fbpx
Wikipedia

Elmer L. Andersen

Elmer Lee Andersen (June 17, 1909 – November 15, 2004) was an American businessman, philanthropist, and politician who built a successful business career with the H. B. Fuller Company. Andersen was most notably the 30th governor of Minnesota. A self-described progressive Republican, he was a well-regarded politician who passed many social and environmental regulations during his time as governor.

Elmer L. Andersen
Andersen as Governor
30th Governor of Minnesota
In office
January 2, 1961 – March 25, 1963
LieutenantKarl Rolvaag
Preceded byOrville Freeman
Succeeded byKarl Rolvaag
Member of the Minnesota Senate
from the 42nd district
In office
February 2, 1949 – January 5, 1959
Preceded byClaude Henry Allen
Succeeded byClifton T. Parks
Personal details
Born
Elmer Lee Andersen

(1909-06-17)June 17, 1909
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
DiedNovember 15, 2004(2004-11-15) (aged 95)
Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
Eleanor Johnson
(m. 1932)
Professionbusinessman, philanthropist

In one of the closest elections in the history of Minnesota and the United States, Andersen lost the 1962 Minnesota gubernatorial election by 91 votes to Karl Rolvaag.

Early life and education edit

Andersen was born in Chicago. His mother, Jennie Olivia Johnson (1877–1925), was the daughter of a seaman from Luleå, Sweden, who came to America as a young man and worked in the timber business. Elmer's father, Arne Kjelsberg Andersen (1866–1926), was an immigrant from Solør, Norway, who had settled in Chicago and became a streetcar motorman, operating on the Halsted streetcar line out of the Ashland Avenue car barns. "My earliest memory", Andersen wrote in his memoirs, "is of riding with him on the streetcar and being permitted to clang the bell as we came to street crossings."[1] His parents separated when he was six years old. Andersen never understood why his parents separated and never questioned them. He and his mother and infant sister, Caroline, moved to Muskegon, Michigan.[2] His two older brothers, Arnold and Marvin, arrived in Muskegon later. The Andersens had only sporadic contact with their father after the separation.[3] At age nine, Elmer contracted a mild form of polio but, through exercise, regained his strength.[4]

Andersen's brothers worked for E. H. Sheldon and Company in Muskegon, a manufacturer of specialty school furniture. Too young to work in the factory, Elmer's first job was helping his mother, who took in washing. From there he moved on to selling newspapers, vegetables, specialty products, candy bars and soft drinks. He also carried travelers' bags from the boat docks to the train station. "I love selling", he wrote. "I love the interchange with people. A good salesman gains influence on another person's mind. That makes selling quite a serious undertaking." At age 14, Andersen joined his brothers at Sheldon and Company. He also wrote short essays on birds that were published in the Muskegon Chronicle. "The thrill I had seeing those columns in print was the start of an abiding attraction to the newspaper business."[5]

Andersen's mother was devoted to church work and ensured that her children were raised in the Lutheran church; Andersen was confirmed at Our Savior's Lutheran Church in Muskegon. In 1925, his mother contracted a cold that developed into pneumonia. She died at home on March 3, 1925, with Andersen at her bedside. Within a year, his father also died, of a heart attack.[6]

Andersen graduated from high school in 1926 and became a member of the first class of the newly established Muskegon Junior College. Upon graduating two years later, he received the first diploma awarded by the school. While in college, he held a sales job with J. J. Fagan and Company, a real estate firm, and worked as a stringer for the Muskegon Chronicle, while starting a newspaper for the junior college. Not long after, he and his brothers started a company, Muskegon Realty, which also sold casualty insurance for the Mercury Insurance Company. "I matured fast in those years. I was selling homes and farms. I was selling insurance. I was editing a college newspaper and stringing for a daily newspaper. I was studying and learning about things I had never known existed. It was almost an incredible time."[7]

Andersen graduated from junior college in 1928. For the next year, he worked as a salesman for the Sheldon Company, working out of Minneapolis, Minnesota. "A year in Minneapolis left me convinced that I wanted something more. I wanted to enroll at the University of Minnesota. I usually approach a new venture with specific objectives. In aiming for the University of Minnesota, I had three: I wanted to get a degree for reasons of job protection. I did not want somebody to push ahead of me because he had a degree and I did not. Another object was to meet a woman whom I might marry. I was beginning to long for a home life and a family. I was lonely. I discovered that being a traveling salesman, on the road all the time, was no way to meet the kind of women I wanted to meet. My third objective was to have a good time! I had been a fairly successful salesman and quite frugal with my earnings....So, having fun, finding a girl, getting a degree—those were my objectives. If I was able to learn anything along the way, that would be purely incidental!" Andersen graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1931.[8]

