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Part I - Settlers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 May 2022

Anders Bo Rasmussen
Affiliation:
University of Southern Denmark

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
Civil War Settlers
Scandinavians, Citizenship, and American Empire, 1848–1870
, pp. 19 - 98
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

1 1848

The revolutions of 1848 set Europe ablaze. The flames erupted in Paris on February 22 and soon spread north, south, east, and west. In short order, the fiery revolutions leapt from France into the Caribbean Sea and onto the American mainland.Footnote 1

The 1848 revolutions impacted American domestic and foreign policy as they increased the need for agricultural labor in the West Indies, elevated fear of abolition among southern slaveholders, and brought disappointed European revolutionaries to seek new opportunities across the Atlantic.Footnote 2 Importantly, the European revolutions of 1848 resulted in slavery’s abolition in both the French and Danish West Indies and served as a striking example of the transnational ties between Europe and the New World.

On February 25, 1848, the French provisional government “declared a republic and also emancipation with indemnity” on the slaveholding islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique, in part due to fears of slave revolts such as the one that led to Haitian independence in 1804.Footnote 3 As Rebecca Schloss has shown, events in the West Indies soon overtook political decisions on the mainland about the practical transition to free labor.

[O]n May 22 more than twenty thousand enslaved workers crowded the streets of Saint Pierre, Martinique demanding their freedom. Shortly afterward, the island’s governor proclaimed emancipation and initiated a new chapter in the complex interplay of race, class, and gender in the French Atlantic.Footnote 4

By July 1848 the French West Indian unrest, and ensuing emancipation, served as partial inspiration for an uprising on the neighboring island of St. Croix in the Danish West Indies (see Figure 1.1).Footnote 5 Thus, Governor Peter von Scholten concluded that the islands’ enslaved population would wait no longer for freedom. A widespread but generally peaceful uprising on St. Croix in July settled the matter.Footnote 6

Figure 1.1 French depictions of abolition in the West Indies, such as this one by artist François-Auguste Biard, mirrored those in Denmark and underscored the pervasive Old World colonial mindset.

Photo by Photo12/Universal Images Group via Getty Images.

Von Scholten’s emancipation had not been authorized by King Frederik VII, however, and the governor was promptly replaced by councillor of state Peter Hansen, who was tasked with reorganizing labor relations between a planter class who felt betrayed by the Danish government’s failure to ensure the twelve-year transition period promised them in 1847 and the newly freed laborers who demanded better work conditions.Footnote 7 From Governor Hansen’s perspective, retaining control of the labor force was the main objective, and, following the lead of larger European powers, not least Great Britain and France, Danish officials by the late 1850s looked to amend American colonization policy to augment the islands’ labor force.Footnote 8

During the early 1860s, colonization in the United States was legally directed toward Liberia, but – in no small part due to Danish diplomats – the policy was reoriented to also include the Caribbean.Footnote 9 Moreover, slavery’s abolition in the Danish and French West Indies sparked fear, as well as jubilation, in the United States.Footnote 10 In the immediate aftermath of emancipation in the West Indies, southern slaveholders peered somewhat fearfully toward the Caribbean emancipation initiatives.Footnote 11 In New York, Frederick Douglass, abolitionist and editor of the North Star after his escape from slavery, remarked optimistically in 1848 that the revolution initiated in Europe flashed “with lightning speed from heart to heart, from land to land,” until it would eventually traverse the entire globe (see Figure 1.2).Footnote 12

Figure 1.2 An 1848 portrait of North Star editor Frederick Douglass, who saw great abolitionist potential in the European revolutions.

Image by Fotosearch/ Stringer/Archive Photos via Getty Images.

Yet by 1851 it was clear that American abolitionists would have to bide their time, as most nations on the European mainland had reverted back to their prerevolution roles in an uneasy equilibrium of monarchical and imperial power balanced mainly between Russia, France, Great Britain, Austria, and the German states.Footnote 13

On the European mainland, underlying social issues and overarching political structures tied population groups together across borders. Uprisings in Frankfurt in 1833, Paris in 1839, and Kraków in 1846 attested to the widespread political, social, and economic discontent across Europe.Footnote 14 In Wolfram Siemann’s words, lack of political participation, the urge for national self-determination, a crisis of “pre-industrial craft trades,” and failed harvests resulting in famine were key driving forces behind uprisings in the spring of 1848.Footnote 15 As a result, revolutionary sentiment among nationalist and politically marginalized groups within Scandinavia, France, Italy, Poland, and Germany sparked uprisings across the continent that simultaneously strengthened and challenged nationalistic ideas within existing borders. In Northern Europe, along Denmark’s southern regions, embers that had smoldered for years suddenly burst into flames and led to a civil war within the kingdom that revealed tangible divisions along political, ideological, social, ethnic, national, separatist, and dynastic lines.Footnote 16

Despite his personal resistance to democratic reform, King Christian VIII had prepared an eventual transition from absolutism to constitutional monarchy before his death on January 20, 1848. This political move toward at least nominal democracy based on a moderately liberal constitution was accepted by the new king, Frederik VII, in the so-called January rescript of January 28, 1848, the commitment to which was strengthened and reiterated after a sizable but peaceful demonstration by an estimated 20,000 people in Copenhagen on March 21, 1848.Footnote 17

In Sweden and Norway, the European revolutions fueled protests in Stockholm and a popular Norwegian movement led by revolutionary Marcus Thrane, but the relatively well-functioning political system in Norway (based on the Eidsvoll Constitution of 1814), coupled with an eventual crackdown by the authorities on Thrane “for conspiracy against the state” in July 1851, prevented the movement, which at its height attracted close to 30,000 followers, from gaining even wider traction during these years.Footnote 18

Despite the largely peaceful political responses to grassroots dissent, King Frederik VII’s decision to move toward constitutional monarchy left a power vacuum within the Danish kingdom. Danish- and German-speaking nationalists both seized this European revolutionary moment, hoping to shape the Danish kingdom’s future according to their own interests.Footnote 19

On Denmark’s southern border, the key point of contention was the status of Schleswig and Holstein.Footnote 20 Since the so-called Ribe Treaty of 1460, the duchies Schleswig and Holstein had been united, based on an understanding that they would remain forever undivided (“up ewig Ungedeelt”).Footnote 21 Hereafter, the Danish monarch became the Count of Holstein and also incorporated the duchy of Schleswig under Danish rule.

The rise of nationalist sentiment among Danish speakers throughout the 1840s, concretized in a political faction called “nationalliberale” (national liberals), led to calls for the consolidation of the Danish kingdom more clearly along cultural and linguistic lines, by dividing Schleswig from German-speaking Holstein along Ejderen, a river running east–west toward the important seaport of Kiel.Footnote 22 Conversely, the population within the Danish kingdom’s borders who identified as German took the revolution in France as a touchstone for their own nationalist claims. On March 18, 1848, less than a month after the revolution’s outbreak in Paris, German-speaking residents of Schleswig-Holstein demanded that the duchies remain undivided with the aim to break away from Denmark. The Danish king dismissed the German-speaking Schleswig-Holsteiners’ petition and instead made statements about incorporating Schleswig without Holstein directly under Danish rule. The irreconcilable positions led to German separatists seizing a Danish fortress in Schleswig-Holstein on March 24, 1848, and forming a “provisional state government.”Footnote 23

This civil war, now known as the First Schleswig War, lasted from 1848 to 1850.Footnote 24 In accordance with the threshold principle, the national liberals feared that Denmark would become a mini-state, if it lost part of Schleswig and all of Holstein, and therefore started to explore Scandinavian alliances.Footnote 25 Pan-Scandinavian sentiment was especially strong among the younger Scandinavian intelligentsia, in spite of the relatively modest 387 Swedes and Norwegians (several of whom would eventually end up in the American Civil War) who volunteered to fight against German separatists.Footnote 26 The spirit of pan-Scandinavianism, however, was concretized at the political level when Sweden, prompted by King Oscar, sent 4,500 troops to defend Denmark’s monarchical rule against the German-speaking rebels, with the promise of up to 15,000 troops in all if the Danish mainland were to be invaded (safeguarded by the provision that Sweden would then have to be part of a broader international coalition led by Great Britain and Russia).Footnote 27

Yet the pan-Scandinavian enthusiasm proved to have notable diplomatic (and nationalist) limitations when confronted with the complexity of high-level European politics. In just one of numerous factors complicating the First Schleswig War, Denmark and Sweden had been on opposite sides for parts of the Napoleonic Wars, and the peace conference of 1814 in Kiel forced Denmark to cede Norway (which had been part of the Danish Kingdom since 1380) to Sweden.Footnote 28

Thus, despite several ambitious attempts, a pan-Scandinavian state incorporating northern Schleswig but excising the German-speaking regions found little concrete backing among more experienced Scandinavian power brokers, not least Danish conservative leaders who insisted on keeping the entire state together to maintain the territory and population already under Danish rule.Footnote 29

Additionally, there was a strong sense among Europe’s great powers, especially Great Britain and Russia, that German control of the important Schleswig harbor of Kiel was undesirable as it would help German Grossstaatenbildung.Footnote 30 Consequently, Russia and Great Britain worked actively to curtail the armed conflict and protect Danish territorial sovereignty in the name of stability (as opposed to revolution or disruption of the international trade). Thus, through the great powers’ intervention, the pre-1848 borders were eventually reestablished.Footnote 31

Across Europe, the lack of revolutionary result caused thousands of disappointed “Forty-Eighters” to seek freedom and liberty elsewhere – and many in the United States.Footnote 32 Even in Scandinavia, where the 1848 revolutions had prompted King Frederik VII to sign grundloven (the Constitution), the effect for people with little economic or political power was negligible. Consequently, a steady emigration from Scandinavia started picking up speed, especially from rural areas.

Additionally, decisions to emigrate were likely accelerated among the German-speaking population in Schleswig and Holstein by the Danish government’s determination to impose strict language requirements and banish revolutionary leaders such as Hans Reimer Claussen and Theodore Olshausen, both of whom eventually ended up in America.Footnote 33 When Claussen arrived in Davenport, Iowa, he apparently found a welcoming community of a “large number of his closest countrymen, the Schleswig-Holsteiners.”Footnote 34

Other German-speaking subjects living within Danish borders struck out for Wisconsin, as was the case for August Hauer, who arrived with his family in what became New Denmark (and who, according to one account, “was a mortal enemy” of everything associated with the Danish state for decades afterward).Footnote 35

The exact number of German-speaking Forty-Eighters who emigrated for political reasons after the First Schleswig War is difficult to ascertain, but the legacy of the 1848 revolutions in terms of political rights, economic opportunity, and abolition of slavery continued to impact American and Scandinavian society in the years afterward.Footnote 36

Whether settling in Iowa, Wisconsin, Illinois, or Minnesota – or, for a few, even Missouri, Louisiana, or Texas – the German, Danish, Swedish, and Norwegian Forty-Eighters who emigrated in the wake of the revolutions generally found some common ground in their interpretation of equality and liberty. Despite Old World divisions, these Northern European immigrants’ experience with class divisions would continue to shape their engagement with issues of social mobility and equality in America. At the very center of such discussions was the importance of owning land.Footnote 37

2 Exodus

It was still dark when Claus Clausen shook his mother’s hand for the last time. Prompted by Norwegian settlers in Wisconsin, the twenty-two-year-old aspiring pastor was leaving Denmark for the relative unknown of America along with his twenty-seven-year-old wife Martha.Footnote 1 In time, Claus Clausen would become one of the most prominent Scandinavian anti-slavery pastors in America and chaplain of a celebrated Scandinavian Civil War unit (see Figure 2.1). Yet, this early spring morning, April 10, 1843, Claus and Martha Clausen were part of a mass-migration vanguard that in less than a century would lead more than two million fellow Scandinavians to the United States.Footnote 2

Figure 2.1 Claus L. Clausen photographed on the island of Langeland during a visit to Denmark after the Civil War.

Courtesy Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum Archives.

Since the 1830s, Amerikafeber (America fever) had spread slowly across Scandinavia and was now beginning to reach even remote villages. Like an invisible hand, the “contagion” crept from Norway through Sweden and into Denmark.Footnote 3 Poets and cultural icons such as Denmark’s Hans Christian Andersen, Sweden’s Fredrika Bremer, and Norway’s Henrik Wergeland (at least initially) helped spread this fervor for America and tied it closely to a mental image of an economic dreamland across the Atlantic.Footnote 4 In America, according to Andersen, horses’ hoofs were covered in silver and fields bloomed with money.

Der går solen aldrig ned [there the sun never sets],
stegt er hver kastanje [every chestnut roasted],
der er alting kærlighed [there everything is love],
kilderne champagne [in champagne toasted]Footnote 5

Together, Andersen and Bremer, who knew each other well, helped disseminate a New World image closely associated with upward social mobility, and Scandinavian literature regularly portrayed the United States as an El Dorado. Yet, perhaps not surprisingly, prospective Scandinavian emigrants needed more tangible advice before making life-changing decisions associated with emigration. Thus, when seemingly reliable pamphlets appeared just a few years after Andersen’s song lyrics, so did Scandinavian communities start to appear across the Atlantic.

The first published pamphlet based on concrete experience in the United States was Ole Rynning’s True Account of America from 1838, which sparked the migration imagination in several Norwegian villages. Rynning described abundant land, wildlife, and relatively cheap agricultural opportunities. Especially the idea of ample American government land was attractive for many Scandinavian smallholders who often found it impossible to amass more than a few acres in their Old World villages due to the nobility’s vast landholdings.Footnote 6

Rynning’s account, written in the winter of 1837–8, “had a considerable effect upon the emigration,” noted the late Norwegian-American historian Theodore C. Blegen.Footnote 7 Unfortunately, Rynning’s pioneer group of Norwegians settled in a swampy region of Iroquois County, Illinois, and by 1838 many had succumbed to malarial fever and other illnesses – Rynning among them.Footnote 8 Yet Ansten Nattestad, one of Rynning’s fellow community members, carried his manuscript back in the spring of 1838 along with several “America letters.” Upon Nattestad’s return to family and friends in Norway, he was besieged by prospective emigrants, one of whom noted:

Hardly any other Norwegian publication has been purchased and read with such avidity as this Rynning’s Account of America. People traveled long distances to hear “news” from the land of wonders, and many who before were scarcely able to read began in earnest to practice in the “America-book,” making such progress that they were soon able to spell their way forward and acquire most of the contents.Footnote 9

Another writer noted, “It is said that wherever Ole Rynning’s book was read anywhere in Norway, people listened as attentively as if they were in church.”Footnote 10 One of the emigration parties that left Norway shortly after the publication of Rynning’s book, and Nattestad’s visit, was a group from Telemarken who established their colony in eastern Wisconsin and by 1841 needed a spiritual guide. The settlement leaders, a young emigrant named Sören Bache among them, wrote family and friends back in Norway to find the right person. Bache’s father, Tollef, helped convince Claus Clausen, who had traveled through Norway in the summer of 1841, that Muskego, Wisconsin, would be the best locality to do religious work. Letters from Sören Bache helped cement the agreement.Footnote 11

On October 6, 1842, Sören Bache wrote Clausen from Muskego, a Norwegian settlement about 20 miles south of Milwaukee, to ease any concern about “his material well-being”; he assured Clausen that the land “is very good and rich and bears all sorts of grains without being fertilized. There is still plenty of government land to be had at $1.25 per acre. … I believe that anyone who is not too emotionally bound to his native place will be happy in America.”Footnote 12

Bache’s letter to Clausen underscored the importance of landownership as a means to social uplift among Scandinavian immigrants, and Rynning’s original account reflected these concerns by treating the “quality of the land” in one of his first and most thorough chapters.Footnote 13

While the decision to emigrate from Scandinavia could have multiple individual causes, economic opportunity, political rights, and religious freedom were the most significant factors pulling Scandinavian immigrants toward the United States in the Civil War era. The lack of land in the Old World was the most important circumstance pushing poorer immigrants out of Norway, Sweden, and Denmark in the years leading up to the Civil War, and the letters and emigration pamphlets that appeared in Scandinavia in the 1840s sparked ideas about American institutions that powerfully informed Scandinavian immigrants’ imaginations about the meaning of American citizenship.Footnote 14

To afford the dream of emigration to, and landownership in, America, a number of prospective Norwegian, Swedish, and Danish farmers started selling off their possessions during the 1840s.Footnote 15 For Claus Clausen, the allure of “a safe income for the future” played an important part in his decision to emigrate, but there was also a strong religious component to his choice.Footnote 16 In this, Clausen was far from alone. As Theodore Blegen argued in 1921, “religious motives” played a larger part “than has usually been recognized in connection with the emigration after 1825,” and, for several Norwegians, Swedes, and Danes in the earliest settlements, the Scandinavian state churches’ conservatism was a contributing factor to emigration.Footnote 17

Clausen was deeply influenced by Nikolai F. S. Grundtvig, who spearheaded the revivalist movement known as Grundtvigianism and was censored by the Danish state church between 1826 and 1837 for his writings.Footnote 18 By 1843, however, Grundtvig had been accepted back into the state church, resumed preaching, and become an increasingly influential pastor of international renown.Footnote 19 Additionally, Clausen had been introduced to the teachings of Hans Nielsen Hauge, a layman preacher who led a religious protest against the Norwegian state church and was jailed for his views between 1804 and 1814.Footnote 20 It was followers of Hans Hauge in Muskego who enticed Claus Clausen to emigrate with the promise of a denomination – as well as official ordination – in Wisconsin.Footnote 21

Thus, the Clausen family members said their final goodbyes at 4 a.m. in a little Danish hamlet.Footnote 22 “We wished them [to] live well in peace of the lord until we all are reunited at the lamb’s throne and they wished us the same under many tears,” wrote Clausen in his diary.Footnote 23

A friend drove the couple to the town of Slagelse, 63 miles (and a twelve-hour carriage ride) outside of Copenhagen, where they arrived half an hour before the horse-drawn stagecoach left for the Danish capital. Claus and Martha Clausen decided to remain in Copenhagen for a week over Easter, where the couple, according to Clausen’s diary entries, had the pleasure of attending several sermons by Grundtvig at an important political moment in the Danish anti-slavery cause.Footnote 24

Since 1839, Grundtvig had been one of three founding members of the Danish anti-slavery committee (the other two being Professor Christian N. David and Jean-Antoine Raffard of the French Reformed Church of Copenhagen), a society formed in the immediate aftermath of a visit from the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society.Footnote 25 The society’s secretary, George W. Alexander, met with several dignitaries when he visited Scandinavia in September 1839 to advocate abolition of slavery on the islands of the Danish West Indies and Swedish St. Barthelémy, and he subsequently reported back that he deemed Grundtvig, along with David and Raffard, “among the best friends of the Cause of negro freedom.”Footnote 26

Notably, none of the three founding members of the Danish anti-slavery committee were uncritical members of the Danish political and religious “establishment.” Both Grundtvig and David (the latter an economics professor of Jewish descent) had experienced censorship of their writings, and Raffard’s role in the French Reformed Church by definition set him apart from the Danish establishment clergy. The three founding anti-slavery committee members were therefore somewhat removed from more conservative societal institutions. The members of the committee advocated the importance of belief in a common humanity and the immediate abolition of slavery, but they also regularly expressed a sense of moral superiority in relation to people of African descent.Footnote 27

After the three members’ first meeting, Grundtvig was asked to write a statement about the views and aims of the committee. Grundtvig denounced slavery and expressed empathy with “our unhappy fellow human beings, who are sold as commodities and are treated – be it harshly or in a lenient way – as domestic animals,” but he also claimed that “the slaves on our west-indian islands usually are treated in a milder way than are the majority of others.”Footnote 28 Grundtvig’s statement was never published, but the document’s ideological underpinnings – slavery’s immorality, infused with supposed superior Scandinavian morality in dealing with slavery – were not uncommon among educated Scandinavians and found their way to the public through C. N. David’s writings in late 1839.Footnote 29

After praising the Danish monarch for being the first European regent to abolish the slave trade in 1792, David informed Danish readers that the native inhabitants of the African Gold Coast, despite the supposed civilizing influence from Europeans, had over time only become more unenlightened, more sinful, and more bestial because of the slave trade.Footnote 30 Though the Danish slave trade ban did not take effect until 1803, the decree served as the source of countless claims of moral superiority by Scandinavian authors in subsequent debates over slavery.Footnote 31 As Pernille Ipsen has succinctly pointed out, “the discourse that helped abolish the slave trade also helped produce racial difference” as the better-educated Scandinavians in the Civil War era came of age in a slaveholding nation where subjugation of Africans, justified in part through science and culture, was an extension of the power and labor dynamics within the Danish and Swedish kingdoms.Footnote 32

In Denmark, “the period of Atlantic slavery,” as Ipsen has demonstrated, was marked “by an ever-deepening linkage of slavery and blackness,” a process that “happened not only on European slave ships, but in European art, literature, and travel accounts and in every corner of the Atlantic touched or affected by the Atlantic slave trade and plantation system.”Footnote 33

These texts about Africa and Africans became part of a transnational flow of ideas that framed Black people as undesirable and inferior in an attempt to rationalize Danish slavery. As an example of perceived African inferiority, a Danish governor of the slavetrading post Christiansborg on Africa’s west coast in 1726 dismissed the idea of his men bringing their local African wives back to Copenhagen, “as the general opinion in Denmark was [not] in favor of Africans.”Footnote 34

The same was true in the Swedish kingdom, where cultural images and scientific texts legitimizing African inferiority circulated with increased frequency in the eighteenth century. While Benjamin Franklin, in his by now well-known classification from 1751, lumped Swedes together with “the Spanish, the Italians, the French, and the Russians” as people with a “swarthy complexion,” lower than white English people and slightly above “black or tawny” people, Scandinavian researchers more clearly demarcated themselves from Africans in culture and so-called science.Footnote 35

Swedish scientist Carl von Linné (Linneaus), for example, in 1735 created a typology where he distinguished Europeans from Indians, Asians, and Africans. In his Systema Naturae, Linneaus situated human beings at top of the animal kingdom, and at the “pinnacle of his human kingdom reigned H. sapiens europaeus: ‘Very smart, inventive. Covered by tight clothing. Ruled by law.’”Footnote 36 At the other end of Linneaus’ typology were Africans, a group the Swedish scientist described as “sluggish, lazy … crafty, slow, careless. Covered by grease. Ruled by caprice.”Footnote 37 Linneaus’ student, Peter Kalm, while expressing regret at enslaved Americans’ subordinate position, also wrote about the enslaved kept in “their heathen darkness” in 1756.Footnote 38

Building on Linneaus’ and Kalm’s work, German anthropologist Johann Friedrich Blumenbach in 1776 differentiated between races on account of the shape of the skull while Olof Erik Bergius, who had been an official in the Swedish West Indian colony St. Barthélemy, in 1819 published a book where he clearly demarcated Black and white people. The former was destined for servitude and would gain “bildung” (edification or enlightenment) through interaction with the white people who were destined to rule.Footnote 39 Additionally, Anders Retzius, a prominent Swedish scientist who was a member of the Royal Swedish Academy and in 1842 “introduced the cephalic index” linking race to skull size, knew and corresponded with German-born scientist Lorenz Oken, who in 1807 created a racial hierarchy based on senses (Black people who were associated with “touch” at the bottom and white people associated with “vision” at the top of Oken’s five races) and was inducted into the prestigious Swedish society in 1832.Footnote 40

Retzius also corresponded often with Samuel George Morton, the founder of American physical anthropology, “about their mutual interest in craniometry.”Footnote 41 Morton’s views were influential and his “measures of cranial capacity placed Europeans on top with the largest capacities, Africans at the bottom and Asians in between.”Footnote 42 While Retzius early in his career criticized phrenology – later recognized as a pseudo-science based on skull measurements – Morton in his book Crania Americana included a section on phrenology’s relationship to anthropology and helped legitimize perceptions of Black inferiority.Footnote 43

While it is difficult to ascertain the extent to which culturally infused ideas of race and scientific racism impacted the general Scandinavian population, there are important examples of the cultural, social, and political elite being familiar with scientific explanations and the storytelling used, directly and indirectly, to undergird slavery in both the Old and the New World.

