrible passage, it was very nice to be surrounded and welcomed by people who understood you and your background.
            This effect was not restricted to Norwegian immigrants. It can also be seen with immigrants from other countries, such as Germany, the Netherlands, or Sweden, whose dominance in some areas can still be seen today. It was not as much the case with Irish immigrants, as they did not struggle with the language barrier. Therefore, farming was a good start as many immigrants already had the skills. Furthermore, farming only necessitated limited communication in English and provided them with a basic living standard. Rice points out: “Almost all had been farmers before they came, and each settler brought a set of values, attitudes and habits from his European homeland.”[6]
            Another important pull factor of the Homestead Act of 1862 was that it provided people who were willing to migrate westwards 160 acres of public land for free.[7] Many settlers made use of the Act thus “virtually all of the land taken by settlers in the late 1860s was claimed under this act”[8].
The Olsen family
One of the many people who left their home country to seek a better future for himself and his family was Mathias Olsen from Lillehammer, Norway. He had been trained and worked as a painter but due to unemployment and economic struggles[9] and having heard and read about the endless possibilities America offered to immigrants, he decided to leave the country.  The family, his wife Martha and six children at that time, arrived in the New World in 1865 where they directly travelled to and settled in St. Peter, Minnesota. Why they chose to go there is unknown, however, it stands to reason that they heard from earlier Norwegian settlers who had settled in this area. Mathias Olsen continued to work as a painter in St. Peter for six years before the family bought land in Lake Prairie, Nicollet county, where they built a house and started to farm the land.[10]
            The agricultural passion was shared by their son Carl, who was born in Norway and came with his parents to America while still an infant. In 1896, thirty years after his arrival, he acquired land close to his parents’ home which originally had become available through the Homestead Act of 1862. Building a house in the prairie at a that time, before automobiles were available for the masses and especially rural people were dependent on animal power, was connected with complicating factors. For example the wood had to be shipped from far away, because there was no useable wood in the prairie.[11] The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only added onto and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought through work in the original building of the house at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater to the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
            When Carl and his wife Julianne got older, their son Christian took the farm over. As it was usual for the time that “children who inherited the family farm were obligated to care for their aging parents”[12] the Olsen’s faced the problem of lacking room. To create more space, they built an addition on the east side of the house in September 1929. Unfortunately, the investment was made one month before the American stock market crashed and engulfed the country in the Great Depression crisis. This also led to a long period of financial hardship for the Olsen family. Nevertheless, they were able to keep the farm running. Two factors might have contributed to that. First, with the Great Depression many people lost their jobs and were desperately looking for employment. This applied to urban workers as well as rural ones. During the time, many so-called itinerant laborers were wandering from town to town, trying to find some work in exchange for board and lodge. The Olsen’ hired a few itinerant workers during the depression time who also lived in the house, which meant that there were at least ten people sharing the space.
            The outbreak of the second World War, ten years later, posed a problem for many farmers as they oftentimes faced serious shortage of especially male laborers. However, due to health issues or because they were too young or old, none of the Olsen family members went overseas but were able to continue their work on the farm and keep it running. By 1942 they farmed 20 crops.
            Another investment in the future, was the installment of electricity around 1940 which replaced the Petro light system they had before.[13] The Olsen’s were not the only ones to install electricity, due to the Rural Electrification Administration which was established in 1935 within the context of Franklin D. Roosevelts’ New Deal program and resulted in the electrification of Midwest farms of 95% in 1954.[14] Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
            The farm was a working dairy until 1971, when the then owner, Julian Olsen, was no longer able to manage the work of the crop farming and caring for the cattle after his own after his father, Christian, had a completely debilitating stroke the previous year[15]. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. Nevertheless, due to various reasons the numbers of farms in the Midwest had dropped constantly since the 1940s.[16] From the aerial perspective one can also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment, which are no longer standing today. The land is still owned by the family, who rents it out to farmers. An additional house for the older generation was also built as the addition from 1929 is now used as an extended living room and more bedrooms.
            Furthermore, the screen porch was transformed into a closed porch and the windows next to the porch were remodeled for practical reasons, namely having a door to the garden. Both changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Other smaller, recognizable changes are the chimney, which has been rebuilt, and the color of the exterior siding, which has been repainted from white to green.
            Even though it is just a farm house, it does not only tell the story of a family but also the history of the country. The micro-historical perspective allows us to better understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life. Between the two photos, 92 years have passed during which many changes had happened, but the spirit of the old days can still be seen and felt.
 