H. B. Fuller Company edit

By 1934, Andersen was growing dissatisfied with life as a traveling salesman. He heard through an associate that the H. B. Fuller Company in St. Paul, Minnesota, a manufacturer of school paste, was looking for someone to hire in sales promotion. Andersen discussed the position with the owner and president, Harvey B. Fuller Jr., and joined the company on October 8, 1934.[9] Andersen managed sales for the H.B. Fuller Company over the next seven years until purchasing a controlling interest in the company in 1941 and taking over as president. Under his leadership, the firm became an early model of corporate responsibility, recognized for offering generous benefits to employees, their spouses, and retirees. Andersen's corporate philosophy was built around four priorities in a definite order. The highest priority was service to the customer. "Anything the customer wanted should be seen as an opportunity for us to provide it. Number two was that the company should exist deliberately for the benefit of the people associated in it. I never liked the word employee. It intimated a difference in class within a plant. We always used the word associate. Fuller's third priority was to make money. To survive, you have to make money. To grow, you need money. To conduct research and develop new products, you must have money. The need for money can be desperate at times. But corporations must put the quest for money in its proper place. Our philosophy did not leave out service to the larger community. We put it in fourth place, behind service to customers, our associates, and the bottom line. Community service cannot be paramount to a business, but it ought not to be omitted, as it too often is. Business must concern itself with the larger society—for reasons of self-interest if nothing else."[10]

Under Andersen's guidance, Fuller grew from a small plant to an international Fortune 500 company.[11] Its expansion strategy baffled the competition. Competitors thought the company was struggling to keep all the new plants afloat, but the opposite was true. Other leaders in the adhesives industry operated in New York City, Chicago, and San Francisco. "They had huge plants and big established investments. They could not start a new plant. What would they do with their big old plant? By comparison, we were popping around the country and setting up small plants in lively little markets. We kept our real estate costs down. We did not have large freight charges to pass on to the customer. National Adhesives, the biggest company in the industry, was very focused on making money. They maintained their prices at a high level, even when their share of the market dropped, in order to make more money. That was a blessing for little companies like Fuller."[12]

In 1968, Fuller became a publicly traded company. By 1970, it had become an adhesives industry leader, with 27 plants and offices in the U.S. and ten in foreign countries. The goal Andersen had set decades before of doubling its sales volume every five years was still being met. In 1970, Fuller reached about $48 million in sales. Andersen retired as president and chief executive officer in 1974, at age 65, turning the company over to his eldest son, Tony.[13]

Dairy farm edit

In 1953, 12 years after becoming president of the H. B. Fuller Company, Andersen entered the dairy business, buying a farm held by his wife's family on Deer Lake, near St. Croix Falls, Wisconsin. It was the start of 35 years in the dairy business, with about 200 head of cattle. The herd was slowly converted to registered Holsteins. In 1984, Deer Lake Farm received the National Holstein Association's Progressive Breeder Award. Additional land was acquired in the 1950s, and environmental restoration projects were undertaken on the expanded farm. After Andersen moved out of the dairy business in 1988, 80 acres of land surrounding one of the ponds were placed in a land preserve to honor the memories of his wife's parents.[14]

ECM Publishers edit

In 1974, Andersen began a new career as a newspaper publisher and writer. He acquired two newspapers to form the Princeton Union-Eagle, which eventually became part of ECM Publishers, which published a number of weekly local newspapers and shoppers. Andersen wrote editorials for the ECM papers, many of which are gathered in Views from the Publisher's Desk (1997). His newspaper work gave him "more personal satisfaction than almost anything else I have done". His editorial goal was to make his readers think without telling them what to think.[15][16] The Andersen family sold ECM to Adams Publishing Group in 2016.[17]

Politics edit

 
Andersen in 1957

A progressive Republican, Andersen served in the Minnesota legislature from 1949 to 1958. Among the many causes he championed were educational programs for exceptional children, recognition of alcoholism as a health problem, the Metropolitan Planning Commission in the Twin Cities, and the Fair Employment Practices Act (Minnesota was the fifth state to pass legislation on this issue).[18] After the anti-discrimination bill passed, Andersen was greeted by an African-American, who told him that for the first time he felt like a "real man". Andersen described this moment as one of his most touching memories.[19]

In 1960, Andersen ran for governor against incumbent Democrat Orville Freeman. In 1999, he said he decided to run after hearing Freeman wish he could again call the Minnesota National Guard to bust a strike at an Albert Lea meatpacking plant, after a federal judge blocked that decision.[20] Andersen won by more than 20,000 votes. During his term, the common loon became the Minnesota state bird, several state parks were established, and the Taconite Amendment and fair housing legislation passed. He lost reelection two years later by the closest margin in U.S. history. The election was held on November 6, 1962, but the results were not known until March 21, 1963. After recounts and court challenges, it was determined that then-Lieutenant Governor Karl Rolvaag had defeated Andersen by 91 votes out of nearly 1.3 million cast, 619,842 to 619,751.[21][22]

