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WINDOWS
TO THE PAST
Howard County, Nebraska is a portal to the past -- a window
to a culture that, even yet today, is testimony to the Nebraska
pioneering spirit. With the exception of Omaha, it was home to the
largest settlement of Danes in Nebraska. The settlement of Danish
colonies in Nebraska began in 1871 after a small group of Danish
immigrants from Wisconsin came to Nebraska in search of free government
land and a better life. The colonies thrived despite prairie fires,
blizzards and grasshoppers. Several Danish communities developed
in and around Howard and Hamilton counties, among other locations
throughout Nebraska.
FROM
VILLAGES TO FARMSTEADS
Danish farms in the New World were more dispersed than in the Old,
due to the greatly increased land available to American farmers.
After the farmers established themselves on the land, it became
ever more important to create central public places in the Danish
communities. Danes in the Central Nebraska colonies chose to establish
villages in response to the need for community, according to David
Murphy, Senior Research Architect at the Nebraska State Historical
Society. "These villages placed an even greater importance on the
construction of public buildings so that immigrants had a place
where they could gather with fellow country people to speak in their
native language, foster relationships and hold events. In Central
Nebraska, Danish villages such as Dannevirke, Nysted, and Kronborg
focused on the church, and, far more than elsewhere, on the Danish
folk school tradition." So while some of the original Danish colonies
seem to be veritable 'ghost towns' today, what often remains are
public buildings such as halls or churches.
"SO
HILLY AND UNINVITING"
The struggles faced by Danish immigrants were not insignificant,
according to an article written by Danish descendent Peter Ebbesen
for the St. Paul Phonograph in 1925. Ebbeson's writings paint a
picture of a determined people:
Excerpt
from the St. Paul Phonograph, 1925, "A Brief Historical Sketch of
the Danish Colonies and Pioneers of Howard County."
"The
privations and battles with inhospitable Nature, the severe and
strenuous testing, the manner of living and fertility of adaptation
to obdurate conditions, the rugged character and physique and unfaltering
ambition of these pioneers were in every manner and degree identical
with the characteristics described in connection with the Dannebrog
colony. So I shall only, additionally, state the fact that the location
chosen by the Dannevirke Danes was in its raw state so hilly and
uninviting that it was apparently created for the special purpose
of testing the patience, fortitude and indefatigableness of a people
engaged in a peculiar search for the hardest kind of a job by which
to develop their genius and powers. Certainly, no other people but
the sturdy, unconquerable, adversity-tempered Jutlanders from the
Danish west coast could have selected such a strenuous situation."
SETTLING
IN
At first, immigrants focused on surviving the harsh realities of
the prairie. According to Murphy, only after the immigrants had
been here a while did they attempt to plant the seeds of their heritage.
"After they felt comfortable and confident that their farms were
surviving -- only at that point did they try to build in a way
that said 'I'm Danish.'" Murphy says the Danes, like many immigrants,
sought to bring elements of their homeland to the United States.
"In the mid-to-late nineteenth century, as people sought to gain
freedom from the old feudal systems in Europe, they tried to reclaim
their history and go back to an architecture of their own roots."
And these roots are still visible in the New World. On a drive through
Howard and Hamilton counties, you can see churches, community halls
and folk schools that still stand. Murphy says the architectural
design of these buildings represent distinctive architectural expressions
in Nebraska.
DANNEVIRKE
After Dannebrog had been settled, other Danish settlers took homesteads
near Munson Creek in the extreme northwestern corner of Howard County.
The area was named Dannevirke, after an ancient wall in Slesvig,
Denmark that separated the Danes from the Germans. In 1901, the
settlers around Dannevirke built a community hall to be used for
dances and public meetings. It soon became a popular gathering place.
In 1904, the community raised $2,000 in a single day for the building
of a church. With all volunteers, and under the direction of carpenter
Cline Jensen, the church was completed in 1906. A year later, 28
cedar trees were added to the land surrounding the church. Dannevirke
was one of several immigrant communities that sought to retain strong
ties to their cultural heritage. The original community hall president,
John Andersen foresaw "A new Denmark within the boundary of the
U.S.A." And even as the pressure to Americanize increased throughout
the early 1900's, Danish immigrants held strong to their traditions.
In the dedication ceremony for the church, no English was spoken.
The ministers of the church, all from Denmark, were dedicated to
keeping the Danish language and customs alive. Only men 18 years
of age and older were allowed to be shareholders in the church and
had to swear first allegiance to Denmark. Additionally, men and
women sat on opposite sides of the church during services. Once
home to a general store, blacksmith, post office and frame houses,
the only remaining buildings or landmarks of the once-thriving settlement
of Dannevirke are the Dannevirke Church, the Community Hall, the
nearby cemetery and the surrounding cedar trees.