[1] Kaarin Lillehei-Bakhtiar, “Norwegians,” in American Immigrant Cultures. Builders of a Nation. Vol. 2. K-Z, ed. David Levinson and Melvin Ember (New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1997), 657.
[2] Kaarin Lillehei-Bakhtiar, “Norwegians,” in American Immigrant Cultures. Builders of a Nation. Vol. 2. K-Z, ed. David Levinson and Melvin Ember (New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1997), 636.
[3] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant (New York: Minton, Balch & Company, 1929; Library of Congress): 20, https://www.loc.gov/item/29001450/.
[4] Andreas Ueland, Recollections of an Immigrant (New York: Minton, Balch & Company, 1929; Library of Congress): 22, https://www.loc.gov/item/29001450/.
[5] Robert C. Ostergren, “Land and Family in Rural Immigrant Communities” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Vol. 71, no. 3 (1981): 400, http://www.jstor.org/stable/2562899.
[6] John G. Rice, “The role of culture and community in frontier prairie farming.” Journal of Historical Geography 3, no. 2 (1977): 155. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0305748877902122.
[7] Lee Ann Potter and Wynell Schamel, "The Homestead Act of 1862," Social Education 61, 6 (1997). https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/homestead-act.
[8] Rice, Role of Culture, 158.
[9] Solveig Langr (great granddaughter of Carl Olsen who presently owns and lives in the house with her family), telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
[10] Applicable for the whole paragraph: William G. Gresham, History of Nicollet and LeSueur Counties, Minnesota: their people, industries, and institutions: with biographical sketches of representative citizens and genealogical records of many of the old families (Indianapolis: B.F. Bowen, 1916), 48-50.
[11] Solveig Langr, telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
[12] Susan Session Rugh, "Family and Kinship," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1028.
[13] Solveig Langr, telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
[14] Ronald Kline, “Rural Electrification,” in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 1014.
[15] Solveig Langr, telephone interview by the author, October 29, 2016.
[16] "The Declining Number of Farms 1920-1997," in The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, ed. Richard Sisson, Christian K. Zacher, and Andrew R. L. Cayton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 997.
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Olsen Family Home 

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Olsen Family Home 

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Olsen Family Home 

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Olsen Family Home 

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Olsen Family Home 

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titledcterms:titleOlsen Family House, New Sweden, Minnesota
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Olsen Family Home 

Introduction
During 19th century America witnessed fundamental changes. Industrialization, consumerism, technological achievements, mass immigration but also slavery and the Civil War were only some of the major events that shaped the country. Society and therefore also culture shifted from an agricultural rural one to an industrialized and urbanized.  
Especially the constant mass of immigrants arriving on the shores day by day, were a massive influence, not only socially but also culturally, politically and economically. Due to either devastating and desperate conditions caused by population boom, depressions, famines, revolution and religious persecution or the desire of adventure and exploration, many Europeans, mainly Irish, Germans, and Scandinavians, left their home in the hope of a better future. In the 1840s alone, the census counted 1.710.000 immigrants which even was exceeded in the following decade with 2.600.000 immigrants.[1]
Immigration from Europe to U.S. continuously increased in the 19th century. Especially many people from Scandinavian countries left their home behind to start a new life in America. A place of which many only had a vague idea of what to expect. This was also the case for Mathias Olson who came with his family from Norway to the New World in 1865. Unable to find work in Lillehammer, he decided to start over in America. Thirty years later, Carl Olson, Mathias’ son, bought land in rural Minnesota, which was originally made available through the Homestead Act in 1862, and built a home for his family. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
Norwegian Immigration
Norwegians were the second biggest group after the Irish, who immigrated to the U.S.. The first ship that brought immigrants from Norway to America set off to the New World in July, 1825. What was in the beginning oftentimes negatively regarded, as “many things in America seemed bizarre. Just think a rail-splitter being president and a tailor vice-president!”[2], it gradually changed with letters and recounts from early immigrants raving about their new lives, “telling how much land they had acquired for little or nothing, how much stock they had and how they fared on pork, eggs, and white bread every day”[3].  This was also the case for Andreas Ueland, a young boy who did not have a prosperous life perspective in Norway after his father’s death and decides to go to America after being infected with the “American fever” as he calls it. In his recollections, he rembers:
“A farmer from Houston County, Minnesota, returned on a visit the winter of ’70-’71. He infected half the population in that district with what was called the American fever, and I who was then the most susceptible caught the fever in its most virulent form. No more amusement of any kind, only brooding on how to get away to America.”[4]
A common observation that can be made with the Norwegian settlers is that they often stayed together in a community and new Norwegian immigrants tented to join them. The major reason for that was most likely the language. Being in a new country with an unfamiliar language, after an oftentimes horrible passage, it was very nice to be surrounded and welcome by people who understood you and your background.
This effect was not restricted to Norwegian immigrants. It can also be seen with immigrants from other countries, such as Germany, the Netherlands, or Sweden whose dominance in some areas can still be seen today. It was not as much the case with Irish immigrants as they did not struggle with the language barrier. Therefore, farming was a good start as many immigrants already had the skills and it furthermore only necessitated a limited capability of communication in English and provided them with a basic living standard.
Another important pull factor embodied the Homestead Act of 1862 which stated “that any person who is the head of a family, or who has arrived at the age of twenty-one years, and is a citizen of the United States, or who shall have filed his declaration of intention to become such, [...] shall, [...] be entitled to enter one quarter section or a less quantity of unappropriated public lands“[5]. Even though it was not as successful as its planer had hoped, … acre land in total were
 