Andersen remained in the Republican Party for the rest of his life, but he became unhappy about how conservative the party became. Even in the 1960s, his views were in the minority of the party. In a 2003 interview with the Saint Paul Pioneer Press, he said, "I remind people I want to be known as a liberal Republican. If that's a dirty word, so be it." In the 2004 presidential election, he endorsed Democratic nominee John Kerry over incumbent Republican President George W. Bush.[20] He was so disenchanted with the Bush administration that he wrote a commentary in the Minneapolis Star Tribune claiming that Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney "spew outright untruths with evangelistic fervor" and calling Cheney an evil man who was the administration's real decision-maker.[23] Unlike many other members of his party, Andersen opposed low taxes.[24]

University of Minnesota edit

Andersen served on the Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota from 1967 to 1975 and as chair from 1972 to 1975. From 1968 to 1988, he was a trustee of the University of Minnesota Foundation, presiding over it from 1978 to 1981. During the Minnesota Campaign, the university's major fundraising effort from 1985 to 1988, he played a major leadership role in what was, at the time, the most successful fundraising effort by any U.S. public university.[25]

Andersen believed there was an additional mission to the three central missions—teaching, research, and community service—of the university: an archival one. The building housing the archives and special collections of the university's libraries is named for him, in recognition of his deep belief in that mission. On May 14, 1999, the university's Board of Regents unanimously voted to name the newest library in his honor. The Elmer L. Andersen Library opened in April 2000.[26]

Voyageurs National Park edit

One of Andersen's proudest achievements came in April 1975, when Congress passed legislation establishing Voyageurs National Park—thousands of acres of forests and lakes along Minnesota's northern border. Along with people like naturalist Sigurd Olson, legislator Willard Munger, and aviator Charles A. Lindbergh, Andersen devoted thousands of hours to persuading landowners, timber industry leaders, politicians, and citizens of the park's value to future generations. For his work, he is remembered as the "father of Voyageurs National Park".[27]

"It is flattering to have been called the father of Voyageurs Park. I think that I made a difference. But so did many, many other people, more than I could possibly name, who kept the dream alive until it came to fruition. Some of the real heroes were people in the region who opposed their friends or employers to support the park. The park also had help from another real hero—Charles Lindbergh....Charles A. Lindbergh's name deserves a prominent place in the annals of Voyageurs National Park. The man who did so much for the development of aviation also did much for his home state, for the cause of wilderness preservation—and for me."[28]

Book collector edit

Andersen developed a passion for books as a child and collected them all his life. As a young traveling salesman, he saved his loose change and spent it on books. His hunt for books brought him into contact with dealers, other collectors, printers and librarians. He was well-acquainted with book and auction catalogues; paging through them became a welcome break in a busy day. Andersen bought books with a purpose, to build a library. He intended to read them, know them well, catalog them, and care for them. American and English history and literature and inspirational poetry were of particular interest to him, but as his interests expanded so did his reading and his library. When he came to Minnesota, he became interested in the state's history. When he learned more about fine printing and printers, he turned to William Morris and the Kelmscott Press. And when he discovered something new, like the Whittington Press, he made sure that the University of Minnesota owned the printer's entire archive.

While writing his Princeton Union-Eagle editorials, Andersen wrote a column on book collecting using the name Arne Kjelsberg, his father's first two names.[29] He did not reveal his authorship of the column for many years, though a close friend guessed. Andersen was a longtime member of the bibliophilic Ampersand Club, and his Arne Kjelsberg articles were published the year after his death in honor of the club's 75th anniversary, in 2005. Compilation of the volume commenced while Andersen lived, and he expressed hope to attend its publication party.[30]

Andersen's wife supported his bibliomania. Together, their book buying was intimately connected with book giving and support for libraries and reading. Public libraries around the state and other book concerns benefited from their support and interest. They were major benefactors of the University of Minnesota and its libraries. Much of the collection at the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum Library, which bears Andersen's name, is a result of their generosity. The gift of his personal library of 12,500 rare volumes in March 1999 was described in the Minneapolis Star Tribune as "a gift of the heart."[31]

Personal life and legacy edit

Andersen met Eleanor Anne Johnson (1911–2011) at Grace University Lutheran Church while they were both students. She was the eldest child of Gustav A. and Elizabeth Johnson, both Swedish immigrants. The Andersens married on September 1, 1932. Eleanor's sister Edith Johnson later married future Minnesota Senator Stanley W. Holmquist. The Andersens settled in the Twin Cities. Eleanor decided to leave the university when they were married and postpone the completion of her degree. Andersen credited his wife for many of his accomplishments.[32] They had three children. Several years later, Eleanor Andersen earned her bachelor's degree.[33][34][35]

Andersen wrote a number of books, including his autobiography, A Man's Reach; a collection of newspaper articles, Views from the Publisher's Desk; a collection of speeches and reflections, I Trust to Be Believed; and Elmer's Tour, a guide to the Minnesota state capitol building.

