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Swedish emigration to the United States

During the 19th and early 20th centuries, about 1.3 million Swedes left Sweden for the United States of America. While the land of the American frontier was a magnet for the rural poor all over Europe, some factors encouraged Swedish emigration in particular. Religious repression and idiosyncrasy practiced by the Swedish Lutheran State Church was widely resented, as was social conservatism and snobbery influenced by the Swedish monarchy. Population growth and crop failures made conditions in the Swedish countryside increasingly bleak. By contrast, reports from early Swedish emigrants painted the American Midwest as an earthly paradise.

Poster showing a cross-section of the Cunard Line's immigrant liner RMS Aquitania, launched in 1913.

According to Joy K. Lintelman, mass migration from Sweden to the United States unfolded in five distinct waves between the 1840s and 1920s. Within this period, hundreds of thousands of Swedish emigrants made their way over and settled in both rural and urban scapes of the United States. Factors which brought migration to a trickle were found on both sides of the Atlantic, with restrictions on immigration placed in the United States and improving social and economic conditions in Sweden being the primary factors.[1]

Swedish migration to the United States peaked in the decades after the American Civil War (1861–1865). By 1890 the U.S. census reported a Swedish-American population of nearly 800,000. These rising emigration rates caused great concern in Sweden. However, before any reform could be done to avoid a continuous flow of Swedish citizens fleeing the home land, World War I (1914–1918) broke out and effectively ended the process. From the mid-1920s, there was no longer a Swedish mass emigration.

Early history: the Swedish-American dream edit

The Swedish West India Company established a colony on the Delaware River in 1638, naming it New Sweden.[2] A small, short-lived colonial settlement, it was lost to the Dutch in New Netherland in 1655.[2] Until 1656, close to 700 Swedish and Finnish settlers had migrated to the colony, of which perhaps 40% was Finnish; what is now the country of Finland was then part of Sweden, and many Finns had migrated to Sweden proper, particularly Värmland, from whence they came to America.[3] Many of the Finns spoke Swedish as a first language, and the clergymen who came to New Sweden were all speakers of Swedish. Finnish was apparently forgotten by 1750 or so; Swedish held on until the late 18th century.[4] While generally the Swedes thought of themselves not as colonizers, having been spared the bloody conflicts with indigenous Americans had with other colonists and of having had good relations with them, new research has complicated that idea.[5]

The historian H. A. Barton has suggested that the greatest significance of New Sweden was the strong and long-lasting interest in America that the colony generated in Sweden. America was seen as the standard-bearer of liberalism and personal freedom, and became an ideal for liberal Swedes. Their admiration for America was combined with the notion of a past Swedish Golden Age with ancient Nordic ideals. Supposedly corrupted by foreign influences, the timeless "Swedish values" would be recovered by Swedes in the New World. This remained a fundamental theme of Swedish, and later Swedish-American, discussion of America, though the recommended "timeless" values changed over time. In the 17th and 18th centuries, Swedes who called for greater religious freedom would often refer to America as the supreme symbol of it. The emphasis shifted from religion to politics in the 19th century, when liberal citizens of the hierarchic Swedish class society looked with admiration to the American Republicanism and civil rights. In the early 20th century, the Swedish-American dream even embraced the idea of a welfare state responsible for the well-being of all its citizens. Underneath these shifting ideas ran from the start the current which carried all before it in the later 20th century: America as the symbol and dream of unfettered individualism.[6]

Swedish debate about the United States remained mostly theoretical before the 19th century, since very few Swedes had any personal experience of the nation. Emigration was illegal and population was seen as the wealth of nations.[7] However, the Swedish population doubled in size between 1750 and 1850 a time of "peace, vaccination, and potatoes",[8] and as population growth outstripped economic development, it gave rise to fears of overpopulation based on the influential population theory of Thomas Malthus. In the 1830s, the laws against emigration were repealed.[9]

19th century edit

Akenson argues that hard times in Sweden before 1867 produced a strong push effect, but that for cultural reasons most Swedes refused to emigrate and clung on at home. Akenson says the state wanted to keep its population high and:

The upper classes' need for a cheap and plentiful labor force, the instinctive willingness of the clergy of the state church to discourage emigration on both moral and social grounds, and the deference of the lower orders to the arcade of powers that hovered above them—all these things formed an architecture of cultural hesitancy concerning emigration.[10]
 
Swedish anti-emigration propaganda, representing Per Svensson's dream of the American idyll (left) and the reality of Per's life in the wilderness (right), where he is menaced by a mountain lion, a big snake, and wild Indians, seen scalping and disembowelling a man.[11]

A few "countercultural" deviants from the mainstream did leave and showed the way. The severe economic hardship of the "Great Deprivation" of 1867 to 1869, finally overcame the reluctance and the floodgates opened to produce an "emigration culture".[12]

European mass emigration: push and pull edit

Large-scale European emigration to the United States started in the 1840s in Britain, Ireland and Germany. That was followed by a rising wave after 1850 from most Northern European countries, and in turn by Central and Southern Europe. Research into the forces behind this European mass emigration has relied on sophisticated statistical methods.[13] One theory which has gained wide acceptance is Jerome's analysis in 1926 of the "push and pull" factors—the impulses to emigration generated by conditions in Europe and the U.S. respectively. Jerome found that fluctuations in emigration co-varied more with economic developments in the U.S. than in Europe, and deduced that the pull was stronger than the push.[14] Jerome's conclusions have been challenged, but still form the basis of much work on the subject.[15][16]

Emigration patterns in the Nordic countries—Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, and Iceland—show striking variation. Nordic mass emigration started in Norway, which also retained the highest rate throughout the century. Swedish emigration got underway in the early 1840s, and had the third-highest rate in all of Europe, after Ireland and Norway. Denmark had a consistently low rate of emigration, while Iceland had a late start but soon reached levels comparable to Norway. Finland, whose mass emigration did not start until the late 1880s, and at the time part of the Russian Empire, is usually classified as part of the Eastern European wave.[15]

Crossing the Atlantic edit

 
The Emigrants by Knut Ekwall (1843–1912) represents the artist's vision of what the 19th-century transatlantic experience might be like. Date unknown.
 
In the Land of Promise, Castle Garden, 1884, by Charles Frederic Ulrich, showing the Emigrant Landing Depot in Manhattan

The first European emigrants travelled in the holds of sailing cargo ships. With the advent of the age of steam, an efficient transatlantic passenger transport mechanism was established at the end of the 1860s. It was based on huge ocean liners run by international shipping lines, most prominently Cunard, White Star, and Inman. The speed and capacity of the large steamships meant that tickets became cheaper. From the Swedish port towns of Stockholm, Malmö and Gothenburg, transport companies operated various routes, some of them with complex early stages and consequently a long and trying journey on the road and at sea. Thus North German transport agencies relied on the regular Stockholm—Lübeck steamship service to bring Swedish emigrants to Lübeck, and from there on German train services to take them to Hamburg or Bremen. There they would board ships to the British ports of Southampton and Liverpool and change to one of the great transatlantic liners bound for New York. The majority of Swedish emigrants, however, travelled from Gothenburg to Hull, UK, on dedicated boats run by the Wilson Line, then by train across Britain to Liverpool and the big ships.[17]

During the later 19th century, the major shipping lines financed Swedish emigrant agents and paid for the production of large quantities of emigration propaganda. Much of this promotional material, such as leaflets, was produced by immigration promoters in the U.S. Propaganda and advertising by shipping line agents was often blamed for emigration by the conservative Swedish ruling class, which grew increasingly alarmed at seeing the agricultural labor force leave the country. It was a Swedish 19th-century cliché to blame the falling ticket prices and the pro-emigration propaganda of the transport system for the craze of emigration, but modern historians have varying views about the real importance of such factors. Brattne and Åkerman have examined the advertising campaigns and the ticket prices as a possible third force between push and pull. They conclude that neither advertisements nor pricing had any decisive influence on Swedish emigration. While the companies remain unwilling, as of 2007, to open their archives to researchers, the limited sources available suggest that ticket prices did drop in the 1880s, but remained on average artificially high because of cartels and price-fixing.[18] On the other hand, H. A. Barton states that the cost of crossing the Atlantic dropped drastically between 1865 and 1890, encouraging poorer Swedes to emigrate.[19] The research of Brattne and Åkerman has shown that the leaflets sent out by the shipping line agents to prospective emigrants would not so much celebrate conditions in the New World, as simply emphasize the comforts and advantages of the particular company. Descriptions of life in America were unvarnished, and the general advice to emigrants brief and factual. Newspaper advertising, while very common, tended to be repetitive and stereotyped in content.[20]

Mid-19th century edit

 
The Emigrants by S. V. Helander (1839–1901): a young farmer bids a sober farewell to friends and relatives.