Olsen family
 
One of the many people who left their home country to seek for a better future for themselves and their family was Mathias Olsen from Lillehammer, Norway. He had been trained and worked as a painter but due to unemployment and thus economic struggle[6] on the one hand and on the other hand having heard and read about the endless possibilities America offers to immigrants, he decided to leave the country.  The family, his wife Martha and six children at that time, arrived in the New World in 1865 where they directly travelled to and settled in St. Peter, Minnesota. Why they chose to go there is unknown, however, it stands to reason that they heard from earlier Norwegian settlers who had located in this area. Mathias Olsen continued to work as a painter in St. Peter for six years before the family bought land in Lake Prairie, Nicollet county, where they built a house and started to farm the land.
The agricultural passion was shared by their son Carl, who was born in Norway and came to America as a baby. In 1896, thirty years after his arrival, he acquired land close to his parents’ home which originally had become available through the Homestead Act of 1862. Building a house in the prairie at a the time before automobiles were available for the masses and especially rural people were dependent on animal power, it was connected with complicating factors as for example the wood had to be shipped from far away, as there was no appropriate wood in the prairie[7].  The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought through work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
When Carl and his wife got older, their son Christian took the farm over. As it was usual for the time that “children who inherited the family farm were obligated to care for their aging parents”[8] the Olsen’s faced the problem of lacking room. To create more space, the addition on the east side was built in September 1929. Unfortunately, the investment was made one month before the American stock market crashed and engulfed the country in the Great Depression crisis. This also led to long period of financial hardship for the Olsen family. Nevertheless, they were able to keep the farm running. Two factors might have contributed to that. First, with the Great Depression many people lost their jobs and were desperately looking for employment. This applied to urban workers as well as for rural ones. During the time, many so called itinerant laborer were wandering from town to town, trying to find some work in exchange for board and lodge. The Olsen’ hired a few itinerant workers during the depression time who also lived in the house which meant that there were at least ten people sharing the space.
The outbreak of the second World War ten years later, posed a problem for many farmers as they oftentimes faced serious shortage of especially male laborers. However, due to health issues or age ineptness none of the Olsen family members went overseas but were able to continue their work on the farm, which was 20 crops by 1942, and keep it running.
Another investment in the future, was the installment of electricity which was made around 1940[9].  Before they had a Petro lite system. Compared to the Midwest this was rather late/early to ad that…. ->Midwest! Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
The farm was a working dairy until 1971, as the then owner, Julian Olsen, on the one hand wanted to focus on crop farming and on the other hand was not able to manage all the work on his own after his father, Christian, had a completely debilitating stroke the previous year[10]. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. Nevertheless, due to various reasons the numbers of farms in the Midwest had dropped constantly since the 1940s[11]. From the aerial perspective one can also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. The land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built as the addition from 1929 is used as an extended living room and more bedrooms.
Furthermore, the screen porch was transformed into a closed porch and the windows next to the porch were remodeled for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Other smaller recognizable changes are the chimney, which has been rebuilt and that the house has been repainted in a new color over the years.
Between the two photos, 92 years have passed.
 
[1] Ross, Donald. American History & Culture: From the Explorers to Cable TV. New York: Lang, 2000. Print. P.136
 
[2] Ueland, Andreas. Recollections of an Immigrant. New York, Minton, Balch & Company, 1929. Online Text. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/29001450/. (Accessed December 04, 2016.) p.20
[3] andreas p.21
[4] andreas p. 22
[5] https://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?doc=31&page=transcript
[6] Solveig
[7] Solveig
[8] Midwest, susan session rugh p. 1028 Abschnitt „family and kinship“
[9] Solveig
[10] Solveig
[11] Midwest, check page
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Olsen Family Home 

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titledcterms:titleOlsen Family House, New Sweden, Minnesota
descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

Between the two photos, 92 years have passed. The house was built in 1896 by Carl Olsen, whose family immigrated from Norway thirty years earlier when Carl was only a baby. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
The most obvious change is the addition on the east side of the house (right side in the picture) as well as the transformation of the screen porch into a closed porch. Furthermore, the windows next to the porch were remodeled, probably for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both previously mentioned changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Another recognizable change is the chimney, which has been rebuilt. Those additions, especially on the east side, speak for growth of the farm and family and investment in the future. The house has also been repainted in a new color over the years. The size and appearance of the house is indicative of a well off family.
The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought trough work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
A change that is not visible in the picture but is still a mentionable fact is that the it was a working dairy till 1971. From an aerial perspective one could also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. Nevertheless, the land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. 
The history of the house is connected to some key topics we have touched so far in class. It is built on land that became available through the Homestead Act. The family who lived on the land before the Olsen’s bought it, purchased the land through the Homestead Act. Moreover, the Olsen family immigrated to the U.S. in 1865 from Norway due to economic struggle in their home country. Unfortunate timing led to financial hardship, when they built the extension on the east side of the house a month before the stock market crashed in 1929. However, during the Depression the family oftentimes hired itinerate workers who would work for board and lodge.
One conclusion that I came up with is that it is actually interesting that in times of urbanization and increase of factory and office jobs an averagely sized farm made the decision to even increase the house.
It would be interesting to find out more about the area and its immigration history in the mid nineteenth century also in regard to the Homestead Act. Another important issue which might be noteworthy to look at is the effect of the Depression in this region and the consequences it had for farmers. Furthermore, it might be interesting to take a closer look at the difficulties of building houses in the prairie during this time, as they often had to get the wood from far away.
 
