Archive for the ‘Katherine Dalager’ Category
Karl and Ida: The move to St. Hilaire
In 1916 Karl, Ida & Horace moved to St. Hilaire, Minnesota. Following are some news items included to show social activities and are also of historical interest.
St Hilaire Spectator
March 23, 1916 More Settlers. Four carloads of immigrant effects were unloaded here last week. John Dwire of Lend, Minnesota had two loads and K. T. Dalager of Herman, Minnesota, had the other two. The first named will move on a farm east of town and the latter will occupy the Ness farm in River Falls township. Both these gentlemen come well supplied with farm machinery and stock and are prepared to farm on a large scale.
Because roads were poor, moving cattle, furniture, and machinery was by train. Because cattle needed care, it meant that the family moved right with them on the train. When Karl and Ida arrived in St. Hilaire, they moved onto the farm that had previously been farmed by A. Gunnar Ness, a bachelor.
James Franze remembered that his dad, John J. Franze, went up to St. Hilaire to visit his daughter and family in the fall of 1917. John said they had so much sowthistle that it really hurt the crops.
Feb. 1, 1917 A son was born to Mr. & Mrs. K.T. Dalager. (This was Karl Vincent Franze Dalager.)
Most children were born with the assistance of a mid-wife rather than a doctor. Grandma Peterson delivered my brother Vincent on Feb. 1, 1917 and two months later she delivered a neighbor’s son, Harold Walseth. Grandma Peterson’s maiden name was Anna Stena Broberg. She was one of two survivors of the Munson Lake Indian massacre near Willmar, Minnesota. Mrs. August Swenson was a daughter of Grandma Peterson. :Arlys Konickson, Mrs Jerry Konickson, would be Grandma Peterson’s great granddaughter.
Hilda Johnson remembered the Easter about a year after my parents had moved in. She and Otto were living on the Martin Hanson place where Nathan & Darcie Dalager live now. The road to town followed closer to the river than it does now. The Dalagers were driving a lumber wagon to church. The roads were so bad that they would have to get out and clean mud out of the wheels so the wheels would turn. They had two boys with them on the spring seat of the wagon.
Thorstein Walseth, a neighbor, remembered one time when Karl got caught in a rainstorm on the way to or from St. Hilaire and stopped at their place to get out of the rain. This was when Thorstein’s parents were living on the place that Ken Schroeder lives on now. Thorstein remembered helping unhook the horses and getting them in the barn so they would have some protection and have a chance to calm down. This happened before 1919 when Thorstein was 14. In those days farmers had most everything on the farm they needed on a day-to-day basis and they went to town to get items such as lumber, coffee, kerosene, sugar, and salt. Each fall farmers would take their own wheat to the Terrebonne mill that was about 20 miles south of the farm and have the wheat ground into flour.
The nearest neighbors to the south of their farm were the Gabe Petersons. Mrs. Peterson’s name was Josie, short for Josephine. Joe, Gladys, Melford, and Dale were children of Gabe and Josie Peterson. When the land was homesteaded, the land between the Dalager place and the Gabe Peterson place and north of the creek was all oak timber. Gabe had a sawmill and made good use of the oak. Joe said that the Dalagers would get their mail at the Petersons for many years. The Dalager’s mail was placed in the Peterson mailbox. The Petersons would bring the mail to their house and one of the Dalagers would come to get it. It was this way for many years. When the creek was high, either the Dalagers came on horseback or the mail was put in a bread pan and floated across the creek.
The following news articles are used to picture life on the Dalager farm for the next years.
St. Hilaire Spectator
May 24, 1917 Louise Franze of Battle Lake, Minn., is visiting with her sister Mrs. Dalager.
October 25, 1917 John Franze of Battle Lake, Minn., is a guest at the home of his daughter, Mrs. K. Dalager.
In the summer of 1918 Karl built a large barn measuring 68×36 feet. The head carpenter was Bill Gilbertson. During the building a carpenter named Leonard Erickson fell from the roof but was not hurt. A silo was added in 1919. Karl also sold many silos in the area.
Nov. 28, 1918 K.T. Dalager recently purchased a couple of extra fine pure bread Duroc-Jersey hogs. Mr. Dalager is going in for this class of stock exclusively & has a fine start.
Nov. 28, 1918 I have some acres of wood stumpage for sale. Some of the timber is dry and some green. Will sell in any size tracts to suit purchaser. Brush to be cut and piled ready for burning. K. T. Dalager, Route 2, St. Hilaire.