Among the prominent Scandinavians to demonstrate interest in, and knowledge of, the scientific currents of the day – and their ramifications in terms of race relations – was renowned Swedish writer Fredrika Bremer. During her travels around the United States between 1849 and 1851, Bremer, who was greatly interested in educational matters and regularly commented on issues of race, described Linneaus and Benjamin Franklin (along with Isaac Newton), as “heroes of natural sciences.”Footnote 44 Bremer also expressed interest in phrenology and wrote favorably about the relocation of the formerly enslaved from America to Africa. While the connection between Bremer’s admiration of Linneaus, belief in phrenology, and support for colonization are not in themselves a direct link between Old World racial ideology and its expression in the New World, they do help explain Bremer’s admission that “I can not divest my mind of the idea that they [negro slaves] are, and must remain, inferior as regards intellectual capacity.”Footnote 45

Bremer published her thoughts on race relations in the United States in 1853, but, as we have seen, expressions of racial hierarchies were prevalent among the Europeans engaged with Atlantic World slavery decades earlier. Moreover, despite the physical distance between Denmark, Western Africa, and the Caribbean, there was no denying slavery’s larger societal impact in Scandinavia and its positive economic impact on Nordic maritime cities in the years leading up to 1849. Both in terms of the material wealth that slavery created and in terms of its cultural imprint, slavery directly and indirectly impacted life in major Scandinavian cities and, as Pernille Ipsen has argued, infused life in a city like Copenhagen with a sense of “colonial haunting.”Footnote 46

In Denmark, Hans Christian Andersen’s play Mulatten (The Mulatto), which was set in the French West Indies, debuted on the Royal Danish Theater’s stage in Copenhagen in 1840. At this time, the Danish abolitionist movement was still in its infancy, but the play – and the success it enjoyed – indicated Andersen’s awareness of slavery’s impact on Europe’s slaveholding nations while simultaneously revealing some of the racial stereotypes that helped legitimize slavery from a white European perspective.Footnote 47

By consciously situating his play on Martinique, Andersen likely helped his elite Copenhagen audience maintain the perception that Danish colonial slavery was qualitatively different from French colonial slavery, an argument that fit into Grundtvig’s view of “benign” Danish slave rule, while avoiding having his play comment explicitly on contemporary monarchical politics, in which the royal court along with Danish merchants for years had been intimately tied to the colonial goods flowing from the West Indies.Footnote 48

Moreover, Andersen understood the racial stereotypes that would make his play legible and perhaps even credible to an elite Scandinavian audience. Playing on fears of slave uprisings, Andersen made the half-naked former slave Paléme a central part of his play. Describing plans for a future slave rebellion, Paléme appeared in the first scene of Andersen’s second act, sipping rum from a coconut (which he in Andersen’s imagination had been nursed on), before proclaiming “in blood and fire everything shall perish.”Footnote 49

Slaves, or former slaves, of African descent – half-naked, and perhaps by implication closer to nature, hard-drinking, and vengeful – were part of the stereotypes that helped maintain legal measures to keep the enslaved population and freedpeople under control and part of the stereotypes that shaped attitudes toward Africans in Europe in the decades leading up to the Civil War.Footnote 50

By being somewhat removed from the influence of the Danish state church and the political establishment, Grundtvig, David, and Raffard were able to set themselves apart from more “establishment” ideas of slavery and race relations in their concrete and active efforts to abolish slavery. In this small abolitionist circle, Grundtvig played an important part, and Claus Clausen on his way to America in April 1843 received concrete anti-slavery inspiration from the pastor that he considered “the North’s spiritual high priest” as he attended several of Grundtvig’s Easter sermons together with his wife Martha.Footnote 51

On Maundy Thursday, April 13, 1843, at a time when he had been working actively for slavery’s abolition for four years, Grundtvig preached on his belief in a common humanity.

[Humankind, originating from the same set of parents, was considered] as children of one blood as Christianity otherwise could not be extended to all people under the heavens, for wherever it comes to black or white … it follows that all of mankind both can and shall be of one blood.Footnote 52

Grundtvig’s Protestant Christian ideas, and his earlier expressed view of slavery’s sinfulness, were part of the ideological inspiration that Clausen carried with him to America – ideas with important implications for discussions of citizenship. If one followed Grundtvig’s conviction that slavery was sinful and “all of mankind of one blood,” then people “black or white” would deserve equal rights. Grundtvig’s ideas about Christianity and slavery – and his history of state-church criticism – would therefore continue to play a part in Claus Clausen’s own anti-slavery struggle in the New World well into the 1860s. While Claus Clausen initially devoted himself to religious matters in America, it became increasingly clear, as more Scandinavian immigrants arrived in the region, that this Danish “disciple” of Grundtvig was more forceful in his denunciation of slavery’s sinfulness than his state church–affiliated colleagues but also served as one of many individual examples connecting ideas of landownership, liberty, and colonialism.

3 Old and New World Liberty

A “very severe epidemic” raged through Muskego during the winter months of 1844.Footnote 1 According to Sören Bache, somewhere between seventy and eighty men, women, and children were carried “to their graves,” and Claus Clausen’s role in the community was thus highlighted in tragic fashion as he conducted more than fifty funerals in a community of 600 people within his first five months in the United States.Footnote 2

The heartbreak led several immigrants to send what Bache described as “ill-considered letters” to family and friends back in Norway portraying life in the United States unfavorably and complicating the early settlers’ hopes of creating a steadily growing and thriving community in Wisconsin. To counteract the negative stories, the Muskego settlement leaders jointly wrote an open letter which appeared in the Norwegian Morgenbladet (Morning Paper) on April 1, 1845. According to the settlers’ religiously infused worldview, the current hardship was God’s will, but the Lord also gave reason for optimism:Footnote 3 “God has made it more convenient to produce human food in America than perhaps in any other nation in the world,” the authors noted.Footnote 4 Moreover, foundational American ideas set the New World apart from Scandinavia. “We make no pretense about acquiring riches, but we are subjects under a liberal government in a bountiful country where freedom and equality rules in religious and civic matters.”Footnote 5

Liberal government, freedom of religion, equality in societal matters: such ideas had resonated in Scandinavian communities for years and would continue to do so for decades. To Scandinavian immigrants, the concepts of liberty and equality, closely tied to ideas of American citizenship and prospect of landownership, were simple and alluring at a time when Old World opportunities seemed increasingly precarious due to population growth (which kept wages down), large landholding estates, emerging industrialization, and few opportunities for political influence to alter socio-economic conditions.Footnote 6

Thus, America’s relatively cheap and seemingly abundant land, secular ethnic newspapers free of censorship, freedom to support non–state-church pastors, and concrete civic participation through voting or eventually running for office, were significant factors for Scandinavians contemplating emigration in the antebellum era.Footnote 7

“Everything is designed to maintain the natural liberty and equality of men,” Ole Rynning had written in his True Account of America from 1838.Footnote 8 In Rynning’s text, the allure of “liberty and equality” and the accompanying opportunities were central, but the author also made clear that important regional differences guided economic prospects. American democratic ideals were undermined by “the disgraceful slave traffic.”Footnote 9 Slavery, according to Rynning, constituted a “vile contrast” in a country which could otherwise rightfully be proud of its foundational values.Footnote 10 Rynning’s subtitle specifically indicated that he wrote for “peasants and commoners,” and the Norwegian author thus described conditions in the South in terms legible to readers who had likely never seen nonwhite people outside of Norway.Footnote 11 In the South, Rynning wrote, “a race of black people with wooly hair on the head called negroes” suffered from their masters’ violence, and slavery was driving a wedge between the North and the South, which could likely soon lead to “a separation between the northern and southern states, or else bloody civil disputes.”Footnote 12

Rynning’s argument for settling in the Midwest rested partly on morality, but there was an implicit economic argument about immigrant prospects in the North as opposed to the South as well. As Ole Rasmussen Dahl later noted in a letter to his brother in Norway, the American experience had shown that “a free laborer” could never sustain himself “among slaves.”Footnote 13 Dahl’s description was somewhat hyperbolic, but opportunities for economic uplift, as Keri Leigh Merritt has demonstrated, were indeed scarcer in the South, as “wage rates were lower in areas where slavery thrived.”Footnote 14 Where New England farm laborers in 1850 “could expect to earn $12.98 per month,” similar work in Georgia would yield $9.03 and even less in South and North Carolina.Footnote 15

Other Scandinavian travel writers, whether recommending Wisconsin, Missouri, Louisiana, or even Texas, also grappled with the difference between North and South, but all connected landownership to a sense of liberty uniquely attainable in America.Footnote 16 In a lengthy guidebook and letters to Norwegian newspapers, Johan Reymert Reiersen, for example, explicitly argued for landownership as a natural and religious right for civilized, white people such as Scandinavians.Footnote 17 In Reiersen’s view, “the red man” was monopolizing more land than consistent with humankind’s general welfare, and he therefore supported “civilized” settlers taking land from “barbarians” until the nation was linked from coast to coast.Footnote 18

The paradox between landownership as a natural right for humankind, in Reiersen’s view equated with civilized, white people, and American Indians’ lack of right to the land they inhabited was maintained by most Scandinavian writers through a belief in white superiority. While Reiersen admitted that “negro slavery exists in Texas,” he did not reflect on its economic implications for immigrants but mainly presented slavery as a source of regional conflict over expansion and political power: “Liberty seems absorbed with the mother’s milk and appears as indispensible for every citizen of the United States as the air he breathes,” Reiersen claimed.Footnote 19 In this manner, Norwegian, Swedish, and Danish settlers, along with other European immigrants, were able to take advantage of American citizenship, enter into politics, and in the process, according to Jon Gjerde, “became among the most vociferous advocates of a herrenvolk republic.”Footnote 20 Racial ideology and economic opportunity were closely linked to land claims.

In his guidebook, Reierson – articulating central elements of the threshold principle – expressed admiration for the United States’ ability to grow both population and territory without succumbing to the small-state rivalries that had often characterized the European continent. “[The country] has maintained its political unity, multiplied its population, expanded its trade to all corners of the world, continued its system of domestic improvements and opened a wide, almost limitless field for individual enterprise,” Reiersen marveled.Footnote 21 Hence, prospective Scandinavian immigrants in the 1840s had a choice between the newly admitted nonslaveholding states in the Midwest, the slaveholding state of Missouri, which was popular among German immigrants, and the deep South.Footnote 22

For Claus and Matha Clausen, the choice rested on personal relationships, religion, and economic prospects. The couple arrived in Muskego, an important Scandinavian social hub and stepping stone, on August 8, 1843.Footnote 23 After receiving his ordination, Clausen preached first on colony leader Even Heg’s farm, known as “Heg hotel,” and later in a log church before relocating in 1846 to accommodate Johannes W. C. Dietrichson, an “official representative of the Church of Norway.”Footnote 24

Claus and Martha Clausen moved to Rock Prairie in the southern part of Wisconsin in 1845. The couple, who had lost a newborn son in the spring of 1844, welcomed another son into the world in the spring of 1846, but shortly thereafter tragedy struck again.Footnote 25 Martha Clausen, “well and cheerful” when Claus Clausen left to visit a neighboring congregation on November 7, became critically ill with pneumonia, and her husband only barely made it back for a final goodbye early on Sunday, November 15.Footnote 26 In a letter dated December 7, 1846, demonstrating the close transnational ties maintained even three years into their migration, Claus Clausen described the heartbreak to Martha’s brother in Denmark, and the relatives stayed in touch subsequently.Footnote 27 Less than a year after Martha’s death, her brother and other community members from the island of Langeland wrote to Claus Clausen asking him to elaborate on conditions in America and perhaps nuance some of the ideas about liberty and equality appearing in Old World emigration pamphlets.Footnote 28

The prospective emigrants’ inspiration came from at least two sources published in 1847. Laurits J. Fribert’s ninety-six-page Haandbog for Emigranter til Amerikas Vest (Handbook for Emigrants to America’s West) served as a source for a shorter, widely circulated, second pamphlet, published by Rasmus Sörensen in Denmark later that same year.Footnote 29

During his time in the United States, Fribert, who settled among Swedish immigrants in Wisconsin in 1843, researched American citizenship requirements that he, based on the 1802 naturalization act, explained as the ability to demonstrate “good moral character” and adhere to the “principles of the Constitution.”Footnote 30 Fribert clearly did not have to worry about his skin color and instead emphasized the importance of immigrants renouncing any “hereditary title” and concluded by detailing the differences between state citizenship and national citizenship:

Only according to the above-mentioned conditions can complete American citizenship be attained according to the laws of Congress, but this does not prevent individual states from conferring citizenship in said state on less strict conditions … In Wisconsin, which is a territory and not yet a state, and therefore cannot make its own provisions in this regard, the above-mentioned general laws of the United States apply.Footnote 31

Fribert’s notes on emigration and citizenship sparked Sörensen’s pamphlet which also offered its own ideas of citizenship’s rights and duties.Footnote 32 Sörensen recognized the discontent among landless laborers and tied these to much larger European discussions in the years leading up to the 1848 revolutions.Footnote 33 According to Sörensen, Scandinavian farm workers faced many of the same issues that had led to “the large English, German, and France emigrations to America.”Footnote 34

In a three-page introduction, Sörensen argued that “the fatherland” had to provide material goods necessary for sustenance for all or risk seeing its younger generations emigrate. If all that was left for landless children, after their parents’ estate had been settled, were the duties associated with subjecthood of a Scandinavian monarch and none of the basic economic rights, a house and land to obtain sustenance from, then everyone – king, country, and prospective emigrant – were better off by letting young people explore opportunities across the Atlantic. The highest expression of one’s affection for the fatherland, even higher than nationality, language, faith, and self-sacrifice in wartime, was the love of fellow man, Sörensen proclaimed.Footnote 35 This love had to be expressed by “allowing and affording one’s neighbor the same worldly goods as one, under similar circumstances, would want allowed and afforded by him.”Footnote 36

Fribert and Sörensen both had concrete experience with the small Danish islands where Clausen and his wife had lived before emigrating and therefore knew firsthand about the recurring issues regarding lack of land availability. Their writings therefore resonated with a wide swath of smallholders.Footnote 37

Rasmus Sörensen’s publication “inspired several” members from Martha Clausen’s childhood community to travel to “this Canaan’s land,” and as a consequence her brother wrote to Claus Clausen asking about conditions in America.Footnote 38 Perhaps still grieving, Clausen’s response was gloomy. “Seldom have I seen more misleading nonsense,” the widowed husband replied in response to the emigration pamphlets.Footnote 39 Clausen was upset that Fribert and Sörensen, in his view, had provided too rosy a picture with their information on travel costs, harvest yields, and disease.Footnote 40 The Danish-born pastor worried that these descriptions now roused the America fever in Scandinavia and might “entice people to injudiciously initiate such an important step as emigration.”Footnote 41 Not all which “glistens in America” is gold, warned Clausen.Footnote 42

Clausen went on to offer advice on climate, land, and emigration practicalities in such detail that his response took up the majority of two newspaper issues. Toward the end of his letter, Clausen did concede, however, that there was no shortage of “good laws or sufficient civic order and safety for the quiet, honest, and diligent citizen in all things regarding his worldly welfare.”Footnote 43

Clausen’s letter was revealing as it demonstrated Scandinavian emigrants’ concern with landownership and the Danish-born pastor’s concrete knowledge of these concerns.Footnote 44 Additionally, Clausen, albeit without reflecting on whiteness’s importance, equated productive citizenship in the United States with honesty and hard work that in turn could lead to socioeconomic progress for younger Scandinavian men and women.Footnote 45 The latter point was also made by Danish-born Peter C. Lütken of Racine, Wisconsin, when he in March 1847 wrote a piece on the connection between landownership and freedom that was published in a trade journal in Denmark the following year.

The truth remains that the soil here rewards its faithful cultivator and that one in all essentials enjoys the full fruit of one’s labor; for taxes do not oppress, and if a man is here in possession of his property free of debt, then no one on earth can be more independent and more free than him.Footnote 46

Liberty and equality were recurrent themes, both implicitly and explicitly, in the emigration literature. Fribert, for example, in a section titled “Everyone should go to Wisconsin” pointed out that because of slavery, with its important implications for labor relations and pay, it was “not as honorable to work for the white man, whom many wealthy men will not regard higher than a black man.”Footnote 47 In short, economic concerns, landownership, and the institution of slavery remained the most important reasons for settling north of the Mason–Dixon line. Settlement patterns reflected the emigration pamphlets’ advice. When the 1850 census was taken, only 202 Scandinavian-born immigrants were counted in Texas and just 247 in Missouri, while 12,516 Scandinavian-born immigrants lived in Wisconsin and Illinois.Footnote 48

In the Midwest, emigrants found the added security of living among fellow Scandinavians, and, starting in the late 1840s, thousands of young, white, Protestant Scandinavians (their average age was around thirty) pursued the promise of equality through landownership close to the Great Lakes.Footnote 49 Yet, Midwestern landownership, as most Scandinavian-born immigrants at least tacitly admitted, was predicated on the fact that the “Indian hordes” through “deceit and force” had been removed.Footnote 50

***

The first newspaper published in Wisconsin by Scandinavian immigrants was Nordlyset (The Northern Light).Footnote 51 In the inaugural issue on July 29, 1847, Nordlyset’s editors emphasized their attempted neutrality in political and religious matters and stated the newspaper’s aim as elevating “ourselves, in regards to our nationality, among our surroundings,” by enlightening and guiding its readership in order to achieve equality at the level of fellow citizens. The first step to achieving political enlightenment among the Scandinavian readers was a translation of the Declaration of Independence.Footnote 52 From a Scandinavian immigrant perspective, the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights provided the vision and legal foundation to ensure economic opportunities in the New World. Thus, in addition to the implicit and explicit recognition of citizenship’s importance, it was pointed out, again and again, in the pamphlets and letters flowing back to Scandinavia that “the United States has no king.”Footnote 53

When adopted on February 1, 1848, the first two sections of Wisconsin’s State Constitution echoed the Declaration of Independence and specifically outlawed slavery as well as “involuntary servitude.” Moreover, in section 14, feudal tenures were prohibited, and section 15 specifically ensured that “no distinction shall ever be made by law between resident aliens and citizens, in reference to the possession, enjoyment or descent of property.”Footnote 54

Thus, with the Wisconsin Constitution in hand, immigrants in the early Scandinavian enclaves could distance themselves from Old World feudalism and pursue their dream of landownership, confident in its legality and ties to ideals of liberty and equality.Footnote 55 As such, Scandinavian immigrants were quickly able to enjoy the fruits of American citizenship, and in the process they generally supported an expansion of American territory, especially if the population therein was mainly white.Footnote 56

In the midst of the American war against Mexico between 1846 and 1848, Nordlyset, under Norwegian-born editor James D. Reymert, initially expressed support for manifest destiny by declaring that “a strong United States was probably destined to annex the enemy’s territory.”Footnote 57 Under its second editor, Even Heg, however, Nordlyset nuanced its position on territorial expansion based on ethnic considerations and on March 10, 1848, deemed it inadvisable to annex any further territory from Mexico as this would mean incorporating additional “half-civilized inhabitants” into the United States.Footnote 58 The same hesitation to annex Cuba, based on a sense “that a people of mixed blood, mainly Negro and Spanish, could not readily be assimilated,” was expressed by American politicians and the Norwegian immigrant papers in the 1850s and appeared again in the following decade.Footnote 59

Heg’s quote, and the sentiments expressed in subsequent ethnic newspapers, underscored the importance of whiteness among Scandinavian immigrants. Importantly, both Reymert and Heg – by settling in Wisconsin, on land formerly occupied by Native people – were actively partaking in the expansion of American boundaries.

In the Midwest, as Stephen Kantrowitz has shown, “Wisconsin’s 1848 constitution” and those of other Midwestern states encouraged the dissolution of American Indians’ collective affiliation, and white settlers, whether in Wisconsin, Kansas, Michigan, or elsewhere, “quickly abetted outright dispossession, aided by unequal tax policies and official tolerance of white squatting.”Footnote 60

As Scandinavian editors started to voice their opinion on American public matters for their fellow countrymen in the ethnic press, it became increasingly clear that they, along with other European immigrants, were solid supporters of a “white man’s republic.”Footnote 61

Andreas Frederiksen Herslev, who arrived in the United States in 1847 and adopted the name Andrew Frederickson, wrote home in 1849 and assessed the Mexican War’s consequences. According to Frederickson, the American military, based on volunteerism, tied into broader societal ideals where “the poor” had greater opportunity for equality and could “attain justice more or less as well as the rich.”Footnote 62 Still, some were more equal than others based on skin color, as exemplified by Frederickson’s ideas about land and the opportunities war service could provide.