The Elmer L. and Eleanor J. Andersen Foundation was founded in 1957.[36][37]

Andersen died in Minneapolis on November 15, 2004, just months after a gala celebration of his 95th birthday held in the library that bears his name. He was the last living former American governor born in the 1900s decade.[20] The Minnesota Department of Human Services Building in St. Paul is also named for him.[38]

References edit

  1. ^ Andersen, Elmer L. (2000). A Man's Reach. Edited by Lori Sturdevant. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  2. ^ Andersen. Reach. pp. 3–4.
  3. ^ Andersen, Elmer L. (2000). A Man's Reach. U of Minnesota Press. p. 419. ISBN 9781452905099. separation.
  4. ^ Andersen. Reach. p. 13.
  5. ^ Andersen. Reach. pp. 7–12.
  6. ^ Andersen. Reach. pp. 16–18.
  7. ^ Andersen. Reach. pp. 25–28.
  8. ^ Andersen. Reach. pp. 39–45.
  9. ^ Andersen. Reach. pp. 59–60.
  10. ^ "1941: Harvey Fuller Sells Company to Elmer Andersen". H.B. Fuller. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
  11. ^ "1984: H. B. Fuller Named to Fortune 500 Based on 1983 Performance". H. B. Fuller. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
  12. ^ Andersen. Reach. pp. 66–101.
  13. ^ "1971: Tony Andersen Becomes H. B. Fuller President". H. B. Fuller. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
  14. ^ Andersen. Reach. pp. 158–166.
  15. ^ Andersen. Reach. pp. 328–341.
  16. ^ "Publications: Princeton Union-Eagle". ECM Publishers. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
  17. ^ "Adams Publishing Group to acquire ECM Publishers Inc". Retrieved February 19, 2018.
  18. ^ . Minnesota Historical Society. Archived from the original on March 1, 2007. Retrieved May 15, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  19. ^ Elmer L. Andersen dead at 95; Elizabeth Stawicki, MRP Radio, November 16, 2004
  20. ^ a b c Whereatt, Robert; Smith, Dane (November 16, 2004). . Star Tribune. Archived from the original on November 18, 2004. Retrieved July 9, 2021.
  21. ^ . Hibbing Daily Tribune. November 3, 1964. Archived from the original on September 5, 2017. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
  22. ^ "Elmer Lee Andersen". Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
  23. ^ Elmer L. Andersen Dead at 95. News.minnesota.publicradio.org. Retrieved April 12, 2014.
  24. ^ The Mary Hanson Show, Interview with Elmer L. Andersen, 2004
  25. ^ . Regents of the University of Minnesota. Archived from the original on June 12, 2021. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
  26. ^ "About Andersen Library". Regents of the University of Minnesota. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
  27. ^ "Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota's Only National Park". Destination Voyageurs National Park. November 3, 1964. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
  28. ^ Andersen. Reach. pp. 275–285.
  29. ^ Andersen. Reach. p. 338.
  30. ^ Kjelsberg, Arne (Anderson, Elmer L.) (2005). On Book Collecting. The Ampersand Club.
  31. ^ Smetanka, Mary Jane. (1999). "Former Governor's Gift Is Voluminous". Minneapolis Star Tribune. Metro ed. April 1. p. 1A.
  32. ^ "The Elmer L. & Eleanor J. Andersen Foundation 2011 President's Report". The Elmer L. & Eleanor J. Andersen Foundation. December 26, 2011. Retrieved August 29, 2018.
  33. ^ "Eleanor Anne Johnson Andersen". Minnesota Historical Society. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
  34. ^ Miller, Pamela (January 15, 2011). "Eleanor Andersen, 99, Widow of Former Governor". Minneapolis Star Tribune. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
  35. ^ "Victor Holmquist". Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
  36. ^ "The Elmer L. and Eleanor J. Andersen Foundation". Retrieved December 12, 2017.
  37. ^ "2016 990: The Elmer L. and Eleanor J. Andersen Foundation" (PDF). Retrieved December 12, 2017.
  38. ^ Capitol Area Architectural and Planning Board. "Elmer L. Andersen Building". State of Minnesota. Retrieved July 1, 2020.

Other sources edit

  • Andersen, Elmer L. (1997) Views from the Publisher's Desk (Nodin Press LLC) ISBN 978-0931714733
  • Andersen, Elmer L. (2004) Man's Reach (University of Minnesota Press ) ISBN 978-0816637393
  • Andersen, Elmer L. (2004) I Trust to Be Believed (Nodin Press LLC) ISBN 978-1932472073
  • Andersen, Elmer L. (2005) Elmer's Tour: A Former Governor's Loving Look at the Minnesota State Capitol (Nodin Press LLC) ISBN 978-1932472387