Swedish mass migration took off in the spring of 1841 with the departure of Uppsala University graduate Gustaf Unonius (1810–1902) together with his wife, a maid, and two students. This small group founded a settlement they named New Upsala in Waukesha County, Wisconsin, and began to clear the wilderness, full of enthusiasm for frontier life in "one of the most beautiful valleys the world can offer".[21] Though he would eventually become disillusioned with life in the U.S. and return to Sweden, his reports in praise of the simple and virtuous pioneer life, published in the liberal newspaper Aftonbladet, had already begun to draw Swedes westward.[22]

The rising Swedish exodus was caused by economic, political, and religious conditions affecting particularly the rural population. Europe was in the grip of an economic depression. In Sweden, population growth and repeated crop failures were making it increasingly difficult to make a living from the tiny land plots on which at least three quarters of the inhabitants depended. Rural conditions were especially bleak in the stony and unforgiving Småland province, which became the heartland of emigration. The American Midwest was an agricultural antipode to Småland, for it, Unonius reported in 1842, "more closely than any other country in the world approaches the ideal which nature seems to have intended for the happiness and comfort of humanity."[23] Prairie land in the Midwest was ample, loamy, and government-owned. From 1841 it was sold to squatters for $1.25 per acre, ($37 per acre ($91/ha) as of 2023), following the Preemption Act of 1841 (later replaced by the Homestead Act). The inexpensive and fertile land of Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin was irresistible to landless and impoverished European peasants. It also attracted more well-established farmers.[citation needed]

The political freedom of the American republic exerted a similar pull. Swedish peasants were some of the most literate in Europe, and consequently had access to the European egalitarian and radical ideas that culminated in the Revolutions of 1848.[24] The clash between Swedish liberalism and a repressive monarchist regime raised political awareness among the disadvantaged, many of whom looked to the U.S. to realize their republican ideals.[citation needed]

Dissenting religious practitioners also widely resented the treatment they received from the Lutheran State Church through the Conventicle Act. Conflicts between local worshipers and the new churches were most explosive in the countryside, where dissenting Pietist groups were more active, and were more directly under the eye of local law enforcement and the parish priest. Before non-Lutheran churches were granted toleration in 1809,[25] clampdowns on illegal forms of worship and teaching often provoked whole groups of Pietists and Radical Pietists to leave together, intent on forming their own spiritual communities in the new land. The largest contingent of such dissenters, 1,500 followers of Eric Jansson, left in the late 1840s and founded a community in Bishop Hill, Illinois.[26] Baptists, including the exiled F. O. Nilsson and fellow preachers Gustaf Palmquist and Anders Wiberg, started Baptist churches in the Midwest.[27] The Mission Friends, who emigrated in the 1860s, would later found the Evangelical Free Church[28] and Evangelical Covenant Church denominations.[29] Lutherans such as Lars Paul Esbjörn – influenced by Pietism and Methodism and felt he was denied advancement in the church because of it – also found new opportunities in the United States. There he became one of the founders of the Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church.[30][31][32] Swedish Methodist pioneers like Victor Witting [sv] began to emigrate in the 1840s.[33][34] Mormon converts found religious freedom in the United States as well.[35]

The first Swedish emigrant guidebook was published as early as 1841, the year Unonius left, and nine handbooks were published between 1849 and 1855.[36] Substantial groups of lumberjacks and iron miners were recruited directly by company agents in Sweden. Agents recruiting construction builders for American railroads also appeared, the first in 1854, scouting for the Illinois Central Railroad.[37]

The Swedish establishment disapproved intensely of emigration. Seen as depleting the labor force and as a defiant act among the lower orders, emigration alarmed both the spiritual and the secular authorities. Many emigrant diaries and memoirs feature an emblematic early scene in which the local clergy warns travellers against risking their souls among foreign heretics. The conservative press described emigrants as lacking in patriotism and moral fibre: "No workers are more lazy, immoral and indifferent than those who immigrate to other places."[38] Emigration was denounced as an unreasoning "mania" or "craze", implanted in an ignorant populace by "outside agents". The liberal press retorted that the "lackeys of monarchism" failed to take into account the miserable conditions in the Swedish countryside and the backwardness of Swedish economic and political institutions.[39] "Yes, emigration is indeed a 'mania'", wrote the liberal Göteborgs Handels- och Sjöfartstidning sarcastically, "The mania of wanting to eat one's fill after one has worked oneself hungry! The craze of wanting to support oneself and one's family in an honest manner!"[40]

The great Swedish famine of 1867–1869, caused by consecutive wet and dry years, followed by a year of mass epidemics, led to the migration to the US of 60,000 Swedes during that period--the start of the mass migration.[41] Another contributing factor was the poverty of 19th-century Sweden, made worse by the abusive solutions practiced to complement the strict Poor Care Regulation of 1871, such as the rotegång, the pauper auction and child auctions.[42]

Late 19th century edit

 
Female laborers at a late-19th-century Swedish sugar beet plantation. Sugar production remained non-mechanized and labor-intensive with low wages throughout the 19th century, fuelling the workers' dream of American opportunity and modern agricultural machinery.
 
Steam-driven threshing machine near Hallock, Minnesota, 1882
 
Swedish immigrants in Rush City, Minnesota, in 1887. Olof Olsson emigrated from Nerikes kil in 1880.

Swedish emigration to the United States reached its height in the 1870–1900 era. The size of the Swedish-American community in 1865 is estimated at 25,000 people, a figure soon to be surpassed by the yearly Swedish immigration. By 1890, the U.S. census reported a Swedish-American population of nearly 800,000, with immigration peaking in 1869 and again in 1887.[43] Most of this influx settled in the North. The great majority of them had been peasants in the old country, pushed away from Sweden by disastrous crop failures[44] and pulled towards the United States by the cheap land resulting from the 1862 Homestead Act. Most immigrants became pioneers, clearing and cultivating the virgin land of the Midwest and extending the pre-Civil War settlements further west, into Kansas and Nebraska.[45] Once sizable Swedish farming communities had formed on the prairie, the greatest impetus for further peasant migration came through personal contacts. The iconic "America-letter" to relatives and friends at home spoke directly from a position of trust and shared background, carrying immediate conviction. At the height of migration, familial America-letters could lead to chain reactions which would all but depopulate some Swedish parishes, dissolving tightly knit communities which then re-assembled in the Midwest.[36]

Other forces worked to push the new immigrants towards the cities, particularly Chicago. According to historian H. Arnold Barton, the cost of crossing the Atlantic dropped by more than half between 1865 and 1890, which led to progressively poorer Swedes contributing a growing share of immigration (but compare Brattne and Åkerman, see "Crossing the Atlantic" above). The new immigrants were increasingly younger and unmarried. With the shift from family to individual immigration came a faster and fuller Americanization, as young, single individuals with little money took whatever jobs they could get, often in cities. Large numbers even of those who had been farmers in the old country made straight for American cities and towns, living and working there at least until they had saved enough capital to marry and buy farms of their own.[46] A growing proportion stayed in urban centers, combining emigration with the flight from the countryside which was happening in the homeland and all across Europe.[47]

Single young women, most commonly moved straight from field work in rural Sweden to jobs as live-in housemaids in the urban United States. "Literature and tradition have preserved the often tragic image of the pioneer immigrant wife and mother", writes Barton, "bearing her burden of hardship, deprivation and longing on the untamed frontier ... More characteristic among the newer arrivals, however, was the young, unmarried woman ... As domestic servants in America, they ... were treated as members of the families they worked for and like 'ladies' by American men, who showed them a courtesy and consideration to which they were quite unaccustomed at home."[48] They found employment easily, as Scandinavian maids were in high demand, and learned the language and customs quickly. Working conditions were far better than in Sweden, in terms of wages, hours of work, benefits, and ability to change positions.[49][50] In contrast, newly arrived Swedish men were often employed in all-Swedish work gangs. The young women usually married Swedish men and brought with them in marriage an enthusiasm for ladylike, American manners and middle-class refinements. Many admiring remarks are recorded from the late 19th century about the sophistication and elegance that simple Swedish farm girls would gain in a few years, and about their unmistakably American demeanor.[48]

As ready workers, the Swedes were generally welcomed by the Americans, who often singled them out as the "best" immigrants. There was no significant anti-Swedish nativism of the sort that attacked Irish, German and, especially, Chinese newcomers. The Swedish style was more familiar: "They are not peddlers, nor organ grinders, nor beggars; they do not sell ready-made clothing nor keep pawn shops", wrote the Congregational missionary M. W. Montgomery in 1885; "they do not seek the shelter of the American flag merely to introduce and foster among us ... socialism, nihilism, communism ... they are more like Americans than are any other foreign peoples."[51]

 
"A childhood acquaintance, much changed": the simple young Swedish peasant women's rapid growth in sophistication in the United States.