I really enjoy working on this project and with my photo as topics discussed in class on an academic level become much more personal and better comprehensible. The micro-historical perspective makes it easier to understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life.
 
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Version 19

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titledcterms:titleOlsen Family House, New Sweden, Minnesota
descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

Between the two photos, 92 years have passed. The house was built in 1896 by Carl Olsen, whose family immigrated from Norway thirty years earlier when Carl was only a baby. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
The most obvious change is the addition on the east side of the house (right side in the picture) as well as the transformation of the screen porch into a closed porch. Furthermore, the windows next to the porch were remodeled, probably for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both previously mentioned changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Another recognizable change is the chimney, which has been rebuilt. Those additions, especially on the east side, speak for growth of the farm and family and investment in the future. The house has also been repainted in a new color over the years. The size and appearance of the house is indicative of a well off family.
The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought trough work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
A change that is not visible in the picture but is still a mentionable fact is that the it was a working dairy till 1971. From an aerial perspective one could also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. Nevertheless, the land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. 
The history of the house is connected to some key topics we have touched so far in class. It is built on land that became available through the Homestead Act. The family who lived on the land before the Olsen’s bought it, purchased the land through the Homestead Act. Moreover, the Olsen family immigrated to the U.S. in 1865 from Norway due to economic struggle in their home country. Unfortunate timing led to financial hardship, when they built the extension on the east side of the house a month before the stock market crashed in 1929. However, during the Depression the family oftentimes hired itinerate workers who would work for board and lodge.
One conclusion that I came up with is that it is actually interesting that in times of urbanization and increase of factory and office jobs an averagely sized farm made the decision to even increase the house.
It would be interesting to find out more about the area and its immigration history in the mid nineteenth century also in regard to the Homestead Act. Another important issue which might be noteworthy to look at is the effect of the Depression in this region and the consequences it had for farmers. Furthermore, it might be interesting to take a closer look at the difficulties of building houses in the prairie during this time, as they often had to get the wood from far away.
 
I really enjoy working on this project and with my photo as topics discussed in class on an academic level become much more personal and better comprehensible. The micro-historical perspective makes it easier to understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life.
 
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Version 18

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versionnumberov:versionnumber18
titledcterms:titleOlsen Family House, New Sweden, Minnesota
descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

Between the two photos, 92 years have passed. The house was built in 1896 by Carl Olsen, whose family immigrated from Norway thirty years earlier when Carl was only a baby. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
The most obvious change is the addition on the east side of the house (right side in the picture) as well as the transformation of the screen porch into a closed porch. Furthermore, the windows next to the porch were remodeled, probably for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both previously mentioned changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Another recognizable change is the chimney, which has been rebuilt. Those additions, especially on the east side, speak for growth of the farm and family and investment in the future. The house has also been repainted in a new color over the years. The size and appearance of the house is indicative of a well off family.
The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought trough work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
A change that is not visible in the picture but is still a mentionable fact is that the it was a working dairy till 1971. From an aerial perspective one could also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. Nevertheless, the land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. 
The history of the house is connected to some key topics we have touched so far in class. It is built on land that became available through the Homestead Act. The family who lived on the land before the Olsen’s bought it, purchased the land through the Homestead Act. Moreover, the Olsen family immigrated to the U.S. in 1865 from Norway due to economic struggle in their home country. Unfortunate timing led to financial hardship, when they built the extension on the east side of the house a month before the stock market crashed in 1929. However, during the Depression the family oftentimes hired itinerate workers who would work for board and lodge.
One conclusion that I came up with is that it is actually interesting that in times of urbanization and increase of factory and office jobs an averagely sized farm made the decision to even increase the house.
It would be interesting to find out more about the area and its immigration history in the mid nineteenth century also in regard to the Homestead Act. Another important issue which might be noteworthy to look at is the effect of the Depression in this region and the consequences it had for farmers. Furthermore, it might be interesting to take a closer look at the difficulties of building houses in the prairie during this time, as they often had to get the wood from far away.
 
I really enjoy working on this project and with my photo as topics discussed in class on an academic level become much more personal and better comprehensible. The micro-historical perspective makes it easier to understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life.
 
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
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titledcterms:titleOlsen Family House, County Road 15, New Sweden, Minnesota
descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

Between the two photos, 92 years have passed. The house was built in 1896 by Carl Olsen, whose family immigrated from Norway thirty years earlier when Carl was only a baby. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
The most obvious change is the addition on the east side of the house (right side in the picture) as well as the transformation of the screen porch into a closed porch. Furthermore, the windows next to the porch were remodeled, probably for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both previously mentioned changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Another recognizable change is the chimney, which has been rebuilt. Those additions, especially on the east side, speak for growth of the farm and family and investment in the future. The house has also been repainted in a new color over the years. The size and appearance of the house is indicative of a well off family.
The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought trough work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
A change that is not visible in the picture but is still a mentionable fact is that the it was a working dairy till 1971. From an aerial perspective one could also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. Nevertheless, the land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. 
The history of the house is connected to some key topics we have touched so far in class. It is built on land that became available through the Homestead Act. The family who lived on the land before the Olsen’s bought it, purchased the land through the Homestead Act. Moreover, the Olsen family immigrated to the U.S. in 1865 from Norway due to economic struggle in their home country. Unfortunate timing led to financial hardship, when they built the extension on the east side of the house a month before the stock market crashed in 1929. However, during the Depression the family oftentimes hired itinerate workers who would work for board and lodge.
One conclusion that I came up with is that it is actually interesting that in times of urbanization and increase of factory and office jobs an averagely sized farm made the decision to even increase the house.
It would be interesting to find out more about the area and its immigration history in the mid nineteenth century also in regard to the Homestead Act. Another important issue which might be noteworthy to look at is the effect of the Depression in this region and the consequences it had for farmers. Furthermore, it might be interesting to take a closer look at the difficulties of building houses in the prairie during this time, as they often had to get the wood from far away.
 