External links edit

  • Minnesota Legislator Past and Present
  • U.S. Congressional Delegations from Minnesota
  • The Elmer L. Andersen Papers, including extensive records of his public service, are available for research use at the Minnesota Historical Society.
  • Elmer L. Andersen, Kay Sexton Award at the Minnesota Book Awards, NORTHERN IGHTS Minnesota Author Interview TV Series #376 (1994)
  • Interview with Elmer L. Andersen (Part One) by Patrick Coleman, NORTHERN LIGHTS Minnesota Author Interview TV Series #380 (1994)
  • Interview with Elmer L. Andersen (Part Two) by Patrick Coleman, NORTHERN LIGHTS Minnesota Author Interview TV Series #381 (1994)
  • Elmer L. Andersen at Minnesota Legislators Past & Present
Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for Governor of Minnesota
1960, 1962
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of Minnesota
1961–1963
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Oldest living U.S. governor
April 19, 2004 – November 15, 2004
Succeeded by

elmer, andersen, governor, minnesota, from, 1951, 1955, elmer, anderson, elmer, andersen, june, 1909, november, 2004, american, businessman, philanthropist, politician, built, successful, business, career, with, fuller, company, andersen, most, notably, 30th, . For the governor of Minnesota from 1951 to 1955 see C Elmer Anderson Elmer Lee Andersen June 17 1909 November 15 2004 was an American businessman philanthropist and politician who built a successful business career with the H B Fuller Company Andersen was most notably the 30th governor of Minnesota A self described progressive Republican he was a well regarded politician who passed many social and environmental regulations during his time as governor Elmer L AndersenAndersen as Governor30th Governor of MinnesotaIn office January 2 1961 March 25 1963LieutenantKarl RolvaagPreceded byOrville FreemanSucceeded byKarl RolvaagMember of the Minnesota Senate from the 42nd districtIn office February 2 1949 January 5 1959Preceded byClaude Henry AllenSucceeded byClifton T ParksPersonal detailsBornElmer Lee Andersen 1909 06 17 June 17 1909Chicago Illinois U S DiedNovember 15 2004 2004 11 15 aged 95 Minneapolis Minnesota U S Political partyRepublicanSpouseEleanor Johnson m 1932 wbr Professionbusinessman philanthropist In one of the closest elections in the history of Minnesota and the United States Andersen lost the 1962 Minnesota gubernatorial election by 91 votes to Karl Rolvaag Contents 1 Early life and education 2 H B Fuller Company 3 Dairy farm 4 ECM Publishers 5 Politics 6 University of Minnesota 7 Voyageurs National Park 8 Book collector 9 Personal life and legacy 10 References 11 Other sources 12 External linksEarly life and education editAndersen was born in Chicago His mother Jennie Olivia Johnson 1877 1925 was the daughter of a seaman from Lulea Sweden who came to America as a young man and worked in the timber business Elmer s father Arne Kjelsberg Andersen 1866 1926 was an immigrant from Solor Norway who had settled in Chicago and became a streetcar motorman operating on the Halsted streetcar line out of the Ashland Avenue car barns My earliest memory Andersen wrote in his memoirs is of riding with him on the streetcar and being permitted to clang the bell as we came to street crossings 1 His parents separated when he was six years old Andersen never understood why his parents separated and never questioned them He and his mother and infant sister Caroline moved to Muskegon Michigan 2 His two older brothers Arnold and Marvin arrived in Muskegon later The Andersens had only sporadic contact with their father after the separation 3 At age nine Elmer contracted a mild form of polio but through exercise regained his strength 4 Andersen s brothers worked for E H Sheldon and Company in Muskegon a manufacturer of specialty school furniture Too young to work in the factory Elmer s first job was helping his mother who took in washing From there he moved on to selling newspapers vegetables specialty products candy bars and soft drinks He also carried travelers bags from the boat docks to the train station I love selling he wrote I love the interchange with people A good salesman gains influence on another person s mind That makes selling quite a serious undertaking At age 14 Andersen joined his brothers at Sheldon and Company He also wrote short essays on birds that were published in the Muskegon Chronicle The thrill I had seeing those columns in print was the start of an abiding attraction to the newspaper business 5 Andersen s mother was devoted to church work and ensured that her children were raised in the Lutheran church Andersen was confirmed at Our Savior s Lutheran Church in Muskegon In 1925 his mother contracted a cold that developed into pneumonia She died at home on March 3 1925 with Andersen at her bedside Within a year his father also died of a heart attack 6 Andersen graduated from high school in 1926 and became a member of the first class of the newly established Muskegon Junior College Upon graduating two years later he received the first diploma awarded by the school While in college he held a sales job with J J Fagan and Company a real estate firm and worked as a stringer for the Muskegon Chronicle while starting a newspaper for the junior college Not long after he and his brothers started a company Muskegon Realty which also sold casualty insurance for the Mercury Insurance Company I matured fast in those years I was selling homes and farms I was selling insurance I was editing a college newspaper and stringing for a daily newspaper I was studying and learning about things I had never known existed It was almost an incredible time 7 Andersen graduated from junior college in 1928 For the next year he worked as a salesman for the Sheldon Company working out of Minneapolis Minnesota A year in Minneapolis left me convinced that I wanted something more I wanted to enroll at the University of Minnesota I