A number of well-established and longtime Swedish Americans visited Sweden in the 1870s, making comments that give historians a window on the cultural contrasts involved. A group from Chicago made the journey in an effort to remigrate and spend their later years in the country of their birth, but changed their minds when faced with the realities of 19th-century Swedish society. Uncomfortable with what they described as the social snobbery, pervasive drunkenness, and superficial religious life of the old country, they returned promptly to the United States.[52] The most notable visitor was Hans Mattson (1832–1893), an early Minnesota settler who had served as a colonel in the Union Army and had been Minnesota's secretary of state. He visited Sweden in 1868–69 to recruit settlers on behalf of the Minnesota Immigration Board, and again in the 1870s to recruit for the Northern Pacific Railroad. Viewing Swedish class snobbery with indignation, Mattson wrote in his Reminiscences that this contrast was the key to the greatness of the United States, where "labor is respected, while in most other countries it is looked down upon with slight". He was sardonically amused by the ancient pageantry of monarchy at the ceremonial opening of the Riksdag: "With all respects for old Swedish customs and manners, I cannot but compare this pageant to a great American circus—minus the menagerie, of course."[53]

Mattson's first recruiting visit came immediately after consecutive seasons of crop failure in 1867 and 1868, and he found himself "besieged by people who wished to accompany me back to America." He noted that:

…the laboring and middle classes already at that time had a pretty correct idea of America, and the fate that awaited emigrants there; but the ignorance, prejudice and hatred toward America and everything pertaining to it among the aristocracy, and especially the office holders, was as unpardonable as it was ridiculous. It was claimed by them that all was humbug in America, that it was the paradise of scoundrels, cheats, and rascals, and that nothing good could possibly come out of it.[54]

A more recent American immigrant, Ernst Skarstedt, who visited Sweden in 1885, received the same galling impression of upper-class arrogance and anti-Americanism. The laboring classes, in their turn, appeared to him coarse and degraded, drinking heavily in public, speaking in a stream of curses, making obscene jokes in front of women and children. Skarstedt felt surrounded by "arrogance on one side and obsequiousness on the other, a manifest scorn for menial labor, a desire to appear to be more than one was". This traveller too was incessantly hearing American civilization and culture denigrated from the depths of upper-class Swedish prejudice: "If I, in all modesty, told something about America, it could happen that in reply I was informed that this could not possibly be so or that the matter was better understood in Sweden."[55]

Swedish emigration dropped dramatically after 1890; return migration rose as conditions in Sweden improved. Sweden underwent a rapid industrialization within a few years in the 1890s, and wages rose, principally in the fields of mining, forestry, and agriculture. The pull from the U.S. declined even more sharply than the Swedish "push", as the best farmland was taken. No longer growing but instead settling and consolidating, the Swedish-American community seemed set to become ever more American and less Swedish. The new century, however, saw a new influx.[56]

Religious confusion edit

In the 1800s–1900s, the Lutheran State Church supported the Swedish government by opposing both emigration and the clergy's efforts recommending sobriety. This escalated to a point where its priests even were persecuted by the church for preaching sobriety, and the reactions of many congregation members to that contributed to an inspiration to leave the country (which however was against the law until 1840).[57]

20th century edit

Parliamentary Emigration Commission 1907–1913 edit

 
Swedish emigrants boarding ship in Gothenburg in 1905

Emigration rose again at the turn of the 20th century, reaching a new peak of about 35,000 Swedes in 1903. Figures remained high until World War I, alarming both conservative Swedes, who saw emigration as a challenge to national solidarity, and liberals, who feared the disappearance of the labor force necessary for economic development. One-fourth of all Swedes had made the United States their home,[58] and a broad national consensus mandated that a Parliamentary Emigration Commission study the problem in 1907. Approaching the task with what Barton calls "characteristic Swedish thoroughness",[59] the Commission published its "Emigration Inquest", including findings and proposals, in 21 large volumes. The Commission rejected conservative proposals for legal restrictions on emigration and in the end supported the liberal line of "bringing the best sides of America to Sweden" through social and economic reform. Topping the list of urgent reforms were universal male suffrage, better housing, and general economic development. The Commission especially hoped that broader popular education would counteract "class and caste differences"[60]

Class inequality in Swedish society was a strong and recurring theme in the commission's findings. It appeared as a major motivator in the 289 personal narratives included in the report. These documents, of great research value and human interest today, were submitted by Swedes in Canada and the U.S. in response to requests in Swedish-American newspapers. The great majority of replies expressed enthusiasm for their new homeland and criticized conditions in Sweden. Bitter experiences of Swedish class snobbery still rankled after sometimes 40–50 years in the United States. Writers recalled the hard work, pitiful wages, and grim poverty of life in the Swedish countryside. One woman wrote from North Dakota of how in her Värmland home parish, she had had to earn her living in peasant households from the age of eight, starting work at four in the morning and living on "rotten herring and potatoes, served out in small amounts so that I would not eat myself sick". She could see "no hope of saving anything in case of illness", but rather could see "the poorhouse waiting for me in the distance". When she was seventeen, her emigrated brothers sent her a prepaid ticket to the United States, and "the hour of freedom struck."[61]

The Emigration Inquest, according to Franklin D. Scott, had little effect on emigration. A year after the Commission published its last volume, World War I began and reduced emigration drastically. Despite a slight increase after World War I, the American Immigration Act of 1924 significantly reduced quotas for Swedish immigrants, and by the late 1920s those quota were not even filled anymore.[62] Barton points to the rapid implementation of essentially all the commission's recommendations to improve conditions in Sweden, from industrialization to an array of social reforms, and claims that "its findings must have had a powerful cumulative effect upon Sweden's leadership and broader public opinion".[63]

Swedish Americans edit

 
Birgit Ridderstedt and small sons emigrating on the mid-Atlantic, bound for Portland, Maine, and on to Chicago in 1950

The Midwest remained the heartland of the Swedish-American community, but its position weakened in the 20th century: in 1910, 54% of the Swedish immigrants and their children lived in the Midwest, 15% in industrial areas in the East, and 10% on the West Coast. Chicago was effectively the Swedish-American capital, accommodating about 10% of all Swedish Americans—more than 100,000 people—making it the second-largest Swedish city in the world (only Stockholm had more Swedish inhabitants).[45]

Defining themselves as both Swedish and American, the Swedish-American community retained a fascination for the old country and their relationship to it. The nostalgic visits to Sweden which had begun in the 1870s continued well into the 20th century, and narratives from these trips formed a staple of the lively Swedish-American publishing companies.[64] The accounts testify to complex feelings, but each contingent of American travellers were freshly indignant at Swedish class pride and Swedish disrespect for women. It was with renewed pride in American culture that they returned to the Midwest.[65]

 
Distribution of Swedish Americans in 2000 by county, according to the United States Census

In the 2000 U.S. Census, about four million Americans claimed to have Swedish roots.[66] Minnesota remains by a wide margin the state with the most inhabitants of Swedish descent—9.6% of the population as of 2005.[67]

Memory edit

The best-known artistic representation of the Swedish mass migration is the epic four-novel suite The Emigrants (1949–1959) by Vilhelm Moberg (1898–1973). Portraying the lives of an emigrant family through several generations, the novels have sold nearly two million copies in Sweden and have been translated into more than twenty languages.[68] The tetralogy has been filmed by Jan Troell as The Emigrants (1971) and The New Land (1972), and forms the basis of Kristina from Duvemåla, a 1995 musical by former ABBA members Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus.[69]

In Sweden, the "House of Emigrants" (Emigranternas Hus) was founded in Gothenburg, the main port for Swedish emigrants, in 2004. The centre has exhibitions on migration and research on genealogy.[70] In the U.S., there are hundreds of active Swedish-American organizations as of 2007, for which the Swedish Council of America functions as an umbrella group. There are Swedish-American museums in Philadelphia, Chicago, Minneapolis, and Seattle.[45] Rural cemeteries such as the Moline Swedish Lutheran Cemetery in central Texas also serve as a valuable record of the first Swedish people to come to the United States.[71]