Dec. 26, 1918 Pure Bred Boar: I have for public service a pure bread Duroc-Jersey boar. Terms are $2.00 for grade and $5.00 for pure-bred hogs, cash at time of service. K. T. Dalager RFD No 2, St. Hilaire.
Feb. 13.1919 Mr. K.T. Dalager and son Horace were Sunday visitors at the T. M .Breviks who lived on the farm where Neil Peterson lives now.
Adelaide was born February 27, 1919.
Mar. 13, 1919 Miss Anna Franze from Battle Lake, Minn. is visiting her sister Mrs. K.T. Dalager.
April 10, 1919 Ad For purebred Leghorn setting eggs call or write to K.T. Dalager, Route 2, St. Hilaire.
April 24, 1919 Mr. & Mrs. E. H. Stephens & Mrs. K.T. Dalager & baby motored to Thief River Falls Thursday. (The baby was Adelaide)
July 24, 1919 K.T. Dalager purchased a new Ford car last week. K.T. Dalager is putting the finishing touches on a new barn out on his farm.
Aug. 14, 1919 Miss Louise Franze of Battle Lake, Minn. is visiting her sister Mrs. K.T. Dalager.
Nov. 20, 1919 K.T. Dalager has bought a complete set of steel stanchions, stalls and drinking fountains from St. Hilaire Retail Lumber Co. for installation in his new stock barn now under construction.
May 6, 1920 Ad Silo Solos were new and Karl had been the local salesman for a silo company.
May 13, 1920 K.T. Dalager has purchased a trailer for his Ford car.
Nov. 18, 1920 Mr. & Mrs. K.T. Dalager & family, Mr. & Mrs. Hans Hanson & family and George Stephens were Sunday guests at the Herman Jepson home. This is the farm where Kenny Noreen lives now.
Aug. 25, 1921 James, Fritz & Ruth Franze and Mrs. Clarence Larson autoed here last Sunday from Battle Lake for a visit at the home of their sister, Mrs. K.T. Dalager. Miss Louise Franze, who has visited in Dakota and arrived last week at the Dalager home, went back with them. (Louise was visiting brother Otto and family at Washborn, ND)
Kathrine was born January 14, 1924. The Pennington County courthouse spells her name Cathryne Isabella Dalager.
DEC 1, 1927 Mr. & Mrs. K.T. Dalager and family and Mr. & Mrs. N.E. Beebe spent Friday evening at the E. H. Stephens home.
Karl and Ida: Horace, Vincent, and Adelaide at Eastside School
Horace, Vincent and Adelaide attended Eastside country school that was located about 2 miles Southeast of their home. The Walseths, Stephens, Gabe and Miller Petersons all had children about the same age and they would take turns hauling kids to school during wet weather or during the cold winter. The children usually walked home. Gladys Peterson, the daughter of Gabe Peterson, recalled an incident that occurred when she was walking home with Adelaide. It was a cloudy spring day and she had said, “I sure wish the sun would shine.” Adelaide replied, “It is shining. If it wasn’t, it would be dark.” Gladys said that Adelaide was smart in school.
Evelyn Peterson Hegrenes, the daughter of Miller Peterson, remembered those who attended East Side with her. They were Ivanette Thyren, Ernest and Victor Erickson, Clarence and Mabel Konickson, Joe, Gladys and Melford Peterson, Horace and Vincent Dalager, Annie and Harold Walseth, and Mary and Henry Rohr.
Among the things Evelyn remembered from country school were the syrup pail lunch buckets with syrup sandwiches. When the weather was cold, their apples would freeze. At school they always played ball and a game called pick-up-sticks. They also played in the water in the big county ditch across the road from the school especialy in the spring. The teacher would let them take turns ringing the school bell. One day a boy tied their teacher, Bertilda Peterson, up with a rope. Another student helped her get free.