SELECTED
EXAMPLES OF DANISH ARCHITECTURAL INFLUENCES IN HOWARD / HAMILTON
COUNTIES
DANNEVIRKE
CHURCH
At first glance, the Dannevirke Church, erected in 1906, appears
to be a typical rural Gothic church. But David Murphy, Senior Research
Architect with the Nebraska State Historical Society says a closer
inspection reveals features characteristic of distinctive Danish
design in Nebraska; these features are especially prominent in the
clustered Central Nebraska settlements. Murphy says foremost is
the explicit absence of Gothic motifs; "Even the name 'Dannevirke,'
which refers to the wall in Slesvig, Denmark that separates the
Danes from the Germans, suggests that Danes in Dannevirke may have
been symbolically disassociating from old German hegemony and the
German Gothic influence in architecture, which at the time was one
of the competing German National styles."
Instead, Murphy says, the Dannevirke Church is representative of
the kind of design eclecticism (stylistic borrowing and recombining)
used specifically to avoid allusion to historic styles (i.e. Gothic)
that carried meanings and associations incompatible with Danish
National identity. "Here, simplified classical motifs are dominant
on the exterior, seen in the steep, triangular pediments in the
roof of the steeple above the belfry. The shape of the pediment
is repeated in the pointed arches of the windows and over the entry.
This classical motif, which was popular in the emerging Danish architectural
identity of the second half of the nineteenth century, is seen again
inside, primarily in the design of the altar with its steep pediment
supported on a beam carried by classical columns."
Evidence
of the distinctive Danish eclecticism can also be seen inside the
church with its non-classical barrel vaulting of the sanctuary.
Murphy adds, "Notable also is the finish of the interior, which
features natural-finished wood bead-board throughout. The walls
are highlighted with alternating panels of diagonally-set bead-board.
Lush wooden interiors are a feature of the Central Nebraska settlements,
(which) seems to be associated with Grundtvigian (a reference to
the founder of a Danish Folk School movement) influences on design.
In more isolated communities, Danish settlers opted for more Americanized
designs that incorporated only subtle influences of Danish eclecticism
- usually seen in pediments that adorn the steeple, a North-European
flare to the eaves of the steeple, or barrel vaulting or round arches
separating the sanctuary from the altar."
The
Dannevirke Community Hall is across the street, southwest from the
Dannevirke Church. According to the National Register of Historic
Places nomination form for the Dannevirke Danish Church and Community
Hall, the Hall is an L-shaped, wood-frame building with a stone
foundation. It has a cross-gabled roof and double wood paneled doors
topped by a transom window. Its interior is also clad with bead-board,
like the church, though here the wood has been painted. Also nearby
is the Dannevirke Cemetery, the final resting place for many of
the original Danish settlers in this area.
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The
lush wooden interior of the Dannevirke Church highlights several
other features of Danish design: in this case, the barrel vault
of the ceiling, the diagonal bead-board panels of the wall surfaces,
the Classical altar, and the north European semi-circular altar
rail. This church also utilizes fixed auditorium seating rather
than pews.
Dannevirke Church / Community Hall LOCATION: At a gravel intersection
off of Highway 11 near Elba, and then 6 miles west on 20th Avenue
(Dannevirke Road) in Howard County. Anyone interested in seeing
the church should call the following number before coming: (308)
863-2210
SUMMARY
OF ARCHITECTURAL CHARACTERISTICS
Provided
by David Murphy, Senior Research Architect, NSHS There are several
general characteristics of Danish-American architecture in the Grundtvigian
tradition represented by the buildings included here; they are not
all evident in every building, but you will notice that two or more
are usually present in each of the buildings featured here:
Rejection of Gothic design, or its subservience to another
style; the emphasis is on an explicit avoidance of form or motif
that derives from the German Gothic.
Presence of curved surfaces on the interior of churches,
either through barrel vaulting, curved intersections between flat
surfaces, or the incorporation of rounded arches, that are unrelated
to a building's predominant style.
Wooden bead-board interiors, with diagonal paneling; particularly
from the early generations of construction through the first decades
of the twentieth century.
Occasional, literal revival of old Danish architectural form
or style.
Classical tendencies in design derived from the popular and
elite Danish Classicism of the second half of the nineteenth century;
sometimes as the dominant mode of design, but more often seen in
the limited use of motifs such as triangular pediments in eclectic
designs.
Grundtvigian eclecticism that freely combined and recombined
stylistic influences -- often but not always in picturesque
designs -- in order to derive a Danish identity. Like Classicism,
eclectic design was also an elite movement in the Old Country.
Exterior
and Interior comments of Dannevirke Church Dannevirke Church / Community
Hall LOCATION: At a gravel intersection off of Highway 11 and then
6 miles west on 20th Avenue (Dannevirke Road) near Elba, Nebraska
in Howard County. (308) 863-2210
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NYSTED:
ST. PEDER'S CHURCH / FOLK SCHOOL St. Peder's St. Peder's Lutheran
Church was built from 1919-1921. It still stands in the former crossroads
village of Nysted. Architect David Murphy says the church is another
example of the inventiveness that marked Danish architecture; "Nysted
is the best of very few Danish designs to incorporate the old medieval
stepped gables that were common on churches of the Danish countryside."