See also edit

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Lintelman, I Go to America, 71-74.
  2. ^ a b Colenbrander, Koloniale Geschiedenis, 14-15.
  3. ^ Carlsson, "The New Sweden Colonists", 173-80.
  4. ^ Carlsson, "The New Sweden Colonists", 180-81.
  5. ^ Fur, Colonialism in the Margins, 1-2.
  6. ^ Barton, A Folk Divided, 5–7.
  7. ^ Kälvemark, 94–96.
  8. ^ Beijbom, "European Emigration".
  9. ^ Barton, A Folk Divided, 11.
  10. ^ Akenson, Ireland, Sweden, and the Great European Migration, 70.
  11. ^ The pictures originally illustrated a cautionary tale published in 1869 in the Swedish periodical Läsning för folket, the organ of the Society for the Propagation of Useful Knowledge (Sällskapet för nyttiga kunskapers spridande). See Barton, A Folk Divided, 71.
  12. ^ Akenson, Ireland, Sweden, and the Great European Migration, 1815–1914 pp. 37–39
  13. ^ Åkerman, passim.
  14. ^ Norman, 150–153.
  15. ^ a b Runblom and Norman, 315.
  16. ^ Norman, passim.
  17. ^ Brattne and Åkerman, 179–181.
  18. ^ Brattne and Åkerman, 179–181, 186–189, 199–200.
  19. ^ Barton, 38.
  20. ^ Brattne and Åkerman, 187–192.
  21. ^ Unonius, quoted in Barton, A Folk Divided, 13.
  22. ^ Pehrson, Den nya världen, 239–240, 260–261.
  23. ^ Quoted in Barton, A Folk Divided, 14.
  24. ^ Cipollo, 115, estimates adult literacy in Sweden at 90% in 1850, which places it highest among the European countries he has surveyed.
  25. ^ Gritsch, A History of Lutheranism, 180.
  26. ^ Barton, A Folk Divided, 15–16.
  27. ^ Douglas, In Search of the New Testament Church, 232-33.
  28. ^ Gustafson, D. L. Moody and Swedes, 6, 167.
  29. ^ "Scandinavian Pietism". Melton's Encyclopedia of American Religions. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
  30. ^ Gustafson, Swedish Chicago.
  31. ^ Lagerquist, The Lutherans, 176.
  32. ^ Westin, Lars Paul Esbjörn.
  33. ^ Nausner, "Swedish Methodists in America"
  34. ^ Barten, The Old Country, 38-39.
  35. ^ "Mormonism in Europe - The Mormonism and Migration Project". Claremont Graduate University. Retrieved 10 May 2022.
  36. ^ a b Barton, A Folk Divided, 17.
  37. ^ Barton, A Folk Divided, 18.
  38. ^ Proclaimed in an article in the newspaper Nya Wermlandstidningen in April 1855; quoted by Barton, A Folk Divided, 20–22.
  39. ^ Göteborgs Handels- och Sjöfartstidning, 1849, quoted in Barton, A Folk Divided, 24.
  40. ^ 1851, quoted and translated by Barton, A Folk Divided, 24.
  41. ^ Beijbom, "European Emigration".
  42. ^ Sven Ulric Palme: Hundra år under kommunalförfattningarna 1862–1962: en minnesskrift utgiven av Svenska landskommunernas förbund, Svenska landstingsförbundet [och] Svenska stadsförbundet, Trykt hos Godvil, 1962[ISBN missing]
  43. ^ Barton, A Folk Divided, 37.
  44. ^ 1867 and 1868 were the worst years for crop failure, which ruined many smallholders; see Barton, A Folk Divided, 37.
  45. ^ a b c Swenson Center 18 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine .
  46. ^ Beijbom, "Chicago 6 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine "
  47. ^ Barton, A Folk Divided, 38–41.
  48. ^ a b Barton, A Folk Divided, 41.
  49. ^ Lintelman, I Go to America, 57-58.
  50. ^ Hoerder, "Historical Perspectives", 78.
  51. ^ Quoted by Barton, A Folk Divided, 40.
  52. ^ Private letters by Anders Larsson in the 1870s, summarized by Barton, A Folk Divided, 59.
  53. ^ Quoted by Barton, A Folk Divided, 60–61.
  54. ^ Barton, A Folk Divided, 61–62.
  55. ^ Svensk-amerikanska folket i helg och söcken (Ernst Teofil Skarstedt. Stockholm: Björck & Börjesson. 1917)[ISBN missing]
  56. ^ Barton, A Folk Divided, 80.
  57. ^ Vår svenska stam på utländsk mark; Svenska öden och insatser i främmande land; I västerled, Amerikas förenta stater och Kanada, Ed. Axel Boëthius, Stockholm 1952, Volume I, pp. 92, 137, 273 & 276; for the whole section[ISBN missing]
  58. ^ 1.4 million first- and second-generation Swedish immigrants lived in the U.S. in 1910, while Sweden's population at the time was 5.5 million; see Beijbom, "Review 2 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine".
  59. ^ Barton, A Folk Divided, 149.
  60. ^ The phrase is from Ernst Beckman's original liberal parliamentary motion for instituting the Commission; quoted by Barton, A Folk Divided, 149.
  61. ^ Quoted from Volume VII of the Survey by Barton, A Folk Divided, 152.
  62. ^ Barton, A Folk Divided, 164.
  63. ^ Barton, A Folk Divided, 165.
  64. ^ For Swedish American publishing, see Barton, A Folk Divided, 212–213, 254.
  65. ^ Barton, A Folk Divided, 103 ff.
  66. ^ American FactFinder, Fact Sheet "Swedish" 13 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine .
  67. ^ American FactFinder: Minnesota, Selected Social Characteristics in the United States, 2005 Archived 11 February 2020 at archive.today.
  68. ^ Moberg biography by JoAnn Hanson-Stone at the Swedish Emigrant Institute 6 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine .
  69. ^ Corliss, Richard (24 September 2009). . TIME. Archived from the original on 27 September 2009. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  70. ^ "About Kulturparken Småland AB". Kulturparken Småland. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  71. ^ "Swedish Texans". digital.utsa.edu.

Reference bibliography edit

  • Akenson, Donald Harman (2011). Ireland, Sweden and the Great European Migration, 1815–1914. McGill-Queens University Press.
  • Åkerman, Sune (1976). "Theories and Methods of Migration Research"". In Runblom and Norman (ed.). From Sweden to America. pp. 19–75.
  • , United States Census, 2000. Consulted 30 June 2007.
  • Barton, H. Arnold (1994). A Folk Divided: Homeland Swedes and Swedish Americans, 1840–1940. Carbondale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 9780809319435.
  • Barton, H. Arnold (1996). . Swedish American Historical Society. Archived from the original on 4 August 2007. Retrieved 7 May 2007.
  • Barton, H. Arnold (2007). The Old Country and the New. SIU Press. pp. 38–39. ISBN 9780809389506.
  • Beijbom, Ulf. . Swedish Emigrant Institute. Archived from the original on 6 October 2013. Retrieved 6 May 2007.
  • Beijbom, Ulf (1996). . American West. Archived from the original on 2 June 2006.
  • Brattne, Berit; Åkerman, Sune (1976). "The Importance of the Transport Sector for Mass Emigration". In Runblom and Norman (ed.). From Sweden to America. pp. 176–200.
  • Carlsson, Sten (1995). "The New Sweden Colonists, 1628-1656: Their Geographical and Social Background". In Hoffecker, Carol E. (ed.). New Sweden in America. University of Delaware Press. pp. 171–87. ISBN 9780874135206.
  • Cipolla, Carlo (1966). Literacy and Development in the West. Harmondsworth.
  • Colenbrander, H. T. (1925). Koloniale Geschiedenis (in Dutch). Vol. 2. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff.
  • Elovson, Harald (1930). Amerika i svensk litteratur 1750–1820 (in Swedish). Lund.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Glynn, Irial (2011). "Emigration Across the Atlantic: Irish, Italians and Swedes compared, 1800–1950". European History Online. Mainz: Institute of European History. Retrieved 16 June 2011.
  • Fur, Gunlög (2006). Colonialism in the Margins: Cultural Encounters in New Sweden and Lapland. Brill. ISBN 9789047410652.
  • Gritsch, Eric W. (2002). A History of Lutheranism. Minneapolis: Fortress Press. ISBN 9780800634728.
  • Gustafson, Anita Olson (2018). Swedish Chicago: The Shaping of an Immigrant Community, 1880-1920. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-60909-246-7. OCLC 1129197373.
  • Gustafson, David M. (2008). D.L. Moody and Swedes: shaping evangelical identity among Swedish mission friends, 1867-1899 (PDF). Linköping University, Department of culture and communication. ISBN 9789173939959. OCLC 489777085.
  • Lintelman, Joy K. (2009). I Go to America: Swedish American Women and the Life of Mina Anderson. Minnesota Historical Society. ISBN 978-0873516365.
  • Hoerder, Dirk (2015). "Historical Perspectives on Domestic and Care-Giving Workers' Migrations: A Global Approach". In Hoerder, Dirk; van Nederveen Meerkerk, Elise; Neunsinger, Silke (eds.). Towards a Global History of Domestic and Caregiving Workers. Brill. pp. 61–109. ISBN 978-9004280144.
  • Kälvemark, Ann-Sofie (1976). "Swedish Emigration Policy in an International Perspective, 1840–1925". In Runblom and Norman (ed.). From Sweden to America. pp. 94–113.
  • Nausner, Michael (October 2000). "Swedish Methodists in America and their quest for identity" (PDF). Methodist History. 39 (1).
  • Norman, Hans (1976). "The Causes of Emigration". In Runblom and Norman (ed.). From Sweden to America. pp. 149–164.
  • Pehrson, Lennart (2014). Den nya världen. Utvandringen till Amerika (I) (in Swedish). Stockholm: Albert Bonniers Förlag. ISBN 978-91-0-013191-3. OCLC 880134785.
  • Runblom, Harald; Norman, Hans, eds. (1976). From Sweden to America: A History of the Migration. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Scott, Franklin D. (1965). "Sweden's Constructive Opposition to Emigration". Journal of Modern History. 37 (3): 307–335. doi:10.1086/600692. JSTOR 1875405. S2CID 144459398.
  • The . Consulted 30 June 2007.
  • , a research institute at Augustana College, Illinois. Consulted 7 May 2007.
  • Weaver, C. Douglas (2008). In Search of the New Testament Church: The Baptist Story. Macon, Georgia: Mercer University Press. ISBN 9780881461060. OCLC 180752918.
  • Westin, Gunnar. "Lars Paul Esbjörn". Svenskt Biografiskt Lexikon (in Swedish). Retrieved 3 May 2022.