Around the time Casper and I arrived, the government issued posters that able-bodied soldiers could receive 7 dollars a month and 160 acres of land which could be surveyed anywhere in the United States where there were unsold sections.Footnote 63

After the war, Frederickson bought two land warrants from Mexican War veterans and used the certificates to claim what he termed “free land” in Brown County, Wisconsin.Footnote 64 As was the case with Frederickson, Scandinavian immigrants often did not reflect explicitly on their role in the American expansion through land acquisition. Scandinavian immigrants did, however, often arrive in the United States with preconceived notions of American Indians partly due to literary texts. As Gunlög Fur has noted, James Fenimore Cooper’s “books were translated into Swedish and, already published in the 1820s, they became readily available for a reading audience to such an extent that Fredrika Bremer regarded him as one of ‘the first to make us in Sweden somewhat at home in America.’”Footnote 65

In 1847, Norwegian-born lawyer Ole Munch Räder, observing a forest fire in the Mississippi Valley, wondered if the local indigenous warriors would interpret the smoke as a “huge peace pipe of their great father in Washington or as war signals and spirits of revenge from the land of their fathers which they had to leave in disgrace to give place to the ‘pale faces.’”Footnote 66 Räder quickly added, “This expression by the way, I use only out of respect for Cooper’s novels; it is claimed that no Indian has ever called the whites by such a name,” but in the darkness the Norwegian traveller could not help his mind from wandering and imagining an encounter with an Indian “fully equipped with tomahawk and other paraphernalia, and of course on the watch for someone to scalp.”Footnote 67

Back in Wisconsin, Räder encountered bands of Pottawatomie returning from Green Bay, “where they had received the annual payment provided for in their treaty with the United States government,” and described their “features and their clothing” as somewhat akin to “our Lapps, although they were taller, more dignified, and also more cleanly” than the indigenous people living in northern Sweden, Norway, and Finland to which he compared them.Footnote 68

Still, the problem with the American Indians, according to Räder, was that they had “lost their old reputation for honesty,” which was part of the reason that people “generally despise and hate the Indians.” People in the western part of the United States, which Räder considered Wisconsin part of, “find it a great nuisance that the Indians never seem to accustom themselves to the fact that the country no longer belongs to them.”Footnote 69

Such tropes of American Indian presence and practice echoed regularly among Scandinavian-American writers. In 1845, the residents of Muskego praised the pioneers who “fought wild animals and Indians,” and Räder, while acknowledging that American Indians were subjected to “injustice” and that the laws passed for their protection were “never enforced,” nevertheless took it for granted that their Midwestern removal was just a matter of time.Footnote 70

Describing a treaty between the Chippewa and local Indian commissioners in August 1847, Räder wrote: “It is specified in the treaty that certain lands west of Wisconsin are to be abandoned in favor of a new territory, Minnesota, which is to be established there. To begin with, the Winnebago are to be placed there.”Footnote 71

In a different example, Hans Mattson depicted his first encounters with “Sioux Indians” positively but also wrote about a “war dance” that “in lurid savageness” exceeded anything he ever saw.Footnote 72 Moreover, Mattson’s countryman, Pastor Gustaf Unonius, who had founded the Swedish Pine Lake settlement in Wisconsin, described the Winnebago tribe as “the wildest and most hostile tribe of all the tribes that are still in this area.”Footnote 73 Unonius’ description was one of several that pointed to American Indians as uncivilized and thereby unfit for a place in American society. Within a decade, however, Scandinavian immigrants also settled in Minnesota and shortly thereafter on American Indian land in the Dakota territory. Thereby, Scandinavian immigrants often embraced the notion of independence, through fruitful contributions as land cultivators not wholly unlike Jefferson’s ideal of an economically and morally independent yeoman farmer, while maintaining support for a sizeable nation-state predicated on territorial expansion and Indian removal.Footnote 74

The Scandinavian definition of citizenship, closely tied to the dream of landownership, was fueled throughout Scandinavia by Räder, Rynning, Fribert, and Rasmus Sörensen’s descriptions of American liberty in the antebellum era.

While emigration pamphlets and America letters were secondary to political and economic conditions on the ground, they did, however, effectively juxtapose Old and New World conditions and opened new opportunities and concrete roadmaps to families seeking a new life across the Atlantic.Footnote 75 The “America fever” brought on by the emigration pamphlets and social conditions set off a chain migration to Wisconsin, where ideas of free soil and free labor soon became powerful political rallying cries among Scandinavian immigrants.Footnote 76 After 1847, first hundreds then thousands of Norwegians, Swedes, and Danes poured into the Midwest. By 1860, a total of 72,576 Scandinavians lived in the United States, with almost a third claiming Wisconsin as their home.Footnote 77

4 Republican Reign

It was late August 1847 when Fritz Rasmussen’s parents left the island of Lolland along with their six children. Fritz’s father, Edward, decided to emigrate to America in pursuit of “liberty and equality,” which he found sorely lacking in Denmark.Footnote 1 The year before, one of the Lolland’s social reform leaders, C. L. Christensen, had also emigrated to America, and the reason was believed to be the Danish authorities’ harsh treatment of dissidents who advocated on behalf of smallholders and peasants.Footnote 2

By 1847, Fritz Rasmussen’s father was also engaged in political activity in opposition to the Danish authorities to such a degree that both political necessity and economic opportunity prompted his decision.Footnote 3 On Lolland, where the Rasmussen family resided, land shortage was acute. In one county, Maribo Amt, 87 percent of all land belonged to properties larger than 4.4 acres.Footnote 4 It was therefore no coincidence that Fritz Rasmussen, looking back from the vantage point of 1883, used the language of the oppressed and stressed the importance of emancipation:

He [Father], I afterwards came to understand, had to leave the Country, like many others, as a political refugee – : on account of his writings & doings, for and among the communalities, in regard to a more & thorough emancipation of the people generally, from the oppressive Sovereignty of the nobility.Footnote 5

Edward Rasmussen’s family emigrated on August 27, 1847, two months after Martha Clausen’s brother had written to Claus Clausen to ask about emigrant prospects in Wisconsin, but the family did not see Clausen’s cautionary letter.Footnote 6 Where Claus Clausen had been guaranteed employment at arrival, the Rasmussen family’s future was from the outset more precarious.

In Fritz Rasmussen’s account, the family stopped briefly in Hamburg (then a sovereign state in the German confederation), boarded the ship Washington, and arrived in New York City on October 26. From New York the family travelled to Albany where the recently constructed Erie Canal originated. A few weeks later they boarded the Atlantic in Buffalo to be transported over the Great Lakes to Wisconsin (see Figure 4.1). Only later did they realize their good fortune. One of the next ships that went west over Lake Erie and Lake Huron was Phoenix, a modern steamer named after the bird in Egyptian mythology. But in contrast to the legend, Phoenix never rose from the ashes in November 1847. Instead, hundreds of Dutch emigrants lost their lives in the flames or icy water on their way to a new Midwestern home.Footnote 7 “We were spared the suffering and catastrophe,” remembered Fritz Rasmussen.Footnote 8

Figure 4.1 Fritz Rasmussen, born on the island of Langeland, emigrated with his family to Wisconsin in 1847 and eventually settled in New Denmark.

Courtesy Wisconsin Historical Society.

While the Rasmussen family’s ship made it unscathed over the lakes, the family did not. Nine-month-old Henry died of disease shortly before they reached Milwaukee on a “cold, bleak” November day, and disease was ever-present. On the snow-covered wharf in eastern Wisconsin, survival more than enjoyment of liberty, equality, and champagne-filled springs was the main concern.Footnote 9 “No money and could not speak [the language] and no countrymen: Father sick unto death – and so my youngest sister and youngest Brother. This was a landing, opposite the gloriously golden and happy anticipation when leaving,” remembered Rasmussen.Footnote 10 But an older Danish sailor, in the United States known as Johnson, “solicited help and finally by evening got us carted off into town and sheltered in a small, poorly furnished tavern or restaurant, kept by a young German and his wife,” recounted Rasmussen.Footnote 11

At the German couple’s place, the family regained their strength somewhat. With the help of fellow Scandinavian immigrants, they – after a brief stay at the local poor house – slowly regained their collective footing. Their fourteen-year-old son Fritz was sent away to work for a newly arrived Norwegian shoemaker, and shortly thereafter a sizable group of approximately fifty Danish immigrants, inspired by Rasmus Sörensen’s emigration pamphlets and Claus Clausen’s letters, arrived.Footnote 12 By June 1848, the newcomers had established a settlement, which was later named New Denmark.Footnote 13

For six years, Fritz Rasmussen worked odd jobs in Wisconsin away from the small immigrant town, but in 1854 he returned, bought land, and soon started to keep meticulous records of major and minor events in New Denmark – not least land transactions.Footnote 14 In his thousands of surviving diary pages, Rasmussen on several occasions mentioned his acquisition of Section 24, N.E. ¼, S.E. ¼ in New Denmark, and the pride thus exhibited in landownership was in no small part tied to his family’s Old World experience.Footnote 15

Looking back later in life, Fritz Rasmussen reflected on his experiences in New Denmark in contrast to the Old World despite the hardship also encountered in Wisconsin: “We have come to this Country, where we are as free, previledged [sic] and no distinction – as to ‘Liberty and Equality’ of person – as the Nobles – so called – are in the lands where we came from.”Footnote 16

This idea – Old World nobility whose disproportional political power and landownership “restrained” the hard-working, honest, common man from achieving liberty and establishing his “pedigree” – defined Fritz Rasmussen’s worldview and, as we have seen, recurred regularly among early Northern European laborers.Footnote 17 While Rasmussen, consciously or unconsciously, benefited from his skin color and religion in terms of landownership and employment opportunities, his views on New World citizenship were not unlike those of the German forty-eighters, who, as Allison Efford Clark has shown, proposed “a nationalism based on residence, not race or even culture, and a form of citizenship grounded in universal manhood suffrage.”Footnote 18

Still, this ability to enjoy the fruits of one’s own labor, earning one’s own bread through one’s own sweat, was a key pull factor to Scandinavian immigrants and one made possible, in part, by whiteness.Footnote 19 When Catharina Jonsdatter Rüd, a Swedish immigrant maid making $2 a week and living in Moline, Illinois, wrote home in March 1856, she celebrated America and the individual liberty she experienced as a white woman:

Here the servant can come and go as it pleases her, because every white person is free and if a servant gets a hard employer then she can quit whenever she likes and even keep her salary for the period she has worked … A woman’s situation is as you can imagine much easier here than in Sweden and I Catherine feel much calmer, happier and more satisfied here than I used to do when I attended school in Nässjö. Everything in this country [seems praiseworthy] – to describe all benefits would take a lifetime!Footnote 20

Rüd underlined the word “white” and thereby proved herself aware, as Jon Gjerde has pointed out, that she enjoyed “freedoms that did not exist in Sweden or for nonwhite people in the United States.”Footnote 21 Since enslaved people in the United States were denied the fruits of their labor, Scandinavian-born laborers generally opposed slavery, with its parallels to the forced labor and serfdom which had been common in Denmark and Norway up until 1788. Unequal power and labor dynamics continued to exist in various guises in Scandinavia subsequently, and the Norwegian, Swedish, and Danish immigrants therefore arrived in the United States with suspicion of slavery’s extension or its beneficiaries’ political powers in the New World.

Thus, by the mid-1850s, the Republican Party’s ideology, what Eric Foner has termed free soil, free labor, and free men, meaning wage earners’ opportunity to become “free men” through landownership, aptly described a large swath of Scandinavian immigrants’ economic and social priorities and, by extension, their attraction to the Republican Party in the years surrounding the Civil War.Footnote 22

The issue of free soil was of central concern to Norwegians, Swedes, and Danes in the Midwest. With its importance for economic uplift and perceptions of liberty, land availability, in areas where slavery did not impact labor relations, played a significant part in shaping economic, legal, and moral positions in the Scandinavian-American immigrant community.

Yet, well-read Scandinavian immigrants such as Even Heg and his fellow early editors of Nordlyset, who had advocated legislation to prevent slavery from spreading into the territories between 1848 and 1850, in line with the Free Soil party’s platform, rarely extended their argument to advocate for nonwhite people.Footnote 23 In this regard, Norwegians, Swedes, and Danes were far from alone. As Henry Nash Smith observed more than sixty years ago, “the farmers of the Northwest were not as a group pro-Negro. Free-soil for them meant keeping Negroes, whether slave or free, out of the territories altogether. It did not imply a humanitarian regard for the oppressed black man.”Footnote 24

Smith might as well have added lack of humanitarian regard for American Indians. In their dismissal of Native peoples’ rights, Scandinavian immigrants, not least the better educated ethnic elite, differed from the central actors of the abolitionist movement who explicitly connected Indian dispossession to slavery’s extension.Footnote 25 In short, Scandinavian immigrants, over time, showed themselves to be passionate Republicans but not abolitionists.

During the late 1840s and early 1850s, with the Democratic Party, the Free Soil Party, and the Whigs all vying for the Scandinavian vote, it was not evident that these newly arrived immigrants would eventually side with what became the Republican Party’s platform, but it was clear that the majority of Scandinavians were primarily interested in free land and less in nonwhite free men despite their professed love of liberty and equality.Footnote 26

Despite his Old World abolitionist inspiration, Claus Clausen in 1852 attempted to find a golden mean politically as the first editor of Emigranten.Footnote 27 Clausen saw Emigranten’s mission in the New World as mobilizing its Scandinavian readership politically, not least in support of liberty and economic opportunity, and in the process he loosely aligned the newspaper with the Democratic Party while relegating discussions of nonwhite people in America to the margins.Footnote 28

In an opening editorial, written both in English and Danish, Clausen stressed the importance of embracing assimilation, which underlined the advantages enjoyed by the paper’s mainly Protestant, literate, and white readership who were generally shielded from nativist critique.

We sincerely believe that the truest interest of our people in this Country is, to become AMERICANIZED – if we may use that word – in language and customs, as soon as possible and be one people with the Americans. In this way alone can they fulfill their destination, and contribute their part to the final development of the character of this great nation.Footnote 29

This openness (and ability) to Americanize, based on both individual and broader public interest, made Scandinavian immigrants more politically acceptable to Yankee Americans otherwise attracted to nativist ideas well into the 1850s and slowly provided political prospects for Scandinavian candidates as well.Footnote 30 Emphasizing the political rights and opportunities associated with American citizenship, Clausen, in an editorial dated February 13, 1852, underlined the importance of “schools, churches, and other civilizing influences” necessary for achieving political influence in America and warned his readership against wandering “out into the wilderness as soon as the land is acquired from the Indians.”Footnote 31 Focusing solely on land development might lead to missed political opportunities, Clausen warned.Footnote 32

During the presidential election campaign of 1852, Emigranten, under the editorship of Clausen’s successor, Charles M. Reese, explicitly supported the Democratic candidate Franklin Pierce at the national level but encouraged the paper’s readership to support Scandinavian candidates in local elections for the state legislature regardless of political party.Footnote 33

One such candidate was Hans Heg, the twenty-two-year-old son of Even Heg. Hans Heg ran for the Wisconsin State legislature on a Free Soil platform out of Racine in 1852 but – partly due to the fact that Scandinavian immigrants still made up less than 10 percent of Wisconsin’s foreign-born population in 1850 – lost narrowly to a Democratic candidate.Footnote 34

Yet, as the Whig and Free Soil Party morphed into the new Republican Party in the wake of the 1854 Kansas–Nebraska Act, the new political alliance, based on a strong commitment to free labor ideology, free soil, and, in time, a strong anti-slavery platform, increasingly appealed to Scandinavian immigrants.Footnote 35 By November 3, 1854, Emigranten, now edited by Norwegian-born Knud J. Fleischer, stated the paper’s position as being firmly in support of the Republican Party:Footnote 36

The November 7 election day is upon us!

Then it will become apparent if wrong shall conquer right, good conquer evil, if slavery shall be expanded and supported, liberty suppressed and curtailed! The Republican Party fighting for liberty and right has risen up to fight the “Democratic” Party’s friends, the defenders of slavery. Norsemen, you would not [want] the advance of slavery!Footnote 37

Emigranten conveniently ignored any lingering Republican nativist sentiment left over from the locally successful Know-Nothing party in the 1854 elections and tried to shift readers’ focus.Footnote 38 By the summer of 1855, Fleischer was urging “Norwegians to work for the Republican platform,” as in his opinion there “prevailed a vicious alliance of antiforeign Know-Nothing enthusiasts and unrighteous ‘slavocrats’” in the Democratic Party’s ranks.Footnote 39

Thus, Emigranten, which had for its first two years maintained an affiliation with the Democratic Party, as evidenced by Reese’s endorsement of Pierce in the 1852 election, adjusted its position based on the debate over free soil and, by extension, nonwhite free men, in part due to the impact slavery had on labor relations. From 1855, with the Republican Party gaining strength on the ground in Wisconsin, Emigranten aligned itself clearly with the anti-slavery party and urged Scandinavian immigrants to do the same.Footnote 40

By 1855, even openly Democratic newspapers such as Den Norske Amerikaner (The Norwegian American) made anti-slavery arguments. Den Norske Amerikaner pointed out that slavery had been “the main theme” in American politics since 1850, and in a front-page piece titled “Negerslaveriet og fremtiden” (“Negro Slavery and the Future”) the editor argued that the conflict between slavery and freedom had the potential to break the United States into pieces.Footnote 41 Expansion of slavery into the territories, it was argued, “would paralyze all political power in the northern states and make them a sort of commercial appendix to the all-commanding slave oligarchy” where free labor was subjugated in relation to “a profitable and advantegous monopoly.”Footnote 42 Perhaps worst of all, slavery’s sinfulness was being ignored in the South, and when Northerners pointed this out, “they point to their slaveholding clergy and slaveholding churches, with their prayers, awakenings, and the entire mechanism of a hypocritical religion.”Footnote 43

Starting with the Republican Party’s grassroots organizational activity in 1854 and supported by amplified anti-slavery advocacy in the Scandinavian press in 1855, the Scandinavian immigrant community became increasingly aware of slavery’s economic and moral implications on life in America. If the future United States could only be built on free soil, free labor, and free (but not necessarily equal) men, then Scandinavian-born agricultural laborers were willing to support the Republican Party’s political project in ever-increasing numbers.

When the Republican Party’s foot soldiers started to fan out over the Midwest to influence local, state, and national elections, they also helped shape opinions in Scandinavian immigrant enclaves. Andrew Fredrickson in 1861 remembered the middle of the 1850s as a politically formative period, where “the Republican Party, of which I am part,” was created.Footnote 44 Also, Celius Christiansen in his memoirs specifically remembered an 1854 visit to New Denmark by a representative of the Republican Party which he – along with Harriet Beecher Stowe’s bestselling novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin and a bribe of two dollars to vote for De Pere as Brown County’s county seat – credited with cementing his anti-slavery views in support of the Republican Party.Footnote 45

With the help of Norwegian leaders such as Hans Heg (see Figure 4.2), Emigranten’s agenda-setting ability on behalf of the Republican Party, and the canvassing and bribery experienced by immigrants such as Celius Christiansen, Scandinavian immigrants were slowly but surely primed through political campaigns and editorials to support the Republican Party.Footnote 46 On July 11, 1856, Scandinavian anti-slavery sentiment was concretely tied to support for the Republican Party when a broadside from the Republican state central committee was distributed by Emigranten in Norwegian. “The Union’s current political battle is the conflict between liberty and serfdom,” read the proclamation’s first paragraph, in language that closely mirrored the phrases used by Scandinavian immigrants themselves.Footnote 47

Figure 4.2 Hans Heg was among the most successful early Scandinavian immigrants. His leadership ability and political savvy earned him the position of colonel when the Civil War broke out.

Image by The History Collection/Alamy Stock Photo.

The Central Committee’s plea for Republican presidential candidate John C. Fremont went on to emphasize the fact that it was not trying to influence “the Scandinavians or other adopted citizens to do anything other than what any good and informed Christian would recognize as right” and additionally distanced the party from the “despised Know-Nothingers.” In conclusion, the Republican committee added, “everyone who in his heart hates slavery will vote for Fremont.”Footnote 48 In other words, any anti-slavery, pro-free labor, enlightened Christian immigrant could safely support the Republican Party going into the 1856 election.

The link between religion and anti-slavery sentiment was an important one. The abolitionist movement had long and deep ties to religious factions, such as the Quakers and Puritans, arguing, as did Grundtvig and Claus Clausen among others, for a common humanity.Footnote 49 On June 10, 1857, Nordstjernen (The North Star), a newly established “National Democratic Paper” within the Scandinavian-American public sphere explicitly linked free soil, popular sovereignty, and religion in its opening editorial but implicitly admitted the difficulty of defending “popular sovereignty” and the resulting violence in western territories to a Scandinavian audience.Footnote 50 While admitting that bands of bandits, who “happened to vote the Democratic ticket,” had crossed into Kansas and committed violent acts against settlers, Nordstjernen’s editor attempted to shift the responsibility to abolitionist agitators.

Who was it that eagerly seized this opportunity for political gain? Who collected money, arms, ammunition and people to send to Kansas and keep up the Civil War? The “Republicans”! … Men like Horace Greeley, Henry Ward Beecher and thousands of others of the same mold, who overtly preached insurrection through the press and from the pulpit.Footnote 51

Beecher’s importance in the anti-slavery struggle was not lost on Scandinavians residing in or visiting the New York area. As early as 1850, Fredrika Bremer heard Beecher preach on his opposition to the Fugitive Slave Act and described the chapel as “full to overflowing.” He is “much esteemed and beloved,” as well as “highly gifted,” noted Bremer.Footnote 52

Since 1847, Henry Ward Beecher had placed his Brooklyn-based Plymouth Church on the national map with his fight against slavery and, according to at least one study, used the church as a hub for the Underground Railroad and a stage for anti-slavery events (see Figure 4.3).Footnote 53 Among the several Scandinavian immigrants who regularly attended Beecher’s sermons was Danish-born Ferdinand Winslöw, who on December 14, 1856, braved heavy rain en route to Plymouth Church to witness what he would describe to a Midwestern audience the following day as “Henry Ward Beechers Prædikener Om Negerne i Amerika” (Henry Ward Beecher’s Sermons on the Negros in America).Footnote 54

Figure 4.3 Henry Ward Beecher, here photographed with his famous sister Harriet after the Civil War, made a strong impression on Scandinavian congregationists and visitors to Plymouth Church.

Photo by Sepia Times/Universal Images Group via Getty Images.

However, when Winslöw published his Beecher-based musings in the pages of Kirkelig Maanedstidende (Church Monthly) in March 1857, the powerful, conservative, well-educated Scandinavian clergy was in the process of distancing itself from revivalist interpretations of Lutheranism and aligning itself more closely with pro-slavery interpretations of the Bible.

Claus Clausen had started Kirkelig Maanedstidende together with his Norwegian-born colleagues Adolph Carl Preus and Hans Andreas Stub in 1851, but few members of the Scandinavian religious elite held positions as close to abolitionism as him. Consequently, collaboration on religious matters was not frictionless.Footnote 55

The Norwegian synod’s clergymen, many of whom were closely affiliated with the Norwegian state church, underscored their theological conservatism when they conducted a Midwestern search to establish collaboration with a larger Lutheran synod for future Scandinavian clergymen’s education. To achieve this goal, two pastors appointed by a synod committee to study theological seminars between 1852 and 1857 settled for an affiliation with the German-led Concordia College in the slave state Missouri, instead of Buffalo or Columbus in the north.Footnote 56

Given the Norwegian synod’s decision to establish a partnership with the conservative German Missouri Synod, where an August 1856 article in the church’s periodical Lehre und Wehre (Teaching and Guidance) “concluded that slavery and Christianity were not in any way incompatible,” it may seem surprising that Winslöw’s depiction of Beecher’s anti-slavery sermons were published in the official outlet for the Norwegian Synod in 1857.Footnote 57

Winslöw’s timing is part of the answer. Anti-slavery contributions stopped appearing in Kirkelig Maanedstidende after the first Norwegian students left for Concordia College in St. Louis in the summer of 1858. Yet, outside the Norwegian Synod, the revivalism and anti-slavery of Henry Ward Beecher clearly inspired Scandinavians like Winslöw who felt compelled to disseminate the Plymouth Church preacher’s ideas about slavery and sin, which seemed closer in spirit to the Scandinavian revivalist factions than the Scandinavian state churches, to a wider Scandinavian audience in the Midwest.