The interior lacks the wooden surfaces that were utilized in the
first church at Nysted, but the present building focuses on an altar
that is also of stepped-gable design. Murphy says the simplified
Gothic windows are subordinate to the overall design. The church
is known for its' solid oak altar and a solid oak pulpit. The pulpit,
hand-carved by Danish immigrant Jes Smidt, features the four evangelists,
symbols of the "living word" in the Grundtvigian tradition.
The
Danish cultural revival focused around the folk school movement
of N.F.S. Grundtvig, according to Murphy. While three previous Danish
folk schools in the U.S. failed to flourish, the Nysted Folk School
(Dansk Hojskole) was founded in 1887. The school was patterned after
the Grundtvigian folk schools in Denmark, which sought to provide
students with a well-rounded knowledge in literature, history, the
Danish language, science and physical fitness. The Nysted folk school
also sought to help Danish immigrants adapt to their new life in
America. In 1937, the folk school was closed due to the Depression
and drought.
The
original folk school building at Nysted was a large, picturesque
structure designed in the Grundtvigian eclectic tradition. The central
section (now missing) featured a decorative porch, gabled and belfried
wall dormers, and a tall entrance tower. Plain, two-story classroom
wings flanked the main section-these are still standing across the
road from the church.
St.
Peder's Church and remains of Folk School LOCATION: The church is
1 mile north and 3 miles west of Highway 11 at Dannebrog, in Howard
County. Two, 2-story wings of the old Folk School building stand
across the road from the church. (308) 226-2343
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KRONBORG:
ST. JOHN'S EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH St. St. John's church was
constructed in 1899-1900 in the village of Kronborg, Nebraska, in
neighboring Hamilton County. The most explicitly Gothic of the churches
presented here, Kronborg nonetheless is distinctively non-German
in its influences, particularly in its picturesque composition and
window design, according to Architectural Historian David Murphy.
He adds, "Inside the building breaks further from the German in
the magnificent wooden interior, complete with diagonal paneling
and curvilinear interface between the side walls and the ceiling.
The flared eaves of the steeple are a north European motif." Carl
Jensen was the architect-builder.
Nearby is the "Brejdalik," a gymnasium (or "large bright hall")
built in 1915 to designs provided by O. Almquist of Central City.
Overall, Murphy describes this build as a Classical Revival design,
while its interior features the same curvilinear wooden surfaces,
and diagonal paneling as the church. The school, which also housed
Grundtvigian activities, was built in 1901 but was attached to the
gymnasium when it was built. The classrooms are also clad in paneled
bead-board.
St.
John's Evangelical Lutheran Church LOCATION: The church is in Kronborg,
which is a small rural village near Marquette, off of SR-14 in Hamilton
County, Nebraska.
Bibliography
and sources for Danish history in Nebraska
LIBRARIES
AND COLLECTIONS
Nebraska
State Historical Society David Murphy,
Senior Research Architect, NSHS
"Danes
in Nebraska," Janet Warkentin Rife (comp.) and Roger L. Welsch (ed.),
Draft typescript on file at the Nebraska State Historical Society,
Research and Publications Division, September, 1979.
National
Register of Historic Places nomination form for "Dannevirke Danish
Church & Community Hall"
Nebraska State Historical Society
David Murphy, Senior Research Architect, NSHS
INTERNET
RESOURCES
http://www.theindependent.com/stories/073199/new_church0731.html
(Dannevirke Church placed on national register 7/31/99)
http://www.nebraskahistory.org/histpres/nebraska/howard.htm
(National Register Sites in Howard County)
http://www.theindependent.com/stories/123099/fea_dannebrog30.html
(Dannebrog, Nebraska's 'Danish Capital')
http://www.huskerhysteria.com/nebraska.htm
(N.F.S. Grundtvig and Danish Educational Practice)
BOOKS,
NEWSPAPERS AND MISCELLANEOUS RESOURCES
Schools
for Life, A Danish-American Experiment in Adult Education, Enok
Mortensen, Danish-American Heritage Society, 1977, pp. 56-57
Blossoms
of the Prairie: The History of the Danish Lutheran Churches in Nebraska,
Jean M. Matteson and Edith M. Matteson, Blossoms of the Prairie,
1988.
"Danes," Thomas Carter, in America's Architectural Roots: Ethnic
Groups That Built America, Preservation Press, 1986, pp. 118-123.
"Scandinavians: The Search for Zion," Paul A. Olson, in Broken
Hoops and Plains People: A Catalog of Ethnic Resources in the Humanities,
Nebraska and Thereabouts, Nebraska Curriculum Development Center,
1976, pp. 237-290.
St.
Paul Phonograph, "Historical Sketch of The Danish Colonies and
Pioneers of Howard County," by Peter Ebbesen, June 18, 1924
Danish Evangelical Church / Howard County Historical Church Tour
Pamphlet, produced by the St. Paul Chamber of Commerce, Loup
Basin RC&D Tourism (re: Churches) and the Nebraska Tourism Office
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