External links edit

Organizations

  • The New Sweden Centre — museum, tours and reenactors
  • The Swedish-American Historical Society is a non-profit organization founded in 1948 to "Record the Achievements of the Swedish Pioneers." The society publishes the academic journal

Articles


swedish, emigration, united, states, during, 19th, early, 20th, centuries, about, million, swedes, left, sweden, united, states, america, while, land, american, frontier, magnet, rural, poor, over, europe, some, factors, encouraged, swedish, emigration, partic. During the 19th and early 20th centuries about 1 3 million Swedes left Sweden for the United States of America While the land of the American frontier was a magnet for the rural poor all over Europe some factors encouraged Swedish emigration in particular Religious repression and idiosyncrasy practiced by the Swedish Lutheran State Church was widely resented as was social conservatism and snobbery influenced by the Swedish monarchy Population growth and crop failures made conditions in the Swedish countryside increasingly bleak By contrast reports from early Swedish emigrants painted the American Midwest as an earthly paradise Poster showing a cross section of the Cunard Line s immigrant liner RMS Aquitania launched in 1913 According to Joy K Lintelman mass migration from Sweden to the United States unfolded in five distinct waves between the 1840s and 1920s Within this period hundreds of thousands of Swedish emigrants made their way over and settled in both rural and urban scapes of the United States Factors which brought migration to a trickle were found on both sides of the Atlantic with restrictions on immigration placed in the United States and improving social and economic conditions in Sweden being the primary factors 1 Swedish migration to the United States peaked in the decades after the American Civil War 1861 1865 By 1890 the U S census reported a Swedish American population of nearly 800 000 These rising emigration rates caused great concern in Sweden However before any reform could be done to avoid a continuous flow of Swedish citizens fleeing the home land World War I 1914 1918 broke out and effectively ended the process From the mid 1920s there was no longer a Swedish mass emigration Contents 1 Early history the Swedish American dream 2 19th century 2 1 European mass emigration push and pull 2 2 Crossing the Atlantic 2 3 Mid 19th century 2 4 Late 19th century 2 5 Religious confusion 3 20th century 3 1 Parliamentary Emigration Commission 1907 1913 4 Swedish Americans 4 1 Memory 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Footnotes 7 Reference bibliography 8 External linksEarly history the Swedish American dream editMain article New Sweden The Swedish West India Company established a colony on the Delaware River in 1638 naming it New Sweden 2 A small short lived colonial settlement it was lost to the Dutch in New Netherland in 1655 2 Until 1656 close to 700 Swedish and Finnish settlers had migrated to the colony of which perhaps 40 was Finnish what is now the country of Finland was then part of Sweden and many Finns had migrated to Sweden proper particularly Varmland from whence they came to America 3 Many of the Finns spoke Swedish as a first language and the clergymen who came to New Sweden were all speakers of Swedish Finnish was apparently forgotten by 1750 or so Swedish held on until the late 18th century 4 While generally the Swedes thought of themselves not as colonizers having been spared the bloody conflicts with indigenous Americans had with other colonists and of having had good relations with them new research has complicated that idea 5 The historian H A Barton has suggested that the greatest significance of New Sweden was the strong and long lasting interest in America that the colony generated in Sweden America was seen as the standard bearer of liberalism and personal freedom and became an ideal for liberal Swedes Their admiration for America was combined with the notion of a past Swedish Golden Age with ancient Nordic ideals Supposedly corrupted by foreign influences the timeless Swedish values would be recovered by Swedes in the New World This remained a fundamental theme of Swedish and later Swedish American discussion of America though the recommended timeless values changed over time In the 17th and 18th centuries Swedes who called for greater religious freedom would often refer to America as the supreme symbol of it The emphasis shifted from religion to politics in the 19th century when liberal citizens of the hierarchic Swedish class society looked with admiration to the American Republicanism and civil rights In the early 20th century the Swedish American dream even embraced the idea of a welfare state responsible for the well being of all its citizens Underneath these shifting ideas ran from the start the current which carried all before it in the later 20th century America as the symbol and dream of unfettered individualism 6 Swedish debate about the United States remained mostly theoretical before the 19th century since very few Swedes had any personal experience of the nation Emigration was illegal and population was seen as the wealth of nations 7 However the Swedish population doubled in size between 1750 and 1850 a time of peace vaccination and potatoes 8 and as population growth outstripped economic development it gave rise to fears of overpopulation based on the influential population theory of Thomas Malthus In the 1830s the laws against emigration were repealed 9 19th century editAkenson argues that hard times in Sweden before 1867 produced a strong push effect but that for cultural reasons most Swedes refused to emigrate and clung on at home Akenson says the state wanted to keep its population high and The upper classes need for a cheap and plentiful labor force the instinctive willingness of the clergy of the state church to discourage emigration on both moral and social grounds and the deference of the lower orders to the arcade of powers that hovered above them all these things formed an architecture of cultural hesitancy concerning emigration 10 nbsp Swedish anti emigration propaganda representing Per Svensson s dream of the American idyll left and the reality of Per s life in the wilderness right where he is menaced by a mountain lion a big snake and wild Indians seen scalping and disembowelling a man 11 A few countercultural deviants from the mainstream did leave and showed the way The severe economic hardship of the Great Deprivation of 1867 to 1869 finally overcame the reluctance and the floodgates opened to produce an emigration culture 12 European mass emigration push and pull edit Large scale European emigration to the United States started in the 1840s in Britain Ireland and Germany That was followed by a rising wave after 1850 from most Northern European countries and in turn by Central and Southern Europe Research into the forces behind this European mass emigration has relied on sophisticated statistical methods 13 One theory which has gained wide acceptance is Jerome s analysis in 1926 of the push and pull factors the impulses to emigration generated by conditions in Europe and the U S respectively Jerome found that fluctuations in emigration co varied more with economic developments in the U S than in Europe and deduced that the pull was stronger than the push 14 Jerome s conclusions have been challenged but still form the basis of much work on the subject 15 16 Emigration patterns in the Nordic countries Finland Sweden Norway Denmark and Iceland show striking variation Nordic mass emigration started in Norway which also retained the highest rate throughout the century Swedish emigration got underway in the early 1840s and had the third highest rate in all of Europe after Ireland and Norway Denmark had a consistently low rate of emigration while Iceland had a late start but soon reached levels comparable to Norway Finland whose mass emigration did not start until the late 1880s and at the time part of the Russian Empire is usually classified as part of the Eastern European wave 15 Crossing the Atlantic edit nbsp The Emigrants by Knut Ekwall 1843 1912 represents the artist s vision of what the 19th century transatlantic experience might be like Date unknown nbsp In the Land of Promise Castle Garden 1884 by Charles Frederic Ulrich showing the Emigrant Landing Depot in Manhattan The first European emigrants travelled in the holds of sailing cargo ships With the advent of the age of steam an efficient transatlantic passenger transport mechanism was established at the end of the 1860s It was based on huge ocean liners run by international shipping lines most prominently Cunard White Star and Inman The speed and capacity of the large steamships meant that tickets became cheaper From the Swedish port towns of Stockholm Malmo and Gothenburg transport companies operated various routes some of them with complex early stages and consequently a long and trying journey on the road and at sea Thus North German transport agencies relied on the regular Stockholm Lubeck steamship service to bring Swedish emigrants to Lubeck and from there on German train services to take them to Hamburg or Bremen There they would board ships to the British ports of Southampton and Liverpool and change to one of the great transatlantic liners bound for New York The majority of Swedish emigrants however travelled from Gothenburg to Hull UK on dedicated boats run by the Wilson Line then by train across Britain to Liverpool and the big ships 17 During the later 19th century the major shipping lines financed Swedish emigrant agents and paid for the production of large quantities of emigration propaganda Much of this promotional material such as leaflets was produced by immigration promoters in the U S Propaganda and advertising by shipping line agents was often blamed for emigration by the conservative Swedish ruling class which grew increasingly alarmed at seeing the agricultural labor force leave the country It was a Swedish 19th century cliche to blame the falling ticket prices and the pro emigration propaganda of the transport system for the craze of emigration but modern historians have varying views about the real importance of such factors Brattne and Akerman have examined the advertising campaigns and the