“One of the most brilliant personalities in this country is undoubtedly Henry Ward Beecher, admired by his friends, hated and slandered by his enemies,” Winslöw wrote. To the Danish immigrant, Beecher was “the forceful giant of truth in these times of confusion.”Footnote 58

Yet, one of the “truths” that Beecher promoted was the idea of a social hierarchy based on typologies of race. The distance between Lorenz Oken’s “five races of man” – or Carl Linneaus’ Systema Naturae with Europeans on top of a racial hierarchy – and Beecher’s sermon this Sunday was negligible.Footnote 59 In Beecher’s sermon one found the savage yet noble Indian, too “proud to be subdued to Slavery,” fleeing before civilization but destined for destruction, as well as the unattractive, uneducated slave who needed white Anglo-Saxon Protestant help to attain social uplift. The substance of Beecher’s sermon was significant because of the influence the preacher had on American religious culture and, by extension, the countless congregationists attending and disseminating his sermons.Footnote 60

While Beecher emphasized that “African people are not stupid,” that “for music, oratory, gentility, for physical learning and the fine arts, they have a genius just as truly as we have not,” and that colonization was a hypocritical pipedream, it was clear that the Plymouth Church preacher did not consider African-Americans his equals. “We are the great Anglo-Saxon people,” said Beecher. “We boast that the African was brought here from his own wretched home to learn the truths that are brought to light in the Bible, but when he is here we pass laws forbidding him to learn to read it.” He added:

The whole nation is guilty. But the thing cannot go on; either Slavery will kill out Christianity, or Christianity will abolish Slavery … Emancipation is only a question of time, not of fact. Society must lift up these dregs, or they will eat out the bottom and all fall through … Society can’t carry our Slavery in its bosom. Slaves, without culture, will rock down our civilization – with culture they will free themselves.Footnote 61

The means to cultural uplift was education, according to Beecher, and toward the end of the service a collection was made to benefit a school for young Black women. Among the school’s original benefactors was Henry Ward Beecher’s older sister Harriet, the famed abolitionist author.Footnote 62 Yet Beecher’s view of “Africa among us” clearly demonstrated the limits of abolitionist sentiment, even among individuals who were considered central to, or at least active in, the movement. As such, Beecher’s sermon reflected Stephen Kantrowitz’s point that “open advocacy of interracial sociability as a means of improving society was rare even among committed white abolitionists.”Footnote 63

Nonetheless, Beecher’s notion of the thrifty, beautiful European immigrants and Anglo-Saxon Americans, who, despite their original sin, could get ahead in society if they worked hard and played by the rules, appealed to Scandinavian immigrants like Winslöw and his Scandinavian social circle. Winslöw’s older brother, Wilhelm, later recalled:

In the beginning of 1857 my younger brother Ferdinand invited me to come and stay with him in the United States. A year and a half was spent on that visit, which proved of great importance to me in more than one respect. I shall here only mention that I became highly influenced by the preaching and theological views of Henry Ward Beecher.Footnote 64

Furthermore, Ferdinand Winslöw’s brother-in-law, Christian Thomsen Christensen, practiced what Beecher preached in the aftermath of the 1856 sermon. Christensen and his family joined Plymouth Church in July 1857, and, though they temporarily “dissolved” their connection in December 1857, they renewed their membership and played a prominent part in the church after the Civil War.Footnote 65 Other people in the Scandinavian network listened to Beecher’s sermons, as evidenced by the church’s prominence in several travelogues from America before and after the Civil War.Footnote 66

The Scandinavian connection to Beecher’s revivalist church and the connection between his anti-slavery views based on white Protestant superiority were important because Winslöw worked consciously to establish a link between Beecher’s ideas and the Scandinavian Midwestern communities by disseminating the December 1856 sermon to Kirkelig Maanedstidende’s readers.

In Beecher’s sermons, religion intersected with politics. Henry Ward Beecher’s brand of Protestantism, known as “the gospel of love” or “the gospel of success,” focused on individual agency (e.g. “his belief that anyone could become successful if only he worked at it”), while maintaining some belief in “original sin,” and his humorous, populist preaching style – what Mark Twain later termed the ability to discharge “rockets of poetry” and explode “mines of eloquence” – attracted thousands every Sunday.Footnote 67

Importantly, Beecher’s views on slavery and social mobility and his notions of white superiority to some extent inspired and closely mirrored well-educated Scandinavian immigrants’ thinking, helping undergird their “free soil” opposition to slavery as well as their rationale for participation in American territorial expansion.Footnote 68 Moreover, Beecher’s gospel of success served as an argument for free labor ideology – the call for Christianity to abolish slavery was an argument in support of “free men” – yet a notion of white, Protestant superiority held the sermon’s two strands together.

This was part of the reason Winslöw described Beecher as “a giant of truth,” excitedly relaying his sermon, and it was part of the reason Beecher continued to inspire. Beecher helped legitimize Scandinavian immigrants’ rationale for claiming and owning land in the Midwest and their attempt to achieve upward social mobility through hard work in a free labor economy. Moreover, due to the constant influx of immigrants from the East Coast to Scandinavian settlements in the Midwest, as well as the fact that Norwegian immigrants had travelled from Muskego, Wisconsin, to New York as early as 1852 to help their newly arrived countrymen, Winslöw and his brother-in-law Christian Thomsen Christensen were well-known in the larger Scandinavian settlements out west.Footnote 69 Claus Clausen, for example, later in life described both Christensen and Winslöw as friends, and vice versa.Footnote 70

Whether it was in Beecher’s church in Brooklyn or in more primitive Midwestern places of worship, numerous early Norwegian, Swedish, and Danish immigrants availed themselves of this opportunity to explore religion outside the Scandinavian state churches. As we have seen, the early Norwegian immigrants of Muskego, Wisconsin, transplanted parts of the Haugean movement to American soil; the early Swedish settlement in New Sweden, Iowa, converted to Methodism; and importantly a large proportion of Danish immigrants to the United States who did not settle in the Midwest came on tickets paid by the Mormon Church en route to Utah.Footnote 71

Claus Clausen also increasingly linked religion and anti-slavery agitation in the more secular public sphere and initially found an ideological ally in Norwegian-born Carl Fredrik Solberg, who took over Emigranten on April 17, 1857 (see Figure 4.4).Footnote 72 Solberg gladly carried on the paper’s position on “the slavery and public land issues,” which had been in place since Fleischer’s editorship.Footnote 73

Figure 4.4 As editor of Emigranten, Carl Fredrik Solberg was one of the most influential Scandinavian-American voices in the Civil War era.

Courtesy Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum Archives.

Almost simultaneously with Emigranten’s editorial change, prominent Scandinavian-born men founded the Scandinavian Democratic Press Association and a few months later launched “a National Democratic” competitor to Emigranten.Footnote 74 Nordstjernen (The North Star), which succeeded Den Norske Amerikaner, published its first issue on June 10, 1857, but quickly ran into trouble based on its position regarding slavery.Footnote 75 Before 1854, the Democratic Party’s insistence on individual freedom and support of immigrant causes seemed to hold some sway over a Scandinavian audience averse to interference from the government or clergy based on their Old World experience, but increasingly the question of slavery, exacerbated by Democratic leader Stephen Douglas’ advocacy of “popular sovereignty” in Kansas, proved difficult for Democratic newspaper editors to defend. The issue of free soil, with its underlying premise that American Indians had no right to the land, was an issue of utmost importance for Scandinavian immigrants: in tying discussions of free soil to discussions of free men, not least the moral issue of free non-white men, Emigranten gained an upper hand in the competition.Footnote 76

Not even Charles M. Reese, a skillful writer and editor who “was not without a following” and who found employment with Democratic newspapers after his departure from Emigranten, could gloss over the increasing political differences on the issue of slavery, and the Scandinavian editors’ position on human bondage proved to be the key to the success, or lack thereof, of Nordstjernen in competition with Emigranten.Footnote 77

When Solberg recounted the competition between the two papers later in life, he noted that Nordstjernen failed “to make much headway among the Norwegians” and emphasized the Republican Party’s increasing appeal to immigrants advocating free soil and anti-slavery politics.Footnote 78

When the Emigranten plant was moved to Madison I was made editor of the paper, and when the new Norwegian paper [Nordstjernen] was started I became at once one of the targets of its abuse. We had it hot back and forth, but I felt that I had the better of it as our paper was on the right side of public questions.Footnote 79

While it is difficult to determine the exact ideological leanings in Scandinavian communities at the ground level, subscription numbers and scattered diary references indicate that Emigranten, as a loyal supporter of the Republican Party, was far more attractive than Nordstjernen. By early 1854, Emigranten’s self-proclaimed subscription list counted between 500 and 600 names, and its overall readership, due to newspapers being shared in the settlements, was likely higher.Footnote 80 In contrast, no issues of Nordlyset were published between October and December of 1857, and in subsequent editions complaints over the newspaper’s financial state appeared regularly, while Emigraten’s weekly issues arrived steadily in Scandinavian enclaves and helped build a Scandinavian Republican electorate during the same time span.Footnote 81

In addition to the issue of free soil, Reese and Solberg sparred over the issue of Black people’s ability to vote in Wisconsin when the question was debated in the summer and fall of 1857. On November 3, 1857, a referendum was held in Wisconsin on the issue of “Suffrage for African Americans,” meaning African-American men over twenty-one years of age, and Solberg’s editorials in the weeks and months leading up to the election argued for Black people’s right to vote while also explicitly stating that Emigranten’s editors distinguished between the Republican Party’s policy and abolitionist policy.Footnote 82

According to the editor, it was Emigranten’s position that everyone should “be free and have equal rights.” The Scandinavian newspaper opposed slavery’s expansion but would not interfere with slavery where it already existed. “Abolitionists we have never been,” the editor stated. Yet, “when a free Negro settles in Wisconsin, he should enjoy his share of civil rights.”Footnote 83

Conversely, Reese warned Nordstjernen’s readers that the result would be “a black governor and a black legislature in Wisconsin! … Would not our Black Republican friends then rejoice? Then there would be not freedom and equality, but first the Negro and after him the white man.”Footnote 84

While Solberg likely was ahead of the Scandinavian public opinion on this issue – and also later changed his editorial stance – Solberg’s editorship does indicate the increased focus on anti-slavery issues within the Republican Party. Moreover, the Scandinavian electorate in Wisconsin seemed to be increasingly following Solberg’s arguments.Footnote 85

Thus, when Solberg later in life remembered that he got the better of Nordstjernen, it had much to do with the Republican Party’s appeal to Scandinavians based on free soil and free labor policies.Footnote 86 In a September 12, 1859, profile of Hans Heg, likely written by Solberg, the Norwegian-born politician’s successful rise from farmer to businessman and candidate for statewide office with broad-based ethnic support was emphasized along with his long-standing “opposition to the spread of slavery.”Footnote 87

Thus, Abraham Lincoln’s speeches in Cincinnati and Milwaukee in September 1859, building on his argument for the primacy of free labor stretching back to the mid-1840s, likely resonated powerfully in the Scandinavian-American community. Social mobility, what Abraham Lincoln on September 17, 1859, called, “improvement in condition” in a free country, was “the great principle for which the government was really formed.”Footnote 88

A few weeks later, at the Wisconsin State Fair in Milwaukee, Lincoln elaborating on these free labor thoughts. “Men, with their families – wives, sons and daughters – work for themselves, on their farms in their houses and in their shops,” he said, “taking the whole product to themselves, and asking no favors of capital on the one hand, nor of hirelings or slaves on the other.”Footnote 89 Free labor, Lincoln argued, led workers to reap “the fruit of labor” and thereby gain the opportunity for economic improvement.Footnote 90 On July 2, 1860, in one of the few editorials in Emigranten signed directly by Solberg himself, he clearly laid out his and his newspaper’s reasons for supporting Abraham Lincoln in the important upcoming presidential election. The Democratic Party’s political decay and despotism, after decades in power, played a part, but anti-slavery attitudes, pro-homestead sentiment, and opposition to non-contigious empire were issues at the top of the list.

“Emigranten” will work actively in this electoral campaign and be in “the thicket of the fight” for Lincoln and Hamlin, for the freeing the territories, for the Homestead Bill’s adoption, for the Cuba Bill’s rejection, for a moderate toll’s adoption to protect interests in the northern and western states etc.Footnote 91

For a few months, Solberg even lowered Emigranten’s subscription price to 50 cents annually compared to $2 during the previous presidential election campaign and thereby indicated the importance he placed on influencing Scandinavian popular opinion in the coming months.Footnote 92 The ties between Emigranten and anti-slavery advocacy was made even clearer in August 1860, when Solberg’s good friend, Hans Heg, serving as prison commissioner, decided to shield abolitionist editor Sherman Booth from arrest by the authorities at the Wisconsin State Prison.Footnote 93

Booth had gained national fame in March 1854 when he gathered a crowd to free runaway slave Joshua Glover in Racine and afterward became a prominent voice in the anti-slavery struggle.Footnote 94 “We send greetings to the free states of the Union, that, in the state of Wisconsin, the fugitive slave Law is repealed!” Booth wrote in his newspaper the Milwaukee Free Democrat.Footnote 95 Yet, in a prolonged back-and-forth legal toggle, Booth was by March 7, 1859, unanimously found guilty of violating the Fugitive Slave Act by the United States Supreme Court led by Chief Justice Roger B. Taney.Footnote 96

Accordingly, federal authorities arrested Booth on March 1, 1860 and placed him in the federal custom house in Milwaukee. Booth remained confined in Milwaukee until August 1, when ten of his political allies broke him free and ushered him to the state penitentiary in Waupun, where he received lodging under Heg’s supervision.

On August 2, 1860, a US marshal arrived at the Waupun prison looking to apprehend Booth, with a letter from a federal marshal, John H. Lewis, asking Heg to assist in Booth’s arrest. The Norwegian-born prison commissioner, however, replied that his men “currently were employed in a better and more honorable way.”Footnote 97 By August 3, Heg instead invited Marshal Garlick in to arrest Booth in person, but Booth threatened to shoot anyone who tried to arrest him.Footnote 98 When later deposed, witnesses remembered Garlick saying, “The men that talk so much about shooting are not the ones to shoot.”Footnote 99 When Garlick, however, asked Heg what he thought about the situation, he received the following answer:

Mr. H. replied that he did not know what Booth would do, but if he was in Booth’s place and had been houn[d]ed round for the last six years, the very first man that should make an attempt to arrest me I would shoot him down as I would a dog. Mr. Garlick asked H. if he had anything against him as a man. Heg replied I have nothing against you Garlick as a man, but I think you ought to be in better business than serving as the tool for the slave catchers.Footnote 100

Heg’s remarks, and Booth’s threat of violence, made the federal marshal leave the prison; with the aid of abolitionist allies, Booth continued to escape federal agents for two more months before he was finally arrested in Berlin, Wisconsin, on October 8, 1860. Because of Heg’s role in what turned out to be Booth’s initial escape, the Scandinavian prison commissioner, who held larger political aspirations, was afforded considerable statewide attention, as he relayed his version of events in English-language and Norwegian-language newspapers.Footnote 101

To Scandinavian readers, at least the way it was remembered, the episode added to Heg’s anti-slavery credentials and solidified his position as a Scandinavian political leader. The event was important to Emigranten, and likely to its readers, because it was a Norwegian-born immigrant taking an overt stand against the Fugitive Slave Act, and in that context it mattered less that Booth’s personal popularity in the pages of Emigranten was negligible due to his sexual assault of a fourteen-year-old girl the year before.Footnote 102

Emigranten’s increasingly firm anti-slavery position seemingly resonated with Scandinavian newspaper readers to a much greater extent than was the case with the rival Nordstjernen. Between 1858 and September 1860, Nordstjernen was edited by the politically ambitious Danish-born immigrant Hans Borchsenius, but it failed to find an effective counter to Emigranten’s popularity, since the Democratic Party seemed increasingly pro-slavery from the Scandinavian readers’ perspective.Footnote 103 When Borchsenius was nominated by the Democratic Party on September 19, 1860, to run for county clerk, he passed the editorial duties over to his employee Jacob Seeman. In his first editorial on October 10, Seeman drew upon the Democratic Party’s long history and central position in American politics as an appeal to Scandinavian readers. Seeman simultaneously expressed pride in and support for the threshold principle’s main strands of population growth and territorial expansion, which likely had a broad appeal among a Scandinavian readership.

I pay tribute to democratic principles and support the Democratic Party because the Union under Democratic rule has grown from 13 to 33 states, has increased its population from close to 4 million to 30 million people and now is regarded one of the mightiest and proudest empires on earth in terms of trade, sea power, agriculture, arts and sciences.Footnote 104

According to Seeman, the Democrats had always been the immigrant’s friend, and it was therefore imperative that the “abolitionizing” Republican Party’s “wrong, deplorable, and treasonous teachings,” were given a more “conservative, honest and truthful quality,” as only the Democratic Party could, or the result could be the deathknell of the Union.Footnote 105 Nevertheless, Seeman’s editorial would prove to be the last ever published in Nordstjernen. Shortly after the October 10 issue, Borchsenius sold the newspaper to Solberg. In a letter to subscribers in January 1861, distributed through Emigraten, the former editor detailed the reasons why and lamented the fact that there was no longer room for “two political papers with opposite views.”Footnote 106

Two years as editor of a Democratic newspaper had disabused Borchsenius of the notion that Scandinavian immigrants, “under the circumstances, due to little interest in reading or more correctly little interest in subscribing to political papers,” were willing to support a newspaper in competition with the Republican Party’s anti-slavery platform. According to Borchsenius, a newspaper needed between 1,500 and 2,000 subscribers to survive, and “the highest number” he had been “able to achieve at ‘Nordstjernen’” had been between 800 and 900, and out of that number there had always “been a few hundred that did not pay.”Footnote 107

Consequently, Borchsenius sold his list of subscribers to Solberg to get out of debt. Emigranten’s subscription list, which, according to Reese, in early 1854 had counted between 500 and 600, had grown sizably under K. J. Fleischer’s and later Solberg’s editorship. When Fleischer handed the editorial reins to Solberg in April 1857, he expressed satisfaction that the subscription list now numbered between 1,300 and 1,400 names.Footnote 108 Moreover, Solberg, in an editorial published on December 7, 1863, put the subscription number at 2,700.Footnote 109 This positive development in subscribers, if the editors’ own numbers can indeed be trusted, corresponds with Theodore Blegen’s assessment. Solberg, according to Blegen, “expanded the paper in size, varied its contents, increased its interest and value as a literary magazine, reached out to all parts of the Northwest for Scandinavian Americans, and built up its circulation until, in Civil War times, it had nearly four thousand subscribers.”Footnote 110

Solberg’s claims that Emigranten’s position was on the “right side of public questions” and therefore decisive in his competition with Nordstjernen found support in the writings of the enterprising Reese, who, by September 22, 1860, now on his fourth newspaper editorship, wrote for a newly established and, as it turned out, short-lived “Republican campaign paper,” Folkebladet,

The struggle this fall will be simply between Freedom and Slavery, and where is the man in the North who can for a moment be undecided as to which side to take? We for one have bid a long farewell to the so-called Democracy and shall hereafter be found battling for Freedom, Free Speech, and Free Territory!Footnote 111

Folkebladet was published out of Chicago, which was also the home of the much more established and influential Swedish-language newspaper Hemlandet. Edited by Swedish-born Pastor Tuve N. Hasselquist (see Figure 4.5), who emigrated in 1852 in part due to his criticism of the Swedish state church, Hemlandet had catered to Illinois’ growing Swedish-born population since 1855.Footnote 112 For years, Hemlandet touted anti-slavery viewpoints to its readership; though it had fewer than 1,000 subscribers, it, according to the estimate of biographer Oscar Fritiof Ander, probably had several thousand readers.Footnote 113

Figure 4.5 Tuve N. Hasselquist was a towering figure among early Swedish-American immigrants and through his editorship of Hemlandet served as an opinion leader in Scandinavian communities.

Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

“Perhaps the most effective testimony to Hasselquist’s influence in forming the political opinion of the Swedes is found in the success of Hemlandet over its competitors, Svenska Republikanen and Minnesota Posten,” notes Ander, who adds, “Swedes were Democratic in 1852, but voted Republican in 1856, and since that time they remained so faithful to the principles of that party that all attempts made after 1860 to start at Democratic newspaper were doomed to fail because of lack of support.”Footnote 114

Consequently, the solidly Republican Hemlandet and Emigranten were by 1860 the only surviving secular Scandinavian newspapers in Illinois and Wisconsin, since they were the only ones that could be sustained through Scandinavian-born subscribers.

In trying to explain why Scandinavian immigrants chose so clearly to support the Republican Party, editor Knud Langeland, who by 1867 published the newspaper Skandinaven (The Scandinavian) out of Chicago, offered this explanation: “The Scandinavian people in America joined the Republican party en masse because it was founded upon the eternal truth: ‘Equality before the law for all citizens of the land without regard to religion, place of birth, or color of skin.’”Footnote 115

While this Scandinavian hagiography necessarily needs to be contextualized by their implicit and explicit support for and benefit from their white, Lutheran background, the extent to which Scandinavian immigrants in Wisconsin, Illinois, and Minnesota backed the Republican Party before, during, and after the Civil War is noteworthy.Footnote 116 Thus, the elections of 1860 provided a litmus test for the political power of ethnicity in relation to the Republican platform’s focus on free soil, free labor, and free men among Scandinavian immigrants. The settlement of New Denmark was just one of many examples.

On a beautiful Tuesday morning, November 6, Fritz Rasmussen awoke in New Denmark and observed frost still visible in areas shaded by the trees as he went down to the local schoolhouse to vote.Footnote 117 The Danish immigrant cast his vote for Abraham Lincoln and followed the election proceedings for some time thereafter before returning home to butcher pigs.Footnote 118 Rasmussen thereby took the political advice of Emigranten, but the same was not the case among all New Denmark’s residents. New Denmark, like the rest of the United States, was split in two. The town’s eligible voters gave Stephen Douglas forty-three votes, while Abraham Lincoln received thirty-seven. According to the 1860 census, New Denmark counted 424 inhabitants, including 139 with Scandinavian heritage, while the rest were mainly Irish or German-speaking.Footnote 119 Despite the community’s ethnic differences, everyday life was relatively frictionless, but the presidential election of 1860 revealed political differences tied to Scandinavian immigrants’ notions of ethnicity, the politics of class, and the racially charged notions of citizenship. As such, the election of 1860 foreshadowed future conflict zones surrounding the Scandinavian community.

While immigrants generally had to reside at least two years within the United States to be able to apply for citizenship and vote in elections, Wisconsin’s State Constitution of 1848 specified that “white persons of foreign birth who have declared their intention to become citizens conformably to the laws of the United States” were eligible to vote.Footnote 120 Thus, together with his brother Jens (James), Fritz Rasmussen declared his intention to become a citizen of the United States on March 29, 1860, with the aim of getting a local position of trust in the New Denmark town election in April.Footnote 121 While Rasmussen failed to win local office in April, his declaration of intent made it possible for him to help elect the next president of the United States. As November 1860 drew nearer, New Denmark residents followed political events with increasing interest and, based on Rasmussen’s diary entries, tracked local news closely.Footnote 122

Despite Wisconsin being lauded as the possible birthplace of the Republican Party, Brown County was not a Republican stronghold.Footnote 123 The local newspaper, Green Bay Advocate, was edited by Charles D. Robinson, a Democrat who had served as Wisconsin’s secretary of state between 1852 and 1854; Robinson strongly supported Stephen Douglas in the presidential campaign of 1860.Footnote 124

Leading up to the election, Robinson on a weekly basis lauded Douglas and, on October 19, in an attempt to build up and Democratic groundswell enthusiasm, passionately described a Douglas campaign event in Fond du Lac where he estimated a crowd of 15,000 to be “entirely in bounds.”Footnote 125 Robinson did not report the substance of Douglas’ speech, but, in the week leading up to the election, the editor was much clearer about the fact that slavery was the most important election issue, and he laid out what was at stake to his readership. The Green Bay Advocate urged a vote for Stephen Douglas to ensure that slaves were kept in bondage, as abolition, “if the Republican platform is properly interpreted,” would mean equality for Black people, increased competition in the labor market, and a potential threat to white women.Footnote 126 “To the People of Brown County,” Robinson wrote:

Large numbers of pamphlets in the French and Holland languages, have been put in circulation by Republicans in this county, so utterly untrue in their statements, and so odious in all respects, that it is important something should be said to expose them, although the time is so short before election, and the means of printing in those languages so limited.Footnote 127

Conversely, Emigranten, which also circulated in New Denmark, encouraged support at the ballot box for “freedom and equality,” which, from the editor’s perspective, was personified by Abraham Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin.Footnote 128 Thus, to Scandinavian voters in New Denmark, there was a clear choice between Abraham Lincoln (advocated by Emigranten) and Stephen Douglas (supported by the Green Bay Advocate) ahead of the November 6 election.