I really enjoy working on this project and with my photo as topics discussed in class on an academic level become much more personal and better comprehensible. The micro-historical perspective makes it easier to understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life.
 
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
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titledcterms:titleOlsen Family House, County Road 15, New Sweden, Minnesota
descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

Between the two photos, 92 years have passed. The house was built in 1896 by Carl Olsen, whose family immigrated from Norway thirty years earlier when Carl was only a baby. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
The most obvious change is the addition on the east side of the house (right side in the picture) as well as the transformation of the screen porch into a closed porch. Furthermore, the windows next to the porch were remodeled, probably for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both previously mentioned changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Another recognizable change is the chimney, which has been rebuilt. Those additions, especially on the east side, speak for growth of the farm and family and investment in the future. The house has also been repainted in a new color over the years. The size and appearance of the house is indicative of a well off family.
The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought trough work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
A change that is not visible in the picture but is still a mentionable fact is that the it was a working dairy till 1971. From an aerial perspective one could also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. Nevertheless, the land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. 
The history of the house is connected to some key topics we have touched so far in class. It is built on land that became available through the Homestead Act. The family who lived on the land before the Olsen’s bought it, purchased the land through the Homestead Act. Moreover, the Olsen family immigrated to the U.S. in 1865 from Norway due to economic struggle in their home country. Unfortunate timing led to financial hardship, when they built the extension on the east side of the house a month before the stock market crashed in 1929. However, during the Depression the family oftentimes hired itinerate workers who would work for board and lodge.
One conclusion that I came up with is that it is actually interesting that in times of urbanization and increase of factory and office jobs an averagely sized farm made the decision to even increase the house.
It would be interesting to find out more about the area and its immigration history in the mid nineteenth century also in regard to the Homestead Act. Another important issue which might be noteworthy to look at is the effect of the Depression in this region and the consequences it had for farmers. Furthermore, it might be interesting to take a closer look at the difficulties of building houses in the prairie during this time, as they often had to get the wood from far away.
 
I really enjoy working on this project and with my photo as topics discussed in class on an academic level become much more personal and better comprehensible. The micro-historical perspective makes it easier to understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life.
 
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
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createddcterms:created2016-11-16T10:55:09-08:00
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Version 15

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titledcterms:titleOlsen family house, County Road 15, New Sweden, Minnesota
descriptiondcterms:descriptionby Sophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

Between the two photos, 92 years have passed. The house was built in 1896 by Carl Olsen, whose family immigrated from Norway thirty years earlier when Carl was only a baby. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
The most obvious change is the addition on the east side of the house (right side in the picture) as well as the transformation of the screen porch into a closed porch. Furthermore, the windows next to the porch were remodeled, probably for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both previously mentioned changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Another recognizable change is the chimney, which has been rebuilt. Those additions, especially on the east side, speak for growth of the farm and family and investment in the future. The house has also been repainted in a new color over the years. The size and appearance of the house is indicative of a well off family.
The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought trough work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
A change that is not visible in the picture but is still a mentionable fact is that the it was a working dairy till 1971. From an aerial perspective one could also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. Nevertheless, the land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. 
The history of the house is connected to some key topics we have touched so far in class. It is built on land that became available through the Homestead Act. The family who lived on the land before the Olsen’s bought it, purchased the land through the Homestead Act. Moreover, the Olsen family immigrated to the U.S. in 1865 from Norway due to economic struggle in their home country. Unfortunate timing led to financial hardship, when they built the extension on the east side of the house a month before the stock market crashed in 1929. However, during the Depression the family oftentimes hired itinerate workers who would work for board and lodge.
One conclusion that I came up with is that it is actually interesting that in times of urbanization and increase of factory and office jobs an averagely sized farm made the decision to even increase the house.
It would be interesting to find out more about the area and its immigration history in the mid nineteenth century also in regard to the Homestead Act. Another important issue which might be noteworthy to look at is the effect of the Depression in this region and the consequences it had for farmers. Furthermore, it might be interesting to take a closer look at the difficulties of building houses in the prairie during this time, as they often had to get the wood from far away.
 
I really enjoy working on this project and with my photo as topics discussed in class on an academic level become much more personal and better comprehensible. The micro-historical perspective makes it easier to understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life.
 