ticket prices as a possible third force between push and pull They conclude that neither advertisements nor pricing had any decisive influence on Swedish emigration While the companies remain unwilling as of 2007 update to open their archives to researchers the limited sources available suggest that ticket prices did drop in the 1880s but remained on average artificially high because of cartels and price fixing 18 On the other hand H A Barton states that the cost of crossing the Atlantic dropped drastically between 1865 and 1890 encouraging poorer Swedes to emigrate 19 The research of Brattne and Akerman has shown that the leaflets sent out by the shipping line agents to prospective emigrants would not so much celebrate conditions in the New World as simply emphasize the comforts and advantages of the particular company Descriptions of life in America were unvarnished and the general advice to emigrants brief and factual Newspaper advertising while very common tended to be repetitive and stereotyped in content 20 Mid 19th century edit nbsp The Emigrants by S V Helander 1839 1901 a young farmer bids a sober farewell to friends and relatives Swedish mass migration took off in the spring of 1841 with the departure of Uppsala University graduate Gustaf Unonius 1810 1902 together with his wife a maid and two students This small group founded a settlement they named New Upsala in Waukesha County Wisconsin and began to clear the wilderness full of enthusiasm for frontier life in one of the most beautiful valleys the world can offer 21 Though he would eventually become disillusioned with life in the U S and return to Sweden his reports in praise of the simple and virtuous pioneer life published in the liberal newspaper Aftonbladet had already begun to draw Swedes westward 22 The rising Swedish exodus was caused by economic political and religious conditions affecting particularly the rural population Europe was in the grip of an economic depression In Sweden population growth and repeated crop failures were making it increasingly difficult to make a living from the tiny land plots on which at least three quarters of the inhabitants depended Rural conditions were especially bleak in the stony and unforgiving Smaland province which became the heartland of emigration The American Midwest was an agricultural antipode to Smaland for it Unonius reported in 1842 more closely than any other country in the world approaches the ideal which nature seems to have intended for the happiness and comfort of humanity 23 Prairie land in the Midwest was ample loamy and government owned From 1841 it was sold to squatters for 1 25 per acre 37 per acre 91 ha as of 2023 following the Preemption Act of 1841 later replaced by the Homestead Act The inexpensive and fertile land of Illinois Iowa Minnesota and Wisconsin was irresistible to landless and impoverished European peasants It also attracted more well established farmers citation needed The political freedom of the American republic exerted a similar pull Swedish peasants were some of the most literate in Europe and consequently had access to the European egalitarian and radical ideas that culminated in the Revolutions of 1848 24 The clash between Swedish liberalism and a repressive monarchist regime raised political awareness among the disadvantaged many of whom looked to the U S to realize their republican ideals citation needed Dissenting religious practitioners also widely resented the treatment they received from the Lutheran State Church through the Conventicle Act Conflicts between local worshipers and the new churches were most explosive in the countryside where dissenting Pietist groups were more active and were more directly under the eye of local law enforcement and the parish priest Before non Lutheran churches were granted toleration in 1809 25 clampdowns on illegal forms of worship and teaching often provoked whole groups of Pietists and Radical Pietists to leave together intent on forming their own spiritual communities in the new land The largest contingent of such dissenters 1 500 followers of Eric Jansson left in the late 1840s and founded a community in Bishop Hill Illinois 26 Baptists including the exiled F O Nilsson and fellow preachers Gustaf Palmquist and Anders Wiberg started Baptist churches in the Midwest 27 The Mission Friends who emigrated in the 1860s would later found the Evangelical Free Church 28 and Evangelical Covenant Church denominations 29 Lutherans such as Lars Paul Esbjorn influenced by Pietism and Methodism and felt he was denied advancement in the church because of it also found new opportunities in the United States There he became one of the founders of the Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church 30 31 32 Swedish Methodist pioneers like Victor Witting sv began to emigrate in the 1840s 33 34 Mormon converts found religious freedom in the United States as well 35 The first Swedish emigrant guidebook was published as early as 1841 the year Unonius left and nine handbooks were published between 1849 and 1855 36 Substantial groups of lumberjacks and iron miners were recruited directly by company agents in Sweden Agents recruiting construction builders for American railroads also appeared the first in 1854 scouting for the Illinois Central Railroad 37 The Swedish establishment disapproved intensely of emigration Seen as depleting the labor force and as a defiant act among the lower orders emigration alarmed both the spiritual and the secular authorities Many emigrant diaries and memoirs feature an emblematic early scene in which the local clergy warns travellers against risking their souls among foreign heretics The conservative press described emigrants as lacking in patriotism and moral fibre No workers are more lazy immoral and indifferent than those who immigrate to other places 38 Emigration was denounced as an unreasoning mania or craze implanted in an ignorant populace by outside agents The liberal press retorted that the lackeys of monarchism failed to take into account the miserable conditions in the Swedish countryside and the backwardness of Swedish economic and political institutions 39 Yes emigration is indeed a mania wrote the liberal Goteborgs Handels och Sjofartstidning sarcastically The mania of wanting to eat one s fill after one has worked oneself hungry The craze of wanting to support oneself and one s family in an honest manner 40 The great Swedish famine of 1867 1869 caused by consecutive wet and dry years followed by a year of mass epidemics led to the migration to the US of 60 000 Swedes during that period the start of the mass migration 41 Another contributing factor was the poverty of 19th century Sweden made worse by the abusive solutions practiced to complement the strict Poor Care Regulation of 1871 such as the rotegang the pauper auction and child auctions 42 Late 19th century edit nbsp Female laborers at a late 19th century Swedish sugar beet plantation Sugar production remained non mechanized and labor intensive with low wages throughout the 19th century fuelling the workers dream of American opportunity and modern agricultural machinery nbsp Steam driven threshing machine near Hallock Minnesota 1882 nbsp Swedish immigrants in Rush City Minnesota in 1887 Olof Olsson emigrated from Nerikes kil in 1880 Swedish emigration to the United States reached its height in the 1870 1900 era The size of the Swedish American community in 1865 is estimated at 25 000 people a figure soon to be surpassed by the yearly Swedish immigration By 1890 the U S census reported a Swedish American population of nearly 800 000 with immigration peaking in 1869 and again in 1887 43 Most of this influx settled in the North The great majority of them had been peasants in the old country pushed away from Sweden by disastrous crop failures 44 and pulled towards the United States by the cheap land resulting from the 1862 Homestead Act Most immigrants became pioneers clearing and cultivating the virgin land of the Midwest and extending the pre Civil War settlements further west into Kansas and Nebraska 45 Once sizable Swedish farming communities had formed on the prairie the greatest impetus for further peasant migration came through personal contacts The iconic America letter to relatives and friends at home spoke directly from a position of trust and shared background carrying immediate conviction At the height of migration familial America letters could lead to chain reactions which would all but depopulate some Swedish parishes dissolving tightly knit communities which then re assembled in the Midwest 36 Other forces worked to push the new immigrants towards the cities particularly Chicago According to historian H Arnold Barton the cost of crossing the Atlantic dropped by more than half between 1865 and 1890 which led to progressively poorer Swedes contributing a growing share of immigration but compare Brattne and Akerman see Crossing the Atlantic above The new immigrants were increasingly younger and unmarried With the shift from family to individual immigration came a faster and fuller Americanization as young single individuals with little money took whatever jobs they could get often in cities Large numbers even of those who had been farmers in the old country made straight for American cities and towns living and working there at least until they had saved enough capital to marry and buy farms of their own 46 A growing proportion stayed in urban centers combining emigration with the flight from the countryside which was happening in the homeland and all across Europe 47 Single young women most commonly moved straight from field work in rural Sweden to jobs as live in housemaids in the urban United States Literature and tradition have preserved the often tragic image of the pioneer immigrant wife and mother writes Barton bearing her burden of hardship deprivation and longing on the untamed frontier More characteristic among the newer arrivals however was the young unmarried woman As domestic servants in America they were treated as members of the families they worked for and like ladies by American men who showed them a courtesy and consideration to which they were quite unaccustomed at home 48 They found employment easily as Scandinavian maids were in high demand and learned the language and customs quickly