Gladys Peterson and my brother Horace started high school in St. Hilaire in 1928. Gladys and Horace went to grade school and high school together graduating in 1932. Prices were really poor and Gladys’ dad, Gabe Peterson, sold a whole load of wheat to buy her class ring that cost $13.00. Some of the teachers Gladys and Horace had at East-Side were Effie Fredrickson, Nannie Erickson, Miss Votava, Gaberial DeCathelineau, Hazel Dann, Lily Baum, Oscar Brevik, Bertilda Peterson, Ellen Nelson, and Evelyn Peterson. Oscar Brevik was the son of Tarbjorn & Magnilda Brevik who lived on the farm west and south of the Dalager farm. Oscar’s siblings were Bernt, Martin, Adolph, John, Mary, Margit, Tilda, Cornelia, and Helen. The children were good singers and would walk to St. Hilaire to church choir practice, a distance of about 6 miles one way. Others who lived on the Brevik place were the Brent Walseths, Frank Bothmans, Dan Johnsons, Harry Uttermarks, and Pete Hansons. The Art Petersons moved to the Brevik place when I was in high school. Art Peterson’s grandson Neil lives on the place now.
Students at the East-side school that Gladys remembered were Thyrenes, Ericksons, Petersons, Hudelson, Weckworth, Walton, Hogquist, Stephen, Palmquist, Hesse, Durheim, Konickson, Walseth, and Dalager. There were up to 40 students at the East-side school during the 1920’s. In a situation like this the older kids had to help the younger one because the teacher couldn’t find enough time to help all of them. This was really the forerunner of our present day mentor system. Schoolhouses were not well insulated and Joe Peterson thought that the winters were colder and had more snow in those days. Gladys Peterson and Helen Hess Simpson remembered hearing wolves howling as they walked to school. Joe Peterson remembered hunting wolves on horse back and on skis. Games Gladys and Joe remember playing were fox & geese, drop the handkerchief, ring around the rosy, farmer in the dell, kitten ball and others. Kids had a good time. School was the main time that kids got to see others of their age.
Delford Stephens was a real cut-up in school. Once he pretended he was going to hang himself. He had tied a rope or wire to the ceiling and was standing on a box or desk with the wire around his neck. Bertilda Peterson was the teacher at that time. She really got excited but Delford was only fooling. When he jumped off the desk he dropped the rope. He would bring frogs and snakes to school, tease the Thyren girls by sitting by them, etc. Gladys Peterson said that Gerald Stephens and Thorstein Walseth were the best looking young men in the area. They were also good friends. Once when Gladys was swinging, Delford started pushing her. She would have fallen off but Delford’s brother Bob, who was on the next swing, jumped off his swing and caught her before she fell. Bob was kind and considerate.
My brother Vincent remembers his first day of school very clearly. He had dark curly hair which mother had let grow which was not the style at the time. When he went to school he was teased a lot and it was the last day that he went to school with long hair. Vincent also told about Delford’s prank with the rope tied to the ceiling but he thought Delford wanted to hang the teacher. Another time Vince tried to roll a pencil across the isle to his neighbor and the teacher came down the isle with a ruler and hit him on the hand. Vince said he out foxed her because he hollered real loud so she didn’t keep on too long. It really didn’t hurt very much. He thought this teacher was Ellen Nelson who later married Andrew Mortenson.
Members of Vincent’s class at the East side school were Floyd Hesse, Donald Thyren, Cyrus Peterson, Joyce Stephens, Bulah Rinkenberger & Harold Walseth.
One of the tricks they would do in school was to place a 22 cartridge on the stove. Later on it would go off with a big bang causing a disturbance. They would also ‘accidentally’ drop a celluloid ring from a horse collar on the stove. This would smell up the school so badly that it would almost be necessary to close school for the day.
When Vincent was old enough to ride horseback he always rode one of the farm ponies to school. By this time there was a barn at the school for the horses.
When the weather was nice enough, the East-Side students would play softball or kitten ball all the time. At that time, Pennington County had a softball tournament in the spring when all the rural schools got together to play softball. They usually had about 5 boys on the team and the rest were girls. One year they were playing a team from up north made up of all big guys and they were tromping the Eastside team. The boys from East Side didn’t like this very well so the 4 boys decided to challenge the other team all by themselves. There were so few on their team that as soon as they got home it was their turn to bat again. They only had a pitcher, a catcher, a first baseman and one fielder. However, with only 4 players they were able to beat the other team. This county sports event also included races, broad jump, pole vaults etc.
Vincent couldn’t remember his 7th grade teacher’s name but she let them do anything they wanted to do. If it were a nice day, they would jump out the window and go for a ride on their horses. She had a model A Ford car. In the spring when it was muddy, the boys would ride their horses in front of her car when she was driving to school on the wet road and plaster her car with mud. Vince said that he and his friends were the meanest guys you ever saw.
Karl and Ida: The Fire
In May of 1928, tragedy struck the home of Karl and Ida.