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/users/14491
createddcterms:created2016-11-16T10:54:00-08:00
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Version 14

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versionnumberov:versionnumber14
titledcterms:titleSophia Beukenhorst
descriptiondcterms:descriptionOlsen family house, County Road 15, New Sweden, Minnesota
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

Between the two photos, 92 years have passed. The house was built in 1896 by Carl Olsen, whose family immigrated from Norway thirty years earlier when Carl was only a baby. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
The most obvious change is the addition on the east side of the house (right side in the picture) as well as the transformation of the screen porch into a closed porch. Furthermore, the windows next to the porch were remodeled, probably for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both previously mentioned changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Another recognizable change is the chimney, which has been rebuilt. Those additions, especially on the east side, speak for growth of the farm and family and investment in the future. The house has also been repainted in a new color over the years. The size and appearance of the house is indicative of a well off family.
The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought trough work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
A change that is not visible in the picture but is still a mentionable fact is that the it was a working dairy till 1971. From an aerial perspective one could also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. Nevertheless, the land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. 
The history of the house is connected to some key topics we have touched so far in class. It is built on land that became available through the Homestead Act. The family who lived on the land before the Olsen’s bought it, purchased the land through the Homestead Act. Moreover, the Olsen family immigrated to the U.S. in 1865 from Norway due to economic struggle in their home country. Unfortunate timing led to financial hardship, when they built the extension on the east side of the house a month before the stock market crashed in 1929. However, during the Depression the family oftentimes hired itinerate workers who would work for board and lodge.
One conclusion that I came up with is that it is actually interesting that in times of urbanization and increase of factory and office jobs an averagely sized farm made the decision to even increase the house.
It would be interesting to find out more about the area and its immigration history in the mid nineteenth century also in regard to the Homestead Act. Another important issue which might be noteworthy to look at is the effect of the Depression in this region and the consequences it had for farmers. Furthermore, it might be interesting to take a closer look at the difficulties of building houses in the prairie during this time, as they often had to get the wood from far away.
 
I really enjoy working on this project and with my photo as topics discussed in class on an academic level become much more personal and better comprehensible. The micro-historical perspective makes it easier to understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life.
 
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/users/14491
createddcterms:created2016-11-16T10:51:11-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 13

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/sophia-beukenhorst.13
versionnumberov:versionnumber13
titledcterms:titleSophia Beukenhorst
descriptiondcterms:descriptionOlsen family house, County Road 15, New Sweden, Minnesota
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

Between the two photos, 92 years have passed. The house was built in 1896 by Carl Olsen, whose family immigrated from Norway thirty years earlier when Carl was only a baby. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
The most obvious change is the addition on the east side of the house (right side in the picture) as well as the transformation of the screen porch into a closed porch. Furthermore, the windows next to the porch were remodeled, probably for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both previously mentioned changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Another recognizable change is the chimney, which has been rebuilt. Those additions, especially on the east side, speak for growth of the farm and family and investment in the future. The house has also been repainted in a new color over the years. The size and appearance of the house is indicative of a well off family.
The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought trough work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
A change that is not visible in the picture but is still a mentionable fact is that the it was a working dairy till 1971. From an aerial perspective one could also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. Nevertheless, the land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. 
The history of the house is connected to some key topics we have touched so far in class. It is built on land that became available through the Homestead Act. The family who lived on the land before the Olsen’s bought it, purchased the land through the Homestead Act. Moreover, the Olsen family immigrated to the U.S. in 1865 from Norway due to economic struggle in their home country. Unfortunate timing led to financial hardship, when they built the extension on the east side of the house a month before the stock market crashed in 1929. However, during the Depression the family oftentimes hired itinerate workers who would work for board and lodge.
One conclusion that I came up with is that it is actually interesting that in times of urbanization and increase of factory and office jobs an averagely sized farm made the decision to even increase the house.
It would be interesting to find out more about the area and its immigration history in the mid nineteenth century also in regard to the Homestead Act. Another important issue which might be noteworthy to look at is the effect of the Depression in this region and the consequences it had for farmers. Furthermore, it might be interesting to take a closer look at the difficulties of building houses in the prairie during this time, as they often had to get the wood from far away.
 
I really enjoy working on this project and with my photo as topics discussed in class on an academic level become much more personal and better comprehensible. The micro-historical perspective makes it easier to understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life.
 
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/users/14491
createddcterms:created2016-11-16T10:42:51-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 12

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/sophia-beukenhorst.12
versionnumberov:versionnumber12
titledcterms:titleSophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

Between the two photos, 92 years have passed. The house was built in 1896 by Carl Olsen, whose family immigrated from Norway thirty years earlier when Carl was only a baby. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
The most obvious change is the addition on the east side of the house (right side in the picture) as well as the transformation of the screen porch into a closed porch. Furthermore, the windows next to the porch were remodeled, probably for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both previously mentioned changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Another recognizable change is the chimney, which has been rebuilt. Those additions, especially on the east side, speak for growth of the farm and family and investment in the future. The house has also been repainted in a new color over the years. The size and appearance of the house is indicative of a well off family.
The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought trough work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
A change that is not visible in the picture but is still a mentionable fact is that the it was a working dairy till 1971. From an aerial perspective one could also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. Nevertheless, the land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. 
The history of the house is connected to some key topics we have touched so far in class. It is built on land that became available through the Homestead Act. The family who lived on the land before the Olsen’s bought it, purchased the land through the Homestead Act. Moreover, the Olsen family immigrated to the U.S. in 1865 from Norway due to economic struggle in their home country. Unfortunate timing led to financial hardship, when they built the extension on the east side of the house a month before the stock market crashed in 1929. However, during the Depression the family oftentimes hired itinerate workers who would work for board and lodge.
One conclusion that I came up with is that it is actually interesting that in times of urbanization and increase of factory and office jobs an averagely sized farm made the decision to even increase the house.
It would be interesting to find out more about the area and its immigration history in the mid nineteenth century also in regard to the Homestead Act. Another important issue which might be noteworthy to look at is the effect of the Depression in this region and the consequences it had for farmers. Furthermore, it might be interesting to take a closer look at the difficulties of building houses in the prairie during this time, as they often had to get the wood from far away.
 