usually approach a new venture with specific objectives In aiming for the University of Minnesota I had three I wanted to get a degree for reasons of job protection I did not want somebody to push ahead of me because he had a degree and I did not Another object was to meet a woman whom I might marry I was beginning to long for a home life and a family I was lonely I discovered that being a traveling salesman on the road all the time was no way to meet the kind of women I wanted to meet My third objective was to have a good time I had been a fairly successful salesman and quite frugal with my earnings So having fun finding a girl getting a degree those were my objectives If I was able to learn anything along the way that would be purely incidental Andersen graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1931 8 H B Fuller Company editBy 1934 Andersen was growing dissatisfied with life as a traveling salesman He heard through an associate that the H B Fuller Company in St Paul Minnesota a manufacturer of school paste was looking for someone to hire in sales promotion Andersen discussed the position with the owner and president Harvey B Fuller Jr and joined the company on October 8 1934 9 Andersen managed sales for the H B Fuller Company over the next seven years until purchasing a controlling interest in the company in 1941 and taking over as president Under his leadership the firm became an early model of corporate responsibility recognized for offering generous benefits to employees their spouses and retirees Andersen s corporate philosophy was built around four priorities in a definite order The highest priority was service to the customer Anything the customer wanted should be seen as an opportunity for us to provide it Number two was that the company should exist deliberately for the benefit of the people associated in it I never liked the word employee It intimated a difference in class within a plant We always used the word associate Fuller s third priority was to make money To survive you have to make money To grow you need money To conduct research and develop new products you must have money The need for money can be desperate at times But corporations must put the quest for money in its proper place Our philosophy did not leave out service to the larger community We put it in fourth place behind service to customers our associates and the bottom line Community service cannot be paramount to a business but it ought not to be omitted as it too often is Business must concern itself with the larger society for reasons of self interest if nothing else 10 Under Andersen s guidance Fuller grew from a small plant to an international Fortune 500 company 11 Its expansion strategy baffled the competition Competitors thought the company was struggling to keep all the new plants afloat but the opposite was true Other leaders in the adhesives industry operated in New York City Chicago and San Francisco They had huge plants and big established investments They could not start a new plant What would they do with their big old plant By comparison we were popping around the country and setting up small plants in lively little markets We kept our real estate costs down We did not have large freight charges to pass on to the customer National Adhesives the biggest company in the industry was very focused on making money They maintained their prices at a high level even when their share of the market dropped in order to make more money That was a blessing for little companies like Fuller 12 In 1968 Fuller became a publicly traded company By 1970 it had become an adhesives industry leader with 27 plants and offices in the U S and ten in foreign countries The goal Andersen had set decades before of doubling its sales volume every five years was still being met In 1970 Fuller reached about 48 million in sales Andersen retired as president and chief executive officer in 1974 at age 65 turning the company over to his eldest son Tony 13 Dairy farm editIn 1953 12 years after becoming president of the H B Fuller Company Andersen entered the dairy business buying a farm held by his wife s family on Deer Lake near St Croix Falls Wisconsin It was the start of 35 years in the dairy business with about 200 head of cattle The herd was slowly converted to registered Holsteins In 1984 Deer Lake Farm received the National Holstein Association s Progressive Breeder Award Additional land was acquired in the 1950s and environmental restoration projects were undertaken on the expanded farm After Andersen moved out of the dairy business in 1988 80 acres of land surrounding one of the ponds were placed in a land preserve to honor the memories of his wife s parents 14 ECM Publishers editIn 1974 Andersen began a new career as a newspaper publisher and writer He acquired two newspapers to form the Princeton Union Eagle which eventually became part of ECM Publishers which published a number of weekly local newspapers and shoppers Andersen wrote editorials for the ECM papers many of which are gathered in Views from the Publisher s Desk 1997 His newspaper work gave him more personal satisfaction than almost anything else I have done His editorial goal was to make his readers think without telling them what to think 15 16 The Andersen family sold ECM to Adams Publishing Group in 2016 17 Politics edit nbsp Andersen in 1957 A progressive Republican Andersen served in the Minnesota legislature from 1949 to 1958 Among the many causes he championed were educational programs for exceptional children recognition of alcoholism as a health problem the Metropolitan Planning Commission in the Twin Cities and the Fair Employment Practices Act Minnesota was the fifth state to pass legislation on this issue 18 After the anti discrimination bill passed Andersen was greeted by an African American who told him that for the first time he felt like a real man Andersen described this moment as one of his most touching