Since the Democratic Party at its June 1860 convention had split into a Northern (Douglas) and Southern faction (John C. Breckinridge), the Republican Party’s chances seemed promising by November.Footnote 129 Hence, it was a confident Emigranten editor who penned his last editorial on the eve of the electoral contest. Solberg predicted a resounding Republican victory in the North and Midwest and projected Wisconsin to be called for Lincoln at margins even greater than would be the case in Minnesota and Iowa.Footnote 130

Moreover, alluding to the importance of ethnicity in politics, Solberg criticized his countryman James D. Reymert for accepting a Democratic congressional nomination. “In the Second District our sly countryman Reymert has attempted to lead 5,000 Norwegian Lincoln-men astray against their better judgement in a manner that is a poor example to follow,” Emigranten’s editor wrote.Footnote 131 Solberg feared that Reymert’s Norwegian origin could lead Scandinavian voters to abandon Lincoln and the Republicans at the national and state levels in favor of a fellow countryman regardless of his political views. However, Solberg’s fear proved unfounded. In Wisconsin, Abraham Lincoln won a clear victory with a majority of over 20,000 votes, and Scandinavian-born immigrants largely supported the Republican Party.Footnote 132

In New Denmark, for example, Lincoln performed better than in the rest of Brown County, and it is likely that a sizable chunk of the Lincoln vote came from the Scandinavian residents. As we have seen, Fritz and Jens Rasmussen, along with their brother-in-law Celius Christiansen and Andrew Frederickson, supported the Republican Party.Footnote 133 Additionally, New Denmark resident Frederik Hjort was on the list of paying subscribers to the solidly Republican Emigranten.Footnote 134 As such, Hjort, and the neighbors he shared the newspaper with, could read Solberg’s assessment of the election on November 10, where he rejoiced that

Wisconsin has elected all three Republican candidates – Potter, Hanchett and Sloan – for Congress with large majorities. Our friend Reimert, to the credit of the Norwegian part of the population, did not succeed in leading the Norwegian Lincoln-men away from their duty and obtain their votes. Here and there he has received up to half a dozen votes more than his party in a Norwegian township, that is all, and several places he lags behind.Footnote 135

The election returns published by Solberg the following week seemed to validate his point about there being little Scandinavian support for an ethnic Democratic candidate. In the Norwegian townships of Perry, Springdale, and Vermont, which were located in a district won by both James D. Reymert at the congressional level and Douglas at the presidential level, there was no significant ethnic boost in votes, and the same was the case in the Republican-leaning township of Pleasant Springs, where the numbers 119 for Lincoln and seventy-five for Douglas were exactly the same as the numbers for Luther Hanchett and Reymert. All told, Reymert lost by more than 500 votes (4,797–4,210) to the Republican Hanchett in Dane County.Footnote 136

Notably a small handful of Democratic candidates at the local county clerk level – Hans Borchsenius, Ole Heg, and Farmer Risum – all lost also, while John A. Johnsen, a Republican, won in Dane County.Footnote 137 On the topic of slavery’s extension, Scandinavian immigrants likely disagreed with their Irish- and German-born counterparts. As Frederick Luebke has argued, “Lutheran and Catholic Germans in rural areas remained loyal to the Democracy in 1860, while other Protestants and the freethinking liberals were attracted to Republicanism. Irish Catholics were uniformly Democratic despite intraparty problems.”Footnote 138

Lincoln, in the the words of James McPherson, “carried every free state except New Jersey, whose electoral votes he divided with Douglas, and thereby won the election despite garnering slightly less than 40 percent of the popular votes.”Footnote 139 Among the states that decided the 1860 election was Illinois.Footnote 140 On election day in Rockford, Illinois, the Swedish immigrants in town, according to Hemlandet’s correspondent, unanimously gathered in front of the Swedish church and marched to the courthouse while cheering “hurrah” under the American and Swedish flags, “the true Republican ballot making up their only weapon,” and met up with an estimated 100 members of “The Young Men’s Republican Legion” voting for the first time.Footnote 141

According to the letter-writer, every single Swede in town voted Republican and cheered in front of the courthouse, while a group of Irish immigrants left the area, remarking that “had any other nation dared to show up with their national flag it would surely have been torn apart.”Footnote 142 In Red Wing, Minnesota, Swedish-born Hans Mattson remembered leading several meetings in a Republican club before the election and later posited that Scandinavians “almost to a man” were “in favor of liberty to all men” and therefore “joined the Republican party, which had just been organized for the purpose of restricting slavery.”Footnote 143

The Scandinavian vote was not decisive for the outcome of the presidential election of 1860, though ethnic scholars subsequently tried to emphasize its importance. Still, the votes that were cast by Norwegian, Swedish, and Danish immigrants did support the Republican Party with seemingly significant margins.Footnote 144

Additionally, in Iowa, ethnically German forty-eighters such as Hans Reimer Claussen and Theodor Olshausen, who had fled Denmark after the First Schleswig War, supported the Republican Party by 1860; in the predominantly Scandinavian township of Cedar in Mitchell County, only 1.4 percent of the inhabitants voted for a Democratic candidate.Footnote 145

In Illinois, Danish-born Ferdinand Winslöw described, on February 12, 1861, going to Springfield with the German-born Republican politician Francis Hoffman to see Lincoln. Here Winslöw was introduced to Lincoln, shook his hand, and listened to the “impressive and tender” farewell address that the newly elected president gave before leaving for the White House.Footnote 146

“I know I cried when the cars started bearing him along with his destiny and that of over thirty millions [sic] men, whose fates he was going to shape,” Winslöw wrote to his wife, adding: “It was a solemn moment for me, but I have an unshaken confidence in his ability, firmness and honesty.”Footnote 147

By February 1861, Lincoln’s ability to shape the country’s fate was already being severely tested. Writing from New York on February 5, 1861, Denmark’s acting consul general, Harald Döllner, assessed the situation in no uncertain terms. “Sir,” Döllner wrote to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, C. C. Hall, “the Union of the states is virtually dissolved.”Footnote 148 South Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, and Louisiana had broken away, and delegates were now gathered in Alabama to “form a Southern confederacy.”Footnote 149 One week later, utilizing the language of the threshold principle, Döllner added that “the State of Texas, an empire within itself according to size and resources, has seceded from the Union.”Footnote 150

Two months later, Civil War broke out, and diplomatic tension ran high. In the conflict’s early phase, when the loyalties of several states were still in question, American fear of foreign powers’ interference was palpable. The latent or explicit fear of Kleinstaaterei thus hung over the State Department and left little room for error or compromise, especially in the border states.Footnote 151

In Scandinavian enclaves across the Midwest, the Civil War simultaneously forced Norwegians, Swedes, and Danes to articulate in even clearer terms their understanding of American citizenship. Accordingly, Scandinavian immigrants’ notions of liberty and equality in relation to upward social mobility, their notions of political competition with Irish and German immigrants, and at the highest possible level their notion of universal values in relation to the the Declaration of Independence’s egalitarian ideal were put to the test when civil war broke out on April 12, 1861.Footnote 152

Footnotes

1 1848

1 Robert E. May, Slavery, Race, and Conquest in the Tropics (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013), 61.

2 Rebecca Hartkopf Schloss, Sweet Liberty: The Final Days of Slavery in Martinique (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009), 152165. While British anti-slavery debates led to the British Emancipation Act of 1833 (coincidentally the same year the American Anti-Slavery Society was formed), slaveholders in the French and Danish West Indies successfully stalled similar measures through their continued influence on Old World politics. When Danish King Christian VIII, on July 28, 1847, finally decided to abolish slavery, it was with the provision that emancipation would only come to fruition after a twelve-year transition period for enslaved people born before the edict took effect. See Niklas Thode Jensen, Gunvor Simonsen, and Poul Erik Olsen, “Reform Eller Revolution 1803–48 [Reform or Revolution 1803–48],” in Vestindien: St. Croix, St. Thomas Og St. Jan, ed. Poul Erik Olsen (Copenhagen: Gads Forlag, 2017), 270279. See also Stephen Kantrowitz, More Than Freedom: Fighting for Black Citizenship in a White Republic, 1829–1889 (New York: Penguin Press, 2012), 5458.

3 Schloss, Sweet Liberty: The Final Days of Slavery in Martinique, 227. See also Steven Hahn, A Nation without Borders: The United States and Its World in an Age of Civil Wars, 1830–1910 (New York: Viking, 2016), 14.

4 Schloss, Sweet Liberty: The Final Days of Slavery in Martinique, 227.

5 For a description of the conditions that led to emancipation in the Danish West Indies, see Jensen, Simonsen, and Olsen, “Reform Eller Revolution 1803–48 [Reform or Revolution 1803–48].”

6 Footnote Ibid., 271–281.

7 Vilhelm Birch, “Memorandum,” in Collection 1175. Koloniernes centralbestyrelse kolonialkontoret. 1855–1918 Immigration af arbejdere. Immigration af arbejdere fra Afrika 1855–1859 mm. Box 909 (Copenhagen: Rigsarkivet 1860).

8 Footnote Ibid. See also Sebastian N. Page, Black Resettlement and the American Civil War (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021), 189193.

9 Secretary, “Monday 18 Augt 1862. Meeting at Governmenthouse According to Invitation of His Excellency.” See also Hunter Miller, ed., Treaties and Other International Acts of the United States of America (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1948).

10 May, Slavery, Race, and Conquest in the Tropics, 61. May notes that it was “unsettling to Cuban planters and southern slave owners that a revolutionary régime in France in 1848 ended slavery in all of France’s overseas possessions – including Guadeloupe and Martinique in the West Indies – and that some antislavery northerners vocally supported emancipation in Cuba.”

11 Daniel Walker Howe, What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007), 792794. According to Howe, news of “an uprising in Paris,” one that Americans learned “had broken out – appropriately, they thought – on the twenty-second of February, George Washington’s birthday,” reached New York on March 18, 1848, where it also became clear that the revolution had led to slavery’s abolition in the French West Indies.

12 Quoted in Benjamin Fagan, “The North Star and the Atlantic 1848,” African American Review 47, no. 1 (2014): 56.

13 As Jonathan Sperber has noted, “In the end, the mid-century revolutions were defeated by soldiers loyal to the monarchical authority to the tsar, the Austrian emperor, the king of Prussia, the king of the Two Sicilies, and the soon to be emperor Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte. Ties of religious and dynastic loyalty, of civilian and military authority, and of reliance on the state for prosperity had proven stronger than the divided and mutually quarreling forces of nationalism, social and economic discontent, and of aspiration towards the realization of popular sovereignty and civic freedom.” See Jonathan Sperber, The European Revolutions, 1848–1851 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), 271.

14 Morten Nordhagen Ottosen, “Folkenes Vår: De Europeiske Revolusjonene 1848–1851 [The People’s Spring: The European Revolutions 1848–1851],” in Demokratiet: Historien Og Ideerne, ed. Raino Malnes and Dag Einar Thorsen, pp. 218233 (Oslo: Dreyers Forlag, 2014), 222.

15 Wolfram Siemann, The German Revolution of 1848–49, trans. Christiane Banerji (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1998), 4546.

16 Michael Bregnsbo, “Danmark 1848 – Systemskifte Og Borgerkrig [Denmark 1848 – Political Change and Civil War],” Fortid og Nutid (1998): 255257, 66. As Bregnsbo notes, the succession of Danish monarchs between 1665 and 1834 held absolute legislative, executive, and judicial power. See also Rasmus Glenthøj, 1864: Sønner Af De Slagne [1864: Descendants of the Defeated] (Copenhagen: Gads Forlag, 2014), 176179.

17 Bregnsbo, “Danmark 1848 – Systemskifte Og Borgerkrig [Denmark 1848 – Political Change and Civil War],” 262–268. See also Hans Vammen, “Anmeldelse Af Betænkninger Fra Christian VIII’s Tid Om Styrelsen Af Det Danske Monarki [Review of Deliberations from Christian VIII’s Reign on Ruling the Danish Monarchy],” Historisk Tidsskrift 13, no. 2 (1975): 365366.

18 Ottosen, “Folkenes Vår: De Europeiske Revolusjonene 1848–1851 [The People’s Spring: The European Revolutions 1848–1851],” 230. By 1850, the population in Norway was approximately 1.4 million, in Sweden 3.5 million, and in Denmark 1.4 million. See Åke Holmberg, Skandinavismen i Sverige, Vid 1800-Talets Mitt [Scandinavianism in Sweden, by the Middle of the 1800s] (Göteborg: Elanders, 1946), 46; Torben Grøngaard Jeppesen, Danske i USA 1850–2000. En Demografisk, Social Og Kulturgeografisk Undersøgelse Af De Danske Immigranter Og Deres Efterkommere [Danes in the United States 1850–2000. A Demographic, Social and Cultural Geographic Study of The Danish Immigrants and Their Descendants] (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2005), 67. Marcus Thrane emigrated to the United States in 1863 and became a newspaper editor in Chicago after the American Civil War. See Theodore C. Blegen, Norwegian Migration to America 1825–1860 (Northfield, MN: The Norwegian-American Historical Association, 1931), 323328. Also Jørn Brøndal, Ethnic Leadership and Midwestern Politics: Scandinavian Americans and the Progressive Movement in Wisconsin, 1890–1914 (Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2004), 17, 109111.

19 Bregnsbo, “Danmark 1848 – Systemskifte Og Borgerkrig [Denmark 1848 – Political Change and Civil War],” 262. The spring of 1848 was characterized by unrest within the Danish Kingdom exemplified by strikes among smallholders and agricultural workers, but legislation benefiting the lower strata of Danish society in March 1848 alleviated some of the tension in the Danish-speaking regions.

20 Siemann, The German Revolution of 1848–49, 46.

21 Footnote Ibid., 46–47.

22 Glenthøj, “Pan-Scandinavism and the Threshold Principle?,” in A History of the European Restorations: Governments, States and Monarchy, edited by Michael Broers and Ambrogio Caiani, pp. 245255 (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019), 1011.

23 Siemann, The German Revolution of 1848–49, 60.

24 For Danish nationalists, grassroots political organizing, enthusiasm for military enlistment, and popular songs such as “Dengang jeg drog afsted” (When I Set Out), emphasizing the importance of the king, the Fatherland, the flag (called Dannebrog) and the Danish language, reflected increased national awareness. See Inge Adriansen and Jens Ole Christensen, Første Slesvigske Krig 1848–1851: Forhistorie, Forløb Og Følger [First Schleswig War 1848–1851: Causes, Course, and Consequences] (Sønderborg: Sønderborg Slot, 2015), 25.

25 Glenthøj, “Pan-Scandinavism and the Threshold Principle?,” 10–11. Even with Schleswig and Holstein, Denmark’s territorial size, excluding the colonial “possession” of Greenland, was less than 1 percent of the United States in 1850. See Jeppesen, Danske i USA 1850–2000. En Demografisk, Social Og Kulturgeografisk Undersøgelse Af De Danske Immigranter Og Deres Efterkommere [Danes in the United States 1850–2000: A Demographic, Social and Cultural Geographic Study of The Danish Immigrants and Their Descendants], 67.

26 Rasmus Glenthøj and Morten Nordhagen Ottesen, Union Eller Undergang: Kampen for Et Forenet Skandinavien [Union or Ruin: The Struggle for a United Scandinavia] (Copenhagen: Gads Forlag, 2021), 228230. Among the Norwegian and Swedish volunteers who later served in the Civil War were Ole Balling and Hans Mattson. See O. P. Hansen Balling, Erindringer Fra Et Langt Liv [Memories from a Long Life] (Kristiania: S. & Jul Sørensens Bogtrykkeri, 1905), 2835; see also Mattson, Reminiscences: The Story of an Emigrant (Saint Paul, MN: D. D. Merrill Company, 1891), 1112.

27 Glenthøj, 1864: Sønner Af De Slagne [1864: Descendants of the Defeated], 206–09. See also Adriansen and Christensen, Første Slesvigske Krig 1848–1851: Forhistorie, Forløb Og Følger [First Schleswig War 1848–1851: Causes, Course, and Consequences], 19. See also Sven Dalhoff-Nielsen, Nordiske Frivillige [Nordic Volunteers] (Graasten: Nordisk Institut, 1944), 33. See also “Af Et Brev Fra Frivillig Og Underofficer Hansen Balling [From a Letter by Volunteer and Junior Officer Hansen Balling],” Den Norske Rigstidende, June 14, 1848. The Danish navy, including conscripts, numbered 22,413, and the standing army numbered 24,282 but could be augmented by citizens who were eligible to be called into service as part of the reserve until the age of forty-five. Counting the Swedish contingent held in reserve, the Danish army was augmented by more than 10 percent by troops from Sweden and Norway. See Generalstaben [General Staff], Den Dansk-Tydske Krig i Aarene 1848–1850 [The Danish-German War between 1848 and 1850] (Copenhagen: J. H. Schultz’s Bogtrykkeri, 1867), 4142; Klaus Bjørn, 1848: Borgerkrig Og Revolution [1848: Civil War and Revolution] (Copenhagen: Gyldendal, 1998), 194195.

28 Rasmus Glenthøj, “Adskillelsen: Hvorfor Denmark Og Norge Blev Skilt i 1814 [The Partition: Why Denmark and Norway Were Separated in 1814],” in Mellem Brødre: Dansk-Norsk Samliv i 600 År [Between Brothers: Danish-Norwegian Coexistence over 600 Years], edited by Rasmus Glenthøj, pp. 92107 (Copenhagen: Gads Forlag, 2016), 92.

29 Glenthøj, “Pan-Scandinavism and the Threshold Principle?,” 9–13.

30 Great Britain and Russia, in 1721 and 1773 respectively, had guaranteed the Danish king’s right to Schleswig. For a discussion of the converging British, Russian, and Austrian interests in the peace negotiations that eventually prevented a partition along lines of ethnicity, culture, and language in Schleswig and Holstein, see Bjørn, 1848: Borgerkrig Og Revolution [1848: Civil War and Revolution], 123–134, 95, 249–251.

31 Footnote Ibid., 123–134, 92–94. For a timeline over major events in the First Schleswig War, see Adriansen and Christensen, Første Slesvigske Krig 1848–1851: Forhistorie, Forløb Og Følger [First Schleswig War 1848–1851: Causes, Course, and Consequences], 42–43. German-speaking troops won a battle around the town of Schleswig on April 23 and subsequently were ordered north across the border between Schleswig and the Danish mainland of Jutland. By August 26, 1848, in no small part due to international pressure, Prussia accepted a seven-month ceasefire, buying the Danish government precious time to find an acceptable domestic solution to the crisis so closely tied to events outside the kingdom’s realm. See Glenthøj, 1864: Sønner Af De Slagne [1864: Descendants of the Defeated], 204–209.

32 Andrew Zimmermann, “From the Rhine to the Mississippi,” Journal of the Civil War Era 5, no. 1 (2015): 9. Zimmermann notes about the failed revolution in Baden that “Those who survived the Prussian siege soon joined their comrades in Switzerland, where more than eleven thousand German refugees fled after the revolution.”

33 Thomas P. Christensen, “A German Forty-Eighter in Iowa,” Annals of Iowa 26, no. 4 (1945): 247.

35 Fritz W. Rasmussen, “Den 17. Mandag [November],” in Fritz William Rasmussen Papers. Diaries, 1856–1876. Green Bay Mss 4. Box 8 (Wisconsin Historical Society, 1862).

36 Zimmermann, “From the Rhine to the Mississippi,” 4.

37 Gunlög Fur, “Indians and Immigrants – Entangled Histories,” Journal of American Ethnic History 33, no. 3 (2014): 5576, 61. In her study of Scandinavians’ entangled histories with Native Americans in the Midwest, Fur notes on the importance of land that “concurrent histories begin there, and the significance of land cannot be overstated.”

2 Exodus

1 Rasmus Andersen, Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen – Banebryder for Den Norske Og Danske Kirke i Amerika. Første Skandinavisk Feltpræst. [Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen: Trailblazer for the Norwegian and Danish Church in America. First Scandinavian Chaplain] (Blair, NE: Danish Lutheran Publishing House, 1921), 2730; Anders Bo Rasmussen, I Krig for Lincoln [To War for Lincoln] (Copenhagen: Informations Forlag, 2014), 2529.

2 Andersen, Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen – Banebryder for Den Norske Og Danske Kirke i Amerika. Første Skandinavisk Feltpræst. [Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen: Trailblazer for the Norwegian and Danish Church in America. First Scandinavian Chaplain], 235–236. See also Gunlög Fur, “Indians and Immigrants – Entangled Histories,” Journal of American History 33, no. 3 (2014): 5576, 55.

3 The earliest nineteenth-century example of Scandinavian migration was a group of fifty-two Norwegians who arrived in New York in 1825, emigrating in large part because of religious reasons, but it would be more than a decade before a sizable party left Scandinavia for America again. In the subsequent years, partially spurred by emigration pamphlets, migration to the United States slowly but surely picked up. See Jørn Brøndal, Ethnic Leadership and Midwestern Politics: Scandinavian Americans and the Progressive Movement in Wisconsin, 1890–1914 (Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2004), 1617. Also Andrew Nilsen Rygg, Norwegians in New York 1825–1925 (New York: Norwegian News Company, 1941), 16; see also Rasmussen, I Krig for Lincoln [To War for Lincoln], 25–29.

4 Sven H. Rossel, “The Image of the United States in Danish Literature: A Survey with Scandinavian Perspectives,” in Images of America in Scandinavia, ed. Poul Houe and Sven Hakon Rossel, pp. 123 (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1998), 811, 15. Rossel notes that “the romantic poet Henrik Wergeland, George Washington and Benjamin Franklin were heroes who had perfected the ideal of humanity in the land of liberty,” but by the 1840s he was warning against emigration to the United States. See also Norman L. Willey, “Wergeland and Emigration to America,” Scandinavian Studies and Notes 16, no. 4 (1940): 121127.

5 Rossel, “The Image of the United States in Danish Literature: A Survey with Scandinavian Perspectives,” 3.

6 Theodore C. Blegen, ed., Ole Rynning’s True Account of America (Minneapolis, MN: Norwegian-American Historical Society, 1921), 8182. See also Richard N. Current, The History of Wisconsin. Volume II. The Civil War Era, 1848–1873 (Madison: State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1976), 54.

7 Blegen, Ole Rynning’s True Account of America, 16.

8 Footnote Ibid., 9–15.

9 Quoted in Footnote ibid., 17.

10 Footnote Ibid., 15–17.

11 Andersen, Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen – Banebryder for Den Norske Og Danske Kirke i Amerika. Første Skandinavisk Feltpræst [Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen: Trailblazer for the Norwegian and Danish Church in America. First Scandinavian Chaplain], 13–16.