St. Hilaire Spectator
Mar 15, 1928 K.T. Dalager & family were visitors Sunday at the E.H. Stephen’s home.
CHILDREN MEET DEATH WHEN FARM HOME BURNS
May 17, 1928 Trapped in their bedroom on second floor of the home, the two small daughters of Mr. and Mrs. K.T. Dalager, Katherine, age 5 and Adelaide, age 9, perished in a fire which completely destroyed the Dalager farm home five miles southeast of here shortly after midnight last Thursday, May 12th.
The parents were aroused about midnight by noise from downstairs and upon investigation found the incubator and wall behind it ablaze. After calling the children, the parents made an attempt to extinguish the blaze that seemingly had not gained much headway by that time. It is believed gas must have generated from the heated incubator lamp as the whole room suddenly burst into flame, driving the parents out and cutting off escape by the stairway for the children. The two boys, Horace and Vincent, managed to break a window and jumped to the ground clad only in their night clothing. Mr. Dalager made a heroic attempt to reach his daughters but was driven back by the flames that completely enveloped the interior of the house by that time.
Help was summoned from the Walseth house nearby and a general alarm was sounded on the farm telephone line. Help was soon at hand but too late to be of any assistance in rescuing the children or saving any of the contents of the house that burned to the ground. Position of the remains of the children found after the fire would indicate that neither had awakened and it is likely they smothered before the fire reached them.
Rev. M.L. Dahle assisted by Rev. Lerohl of Oklee at the Norwegian Lutheran Church here Saturday afternoon conducted funeral services for the little girls. Internment was made in the cemetery east of the village.
The heartfelt sympathy of the community is extended to Mr. and Mrs. Dalager in the sad loss of their little ones and their home under such heartrending circumstances.
Pastor Lerohl was from the Glenwood, Minn area and had officiated at Karl and Ida’s wedding. Because Oklee and St. Hilaire are not to far apart, the Lerohls visited with each other quite often.
May 17, 1928 Mr. & Mrs. J.O. Grove of Glenwood, Mrs. K. Knutson of Willmar, relatives of K.T. Dalager, arrived here Friday being called by the holocaust that occurred at the Dalager home Thursday morning. They all returned home Sunday, Mr. Dalager accompanying them to spend a short time with his relatives.
The Glenwood Herald
May 17, 1928
Mr. & Mrs. J.O. Grove of Glenwood and Mrs. Knute Knutson of Willmar left here last Thursday evening for Hazel, Minn., called there by Mr. Karl T. Dalager, brother of Mrs. Grove and Mrs. Knutson, on account of the burning the night before of Mr. Dalager’s farm residence where two of his children lost their lives.
The fire was noticed in the middle of the night and at that time it had reached such headway that Mr. and Mrs. Dalager and the two elder boys barely exited in their nightclothes. Some of them had to jump out through the windows. It is not known how the fire started except that it is thought that it may have come from an incubator that was running in the house at the time. The two children that lost their lives were: Adelaide nine years old and Kathryn four years old.
Funeral services were conducted on Saturday afternoon at St. Hilaire. Relatives from Hallock, Minnesota also attending were Mrs. John Brendal and Hazel Grove.
Karl and Ida took this especially hard for if they had cleared the house of people before trying to put out the fire, no one would have lost their lives.
At the time of the fire, Gladys Peterson remembered waiting along with her mother for her dad, Gabe, to return. He had gone over to the Dalager place when central had sent out the general call. Horace went to stay with the Gabe Petersons and Karl, Ida & Vincent went to Walseths. As a result of the fire my parents lost all their pictures. They had lost the house and Katherine and Adelaide but also their memories.
Hazel Dann was the teacher at the East-Side school during the 1927-28 school year, the year of that fire. Hazel remembered that Katherine was visiting school the day before the fire. Katherine and Adelaide were having so much fun and they did not want to go home. Hazel described the girls as being “sweet.” When school met again Hazel said she had a “sad group of children.” One of the hardest jobs she had was to clean out Adelaide’s desk.
My parents never talked about the fire, however, the cellar and foundation of the house was always there as I grew up. The pain of the event is evident, also, in the fact that Dad left the farm for a time to live with his sister in Battle Lake, and Mom’s hair turned from black to white in a year’s time.
One of the sweet memories that mother told Shirley in later years was that Katherine and Adelaide had run down to the barn to say “good night” to their dad before they went to bed on the night of the fire.
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