memories 19 In 1960 Andersen ran for governor against incumbent Democrat Orville Freeman In 1999 he said he decided to run after hearing Freeman wish he could again call the Minnesota National Guard to bust a strike at an Albert Lea meatpacking plant after a federal judge blocked that decision 20 Andersen won by more than 20 000 votes During his term the common loon became the Minnesota state bird several state parks were established and the Taconite Amendment and fair housing legislation passed He lost reelection two years later by the closest margin in U S history The election was held on November 6 1962 but the results were not known until March 21 1963 After recounts and court challenges it was determined that then Lieutenant Governor Karl Rolvaag had defeated Andersen by 91 votes out of nearly 1 3 million cast 619 842 to 619 751 21 22 Andersen remained in the Republican Party for the rest of his life but he became unhappy about how conservative the party became Even in the 1960s his views were in the minority of the party In a 2003 interview with the Saint Paul Pioneer Press he said I remind people I want to be known as a liberal Republican If that s a dirty word so be it In the 2004 presidential election he endorsed Democratic nominee John Kerry over incumbent Republican President George W Bush 20 He was so disenchanted with the Bush administration that he wrote a commentary in the Minneapolis Star Tribune claiming that Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney spew outright untruths with evangelistic fervor and calling Cheney an evil man who was the administration s real decision maker 23 Unlike many other members of his party Andersen opposed low taxes 24 University of Minnesota editAndersen served on the Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota from 1967 to 1975 and as chair from 1972 to 1975 From 1968 to 1988 he was a trustee of the University of Minnesota Foundation presiding over it from 1978 to 1981 During the Minnesota Campaign the university s major fundraising effort from 1985 to 1988 he played a major leadership role in what was at the time the most successful fundraising effort by any U S public university 25 Andersen believed there was an additional mission to the three central missions teaching research and community service of the university an archival one The building housing the archives and special collections of the university s libraries is named for him in recognition of his deep belief in that mission On May 14 1999 the university s Board of Regents unanimously voted to name the newest library in his honor The Elmer L Andersen Library opened in April 2000 26 Voyageurs National Park editOne of Andersen s proudest achievements came in April 1975 when Congress passed legislation establishing Voyageurs National Park thousands of acres of forests and lakes along Minnesota s northern border Along with people like naturalist Sigurd Olson legislator Willard Munger and aviator Charles A Lindbergh Andersen devoted thousands of hours to persuading landowners timber industry leaders politicians and citizens of the park s value to future generations For his work he is remembered as the father of Voyageurs National Park 27 It is flattering to have been called the father of Voyageurs Park I think that I made a difference But so did many many other people more than I could possibly name who kept the dream alive until it came to fruition Some of the real heroes were people in the region who opposed their friends or employers to support the park The park also had help from another real hero Charles Lindbergh Charles A Lindbergh s name deserves a prominent place in the annals of Voyageurs National Park The man who did so much for the development of aviation also did much for his home state for the cause of wilderness preservation and for me 28 Book collector editAndersen developed a passion for books as a child and collected them all his life As a young traveling salesman he saved his loose change and spent it on books His hunt for books brought him into contact with dealers other collectors printers and librarians He was well acquainted with book and auction catalogues paging through them became a welcome break in a busy day Andersen bought books with a purpose to build a library He intended to read them know them well catalog them and care for them American and English history and literature and inspirational poetry were of particular interest to him but as his interests expanded so did his reading and his library When he came to Minnesota he became interested in the state s history When he learned more about fine printing and printers he turned to William Morris and the Kelmscott Press And when he discovered something new like the Whittington Press he made sure that the University of Minnesota owned the printer s entire archive While writing his Princeton Union Eagle editorials Andersen wrote a column on book collecting using the name Arne Kjelsberg his father s first two names 29 He did not reveal his authorship of the column for many years though a close friend guessed Andersen was a longtime member of the bibliophilic Ampersand Club and his Arne Kjelsberg articles were published the year after his death in honor of the club s 75th anniversary in 2005 Compilation of the volume commenced while Andersen lived and he expressed hope to attend its publication party 30 Andersen s wife supported his bibliomania Together their book buying was intimately connected with book giving and support for libraries and reading Public libraries around the state and other book concerns benefited from their support and interest They were major benefactors of the University of Minnesota and its libraries Much of the collection at the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum Library which bears Andersen s name is a result of their generosity The gift of his personal library of 12 500 rare volumes in March 1999 was described in the