12 Clarence A. Clausen and Andreas Elviken, eds., The Chronicle of Old Muskego: The Diary of Søren Bache, 1839–1847 (Northfield, MN: Norwegian-American Historical Association, 1951), 91.

13 Blegen, Ole Rynning’s True Account of America, 40–46.

14 Torben Grøngaard Jeppesen, Danske i USA 1850–2000. En Demografisk, Social Og Kulturgeografisk Undersøgelse Af De Danske Immigranter Og Deres Efterkommere [Danes in the United States 1850–2000. A Demographic, Social and Cultural Geographic Study of The Danish Immigrants and Their Descendants] (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2005), 2930.

15 See, for example, Andreas Frederiksen, “Wilmington Ill, Den 28 Juli 1850,” in Afskrift af 22 breve til Frederik Nielsen, Herlev DK fra A.F.Wilmington Ill. og West Denmark og Neenah Wisc. (1847–1872) (Det Danske Udvandrerarkiv, 1850). See also Johannes Romwall, “Håkabo Okt. 16 1863,” in Sven August Johnson Papers, 1831–1921. SSIRC Mss P:9 (Augustana College, 1863). For a description of social conditions in Denmark in the 1840s, see Asger Th. Simonsen, Husmandskår Og Husmandspolitik i 1840erne [Smallholder Conditions and Smallholder Politics in the 1840s] (Copenhagen: Landbohistorisk Selskab, 1977), 1619.

16 Clausen and Elviken, The Chronicle of Old Muskego: The Diary of Søren Bache, 1839–1847, 91.

17 Blegen, Ole Rynning’s True Account of America, 16.

18 On Claus Clausen’s deep knowledge of Grundtvig’s abolitionist writings, see Andersen, Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen – Banebryder for Den Norske Og Danske Kirke i Amerika. Første Skandinavisk Feltpræst [Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen: Trailblazer for the Norwegian and Danish Church in America. First Scandinavian Chaplain], 61.

19 For a discussion of Grundtvig’s perspective on Christianity and the Danish state church, see Julie Allen, Danish, but Not Lutheran: The Impact of Mormonism on Danish Cultural Identity, 1850–1920 (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 2017), 9699.

20 Eugene F. Fevold, “The Norwegian Immigrant and His Church,” Norwegian-American Studies 23 (1967): 316.

21 Andersen, Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen – Banebryder for Den Norske Og Danske Kirke i Amerika. Første Skandinavisk Feltpræst [Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen: Trailblazer for the Norwegian and Danish Church in America. First Scandinavian Chaplain], 13–16. See also Blegen, Ole Rynning’s True Account of America, 86. Rynning wrote about the multitude of religious strands in the United States: “Catholics, Protestants, Lutherans, Calvinists, Presbyterians, Baptists, Quakers, Methodists, and many others.” And while there were also “various sects among the Norwegians,” he wrote, they did not “yet have ministers and churches.”

22 Clausen and Elviken, The Chronicle of Old Muskego: The Diary of Søren Bache, 1839–1847, 88–90.

23 Claus L. Clausen, “Dagbog [Diary],” in Clausen, Claus L. (1820–1892). P59 (Northfield, MN: Norwegian-American Historical Association, 1843). See also Andersen, Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen – Banebryder for Den Norske Og Danske Kirke i Amerika. Første Skandinavisk Feltpræst [Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen: Trailblazer for the Norwegian and Danish Church in America. First Scandinavian Chaplain], 39.

24 K. E. Bugge, “Grundtvig and the Abolition of Slavery,” Grundtvig-Studier 56, no. 1 (2005): 171172.

25 Footnote Ibid., 161–163.

27 For American examples of the same sense of racial superiority within the abolitionist movement, see Stephen Kantrowitz, More Than Freedom: Fighting for Black Citizenship in a White Republic, 1829–1889 (New York: Penguin Press, 2012), 5864.

28 Quoted in Bugge, “Grundtvig and the Abolition of Slavery,” 165.

29 A decade later, American congressman Thaddeus Stevens mirrored David’s viewpoint when he noted that “slavery always degrades labor.” Quoted in Keri Leigh Merritt, Masterless Men: Poor Whites and Slavery in the Antebellum South (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), 110.

30 Christian N. David, “Om Slavehandel [On the Slave Trade],” Fædrelandet, September 28, 1839. Given the fact that the Danish monarch had imposed strict censorship on the press to eliminate revolutionary ideas from the public sphere, it was noteworthy that David’s anti-slavery notions appeared in print without censure. The explanation, as Knud Bugge has suggested, may have been Grundtvig and Raffard’s close ties to Princess Caroline Amalie (Grundtvig sermonized at the court, and Raffard helped the princess distribute food and supplies to the needy). K. E. Bugge, Grundtvig Og Slavesagen [Grundtvig and the Slavery Cause] (Aarhus: Aarhus Universitetsforlag, 2003), 3971, 202. See also Bugge, “Grundtvig and the Abolition of Slavery,” 161–164.

31 David, “Om Slavehandel [On the Slave Trade].” See also Pernille Ipsen and Gunlög Fur, “Scandinavian Colonialism: Introduction,” Itenerario 33, no. 2 (2009): 716, 11. For example, in 1828, the famous Danish poet Adam Oehlenschläger in a tribute to the royal family wrongfully claimed that Denmark had been the first country in the world to abolish slavery; see Bugge, Grundtvig Og Slavesagen [Grundtvig and the Slavery Cause], 33–34.

32 Pernille Ipsen, Daughters of the Trade: Atlantic Slavers and Interracial Marriage on the Gold Coast (University of Pennsylvania Press: Philadelphia, 2015), 155.

35 Quoted in Peter Kolchin, “Whiteness Studies: The New History of Race in America,” Journal of American History 89, no. 1 (2002): 154173, 158. For examples of “romantic” and “scientific” hierarchies based on whiteness, see also Jørn Brøndal, “‘The Fairest among the So-Called White Races’: Portrayals of Scandinavian Americans in the Filiopietistic and Nativist Literature of the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries,” Journal of American Ethnic History 33, no. 3 (2014): 69.

36 Quoted in Ibram X. Kendi, Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America (New York: Nation Books, 2016), 82. For a discussion emphasizing the nuances of Linneaus’ work on race, see Stefan Müller-Wille, “Race and History: Comments from an Epistemological Point of View,” Science, Technology, & Human Values 39, no. 4 (2014): 600602.

37 Quoted in Kendi, Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America, 82. See also Erika K. Jackson, Scandinavians in Chicago: The Origins of White Privilege in Moderne America (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2019), 6061.

38 Pehr Kalm, En Resa Til Norra America [Travels to North America] (Stockholm: Lars Salvii, 1756), 476485. See also Frank Shuffelton, “Circumstantial Accounts, Dangerous Art: Recognizing African-American Culture Intravelers’ Narratives,” Eighteenth-Century Studies 27, no. 4 (1994): 591594.

39 Ale Pålsson, Our Side of the Water: Political Culture in the Swedish Colony of St Barthélemy 1800–1825 (Stockholm: Stockholm University, Faculty of Humanities, Department of History, 2016), 2728, http://su.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?pid=diva2%3A967510&dswid=-7542. For a discussion of “romantic” and “scientific” racism in the 1800s, see Brøndal, “‘The Fairest among the So-Called White Races’: Portrayals of Scandinavian Americans in the Filiopietistic and Nativist Literature of the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries.” See also O. E. Bergius, Om Westindien [About The West Indies] (Stockholm: A. Gadelius, 1819), 3031.

40 On the cephalic index, see Alan Mann, “The Origins of American Physical Anthropology in Philadelphia,” Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 52 (2009): 160. See also David Howes, ed., The Sixth Sense Reader (New York: Berg, 2009), 10. See also Olaf Breidbach and Michael T. Ghiselin, “Lorenz Oken and ‘Naturphilosophie’ in Jena, Paris and London,” History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 27, no. 2 (2002): 227. See also David Howes, “The Expanding Field of Sensory Studies,” www.sensorystudies.org/sensorial-investigations/the-expanding-field-of-sensory-studies/. As David Howes has noted, “Oken’s ascending scale of ‘sensory perfection’ in ‘Man’ (with the European eye-man at the apex) was not based on any intrinsic propensities of the peoples concerned, but rather dependent on the typologies of the Western social imaginary.” On the connection between Retzius and Oken, I am grateful to Anne Miche de Malleray of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences for providing this information in an e-mail dated November 29, 2018.

41 Mann, “The Origins of American Physical Anthropology in Philadelphia,” 160–161.

43 Footnote Ibid. See also Steven Hahn, A Nation without Borders: The United States and Its World in an Age of Civil Wars, 1830–1910 (New York: Viking, 2016), 67. According to Hahn, defenders of slavery in the United States “eagerly embraced the racialist thought that had penetrated more and more of the Atlantic world since the last third of the eighteenth century.” Additionally, as Alan Levine has noted, Samuel Morton’s influence and arguments were “amplified” by immigrant scholars such as English-born George R. Gliddon and Swiss-born Jean Louis Rodolphe Agassiz. See Alan Levine, “Scientific Racism in Antebellum America,” in The Political Thought of the Civil War, ed. Alan Levine, Thomas W. Merrill, and James R. Stoner Jr. (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2018), 98.

44 Fredrika Bremer, The Homes of the New World: Impressions of America (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1853), 20.

45 Footnote Ibid., 20, 351. In a previous paragraph, Bremer prefaced her assessment of Black people’s intellectual capacity by expressing support for colonization: “much is done in Georgia for the instruction of the negro slaves in Christianity for their emancipation, and their colonization at Liberia, on the coast of Africa.” See also Rossel, “The Image of the United States in Danish Literature: A Survey with Scandinavian Perspectives,” 10. Also Jørn Brøndal, “An Early American Dilemma? Scandinavian Travel Writers’ Reflections on the Founding Ideals of the United States and the Condition of African Americans, Ca. 1850–1900,” in Les Constitutions: Des Révolutions À L’épreuve Du Temps Aux Etats-Unis Et En Europe [Constitutions: On-Going Revolutions in Europe and the United States], ed. Marie-Elisabeth Baudoin and Marie Bolton (Paris, 2016), 143144, 55.

46 Pernille Ipsen, “‘Plant Ikke Upas-Træet Om Vor Bolig’: Colonial Haunting, Race, and Interracial Marriage in Hans Christian Andersen’s Mulatten (1840),” Scandinavian Studies 88, no. 2 (2016): 130132. See also Ipsen, Daughters of the Trade: Atlantic Slavers and Interracial Marriage on the Gold Coast, 99–104.

47 H. C. Andersen, Mulatten [The Mulatto] (Copenhagen: Bianco Luno’s Bogtrykkeri, 1840), 29.

48 Ipsen, “‘Plant Ikke Upas-Træet Om Vor Bolig’: Colonial Haunting, Race, and Interracial Marriage in Hans Christian Andersen’s Mulatten (1840).”

49 Andersen, Mulatten [The Mulatto], 29.

50 Even while working at the forefront of the small Danish abolitionist movement and trying to refute charges of slaves being “rude,” “immoral,” and “devoid of all religion,” in an address read by Professor C. N. David to Danish politicians in 1844 the anti-slavery activists seemed to acknowledge the existence of a racial hierarchy. On behalf of the Danish anti-slavery committee, David did allow that the present generation of slaves may well be “as rude and morally corrupt” as they were represented to be, but he blamed the slaveowners for this condition before calling for immediate abolition (yet steeping the call in paternalist discourse): “It is obvious that freedom, to a certain extent at least, must be given before it can be enjoyed. A child will not learn to walk by being continually held in leading strings.” See C. N. David et al., “Denmark – Proceedings in the States,” British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Reporter, January 8, 1845. Also Ipsen, Daughters of the Trade: Atlantic Slavers and Interracial Marriage on the Gold Coast, 175.

51 Andersen, Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen – Banebryder for Den Norske Og Danske Kirke i Amerika. Første Skandinavisk Feltpræst. [Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen: Trailblazer for the Norwegian and Danish Church in America. First Scandinavian Chaplain], 40–41, 61. Clausen wrote, “That he is called the North’s spiritual high priest is rather high [praise] but not [a] wholly incorrect designation.” See also Johannes W. C. Dietrichson, Pastor J. W. C. Dietrichsons Reise Blandt De Norske Emigranter i “De Forenede Nordamerikanske Fristater.” Paany Udgiven Af Rasmus B. Anderson (Madison: Amerika’s Bogtrykkeri, 1896), 27.

52 Jette Holm and Elisabeth A. Glenthøj, eds., Grundtvig: Prædikener i Vartov, 1842–43 [Grundtvig: Sermons in Vartov, 1842–43], vol. 5 (Copenhagen: Forlaget Vartov, 2007), 170178. See also Sebastian N. Page, Black Resettlement and the American Civil War (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021), 3.

3 Old and New World Liberty

1 Clarence A. Clausen and Andreas Elviken, eds., The Chronicle of Old Muskego: The Diary of Søren Bache, 1839–1847 (Northfield, MN: Norwegian-American Historical Association, 1951), 141. The epidemic may well have been cholera, as Rasmus B. Anderson describes recurring outbreaks in the late 1840s and early 1850s; see Rasmus B. Anderson, The First Chapter of Norwegian Migration, Its Causes and Results, second ed. (Madison: Published by the author, 1896), 274.

2 Albert O. Barton, “The Most Historic Norwegian Colony,” Wisconsin Magazine of History 21, no. 2 (1937): 134. See also Enok Mortensen, The Danish Lutheran Church in America (Philadelphia, PA: Board of Publication, Lutheran Church in America, 1967), 30. Also Johannes W. C. Dietrichson, Pastor J. W. C. Dietrichsons Reise Blandt De Norske Emigranter i “De Forenede Nordamerikanske Fristater.” Paany Udgiven Af Rasmus B. Anderson [Pastor J. W. C. Dietrichson’s Travels among the Norwegian Emigrants in “the United North American States.” Reprinted by Rasmus B. Anderson] (Madison, WI: Amerika’s Bogtrykkeri, 1896).

3 Setlementet Muskigo, “Beretning Fra Nordamerika [Account from North America],” Morgenbladet, April 1,1845.

6 Torben Grøngaard Jeppesen, Danske i USA 1850–2000. En Demografisk, Social Og Kulturgeografisk Undersøgelse Af De Danske Immigranter Og Deres Efterkommere [Danes in the United States 1850–2000. A Demographic, Social and Cultural Geographic Study of the Danish Immigrants and Their Descendants] (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2005), 2830. Even by the 1860s and 1870s, as Jørn Brøndal has noted, “only an estimated 52.4 percent of Danish males above the age of twenty could vote in parliamentary elections, and then only for the lower house, Folketinget, along with just 38.1 percent of their Norwegian, and, after the introduction of the bicameral Riksdag in 1866, a bare 20.4 percent of their Swedish brethren. Women, of course, were denied suffrage.” See Jørn Brøndal, Ethnic Leadership and Midwestern Politics: Scandinavian Americans and the Progressive Movement in Wisconsin, 1890–1914 (Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2004), 32.

7 Brøndal, Ethnic Leadership and Midwestern Politics: Scandinavian Americans and the Progressive Movement in Wisconsin, 1890–1914, 18. In his study of Danish emigration after 1868, Kristian Hvidt also points to the primacy of economic explanations, while acknowledging political and religious grievances as secondary factors; see Kristian Hvidt, Flugten Til Amerika, Eller Drivkræfter i Masseudvandringen Fra Danmark 1868–1914 [Flight to America or Driving Forces in the Mass Emigration from Denmark 1868–1914] (Aarhus: Universitetsforlaget i Aarhus, 1971), 263264.

8 Theodore C. Blegen, Ole Rynning’s True Account of America (Minneapolis, MN: Norwegian-American Historical Society, 1921), 87. Blegen’s translation.

9 Footnote Ibid., 48. Blegen’s translation.

10 Footnote Ibid. Blegen’s translation.

11 Footnote Ibid., 25, 61. Blegen’s translation.

12 Footnote Ibid., 47–50, 88. “The slave trade is still permitted in Missouri; but it is strictly forbidden and despised in Indiana, Illinois, and Wisconsin Territory.” Blegen’s translation.

13 Olaf Yderstad, “Et Amerikabrev Fra 1863,” Årsskrift for Nordmøre historielag (1931): 30.

14 Keri Leigh Merritt, Masterless Men: Poor Whites and Slavery in the Antebellum South (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), 73.

16 Blegen, Ole Rynning’s True Account of America, 56–57. After Ole Rynning’s death, a slightly revised 1839 version of his book appeared. In this edition, based on recommendations from the early Norwegian immigrant Kleng Peerson, Norwegian immigrants were introduced to the slave state Missouri as a fruitful future home.

17 A letter by Reiersen dated March 19, 1844, published in Christianssandsposten and Morgenbladet back in Norway in July 1844, did not mention human bondage in a single word. Johan Reymert Reiersen, “Cincinnatti, Ohio Den 19de Marts 1844,” in J. R. Reierson Papers. P0325 (Northfield, MN: Norwegian-American Historical Association, 1844).

18 Reierson, Veiviser for Norske Emigranter Til De Forenede Nordamerikanske Stater Og Texas [Guide for Norwegian Emigrants to the North American States and Texas] (Christiania: G. Reiersens Forlag, 1844), 135. As Stephen Kantrowitz has shown, such arguments were also part of the American political mainstream after the Civil War. See Kantrowitz, “White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and the Two Citizenships of the Fourteenth Amendment,” 44.

19 Reiersen, Veiviser for Norske Emigranter Til De Forenede Nordamerikanske Stater Og Texas [Guide for Norwegian Emigrants to the North American States and Texas], 134, 49. On American people, Reiersen argued that they recognized “no moral right for any class of individuals to monopolize the soil” and “halt the progress of industry, civilization, and Christianity.”

20 Jon Gjerde, “‘Here in America There Is Neither King nor Tyrant’: European Encounters with Race, ‘Freedom,’ and Their European Pasts,” Journal of the Early Republic 19, no. 4 (1999): 673690.

21 Reiersen, Veiviser for Norske Emigranter Til De Forenede Nordamerikanske Stater Og Texas [Guide for Norwegian Emigrants to the North American States and Texas], 125. Also William Notz, “Frederick List in America,” American Economic Review 16, no. 2 (1926): 265.

22 When the 1850 census was taken, 44,352 German-born immigrants lived in Missouri; see Jeppesen, Danske i USA 1850–2000. En Demografisk, Social Og Kulturgeografisk Undersøgelse Af De Danske Immigranter Og Deres Efterkommere [Danes in the United States 1850–2000. A Demographic, Social and Cultural Geographic Study of the Danish Immigrants and Their Descendants], 86. For southern Democrats’ support for the annexation of Texas, see Kevin Waite, “Jefferson Davis and Proslavery Visions of Empire in the Far West,” Journal of the Civil War Era 6, no. 4 (2016): 545.

23 Barton, “The Most Historic Norwegian Colony,” 131–134. According to Barton, Muskego served as a “gateway through which hundreds of immigrants passed in their westward quest for homes.”

24 Mortensen, The Danish Lutheran Church in America, 31.

25 Rasmus Andersen, Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen – Banebryder for Den Norske Og Danske Kirke i Amerika. Første Skandinavisk Feltpræst. [Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen: Trailblazer for the Norwegian and Danish Church in America. First Scandinavian Chaplain] (Blair, NE: Danish Lutheran Publishing House, 1921), 9394.

26 Footnote Ibid., 94–100. See also Mathilde Rasmussen, Martha Rasmussen (Little Library of Lutheran Biography, 1945), 22.

27 Jeppesen, Danske i USA 1850–2000. En Demografisk, Social Og Kulturgeografisk Undersøgelse Af De Danske Immigranter Og Deres Efterkommere [Danes in the United States 1850–2000. A Demographic, Social and Cultural Geographic Study of The Danish Immigrants and Their Descendants], 230. See also Peter Sørensen Vig, Danske i Amerika [Danes in America], 2 vols., vol. 1 (Minneapolis, MN: C. Rasmussen Company, 1907), 259. As the chain migration initiated from Martha’s place of birth to Wisconsin after her death demonstrates, Clausen’s letters “were eagerly read” back home.

28 C. L. Clausen, “Luther Valley, Rock County, Beloet-Post-Office, Wisconsin Territory, North-Amerika, Den 6. Septbr. 1847,” Fyns Stifts, November 26 (Friday morning), 1847. Martha Clausen’s brother, Peder Rasmussen, wrote to Claus Clausen on June 30, 1847, with nine specific questions (the first about the quality of land) and received an answer on September 6 which was then published in November.

29 William J. Orr, “Rasmus Sørensen and the Beginning of Danish Settlement in Wisconsin,” Wisconsin Magazine of History 65, no. 3 (1982): 200.

30 L. J. Fribert, Haandbog for Emigranter Til Amerikas Vest [Handbook for Emigrants to America’s West] (Christiania [Oslo]: Forlaget af Johan Dahl, 1847), 9596; Pia Viscor, “Danish Immigration to Racine County, Wisconsin: A Case Study of the Pull Effect in Nineteenth-Century Migration,” The Bridge 31, no. 2 (2008): 13.

31 Fribert, Haandbog for Emigranter Til Amerikas Vest [Handbook for Emigrants to America’s West], 196.

32 Rasmus Sørensen, Om De Udvandrede Nordmaends Tilstand i Nordamerika: Og Hvorfor Det Vilde Vaere Gavnligt, Om Endeel Danske Bønder Og Handvaerker Udvandrede Ligeledes, Og Bosatte Sig Sammesteds [On the Condition of Emigrated Norwegians in North America: And Why it Would be Beneficial if Some Danish Peasants and Artisans Emigrated and Settled There as Well] (Copenhagen: Niskenske Bogtrykkeri, 1847), 4.

33 Morten Nordhagen Ottosen, “Folkenes Vår: De Europeiske Revolusjonene 1848–1851 [The People’s Spring: The European Revolutions 1848–1851],” in Demokratiet: Historien Og Ideerne, edited by Raino Malnes and Dag Einar Thorsen (Oslo: Dreyers Forlag, 2014), 222; Sørensen, Om De Udvandrede Nordmaends Tilstand i Nordamerika: Og Hvorfor Det Vilde Vaere Gavnligt, Om Endeel Danske Bønder Og Handvaerker Udvandrede Ligeledes, Og Bosatte Sig Sammesteds, 3.

34 Sørensen, Om De Udvandrede Nordmaends Tilstand i Nordamerika: Og Hvorfor Det Vilde Vaere Gavnligt, Om Endeel Danske Bønder Og Handvaerker Udvandrede Ligeledes, Og Bosatte Sig Sammesteds, 3.

35 Footnote Ibid., 1–3.

37 Viscor, “Danish Immigration to Racine County, Wisconsin: A Case Study of the Pull Effect in Nineteenth-Century Migration,” 12–14.

38 “Mr. Editor,” Martha’s brother wrote to the local newspaper after having heard from his brother-in-law, “In the year 1843, Mr. C. L. Clausen travelled … to North America and settled in the territory of Wisconsin among Norwegian emigrants, where he [Clausen], who had received seminary training, was hired as pastor and teacher for several parishes. Through his continual travels in the district he has gained a quite exact knowledge of the countryside’s character and the people’s condition.” See C. L. Clausen, “Luther Valley, Rock County, Beloet-Post-Office, Wisconsin Territory, North-Amerika, Den 6. Septbr. 1847,” Fyns Stifts, November 26 (Friday morning), 1847.