Working conditions were far better than in Sweden in terms of wages hours of work benefits and ability to change positions 49 50 In contrast newly arrived Swedish men were often employed in all Swedish work gangs The young women usually married Swedish men and brought with them in marriage an enthusiasm for ladylike American manners and middle class refinements Many admiring remarks are recorded from the late 19th century about the sophistication and elegance that simple Swedish farm girls would gain in a few years and about their unmistakably American demeanor 48 As ready workers the Swedes were generally welcomed by the Americans who often singled them out as the best immigrants There was no significant anti Swedish nativism of the sort that attacked Irish German and especially Chinese newcomers The Swedish style was more familiar They are not peddlers nor organ grinders nor beggars they do not sell ready made clothing nor keep pawn shops wrote the Congregational missionary M W Montgomery in 1885 they do not seek the shelter of the American flag merely to introduce and foster among us socialism nihilism communism they are more like Americans than are any other foreign peoples 51 nbsp A childhood acquaintance much changed the simple young Swedish peasant women s rapid growth in sophistication in the United States A number of well established and longtime Swedish Americans visited Sweden in the 1870s making comments that give historians a window on the cultural contrasts involved A group from Chicago made the journey in an effort to remigrate and spend their later years in the country of their birth but changed their minds when faced with the realities of 19th century Swedish society Uncomfortable with what they described as the social snobbery pervasive drunkenness and superficial religious life of the old country they returned promptly to the United States 52 The most notable visitor was Hans Mattson 1832 1893 an early Minnesota settler who had served as a colonel in the Union Army and had been Minnesota s secretary of state He visited Sweden in 1868 69 to recruit settlers on behalf of the Minnesota Immigration Board and again in the 1870s to recruit for the Northern Pacific Railroad Viewing Swedish class snobbery with indignation Mattson wrote in his Reminiscences that this contrast was the key to the greatness of the United States where labor is respected while in most other countries it is looked down upon with slight He was sardonically amused by the ancient pageantry of monarchy at the ceremonial opening of the Riksdag With all respects for old Swedish customs and manners I cannot but compare this pageant to a great American circus minus the menagerie of course 53 Mattson s first recruiting visit came immediately after consecutive seasons of crop failure in 1867 and 1868 and he found himself besieged by people who wished to accompany me back to America He noted that the laboring and middle classes already at that time had a pretty correct idea of America and the fate that awaited emigrants there but the ignorance prejudice and hatred toward America and everything pertaining to it among the aristocracy and especially the office holders was as unpardonable as it was ridiculous It was claimed by them that all was humbug in America that it was the paradise of scoundrels cheats and rascals and that nothing good could possibly come out of it 54 A more recent American immigrant Ernst Skarstedt who visited Sweden in 1885 received the same galling impression of upper class arrogance and anti Americanism The laboring classes in their turn appeared to him coarse and degraded drinking heavily in public speaking in a stream of curses making obscene jokes in front of women and children Skarstedt felt surrounded by arrogance on one side and obsequiousness on the other a manifest scorn for menial labor a desire to appear to be more than one was This traveller too was incessantly hearing American civilization and culture denigrated from the depths of upper class Swedish prejudice If I in all modesty told something about America it could happen that in reply I was informed that this could not possibly be so or that the matter was better understood in Sweden 55 Swedish emigration dropped dramatically after 1890 return migration rose as conditions in Sweden improved Sweden underwent a rapid industrialization within a few years in the 1890s and wages rose principally in the fields of mining forestry and agriculture The pull from the U S declined even more sharply than the Swedish push as the best farmland was taken No longer growing but instead settling and consolidating the Swedish American community seemed set to become ever more American and less Swedish The new century however saw a new influx 56 Religious confusion edit In the 1800s 1900s the Lutheran State Church supported the Swedish government by opposing both emigration and the clergy s efforts recommending sobriety This escalated to a point where its priests even were persecuted by the church for preaching sobriety and the reactions of many congregation members to that contributed to an inspiration to leave the country which however was against the law until 1840 57 20th century editParliamentary Emigration Commission 1907 1913 edit Main article Swedish Emigration Commission 1907 1913 nbsp Swedish emigrants boarding ship in Gothenburg in 1905 Emigration rose again at the turn of the 20th century reaching a new peak of about 35 000 Swedes in 1903 Figures remained high until World War I alarming both conservative Swedes who saw emigration as a challenge to national solidarity and liberals who feared the disappearance of the labor force necessary for economic development One fourth of all Swedes had made the United States their home 58 and a broad national consensus mandated that a Parliamentary Emigration Commission study the problem in 1907 Approaching the task with what Barton calls characteristic Swedish thoroughness 59 the Commission published its Emigration Inquest including findings and proposals in 21 large volumes The Commission rejected conservative proposals for legal restrictions on emigration and in the end supported the liberal line of bringing the best sides of America to Sweden through social and economic reform Topping the list of urgent reforms were universal male suffrage better housing and general economic development The Commission especially hoped that broader popular education would counteract class and caste differences 60 Class inequality in Swedish society was a strong and recurring theme in the commission s findings It appeared as a major motivator in the 289 personal narratives included in the report These documents of great research value and human interest today were submitted by Swedes in Canada and the U S in response to requests in Swedish American newspapers The great majority of replies expressed enthusiasm for their new homeland and criticized conditions in Sweden Bitter experiences of Swedish class snobbery still rankled after sometimes 40 50 years in the United States Writers recalled the hard work pitiful wages and grim poverty of life in the Swedish countryside One woman wrote from North Dakota of how in her Varmland home parish she had had to earn her living in peasant households from the age of eight starting work at four in the morning and living on rotten herring and potatoes served out in small amounts so that I would not eat myself sick She could see no hope of saving anything in case of illness but rather could see the poorhouse waiting for me in the distance When she was seventeen her emigrated brothers sent her a prepaid ticket to the United States and the hour of freedom struck 61 The Emigration Inquest according to Franklin D Scott had little effect on emigration A year after the Commission published its last volume World War I began and reduced emigration drastically Despite a slight increase after World War I the American Immigration Act of 1924 significantly reduced quotas for Swedish immigrants and by the late 1920s those quota were not even filled anymore 62 Barton points to the rapid implementation of essentially all the commission s recommendations to improve conditions in Sweden from industrialization to an array of social reforms and claims that its findings must have had a powerful cumulative effect upon Sweden s leadership and broader public opinion 63 Swedish Americans editMain article Swedish Americans nbsp Birgit Ridderstedt and small sons emigrating on the mid Atlantic bound for Portland Maine and on to Chicago in 1950 The Midwest remained the heartland of the Swedish American community but its position weakened in the 20th century in 1910 54 of the Swedish immigrants and their children lived in the Midwest 15 in industrial areas in the East and 10 on the West Coast Chicago was effectively the Swedish American capital accommodating about 10 of all Swedish Americans more than 100 000 people making it the second largest Swedish city in the world only Stockholm had more Swedish inhabitants 45 Defining themselves as both Swedish and American the Swedish American community retained a fascination for the old country and their relationship to it The nostalgic visits to Sweden which had begun in the 1870s continued well into the 20th century and narratives from these trips formed a staple of the lively Swedish American publishing companies 64 The accounts testify to complex feelings but each contingent of American travellers were freshly indignant at Swedish class pride and Swedish disrespect for women It was with renewed pride in American culture that they returned to the Midwest 65 nbsp Distribution of Swedish Americans in 2000 by county according to the United States Census In the 2000 U S Census about four million Americans claimed to have Swedish roots 66 Minnesota remains by a wide margin the state with the most inhabitants of Swedish descent 9 6 of the population as of 2005 update 67 Memory edit The best known artistic representation of the Swedish mass migration is the epic four novel suite The Emigrants 1949 1959 by Vilhelm Moberg 1898 1973 Portraying the lives of an emigrant family through several generations the novels have sold nearly two million copies in Sweden and have been translated into more than twenty languages 68 The tetralogy has been filmed by Jan Troell as The