I really enjoy working on this project and with my photo as topics discussed in class on an academic level become much more personal and better comprehensible. The micro-historical perspective makes it easier to understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life.
 
default viewscalar:defaultViewblank
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/users/14491
createddcterms:created2016-11-16T10:32:39-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 11

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/sophia-beukenhorst.11
versionnumberov:versionnumber11
titledcterms:titleSophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

Between the two photos, 92 years have passed. The house was built in 1896 by Carl Olsen, whose family immigrated from Norway thirty years earlier when Carl was only a baby. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
The most obvious change is the addition on the east side of the house (right side in the picture) as well as the transformation of the screen porch into a closed porch. Furthermore, the windows next to the porch were remodeled, probably for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both previously mentioned changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Another recognizable change is the chimney, which has been rebuilt. Those additions, especially on the east side, speak for growth of the farm and family and investment in the future. The house has also been repainted in a new color over the years. The size and appearance of the house is indicative of a well off family.
The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought trough work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
A change that is not visible in the picture but is still a mentionable fact is that the it was a working dairy till 1971. From an aerial perspective one could also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. Nevertheless, the land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. 
The history of the house is connected to some key topics we have touched so far in class. It is built on land that became available through the Homestead Act. The family who lived on the land before the Olsen’s bought it, purchased the land through the Homestead Act. Moreover, the Olsen family immigrated to the U.S. in 1865 from Norway due to economic struggle in their home country. Unfortunate timing led to financial hardship, when they built the extension on the east side of the house a month before the stock market crashed in 1929. However, during the Depression the family oftentimes hired itinerate workers who would work for board and lodge.
One conclusion that I came up with is that it is actually interesting that in times of urbanization and increase of factory and office jobs an averagely sized farm made the decision to even increase the house.
It would be interesting to find out more about the area and its immigration history in the mid nineteenth century also in regard to the Homestead Act. Another important issue which might be noteworthy to look at is the effect of the Depression in this region and the consequences it had for farmers. Furthermore, it might be interesting to take a closer look at the difficulties of building houses in the prairie during this time, as they often had to get the wood from far away.
 
I really enjoy working on this project and with my photo as topics discussed in class on an academic level become much more personal and better comprehensible. The micro-historical perspective makes it easier to understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life.
 
default viewscalar:defaultViewblank
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/users/14491
createddcterms:created2016-11-16T10:26:55-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 10

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/sophia-beukenhorst.10
versionnumberov:versionnumber10
titledcterms:titleSophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

Between the two photos, 92 years have passed. The house was built in 1896 by Carl Olsen, whose family immigrated from Norway thirty years earlier when Carl was only a baby. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
The most obvious change is the addition on the east side of the house (right side in the picture) as well as the transformation of the screen porch into a closed porch. Furthermore, the windows next to the porch were remodeled, probably for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both previously mentioned changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Another recognizable change is the chimney, which has been rebuilt. Those additions, especially on the east side, speak for growth of the farm and family and investment in the future. The house has also been repainted in a new color over the years. The size and appearance of the house is indicative of a well off family.
The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought trough work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
A change that is not visible in the picture but is still a mentionable fact is that the it was a working dairy till 1971. From an aerial perspective one could also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. Nevertheless, the land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. 
The history of the house is connected to some key topics we have touched so far in class. It is built on land that became available through the Homestead Act. The family who lived on the land before the Olsen’s bought it, purchased the land through the Homestead Act. Moreover, the Olsen family immigrated to the U.S. in 1865 from Norway due to economic struggle in their home country. Unfortunate timing led to financial hardship, when they built the extension on the east side of the house a month before the stock market crashed in 1929. However, during the Depression the family oftentimes hired itinerate workers who would work for board and lodge.
One conclusion that I came up with is that it is actually interesting that in times of urbanization and increase of factory and office jobs an averagely sized farm made the decision to even increase the house.
It would be interesting to find out more about the area and its immigration history in the mid nineteenth century also in regard to the Homestead Act. Another important issue which might be noteworthy to look at is the effect of the Depression in this region and the consequences it had for farmers. Furthermore, it might be interesting to take a closer look at the difficulties of building houses in the prairie during this time, as they often had to get the wood from far away.
 