Minneapolis Star Tribune as a gift of the heart 31 Personal life and legacy editAndersen met Eleanor Anne Johnson 1911 2011 at Grace University Lutheran Church while they were both students She was the eldest child of Gustav A and Elizabeth Johnson both Swedish immigrants The Andersens married on September 1 1932 Eleanor s sister Edith Johnson later married future Minnesota Senator Stanley W Holmquist The Andersens settled in the Twin Cities Eleanor decided to leave the university when they were married and postpone the completion of her degree Andersen credited his wife for many of his accomplishments 32 They had three children Several years later Eleanor Andersen earned her bachelor s degree 33 34 35 Andersen wrote a number of books including his autobiography A Man s Reach a collection of newspaper articles Views from the Publisher s Desk a collection of speeches and reflections I Trust to Be Believed and Elmer s Tour a guide to the Minnesota state capitol building The Elmer L and Eleanor J Andersen Foundation was founded in 1957 36 37 Andersen died in Minneapolis on November 15 2004 just months after a gala celebration of his 95th birthday held in the library that bears his name He was the last living former American governor born in the 1900s decade 20 The Minnesota Department of Human Services Building in St Paul is also named for him 38 References edit Andersen Elmer L 2000 A Man s Reach Edited by Lori Sturdevant Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press Andersen Reach pp 3 4 Andersen Elmer L 2000 A Man s Reach U of Minnesota Press p 419 ISBN 9781452905099 separation Andersen Reach p 13 Andersen Reach pp 7 12 Andersen Reach pp 16 18 Andersen Reach pp 25 28 Andersen Reach pp 39 45 Andersen Reach pp 59 60 1941 Harvey Fuller Sells Company to Elmer Andersen H B Fuller Retrieved May 15 2016 1984 H B Fuller Named to Fortune 500 Based on 1983 Performance H B Fuller Retrieved May 15 2016 Andersen Reach pp 66 101 1971 Tony Andersen Becomes H B Fuller President H B Fuller Retrieved May 15 2016 Andersen Reach pp 158 166 Andersen Reach pp 328 341 Publications Princeton Union Eagle ECM Publishers Retrieved May 15 2016 Adams Publishing Group to acquire ECM Publishers Inc Retrieved February 19 2018 Elmer L Lee Andersen Thirtieth State Governor Minnesota Historical Society Archived from the original on March 1 2007 Retrieved May 15 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Elmer L Andersen dead at 95 Elizabeth Stawicki MRP Radio November 16 2004 a b c Whereatt Robert Smith Dane November 16 2004 A Minnesota statesman dies Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 18 2004 Retrieved July 9 2021 Taconite Amendment No 1 Approved by Overwhelming Vote Hibbing Daily Tribune November 3 1964 Archived from the original on September 5 2017 Retrieved May 15 2016 Elmer Lee Andersen Minnesota Legislative Reference Library Retrieved May 15 2016 Elmer L Andersen Dead at 95 News minnesota publicradio org Retrieved April 12 2014 The Mary Hanson Show Interview with Elmer L Andersen 2004 Governor Elmer Lee Andersen 1909 2004 Regents of the University of Minnesota Archived from the original on June 12 2021 Retrieved May 15 2016 About Andersen Library Regents of the University of Minnesota Retrieved May 15 2016 Voyageurs National Park Minnesota s Only National Park Destination Voyageurs National Park November 3 1964 Retrieved May 15 2016 Andersen Reach pp 275 285 Andersen Reach p 338 Kjelsberg Arne Anderson Elmer L 2005 On Book Collecting The Ampersand Club Smetanka Mary Jane 1999 Former Governor s Gift Is Voluminous Minneapolis Star Tribune Metro ed April 1 p 1A The Elmer L amp Eleanor J Andersen Foundation 2011 President s Report The Elmer L amp Eleanor J Andersen Foundation December 26 2011 Retrieved August 29 2018 Eleanor Anne Johnson Andersen Minnesota Historical Society Retrieved May 15 2016 Miller Pamela January 15 2011 Eleanor Andersen 99 Widow of Former Governor Minneapolis Star Tribune Retrieved May 15 2016 Victor Holmquist Minnesota Legislative Reference Library Retrieved May 15 2016 The Elmer L and Eleanor J Andersen Foundation Retrieved December 12 2017 2016 990 The Elmer L and Eleanor J Andersen Foundation PDF Retrieved December 12 2017 Capitol Area Architectural and Planning Board Elmer L Andersen Building State of Minnesota Retrieved July 1 2020 Other sources editAndersen Elmer L 1997 Views from the Publisher s Desk Nodin Press LLC ISBN 978 0931714733 Andersen Elmer L 2004 Man s Reach University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0816637393 Andersen Elmer L 2004 I Trust to Be Believed Nodin Press LLC ISBN 978 1932472073 Andersen Elmer L 2005 Elmer s Tour A Former Governor s Loving Look at the Minnesota State Capitol Nodin Press LLC ISBN 978 1932472387External links editMinnesota Legislator Past and Present Governors of Minnesota U S Congressional Delegations from Minnesota The Elmer L Andersen Papers including extensive records of his public service are available for research use at the Minnesota Historical Society Elmer L Andersen Kay Sexton Award at the Minnesota Book Awards NORTHERN IGHTS Minnesota Author Interview TV Series 376 1994 Interview with Elmer L Andersen Part One by Patrick Coleman NORTHERN LIGHTS Minnesota Author Interview TV Series 380 1994 Interview with Elmer L Andersen Part Two by Patrick Coleman NORTHERN LIGHTS Minnesota Author Interview TV Series 381 1994 Elmer L Andersen at Minnesota Legislators Past amp Present Party political offices Preceded byGeorge MacKinnon Republican nominee for Governor of Minnesota1960 1962 Succeeded byHarold LeVander Political offices Preceded byOrville Freeman Governor of Minnesota1961 1963 Succeeded byKarl Rolvaag Honorary titles Preceded byFrank Morrison Oldest living U S governorApril 19 2004 November 15 2004 Succeeded byAlbert Rosellini Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elmer L Andersen amp oldid 1211919457, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.