39 Footnote Ibid. See also Orr, “Rasmus Sørensen and the Beginning of Danish Settlement in Wisconsin,” 201.

40 Clausen, “Luther Valley, Rock County, Beloet-Post-Office, Wisconsin Territory, North-Amerika, Den 6. Septbr. 1847.” See also Orr, “Rasmus Sørensen and the Beginning of Danish Settlement in Wisconsin,” 201.

41 Clausen, “Luther Valley, Rock County, Beloet-Post-Office, Wisconsin Territory, North-Amerika, Den 6. Septbr. 1847.”

43 C. L. Clausen, “Slutningen Af Brevet Fra Nordamerika; See Morgenavisen! [The Conclusion of the Letter from North America; See the Morning Edition!],” Fyens Stifts, November 26 (Friday evening), 1847.

45 Clausen, “Luther Valley, Rock County, Beloet-Post-Office, Wisconsin Territory, North-Amerika, Den 6. Septbr. 1847.”

46 P. C. Lütken, “Noticer Vedkommende Agerdyrkningsvæsenet Og Landboforholdene i Territoriet Wiscounsin i Nord-Amerika [Notices Regarding Agriculture and Farming in the Wisconsin Territory in North America],” Tidsskrift for Landoekonomie 9 (1848): 427.

47 Fribert, Haandbog for Emigranter Til Amerikas Vest [Handbook for Emigrants to America’s West], 10. Fribert warned against settling in the South, where a prospective immigrant – on top of difficulties in the labor market – might encounter a climate “way too hot for a Scandinavian,” as well as yellow fever, poisonous snakes, and alligators. On Southern fear of immigrant influence, see Merritt, Masterless Men: Poor Whites and Slavery in the Antebellum South, 73–75, 191.

48 Theodore C. Blegen, “Cleng Peerson and Norwegian Immigration,” Mississippi Valley Historical Review 7, no. 4 (1921): 321. According to Blegen, most Norwegian immigrants who were attracted to Missouri by Peerson soon after moved to Iowa, where 611 Scandianian-born immigrants lived by 1850. See also Jeppesen, Danske i USA 1850–2000. En Demografisk, Social Og Kulturgeografisk Undersøgelse Af De Danske Immigranter Og Deres Efterkommere [Danes in the United States 1850–2000. A Demographic, Social and Cultural Geographic Study of the Danish Immigrants and Their Descendants], 86.

49 Fribert, Haandbog for Emigranter Til Amerikas Vest [Handbook for Emigrants to America’s West], 13. “Where men of the three Scandinavian nations come together, they always regard each other as countrymen and help each other as brothers and the harmony and good faith that is not being worked on between the three kingdoms has already been realized in America that also in this respect is hastening ahead of Europe.” See also Jeppesen, Danske i USA 1850–2000. En Demografisk, Social Og Kulturgeografisk Undersøgelse Af De Danske Immigranter Og Deres Efterkommere [Danes in the United States 1850–2000. A Demographic, Social and Cultural Geographic Study of the Danish Immigrants and Their Descendants], 130.

50 Dietrichson, Pastor J. W. C. Dietrichsons Reise Blandt De Norske Emigranter i “De Forenede Nordamerikanske Fristater.” Paany Udgiven Af Rasmus B. Anderson, 25.

51 Barton, “The Most Historic Norwegian Colony,” 134–135. The printing shop for Nordlyset was located on Even Heg’s farm in Muskego and thus underscored the community’s importance in defining early Scandinavian notions of American citizenship.

52 “Til Vore Landsmænd [To Our Countrymen],” Nordlyset, July 29, 1847. See also “Den Enstemmige Erklæring Af De Tretten Forenede Stater Af America [The Unanimous Declaration of the Thirteen United States of America],” Nordlyset, July 29, 1847.

53 Gjerde, “‘Here in America There Is Neither King nor Tyrant’: European Encounters with Race, ‘Freedom,’ and Their European Pasts,” 682. As Jon Gjerde has noted, “Americans in the mid-nineteenth century celebrated the many ways in which their Republic improved upon the tired systems of the old European States. As they invented an American nationality that allegedly reflected these advancements, they stressed the conviction that their nation was structured according to abstract notions of freedom, equality, and self-government.” See The Minds of the West: Ethnocultural Evolution in the Rural Middle West 1830–1917, 54–55. See also Linda K. Kerber, “The Meanings of Citizenship,” Journal of American History 84, no. 3 (1997): 841. See also Blegen, Ole Rynning’s True Account of America, 87.

54 Wisconsin Constitutional Convention, Constitution of the State of Wisconsin (Madison: Beriah Brown, 1848), online facsimile at www.wisconsinhistory.org/turningpoints/search.asp?id=1627.

55 Barton, “The Most Historic Norwegian Colony,” 129. See also Torben Grøngaard Jeppesen, Dannebrog På Den Amerikanske Prærie [Dannebrog on the American Prairie] (Odense: Odense University Press, 2000), 41. Lastly, see Fritz W. Rasmussen, “History of the Town of New Denmark, Brown County, Wisconsin! Both Politically and Privately,” in Fritz William Rasmussen Papers. Correspondence, 1834–1942. Green Bay Mss 4. Box no. 1 (Wisconsin Historical Society, 1876).

56 Gjerde, “‘Here in America There Is Neither King nor Tyrant’: European Encounters with Race, ‘Freedom,’ and Their European Pasts,” 674. Gjerde rightly points out that “there are shadings of freedom and unfreedom, white and nonwhite that clearly complicate the story,” but Scandinavian-born immigrants generally expressed a sense of freedom soon after arrival.

57 Quoted in Arlow William Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872 (Northfield, MN: Norwegian-American Historical Association, 1953), 34.

58 Quoted in Footnote ibid.

59 Frymer, Building an American Empire: The Era of Territorial and Political Expansion, 210–212. See also Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872, 39.

60 Stephen Kantrowitz, “‘Not Quite Constitutionalized’: The Meaning of ‘Civilization’ and the Limits of Native American Citizenship,” in The World the Civil War Made, ed. Gregory P. Downs and Kate Masur (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2015), 7778.

61 See Gjerde, “‘Here in America There Is Neither King nor Tyrant’: European Encounters with Race, ‘Freedom,’ and Their European Pasts,” 690.

62 Andreas Frederiksen, “Milvaukii Wisconsin Den 24de November 1849,” in Afskrift af 22 breve til Frederik Nielsen, Herlev DK fra A.F.Wilmington Ill. og West Denmark og Neenah Wisc. (1847–1872) (Aalborg: Det Danske Udvandrerarkiv, 1849). Also “Wilmington Ill, Den 28 Juli 1850.”

63 “Milvaukii Wisconsin Den 24de November 1849.”

64 Footnote Ibid. See also Red., “Et Par Ord Om De Norskes Representation i Legislaturen [A Few Words on the the Norwegians’ Representation in the Legislature],” Emigranten, October 15, 1852. See also Howe, What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007), 809810. As Howe notes, “counting Texas, Oregon, California, and New Mexico, James K. Polk extended the domain of the United States more than any other president even Thomas Jefferson or Andrew Johnson (who acquired Alaska),” but in the process also brought land into the United States that had previously belonged to Mexican subjects or indigenous nations. “The state of California placed heavy burdens of legal proof on the owners of Mexican land grants to validate their titles, in violation of the spirit if not the letter of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo … California did not recognize Mexican Americans as citizens until a decision by the state supreme court in 1870.”

65 Fur, “Indians and Immigrants – Entangled Histories,” 59–60.

66 Gunnar Malmin, ed., America in the Forties: The Letters of Ole Munch Ræder (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1929), 133.

67 Footnote Ibid. See also Betty Bergland, “Norwegian Immigrants and ‘Indianerne’ in the Landtaking, 1838–1862,” Norwegian-American Studies 35 (2000): 331333.

68 Malmin, America in the Forties: The Letters of Ole Munch Ræder, 142.

69 Footnote Ibid., 143–145.

70 Muskigo, “Beretning Fra Nordamerika [Account from North America].” See also Malmin, America in the Forties: The Letters of Ole Munch Ræder, 146–147.

71 America in the Forties: The Letters of Ole Munch Ræder, 146–147.

72 Hans Mattson, Reminiscences: The Story of an Emigrant (Saint Paul, MN: D. D. Merrill Company, 1891), 43.

73 Gustaf Unonius, Minnen Från En Sjuttonårig Vistelse i Nordvestra Amerika I-II [Memories from a Seventeen-Year-Long Stay in the American Northwest I–II] (Uppsala, 1862), 188.

74 Reiersen, Veiviser for Norske Emigranter Til De Forenede Nordamerikanske Stater Og Texas [Guide for Norwegian Emigrants to the North American States and Texas], 135. Also Lisi Krall, “Thomas Jefferson’s Agrarian Vision and the Changing Nature of Property,” Journal of Economic Issues 36, no. 1 (2002): 131132. See also Henry Nash Smith, Virgin Land: The American West as Symbol and Myth, first Vintage ed. (New York: Vintage Books, 1957), 144145. Smith notes that Jefferson “saw the cultivator of the earth, the husbandman who tilled his own acres, as the rock upon which the American republic must stand.”

75 Sörensen’s writings also inspired emigrants in the northern part of Denmark. See, for example, Celius Christiansen, En Pioneers Historie (Erindringer Fra Krigen Mellem Nord- Og Sydstaterne) [A Pioneer’s Story: Memoirs from the War between North and South] (Aalborg: Eget forlag, 1909), 5. Christiansen, along with two brothers, emigrated to America in 1853 and cited Rasmus Sörensen’s writings as the direct cause due its portrayal of brighter prospects across the Atlantic.

76 The way some of the first settlers in Wisconsin from Langeland, the island where Claus Clausen’s wife was born, remembered it, Rasmus Sörensen had indeed served as one of the key inspirational sources for emigration. Fritz W. Rasmussen, “New Denmark, Brown Co. Wis. January 3rd, 1900,” in Fritz William Rasmussen Papers, 1834–1942. Green Bay Mss 4. Box 1 (Green Bay: Wisconsin Historical Society, 1900).

77 Jeppesen, Danske i USA 1850–2000. En Demografisk, Social Og Kulturgeografisk Undersøgelse Af De Danske Immigranter Og Deres Efterkommere [Danes in the United States 1850–2000. A Demographic, Social and Cultural Geographic Study of The Danish Immigrants and Their Descendants], 131.

4 Republican Reign

1 Fritz W. Rasmussen, “Record! Of Skandinavians, Who Have Been Settled and Lived in the Town of New Denmark,” in Fritz William Rasmussen Papers. Diaries, 1857–1876. Green Bay Mss 4. Box 8 (Wisconsin Historical Society, 1880); February 1883. Sunday the 18th. 11 Oclock A.M.,” in Fritz William Rasmussen Papers, 1834–1942. Green Bay Mss 4. Box 2 (Wisconsin Historical Society, 1883).

2 Erik Helmer Pedersen, Drømmen Om America [The Dream of America], Politikens Danmarkshistorie (Copenhagen: Politikens Forlag, 1985), 5659.

3 Rasmussen, “February 1883. Sunday the 18th. 11 Oclock A.M.” For a discussion of reasons for emigration, see, for example, Kristian Hvidt, Flugten Til Amerika, Eller Drivkræfter i Masseudvandringen Fra Danmark 1868–1914 [Flight to America or Driving Forces in the Mass Emigration from Denmark 1868–1914] (Aarhus: Universitetsforlaget i Aarhus, 1971), 263270. Also Jørn Brøndal, Ethnic Leadership and Midwestern Politics: Scandinavian Americans and the Progressive Movement in Wisconsin, 1890–1914 (Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2004), 1617.

4 Asger Th. Simonsen, Husmandskår Og Husmandspolitik i 1840erne [Smallholder Conditions and Smallholder Politics in the 1840s] (Copenhagen: Landbohistorisk Selskab, 1977).

5 Rasmussen, “February 1883. Sunday the 18th. 11 Oclock A.M.”

6 “Record! Of Skandinavians, Who Have Been Settled and Lived in the Town of New Denmark.”

7 William O. Van Eyck, “The Story of the Propeller Phoenix,” Wisconsin Magazine of History 7, no. 3 (1924): 282284; Anders Bo Rasmussen, I Krig for Lincoln [To War for Lincoln] (Copenhagen, Informations Forlag, 2014), 33–34.

8 Rasmussen, “Record! Of Skandinavians, Who Have Been Settled and Lived in the Town of New Denmark,” Memorandum.

9 The same observation was made by John Matteson when he arrived in New Denmark. “[John] Matteson found his soggy berth [in New Denmark] to be ‘much different from the songs of praise we had heard about America in the old country … about her magnificent forests teeming with unsurpassed wildlife, her crystal-clear springs, majestic waterfalls, and so on.’” Quoted in Frederick Hale, “The Americanization of a Danish Immigrant in Wisconsin 1847–1872,” Wisconsin Magazine of History 64, no. 3 (1981): 208.

10 Fritz W. Rasmussen, “FWR Milwaukee,” in Fritz William Rasmussen Papers. Correspondence, 1834–1942. Green Bay Mss 4. Box no. 1 (Green Bay: Wisconsin Historical Society, 1847).

11 “Record! Of Skandinavians, Who Have Been Settled and Lived in the Town of New Denmark.”

12 “FWR Milwaukee.”

13 “New Denmark, Brown Co. Wis. January 3rd, 1900.” See also Peter Sørensen Vig, Danske i Amerika [Danes in America], 2 vols., vol. 1 (Minneapolis, MN: C. Rasmussen Company, 1907), 258262. See as well William J. Orr, “Rasmus Sørensen and the Beginning of Danish Settlement in Wisconsin,” Wisconsin Magazine of History 65, no. 3 (1982): 195210.

14 Fritz W. Rasmussen, “Dagbog of F. W. Rasmussen. New Denmark, Brown Co. State of Wis [June 5],” in Fritz William Rasmussen Papers. Diaries, 1856–1876. Box 8. Green Bay Mss 4 (Green Bay: Wisconsin Historical Society, 1859).

15 “Record! Of Skandinavians, Who Have Been Settled and Lived in the Town of New Denmark.”

17 Footnote Ibid. See also Andrew Zimmermann, “From the Rhine to the Mississippi,” Journal of the Civil War Era 5, no. 1 (2015): 9.

18 Alison Clark Efford, German Immigrants, Race, and Citizenship in the Civil War Era (Washington, DC: Cambridge University Press, 2013), 32.

19 Fritz W. Rasmussen, “Den 31. Søndag. Paaske [The 31st Sunday. Easter],” in Fritz Wiliam Rasmussen Papers. Diaries, 1861, June–1883, June. Box No. 2. Green Bay Mss 4 (Green Bay: Wisconsin Historical Society, 1861).

20 Quoted in Werner Sollors, “How Americans Became White: Three Examples,” in Multiamerica: Essays on Cultural Wars and Cultural Peace, ed. Ishmael Reed (New York:Penguin Books, 1998), 4.

21 Gjerde, “‘Here in America There Is Neither King nor Tyrant’: European Encounters with Race, ‘Freedom,’ and Their European Pasts,” Journal of the Early Republic 19, no. 4 (1999): 387.

22 Eric Foner, Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), 810, 8387.

23 Arlow William Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872 (Northfield, MN: Norwegian-American Historical Association, 1953), 60; Theodore C. Blegen, “Colonel Hans Christian Heg,” Wisconsin Magazine of History 4, no. 2 (1920): 144.

24 Henry Nash Smith, Virgin Land: The American West as Symbol and Myth, First Vintage ed. (New York: Vintage Books, 1957), 193.

25 Natalie Joy, “The Indian’s Cause: Abolitionists and Native American Rights,” Journal of the Civil War Era 8, no. 2 (2018): 233. For example, abolitionists involved in the anti-slavery Liberty Party in 1845 argued that “the forcible relocation of southern Indians could be traced to the Slave Power’s efforts (with northern participation) to obtain fertile land for the expansion of slavery.”

26 Blegen, “Colonel Hans Christian Heg,” 147. Blegen writes, in his somewhat uncritical portrait of the Norwegian immigrant leader, “[In Hans] Heg there is evident a deep faith in American ideals, in democracy, equality, and human freedom. A champion of such principles, Heg was put forward in 1852 as a Free-soil candidate for the state legislature.”

27 Claus L. Clausen, “Et Par Ord Til Læserne [A Few Words to the Readers],” Emigranten, January 30, 1852; Theodore C. Blegen, Norwegian Migration to America: The American Transition (New York: Haskell House Publishers, 1940), 308317.

28 Claus L. Clausen, “To Our American Friends,” Emigranten, January 30, 1852.

30 Foner, Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War, 228–230.

31 Quoted in Harold M. Tolo, “The Political Position of Emigranten in the Election of 1852: A Documentary Article,” Norwegian-American Studies 8 (1934): 98.

32 Clausen wrote: “For my part, I fear that if some farm work is to be done on election day, [Norwegians] will fail to go to the polls even though the work could easily be postponed. It is a sad situation; it indicates that the Norwegian-American has no conception of what it means to be an American citizen. … Let us try to create a little political instinct in ourselves! Let us read and listen and I am sure you will more than stand your ground also in political colloquia of the future.” Clausen quoted in Footnote ibid., 106.

33 Clausen, “Et Par Ord Til Læserne [A Few Words to the Readers]”; Blegen, Norwegian Migration to America: The American Transition, 308–317. See also Foner, Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War, 124–128. On Scandinavian editors such as Claus L. Clausen and Chales M. Reese walking a middle editorial ground on abolitionism, see Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872, 62.

34 J. A. Johnson, Det Skandinaviske Regiments Historie [The Scandinavian Regiment’s History] (La Crosse: Fædrelandet og Emigrantens Trykkeri, 1869), 104; Blegen, “Colonel Hans Christian Heg,” 147; Jeppesen, Danske i USA 1850–2000. En Demografisk, Social Og Kulturgeografisk Undersøgelse Af De Danske Immigranter Og Deres Efterkommere [Danes in the United States 1850–2000. A Demographic, Social and Cultural Geographic Study of The Danish Immigrants and Their Descendants] (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2005), 86; “Wisconsin-Affærer. Hans Christian Heg [Wisconsin Affairs. Hans Christian Heg],” Emigranten, September 12, 1859.

35 Foner, Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War, 124–128.

36 Blaine Hansen, “The Norwegians of Luther Valley,” Wisconsin Magazine of History 28, no. 4 (1945): 428.

37 “Til Norske Vælgere i Dane County. Washburn! Washburn!! [To Norwegian Voters in Dane County. Washburn! Washburn!!],” Emigranten, November 3, 1854.

38 McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era (New York: Oxford University Press, 1988), 135144. McPherson points out that the 1854–1855 election ended the two-party system consisting of Whigs and Democrats. “Most estimates [of the newly elected Congress] counted somewhere in the neighborhood of 105 Republican congressmen, 80 democrats and 50 Americans [nativists] … Of the Republicans (not all of whom yet acknowledged that label), perhaps two-thirds had at least a nominal connection with Know-Nothingism.” See also Rasmussen, “‘Drawn Together in a Blood Brotherhood’: Civic Nationalism Amongst Scandinavian Immigrants in the American Civil War Crucible,” American Studies in Scandinavia 48, no. 2 (2016): 731. On the Republican Party and nativism, see Foner, Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War, 226–60.

39 Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872, 63.

40 Carl Hansen, “Pressen Til Borgerkrigens Slutning [The Press until the Civil War’s End],” in Norsk-Amerikanernes Festskrift 1914, ed. Johannes B. Wist (Decorah: The Symra Company, 1914), 39. Carl Hansen claimed that Emigranten in the subsequent years “had an impact that can hardly be exaggerated” and noted the role of Fædrelandet, which was first published in 1864, as another key culture-carrying news outlet.

41 “Negerslaveriet Og Fremtiden [Negro Slavery and the Future],” Den Norske Amerikaner, February 28, 1855.

44 Andreas Frederiksen, “Denmark. Brown Co. Wisc. Den 16. Februar 1861,” in Afskrift af 22 breve til Frederik Nielsen, Herlev DK fra A.F.Wilmington Ill. og West Denmark og Neenah Wisc. (1847–1872) (Det danske udvandrerarkiv, 1861). See also Hale, “The Americanization of a Danish Immigrant in Wisconsin 1847–1872,” 211.

45 Christiansen, En Pioneers Historie (Erindringer Fra Krigen Mellem Nord- Og Sydstaterne) [A Pioneer’s Story: Memoirs from the War between North and South] (Aalborg: Eget forlag, 1909), 1532.

46 Blegen, “Colonel Hans Christian Heg,” 148. On attempts to counter claims of the Republican Party’s ties to nativist movements, Blegen writes: “Many Germans and Scandinavians at this time believed that the Republican party was tainted with Know Nothingism, and Heg’s place on the Republican ticket in Wisconsin was undoubtedly a Republican bid for the Scandinavian vote.”

47 Edward Ilsley, “Fra Den Republikanske Stats-Central-Committee [From the Republican State Central Committee],” Emigranten, July 11, 1856.

48 Footnote Ibid. See also Blegen, Norwegian Migration to America: The American Transition, 317.

49 Manisha Sinha, The Slave’s Cause: A History of Abolition (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2016), 1517.

50 “Til Vore Læsere, Gamle og Nye [To Our Readers, Old and New].” Nordstjernen, June 10, 1857.

52 Fredrika Bremer, The Homes of the New World: Impressions of America (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1853), 553554, 615. During an earlier visit in March 1850, Bremer described Beecher as “full of life and energy” and preaching “with riveting effect.”

53 Frank Decker, “Working as a Team: Henry Ward Beecher and the Plymouth Congregation in the Anti-Slavery Cause,” International Congregational Journal 8, no. 2 (2009): 38. See also Wayne Shaw, “The Plymouth Pulpit: Henry Ward Beecher’s Slave Auction Block,” American Transcendental Quarterly, no. 14 (2000): 335337; Jonathan Earle, “Beecher’s Bibles and Broadswords: Paving the Way for the Civil War in the West, 1854–1859,” in Empire and Liberty: The Civil War and the West, ed. Virginia Scharff (Oakland: University of California Press, 2015), 52.

54 Ferdinand S. Winslow, “Henry Ward Beechers Prædikener Om Negerne i Amerika [Henry Ward Beecher’s Sermons on the Negros in America],” in Kirkelig Maanedstidende [Church Monthly], ed. Kirkens præster i Amerika (Inmansville, WI: Den Skandinaviske Presseforening, 1857).

55 Brynjar Haraldsø, Slaveridebatten i Den Norske Synode: En Undersøkelse Av Slaveridebatten i Den Norske Synode i USA i 1860-Årene Med Særlig Vekt På Debattens Kirkelig-Teologiske Aspekter [The Slavery Debate in the Norwegian Synod: A Study of the Slavery Debate in the Norwegian Synod in the United States During the 1860 Emphasizing the Debate’s Church-Theological Aspects] (Oslo: Solum Forlag, 1988), 39. See also Hansen, “Pressen Til Borgerkrigens Slutning [The Press until the Civil War’s End],” 15–16. The Press Association’s founding meeting was held on March 10, 1852, and admitted James D. Reymert, the first editor of Nordlyset in 1847, who later became active in Democratic politics and journalism. Additionally, the Scandinavian Press Association’s first board of managers included, among others, Clausen, Gustav Fredrik Dietrichson, and A. C. Preus.