I really enjoy working on this project and with my photo as topics discussed in class on an academic level become much more personal and better comprehensible. The micro-historical perspective makes it easier to understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life.
 
default viewscalar:defaultViewblank
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/users/14491
createddcterms:created2016-11-16T10:26:08-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 9

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versionnumberov:versionnumber9
titledcterms:titleSophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

Between the two photos, 92 years have passed. The house was built in 1896 by Carl Olsen, whose family immigrated from Norway thirty years earlier when Carl was only a baby. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
The most obvious change is the addition on the east side of the house (right side in the picture) as well as the transformation of the screen porch into a closed porch. Furthermore, the windows next to the porch were remodeled, probably for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both previously mentioned changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Another recognizable change is the chimney, which has been rebuilt. Those additions, especially on the east side, speak for growth of the farm and family and investment in the future. The house has also been repainted in a new color over the years. The size and appearance of the house is indicative of a well off family.
The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought trough work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
A change that is not visible in the picture but is still a mentionable fact is that the it was a working dairy till 1971. From an aerial perspective one could also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. Nevertheless, the land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. 
The history of the house is connected to some key topics we have touched so far in class. It is built on land that became available through the Homestead Act. The family who lived on the land before the Olsen’s bought it, purchased the land through the Homestead Act. Moreover, the Olsen family immigrated to the U.S. in 1865 from Norway due to economic struggle in their home country. Unfortunate timing led to financial hardship, when they built the extension on the east side of the house a month before the stock market crashed in 1929. However, during the Depression the family oftentimes hired itinerate workers who would work for board and lodge.
One conclusion that I came up with is that it is actually interesting that in times of urbanization and increase of factory and office jobs an averagely sized farm made the decision to even increase the house.
It would be interesting to find out more about the area and its immigration history in the mid nineteenth century also in regard to the Homestead Act. Another important issue which might be noteworthy to look at is the effect of the Depression in this region and the consequences it had for farmers. Furthermore, it might be interesting to take a closer look at the difficulties of building houses in the prairie during this time, as they often had to get the wood from far away.
 
I really enjoy working on this project and with my photo as topics discussed in class on an academic level become much more personal and better comprehensible. The micro-historical perspective makes it easier to understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life.
 
default viewscalar:defaultViewblank
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/users/14491
createddcterms:created2016-11-16T10:25:42-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 8

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versionnumberov:versionnumber8
titledcterms:titleSophia Beukenhorst
contentsioc:content

Olsen Family Home 

Between the two photos, 92 years have passed. The house was built in 1896 by Carl Olsen, whose family immigrated from Norway thirty years earlier when Carl was only a baby. Since then four generations of his family lived in the house, each leaving their footprint on it by slightly or greatly changing the house’s look.
The most obvious change is the addition on the east side of the house (right side in the picture) as well as the transformation of the screen porch into a closed porch. Furthermore, the windows next to the porch were remodeled, probably for practical reason namely having a door to the garden. Both previously mentioned changes were made by the present generation in the 2000s. Another recognizable change is the chimney, which has been rebuilt. Those additions, especially on the east side, speak for growth of the farm and family and investment in the future. The house has also been repainted in a new color over the years. The size and appearance of the house is indicative of a well off family.
The fact that the house was never rebuilt but only complemented and remodeled in over a hundred years speaks for the decent and thoroughly thought trough work back then at the end of the 19th century. It is a modest wooden house without much ornamentation, but perfectly fit to cater for the needs of a farm house in the prairie facing hot summers and cold winters.
Today the house shows modern technology elements, such as satellite antenna and lightning rod on the roof.
A change that is not visible in the picture but is still a mentionable fact is that the it was a working dairy till 1971. From an aerial perspective one could also see that many of the original farm buildings like stables and garages for agricultural equipment are no longer standing. Nevertheless, the land is still owned by the family who rents it out to farmers. And additional house for the older generation was also built. A few animals are still living on the farm but more for family resource than profit. 
The history of the house is connected to some key topics we have touched so far in class. It is built on land that became available through the Homestead Act. The family who lived on the land before the Olsen’s bought it, purchased the land through the Homestead Act. Moreover, the Olsen family immigrated to the U.S. in 1865 from Norway due to economic struggle in their home country. Unfortunate timing led to financial hardship, when they built the extension on the east side of the house a month before the stock market crashed in 1929. However, during the Depression the family oftentimes hired itinerate workers who would work for board and lodge.
One conclusion that I came up with is that it is actually interesting that in times of urbanization and increase of factory and office jobs an averagely sized farm made the decision to even increase the house.
It would be interesting to find out more about the area and its immigration history in the mid nineteenth century also in regard to the Homestead Act. Another important issue which might be noteworthy to look at is the effect of the Depression in this region and the consequences it had for farmers. Furthermore, it might be interesting to take a closer look at the difficulties of building houses in the prairie during this time, as they often had to get the wood from far away.
 
I really enjoy working on this project and with my photo as topics discussed in class on an academic level become much more personal and better comprehensible. The micro-historical perspective makes it easier to understand how governmental, economic or cultural changes directly impacted people’s life.
 
default viewscalar:defaultViewblank
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/history_re_photographed/users/14491
createddcterms:created2016-11-16T10:20:17-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 7

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contentsioc:contentOlsen Family Home 
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createddcterms:created2016-11-16T10:14:46-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 6

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Version 5

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Version 4

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Version 3

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Version 2

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Version 1

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