Language:EnglishPublisher:Createspace Independent Publishing PlatformISBN-13:9781546498643ISBN-10:1546498648UPC:9781546498643Book Category:HistoryBook Subcategory:United StatesBook Topic:19th CenturySize:9.02 x 5.98 x 0.27 inchesWeight:0.4012Product ID:SC7AGWR03A
For three days in January, 1873, a severe snowstorm struck the Dakota Territory, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota. People awoke on January 7 to an unusually warm winter's day with temperatures above freezing. Farmers and their families took advantage of the warmer temperatures, not knowing a severe storm was approaching. They brought grain to the mills, cut firewood in nearby forests, tended to their cattle, helped neighbors thresh grain, visited family or tended to other duties. The storm started in Kandiyohi County at 2:00 pm on Tuesday, January 7 and took the lives of hundreds of people in several states, including seventy in Minnesota. Bodies were recovered and many of those trapped were rescued on Friday, January 10. Twelve people died in Kandiyohi County. Some victims were residents of the county. Others were traveling and died in the county when overcome by the dangerous storm. This book takes a detailed look at the victims of this snowstorm: who they were; where they lived; their journeys and deaths in the storm; and the families who mourned. All victims were immigrants and early pioneers to Minnesota: brothers Claus and Jorgen Strand, brothers Charles, John and Stephen O'Neil, Thomas Holden, Lars Nelson, Ole K. Skau, Margaret (Lockrem) Soland, Helge Stengrimson, William Crump, and Helena (Thorson) Johnson. The book also includes the story of Ole Larsen Gronseth who died in a February 1872 blizzard but has been incorrectly included in lists of victims of the 1873 blizzard.
Language:EnglishPublisher:Createspace Independent Publishing PlatformISBN-13:9781546498643ISBN-10:1546498648UPC:9781546498643Book Category:HistoryBook Subcategory:United StatesBook Topic:19th CenturySize:9.02 x 5.98 x 0.27 inchesWeight:0.4012Product ID:SC7AGWR03A
Carolyn Mankell Sowinski grew up in Kandiyohi County, Minnesota. She received her BA in History from St. Olaf College in Northfield MN and an MA in American History and an MA in Library Science from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She has worked or volunteered at university archives, business archives, state historical societies, county historical societies, and the National Archives and Records Administration in Washington, DC. She is the Director of Gifts of Hope, a ministry of the Metropolitan Washington DC Synod of the ELCA (Evangelical Lutheran Church in America) and she is a genealogy researcher for clients. In her spare time she sings with the Choral Arts Society of Washington.
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For three days in January, 1873, a severe snowstorm struck the Dakota Territory, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota. People awoke on January 7 to an unusually warm winter's day with temperatures above freezing. Farmers and their families took advantage of the warmer temperatures, not knowing a severe storm was approaching. They brought grain to the mills, cut firewood in nearby forests, tended to their cattle, helped neighbors thresh grain, visited family or tended to other duties. The storm started in Kandiyohi County at 2:00 pm on Tuesday, January 7 and took the lives of hundreds of people in several states, including seventy in Minnesota. Bodies were recovered and many of those trapped were rescued on Friday, January 10. Twelve people died in Kandiyohi County. Some victims were residents of the county. Others were traveling and died in the county when overcome by the dangerous storm. This book takes a detailed look at the victims of this snowstorm: who they were; where they lived; their journeys and deaths in the storm; and the families who mourned. All victims were immigrants and early pioneers to Minnesota: brothers Claus and Jorgen Strand, brothers Charles, John and Stephen O'Neil, Thomas Holden, Lars Nelson, Ole K. Skau, Margaret (Lockrem) Soland, Helge Stengrimson, William Crump, and Helena (Thorson) Johnson. The book also includes the story of Ole Larsen Gronseth who died in a February 1872 blizzard but has been incorrectly included in lists of victims of the 1873 blizzard.
Carolyn Mankell Sowinski grew up in Kandiyohi County, Minnesota. She received her BA in History from St. Olaf College in Northfield MN and an MA in American History and an MA in Library Science from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She has worked or volunteered at university archives, business archives, state historical societies, county historical societies, and the National Archives and Records Administration in Washington, DC. She is the Director of Gifts of Hope, a ministry of the Metropolitan Washington DC Synod of the ELCA (Evangelical Lutheran Church in America) and she is a genealogy researcher for clients. In her spare time she sings with the Choral Arts Society of Washington.