57 Quoted in Kristen Layne Anderson, Abolitionizing Missouri: German Immigrants and Racial Ideology in Nineteenth-Century America (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2016), 7778.

58 Winslow, “Henry Ward Beechers Prædikener Om Negerne i Amerika [Henry Ward Beecher’s Sermons on the Negros in America]”; “Africa among Us: Sketch of Two Sermons by Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, at His Church, Yesterday, on the African Race in America,” New York Times, December 15, 1856.

59 David Howes, The Sixth Sense Reader (New York: Berg, 2009), 10; Stefan Müller-Wille, “Race and History: Comments from an Epistemological Point of View,” Science, Technology & Human Values 39, no. 4 (2014): 600602; “Africa among Us: Sketch of Two Sermons by Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, at His Church, Yesterday, on the African Race in America.” After singing two hymns and reading the notices, one of which concerned a fair to raise money for “fugitives from slavery,” Beecher, according to the New York Times, started his sermon on slavery with musings on westward expansion. “This Continent, said the preacher, presented a most curious spectacle of mixed peoples. Here were the original people – the Indians – too haughty and proud to be subdued to Slavery. They are crumbling away. Civilization carries hell on its outer edge, and burns up everything it first touches. The whole Indian race retreats to the westward, following the path of the sun; they will soon imitate its example, and go down, but into a night that knows no morning.”

60 Clifford E. Clark Jr., “The Changing Nature of Protestantism in Mid-Nineteenth Century America: Henry Ward Beecher’s Seven Lectures to Young Men,” Journal of American History 57, no. 4 (1971): 833. As Clifford E. Clark Jr. has argued, “because of his immense popularity, Henry Ward Beecher exerted a strong influence on the religious outlook of his day. Through his extensive activities as newspaper editor, lyceum lecturer, and preacher, he spoke to thousands of Americans and helped shape their views on a variety of religious and social questions.”

61 “Africa among Us: Sketch of Two Sermons by Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, at His Church, Yesterday, on the African Race in America.” See also Clark Jr., “The Changing Nature of Protestantism in Mid-Nineteenth Century America: Henry Ward Beecher’s Seven Lectures to Young Men.”

62 Winslow, “Henry Ward Beechers Prædikener Om Negerne i Amerika [Henry Ward Beecher’s Sermons on the Negros in America]”; Debby Applegate, The Most Famous Man in America: The Biography of Henry Ward Beecher (New York: Doubleday, 2006), 262372.

63 Kantrowitz, More Than Freedom: Fighting for Black Citizenship in a White Republic, 1829–1889 (New York: Penguin Press, 2012), 6064.

64 Wilhelm Winsløw, “Reports and Letters. The Rev. Wilhelm Winslow,” in The New Church Messenger (Brooklyn: Swedenborg Press, 1885), 292. Also Marcus Thrane expressed admiration of Henry Ward Beecher’s sermons. See Marcus Thrane, “Program [Program],” Marcus Thrane’s Norske Amerikaner, May 25, 1866.

65 Christian Thomsen Christensen corresponded with Beecher and volunteered in Plymouth Church after the Civil War, for example as president of the Church Work Committee. “Plymouth Church Membership 1847–1901” (Plymouth Church, 1857). See also Clark Jr., “The Changing Nature of Protestantism in Mid-Nineteenth Century America: Henry Ward Beecher’s Seven Lectures to Young Men,” 845. See also Henry Ward Beecher, “My Dear Mr. Christensen,” in Papers of Christian T. Christensen, 1862–1906 (Huntington Library, Art Collections & Botanical Gardens, 1877); “Plymouth Church and Foreign Missions,” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, December 4, 1892.

66 Bremer, The Homes of the New World: Impressions of America, 553–554, 615. Also Robert Watt, Hinsides Atlanterhavet: Skildringer Fra Amerika [Beyond the Atlantic: Accounts from America], 3 vols., vol. 2 (Copenhagen: P. Bloch, 1872), 234245; “General Christensen to Give up Business,” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, March 25, 1900.

67 Applegate, The Most Famous Man in America: The Biography of Henry Ward Beecher, 181, 372. See also Clifford E. Clark Jr., “The Changing Nature of Protestantism in Mid-Nineteenth Century America: Henry Ward Beecher’s Seven Lectures to Young Men,” 832–836.

68 Ferd. S. Winslow, “Brooklyn. 11th Septbr. 1856. Religion Og Politik [Brooklyn. September 11, 1856. Religion and Politics],” in Kirkelig Maanedstidende, ed. Kirkens Præster i Amerika (Inmansville: Den Skandinaviske Presseforening, 1856).

69 Ferd S. Winslow, “Det Skandinaviske Selskab i New-York [The Scandinavian Association in New York],” Emigranten, January 30, 1857.

70 Writing a letter on behalf of Claus L. Clausen in 1872, Christian T. Christensen noted: “I have known him intimately for a number of years past, and esteem him highly”; see C. T. Christensen, “Danish Consulate and Legation, Pro. Tem. New York April 4th 1872,” in Papers of Claus Clausen. RG 15. Box 1. Correspondence 1871–1876 (Luther College Archives, 1872). Also Rasmus Andersen, Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen – Banebryder for Den Norske Og Danske Kirke i Amerika. Første Skandinavisk Feltpræst. [Pastor Claus Laurits Clausen: Trailblazer for the Norwegian and Danish Church in America. First Scandinavian Chaplain] (Blair, NW: Danish Lutheran Publishing House, 1921), 128. On Clausen’s relationship with Ferdinand and Wilhelm Winslöw, Andersen writes: “He [Ferdinand] and his brother Wilhelm Winslow stood as Clausen’s friends through the years.” On Norwegians from Muskego, see Hansen, “Pressen Til Borgerkrigens Slutning [The Press until the Civil War’s End],” 25.

71 See, for example, Eugene F. Fevold, “The Norwegian Immigrant and His Church,” Norwegian-American Studies 23 (1967), 316. Also Earl D. Check and Emeroy Johnson (translator), “Civil War Letters to New Sweden, Iowa,” Swedish-American Historical Quarterly 36, no. 1 (1985); Enok Mortensen, The Danish Lutheran Church in America; Allen, Danish, but Not Lutheran: The Impact of Mormonism on Danish Cultural Identity, 1850–1920 (Philadelphia: Board of Publication, Lutheran Church in America, 1967).

72 Harold M. Tolo, “The Political Position of Emigranten in the Election of 1852: A Documentary Article,” Norwegian-American Studies 8 (1934): 9495.

73 Blegen, Norwegian Migration to America: The American Transition, 318.

74 Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872, 12–13, 65. See also Hansen, “Pressen Til Borgerkrigens Slutning [The Press until the Civil War’s End],” 26. The Scandinavian Democratic Press Association, according to Hansen, was established on April 1851 by prominent Scandinavian-born Democrats. Among the organization’s founders were Gabriel Björnson, who served in the Wisconsin Assembly in 1851, Charles Reese, and J. D. Reymert (who had previously been part of the leadership behind Emigranten), and it was supported by prominent Norwegian farmers in Dane County. Also R. M. Rashford, ed., The Legislative Manual of the State of Wisconsin (Madison, WI: E. B. Bolens State Printer, 1877), 158.

75 Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872, 24–25, 65-68. See also Hansen, “Pressen Til Borgerkrigens Slutning [The Press until the Civil War’s End],” 26.

76 Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872, 68. Andersen argues “that Solberg, through Emigranten, represented majority opinion among the Norwegians on this issue [slavery].”

77 “Til Vore Læsere, Gamle Og Nye [To Our Readers, Old and New].” See also Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872, 20.

78 Blegen, Norwegian Migration to America: The American Transition, 318.

79 Albert O. Barton, “Reminiscences of a Pioneer Editor,” NAHA Studies and Records 1 (1926).

80 Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872, 12–13, 61. According to Andersen, Emigranten was more “representative of Norwegian-American opinion in the 1850s” with its “antislavery Democratic” program until 1854 when it switched to support the Republican Party. On subscription list numbers, based on then-editor Charles M. Reese, see Hansen, “Pressen Til Borgerkrigens Slutning [The Press until the Civil War’s End],” 24. See also Blegen, Norwegian Migration to America: The American Transition, 317–319.

81 Hansen, “Pressen Til Borgerkrigens Slutning [The Press until the Civil War’s End],” 28.

82 “Bør Negerne Have Stemmeret i Wisconsin?,” Emigranten, August 12, 1857; “Tale Af Carl Schurz, Republikansk Candidat for Lieutenant Governor, Holdet i Madison Den 16. Oktober 1857 [Speech by Carl Schurz, Republican Candidate for Lieutenant Governor, Held in Madison October 16, 1857],” Emigranten, October 23, 1857.

83 Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872, 65; “Bør Negerne Have Stemmeret i Wisconsin?,” Emigranten, August 12, 1857.

84 Quoted in Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872, 66–67.

85 Hansen, “Pressen Til Borgerkrigens Slutning [The Press until the Civil War’s End],” 31.

86 Barton, “Reminiscences of a Pioneer Editor.”

87 “Wisconsin-Affærer. Hans Christian Heg [Wisconsin Affairs. Hans Christian Heg].”

88 Eric Foner, The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2010), 113115. See also Roy P. Basler, ed., Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, vol. 3 (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1953), 438463.

89 Quoted in Foner, The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery, 113–115. According to Foner, by the time Lincoln gave his speech in 1859 he had embraced the market revolution and “advised farmers to abandon traditional ways in favor of new methods of plowing and crop rotation and new fertilizers, seeds, and agricultural machinery.” See also Basler, Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, vol. 3, 438–463.

90 Foner, The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery, 113.

91 Solberg, “Emigranten under Præsidentvalgkampen [The Emigrant During the Presidential Election].” For discussions of Cuban annexation, see “Annexation of Cuba Made Easy,” New York Times, December 13, 1860.

93 Royal M. Bryant, “State of Wisconsin, County of Dodge [August 21],” in Hans Christian Heg Letters, 1840, 1861–1863 (Wisconsin Historical Society, 1860). See also Hans C. Heg, “Booth Flygtet – Breve Fra Hans C. Heg [Booth Escaped – Letters from Hans C. Heg],” Emigranten, August 13, 1860.

94 Diane S. Butler, “The Public Life and Private Affairs of Sherman M. Booth,” Wisconsin Magazine of History 82, no. 3 (1999): 168. Butler points out that Booth also at this time had gained national infamy “by seducing, and possibly raping, a fourteen-year-old girl.”

95 Quoted in Footnote ibid., 178.

96 Footnote Ibid., 182–189. Heg, “Booth Flygtet – Breve Fra Hans C. Heg [Booth Escaped – Letters from Hans C. Heg].”

97 Hans C. Heg, “Booth Flygtet – Breve Fra Hans C. Heg [Booth Escaped – Letters from Hans C. Heg].”

98 “Booth Flygtet – Breve Fra Hans C. Heg [Booth Escaped – Letters from Hans C. Heg].”

99 Bryant, “State of Wisconsin, County of Dodge [August 21].”

101 Barton, “Reminiscences of a Pioneer Editor.”

102 Butler, “The Public Life and Private Affairs of Sherman M. Booth,” 168, 82–89. Emigranten noted that Booth had “lost his good name” in a “scandalous trial” the previous year before describing events related to his escape from authorities in August of 1860. Heg, “Booth Flygtet – Breve Fra Hans C. Heg [Booth Escaped – Letters from Hans C. Heg].”

103 Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872, 68.

104 Jacob Seemann, “Til ‘Nordstjernens’ Læsere [To the North Star’s Readers],” Nordstjernen, October 10, 1860.

106 Hans Borchsenius, “Cirkulære Til Nordstjernens Abonnenter [Circular to the North Star’s Subscribers],” Emigranten, January 7, 1861.

108 Solberg, “Til Emigrantens Læsere [To the Emigrant’s Readership].”

109 “Emigranten for Aaret 1864 [The Emigrant for the Year 1864],” Footnote ibid., December 7, 1863.

110 Blegen, Norwegian Migration to America: The American Transition, 318. Blegen’s estimate of close to 4,000 subscribers is based on Solberg’s recollection later in life, when he stated: “During the war I built up a circulation of nearly four thousand for Emigranten.” See also Barton, “Reminiscences of a Pioneer Editor.” Also Borchsenius, “Cirkulære Til Nordstjernens Abonnenter [Circular to the North Star’s Subscribers].”

111 Andersen, The Immigrant Takes His Stand: The Norwegian-American Press and Public Affairs, 1847–1872, 69.

112 Dag Blanck, The Creation of an Ethnic Identity: Being Swedish American in the Augustana Synod, 1860–1917 (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2006), 2728, 39.

113 Blegen, Norwegian Migration to America: The American Transition, 318.

114 Oscar Fritiof Ander, T. N. Hasselquist: The Career and Influence of a Swedish-American Clergyman, Journalist and Educator (Rock Island, IL: Augustana Historical Society, 1931), 159160.

115 Quoted in Arlow W. Andersen, “Knud Langeland: Pioneer Editor,” Norwegian-American Studies 14 (1944). Arlow W. Anderson, “Knud Langeland: Pioneer Editor,” Norwegian-American Studies 14 (1944).

116 Hans Borchsenius, “Et Par Ord Om Valgene [A Few Words on the Elections],” Emigranten, October 27, 1862; Peter Sørensen Vig, Danske i Krig i Og for Amerika [Danes Fighting in and for America] (Omaha, NE: Axel H. Andersen, 1917). Being politically and economically savvy, and perhaps genuinely influenced by the course of events in 1860 and 1861, Nordstjernen’s former Democratic editors, Hans Borchsenius and Charles M. Reese, had by 1862 both volunteered for the Union Army and publicly proclaimed their support for the Republican Party’s Union and anti-slavery platform.

117 Fritz W. Rasmussen, “November 1860. Den 7de. [November 1860. The 7th],” in State Historical Society of Wisconsin Archives Division. Rasmussen, Fritz. Additions, 1860–1919. Gren Bay Mss 4. Box 9 (Wisconsin Historical Society, 1860), 5152; Rasmussen, I Krig for Lincoln [To War for Lincoln].

118 Rasmussen, “November 1860. Den 7de. [November 1860. The 7th].”

119 Joseph C. G. Kennedy, ed., Population of the United States in 1860 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1864), 533. The number of Scandinavian residents is gathered from www.ancestry.com.

120 Wisconsin Constitutional Convention, Constitution of the State of Wisconsin (Madison, WI: Beriah Brown, 1848), 4.

121 Fritz W. Rasmussen, “Den 31. Løverdag [March],” in Fritz William Rasmussen Papers. Diaries, 1856–1876. Green Bay Mss 4. Box 8 (Wisconisn Historical Society, 1860).

122 Footnote Ibid.; Rasmussen, “November 1860. Den 7de. [November 1860. The 7th].”

123 “Brown County Election Returns,” Green Bay Advocate, November 16, 1860. In the 1860 presidential election, Stephen Douglas received 1,272 votes to Abraham Lincoln’s 874 votes in Brown County.

124 For Charles D. Robinson’s political career, see William J. Anderson and William A. Anderson, eds., The Wisconsin Blue Book (Madison, WI: Democrat Priting Company, 1929), 144. Also Harold Holzer, Lincoln and the Power of the Press: The War for Public Opinion (New York: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks, 2015), 518519.

125 Charles D. Robinson, “The Douglas Gathering at Fond Du Lac,” Green Bay Advocate, October 19, 1860.

126 “To the People of Brown County,” Green Bay Advocate, November 1, 1860.

128 See “National Republication Nomination,” Emigranten, September 24, 1860. One of New Denmark’s founders, Frederik Hjort, subscribed to Emigranten in 1860, and Fritz Rasmussen described his neighbor Lars Andersen paying a subscription to Emigranten in 1863 as well. See “Indbetalt På Emigr. [Paid to Emigranten],” Emigranten, January 7, 1861. Also Fritz W. Rasmussen, “Thursday December 31,” in Fritz William Rasmussen Papers. Diaries, 1857–1876; Account Books, 1856–1909; “Record of Skandinavians Who Have Been Settled and Lived in the Town of New Denmark, Brown County, Wisconsin.” Box no. 8 (Wisconsin Historical Society, 1863).

129 Foner, Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War, 307–308. Also James M. McPherson, Abraham Lincoln (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009), 26. Regarding the political complexity of the 1860 election, McPherson adds, “a remnant of Whigs, mostly from the border states,” in an attempt to avert disunion, established the Constitutional Union party.

130 “Præsidentvalget [The Presidential Election],” Emigranten, November 5, 1860. On Wisconsin’s congressional districts, which were apportioned and expanded from three to six in 1861, see the Chief Clerks of the Senate and Asembly in the Year 1863, The Legislative Manual of the State of Wisconsin (Madison: Atwood & Rublee, 1863), 131. Also L. D. H. Crane, A Manual of Customs, Precedents and Forms, in the Use in the Assembly of Wisconsin (Madison, WI: E. A. Calkins & Co., 1861), 42.

131 “Præsidentvalget [The Presidential Election].”

132 “Brown County Election Returns.” See also “Valgene Tirsdagen Den 6te November – Et Tusinde Hurraer for Lincoln Og Hamlin [The Elections Tuesday November 6 – A Thousand Hurrahs for Lincoln and Hamlin],” Emigranten, November 12, 1860.

133 Christiansen, En Pioneers Historie (Erindringer Fra Krigen Mellem Nord- Og Sydstaterne) [A Pioneer’s Story: Memoirs from the War between North and South], 15–17. For Christiansen’s naturalization information, I have used www.fold3.com. James took out his naturalization papers together with Fritz and later served in the Wisconsin Legislature for the Republican Party while Hjort was on the list of paying subscribers to the solidly Republican Emigranten. James E. Heg, ed., The Blue Book of the State of Wisconsin (Madison, WI: Democrat Printing Co., 1885), 159, 427. See as well Frederiksen, “Denmark. Brown Co. Wisc. Den 16. Februar 1861.” See also Hale, “The Americanization of a Danish Immigrant in Wisconsin 1847–1872,” 205–211. According to Hale, “like many other Scandinavian-Americans, he [Frederikson] declared his allegiance to the Union and supported the infant Republican party.”

134 “Indbetalt På Emigr. [Paid to Emigranten].”

135 “Valgene Tirsdagen Den 6te November – Et Tusinde Hurraer for Lincoln Og Hamlin [The Elections Tuesday November 6 – A Thousand Hurrahs for Lincoln and Hamlin].”

136 “Official Statement of Votes Cast at The Election in Dane County, November 6, 1860,” Emigranten, November 19, 1860.

137 “Valgene Tirsdagen Den 6te November – Et Tusinde Hurraer for Lincoln Og Hamlin [The Elections Tuesday November 6 – A Thousand Hurrahs for Lincoln and Hamlin].”

138 Frederick C. Luebke, ed., Ethnic Voters and the Election of Lincoln (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1971), xxviii.

139 McPherson, Abraham Lincoln, 26.

140 Foner, Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War, 216. The election of 1860, Foner points out, “hinged on the states Frémont had failed to carry – New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Indiana, and Illinois.”

141 H., “Rockford, Ill. D. 10 Nov. 1860,” Hemlandet, November 14, 1860.

143 Mattson, Reminiscences: The Story of an Emigrant (Saint Paul, MN: D. D. Merrill Company, 1891), 5657.

144 As an example of trying to prove Swedish immigrants’ outsize influence on the 1860 election, see Hokanson, Swedish Immigrants in Lincoln’s Time (New York: Arno Press, 1979), 27. According to Hokanson, “the outcome of the presidential election of 1860 hung on a very small margin. Lincoln could not have been elected without the support of the Germans and the Swedes.”

145 Thomas P. Christensen, “A German Forty-Eighter in Iowa,” Annals of Iowa 26, no. 4 (1945): 248249; George H. Daniels, “Immigrant Vote in the 1860 Election: The Case of Iowa,” in Ethnic Voters and the Election of Lincoln, ed. Frederick C. Luebke (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1971), 126127. See as well Walter D. Kamphoefner and Wolfgang Helbich, Germans in the Civil War: The Letters They Wrote Home (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006), 4, 12.

146 Ferdinand S. Winslöw, “Chicago, February 12th, 1861” (transcribed letter in possession of Laura Sadovnikoff, 1861). In the evening Hoffman and Winslow dined with Carl Schurz, William Ogden, and Jonathan Scammon who all had ties to Lincoln and the Republican Party.

148 H[arald] Dollner, “Consulate General of Denmark. New York, 5th February 1861,” in Collection 0002. Udenrigsministeriet. 1848–1972. Depecher. Washington 1861–1862 mm. Box 155 (Copenhagen: Rigsarkivet, 1861).

150 H[arald] Dollner, “New York, 12th Febr. 1861,” in Collection 0002. Udenrigsministeriet. 1848–1972. Depecher. Washington 1861–1862 mm. Box 155 (Rigsarkivet, 1861).

151 Given the political pressure generated by Civil War, it is perhaps not surprising that the Swedish consul in New York on October 22, 1861, acknowledged receipt of a letter from Secretary of State Seward telling the Swedish-Norwegian government to replace their vice-consuls in Norfolk and Baltimore respectively as they, according to the Americans, had “allowed themselves to be made mediums of private treasonable correspondence.” See Claudius Habicht, “New York 22d Octobr 1861,” in M-60. Notes from the Swedish Legation in the U.S. to Dept. of State, 1813–1906. Roll T3 (National Archives at College Park, 1861).

152 On the Declaration of Independence and “the nation’s implied promise to those who had been denied the rights espoused in its founding documents,” see Edna Greene Medford, Lincoln and Emancipation (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2015), 21, 111112. On the the Declaration of Independence and continued belief in white superiority, see, for example, Hahn, A Nation without Borders: The United States and Its World in an Age of Civil Wars, 1830–1910 (New York: Viking, 2016), 6768.

Figure 0

Figure 1.1 French depictions of abolition in the West Indies, such as this one by artist François-Auguste Biard, mirrored those in Denmark and underscored the pervasive Old World colonial mindset.

Photo by Photo12/Universal Images Group via Getty Images.
Figure 1

Figure 1.2 An 1848 portrait of North Star editor Frederick Douglass, who saw great abolitionist potential in the European revolutions.

Image by Fotosearch/ Stringer/Archive Photos via Getty Images.
Figure 2

Figure 2.1 Claus L. Clausen photographed on the island of Langeland during a visit to Denmark after the Civil War.

Courtesy Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum Archives.
Figure 3

Figure 4.1 Fritz Rasmussen, born on the island of Langeland, emigrated with his family to Wisconsin in 1847 and eventually settled in New Denmark.

Courtesy Wisconsin Historical Society.
Figure 4

Figure 4.2 Hans Heg was among the most successful early Scandinavian immigrants. His leadership ability and political savvy earned him the position of colonel when the Civil War broke out.

Image by The History Collection/Alamy Stock Photo.
Figure 5

Figure 4.3 Henry Ward Beecher, here photographed with his famous sister Harriet after the Civil War, made a strong impression on Scandinavian congregationists and visitors to Plymouth Church.

Photo by Sepia Times/Universal Images Group via Getty Images.
Figure 6

Figure 4.4 As editor of Emigranten, Carl Fredrik Solberg was one of the most influential Scandinavian-American voices in the Civil War era.

Courtesy Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum Archives.
Figure 7

Figure 4.5 Tuve N. Hasselquist was a towering figure among early Swedish-American immigrants and through his editorship of Hemlandet served as an opinion leader in Scandinavian communities.

Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

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