Emigrants 1971 and The New Land 1972 and forms the basis of Kristina from Duvemala a 1995 musical by former ABBA members Benny Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus 69 In Sweden the House of Emigrants Emigranternas Hus was founded in Gothenburg the main port for Swedish emigrants in 2004 The centre has exhibitions on migration and research on genealogy 70 In the U S there are hundreds of active Swedish American organizations as of 2007 update for which the Swedish Council of America functions as an umbrella group There are Swedish American museums in Philadelphia Chicago Minneapolis and Seattle 45 Rural cemeteries such as the Moline Swedish Lutheran Cemetery in central Texas also serve as a valuable record of the first Swedish people to come to the United States 71 See also editAmerican Swedish Historical Museum American Swedish Institute Bishop Hill Colony Large sectarian colony in Illinois with Swedish followers of Eric Janson established in 1846 Emihamn a database of passenger lists from major Swedish ports Nordstjernan Swedish newspaper founded in New York 1872 Swedish colonization of the Americas Swedish language in the United States Swedish American relationsReferences editFootnotes edit Lintelman I Go to America 71 74 a b Colenbrander Koloniale Geschiedenis 14 15 Carlsson The New Sweden Colonists 173 80 Carlsson The New Sweden Colonists 180 81 Fur Colonialism in the Margins 1 2 Barton A Folk Divided 5 7 Kalvemark 94 96 Beijbom European Emigration Barton A Folk Divided 11 Akenson Ireland Sweden and the Great European Migration 70 The pictures originally illustrated a cautionary tale published in 1869 in the Swedish periodical Lasning for folket the organ of the Society for the Propagation of Useful Knowledge Sallskapet for nyttiga kunskapers spridande See Barton A Folk Divided 71 Akenson Ireland Sweden and the Great European Migration 1815 1914 pp 37 39 Akerman passim Norman 150 153 a b Runblom and Norman 315 Norman passim Brattne and Akerman 179 181 Brattne and Akerman 179 181 186 189 199 200 Barton 38 Brattne and Akerman 187 192 Unonius quoted in Barton A Folk Divided 13 Pehrson Den nya varlden 239 240 260 261 Quoted in Barton A Folk Divided 14 Cipollo 115 estimates adult literacy in Sweden at 90 in 1850 which places it highest among the European countries he has surveyed Gritsch A History of Lutheranism 180 Barton A Folk Divided 15 16 Douglas In Search of the New Testament Church 232 33 Gustafson D L Moody and Swedes 6 167 Scandinavian Pietism Melton s Encyclopedia of American Religions Retrieved 29 April 2022 Gustafson Swedish Chicago Lagerquist The Lutherans 176 Westin Lars Paul Esbjorn Nausner Swedish Methodists in America Barten The Old Country 38 39 Mormonism in Europe The Mormonism and Migration Project Claremont Graduate University Retrieved 10 May 2022 a b Barton A Folk Divided 17 Barton A Folk Divided 18 Proclaimed in an article in the newspaper Nya Wermlandstidningen in April 1855 quoted by Barton A Folk Divided 20 22 Goteborgs Handels och Sjofartstidning 1849 quoted in Barton A Folk Divided 24 1851 quoted and translated by Barton A Folk Divided 24 Beijbom European Emigration Sven Ulric Palme Hundra ar under kommunalforfattningarna 1862 1962 en minnesskrift utgiven av Svenska landskommunernas forbund Svenska landstingsforbundet och Svenska stadsforbundet Trykt hos Godvil 1962 ISBN missing Barton A Folk Divided 37 1867 and 1868 were the worst years for crop failure which ruined many smallholders see Barton A Folk Divided 37 a b c Swenson Center Archived 18 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Beijbom Chicago Archived 6 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Barton A Folk Divided 38 41 a b Barton A Folk Divided 41 Lintelman I Go to America 57 58 Hoerder Historical Perspectives 78 Quoted by Barton A Folk Divided 40 Private letters by Anders Larsson in the 1870s summarized by Barton A Folk Divided 59 Quoted by Barton A Folk Divided 60 61 Barton A Folk Divided 61 62 Svensk amerikanska folket i helg och socken Ernst Teofil Skarstedt Stockholm Bjorck amp Borjesson 1917 ISBN missing Barton A Folk Divided 80 Var svenska stam pa utlandsk mark Svenska oden och insatser i frammande land I vasterled Amerikas forenta stater och Kanada Ed Axel Boethius Stockholm 1952 Volume I pp 92 137 273 amp 276 for the whole section ISBN missing 1 4 million first and second generation Swedish immigrants lived in the U S in 1910 while Sweden s population at the time was 5 5 million see Beijbom Review Archived 2 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine Barton A Folk Divided 149 The phrase is from Ernst Beckman s original liberal parliamentary motion for instituting the Commission quoted by Barton A Folk Divided 149 Quoted from Volume VII of the Survey by Barton A Folk Divided 152 Barton A Folk Divided 164 Barton A Folk Divided 165 For Swedish American publishing see Barton A Folk Divided 212 213 254 Barton A Folk Divided 103 ff American FactFinder Fact Sheet Swedish Archived 13 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine American FactFinder Minnesota Selected Social Characteristics in the United States 2005 Archived 11 February 2020 at archive today Moberg biography by JoAnn Hanson Stone at the Swedish Emigrant Institute Archived 6 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Corliss Richard 24 September 2009 Kristina A New Musical from the ABBA Guys TIME Archived from the original on 27 September 2009 Retrieved 3 September 2022 About Kulturparken Smaland AB Kulturparken Smaland Retrieved 3 September 2022 Swedish Texans digital utsa edu Reference bibliography editAkenson Donald Harman 2011 Ireland Sweden and the Great European Migration 1815 1914 McGill Queens University Press Akerman Sune 1976 Theories and Methods of Migration Research In Runblom and Norman ed From Sweden to America pp 19 75 American FactFinder United States Census 2000 Consulted 30 June 2007 Barton H Arnold 1994 A Folk Divided Homeland Swedes and Swedish Americans 1840 1940 Carbondale and Edwardsville Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 9780809319435 Barton H Arnold 1996 Swedish America in Fifty Years 2050 Swedish American Historical Society Archived from the original on 4 August 2007 Retrieved 7 May 2007 Barton H Arnold 2007 The Old Country and the New SIU Press pp 38 39 ISBN 9780809389506 Beijbom Ulf Chicago the Essence of the Promised Land Swedish Emigrant Institute Archived from the original on 6 October 2013 Retrieved 6 May 2007 Beijbom Ulf 1996 European Emigration A Review of Swedish Emigration to America American West Archived from the original on 2 June 2006 Brattne Berit Akerman Sune 1976 The Importance of the Transport Sector for Mass Emigration In Runblom and Norman ed From Sweden to America pp 176 200 Carlsson Sten 1995 The New Sweden Colonists 1628 1656 Their Geographical and Social Background In Hoffecker Carol E ed New Sweden in America University of Delaware Press pp 171 87 ISBN 9780874135206 Cipolla Carlo 1966 Literacy and Development in the West Harmondsworth Colenbrander H T 1925 Koloniale Geschiedenis in Dutch Vol 2 The Hague Martinus Nijhoff Elovson Harald 1930 Amerika i svensk litteratur 1750 1820 in Swedish Lund a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Glynn Irial 2011 Emigration Across the Atlantic Irish Italians and Swedes compared 1800 1950 European History Online Mainz Institute of European History Retrieved 16 June 2011 Fur Gunlog 2006 Colonialism in the Margins Cultural Encounters in New Sweden and Lapland Brill ISBN 9789047410652 Gritsch Eric W 2002 A History of Lutheranism Minneapolis Fortress Press ISBN 9780800634728 Gustafson Anita Olson 2018 Swedish Chicago The Shaping of an Immigrant Community 1880 1920 Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1 60909 246 7 OCLC 1129197373 Gustafson David M 2008 D L Moody and Swedes shaping evangelical identity among Swedish mission friends 1867 1899 PDF Linkoping University Department of culture and communication ISBN 9789173939959 OCLC 489777085 Lintelman Joy K 2009 I Go to America Swedish American Women and the Life of Mina Anderson Minnesota Historical Society ISBN 978 0873516365 Hoerder Dirk 2015 Historical Perspectives on Domestic and Care Giving Workers Migrations A Global Approach In Hoerder Dirk van Nederveen Meerkerk Elise Neunsinger Silke eds Towards a Global History of Domestic and Caregiving Workers Brill pp 61 109 ISBN 978 9004280144 Kalvemark Ann Sofie 1976 Swedish Emigration Policy in an International Perspective 1840 1925 In Runblom and Norman ed From Sweden to America pp 94 113 Nausner Michael October 2000 Swedish Methodists in America and their quest for identity PDF Methodist History 39 1 Norman Hans 1976 The Causes of Emigration In Runblom and Norman ed From Sweden to America pp 149 164 Pehrson Lennart 2014 Den nya varlden Utvandringen till Amerika I in Swedish Stockholm Albert Bonniers Forlag ISBN 978 91 0 013191 3 OCLC 880134785 Runblom Harald Norman Hans eds 1976 From Sweden to America A History of the Migration Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press Scott Franklin D 1965 Sweden s Constructive Opposition to Emigration Journal of Modern History 37 3 307 335 doi 10 1086 600692 JSTOR 1875405 S2CID 144459398 The Swedish Emigrant Institute Consulted 30 June 2007 Swenson Center a research institute at Augustana College Illinois Consulted 7 May 2007 Weaver C Douglas 2008 In Search of the New Testament Church The Baptist Story Macon Georgia Mercer University Press ISBN 9780881461060 OCLC 180752918 Westin Gunnar Lars Paul Esbjorn Svenskt Biografiskt Lexikon in Swedish Retrieved 3 May 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Immigrants to the United States from Sweden Organizations The New Sweden Centre museum tours and reenactors The Swedish American Historical Society is a non profit organization founded in 1948 to Record the Achievements of the Swedish Pioneers The society publishes the academic journal The Swedish American Historical Quarterly Articles The Swedish Emigration to America The Emigrant Routes to the Promised Land in America Sillgatan The Emigrant Path through Goteborg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Swedish emigration to the United States amp oldid 1219652311, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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