|

|
|
|
|
|
Resources |
|
|
|
A Windmill and a Mermaid
| Article
# : |
15972 |
|
|
Section : |
CULTURE
|
| Issue
Date : |
7 / 1989 |
3,799 Words |
| Author
: |
Peter L. Petersen Peter L. Petersen is professor of history at West Texas State
University in Canyon, Texas. He has written extensively on
Danish and Norwegian immigrants in the United States. |
By almost every measure, Danish emigrants to the United States were quick to join the mainstream of American life. Relatively few in number (only 371,258 came between 1820 and 1980), widely scattered in settlement, overwhelmingly Protestant, and generally attuned to the nation's political and economic systems, Danes were among the most rapidly assimilated of immigrants to America.
Within the past two decades, however, there has been a remarkable resurgence of interest in the Danish heritage in the Untied States, nowhere more visible than in two small, neighboring Iowa communities--Elk Horn and Kimballton. While scholars still debate the reasons for this revival of ethnic consciousness, many residents of these two farm villages point to one man and what was once widely considered his "crazy" idea of erecting an unusual historical monument--one that when built changed the future of both communities and created ripples across the entire nation.
Harvey Sornson's 'crazy' idea
Harvey Sornson (a corruption of the Danish surname Sorensen) has always been fascinated by windmills. Born to Danish immigrant parents and reared on a farm just east of Elk Horn, he has spent most of his eighty years farming near Kimballton. As he approached retirement age, restoration of old windmills became a hobby for him, and wherever he traveled, Sornson always looked for windmills.
During a 1975 trip to Denmark, Sornson found several magnificent nineteenth-century structures, giants that ground grain into flour in contrast to their much smaller and cheaper American
... (1994 of 22942 Characters)
Read Full Article
|
|