Wednesday, January 31, 2024

THEY LOVED THEIR BIKUBEN

 

Originally shared by Sam Stewart 

James L. Jacobs

Senior Citizen Division, Second Place Anecdote
The Bikuben Club met every Thursday in the lobby of the Mt. Pleasant Post Office during the 1920's.
These were the older Danish immigrants who never learned to read English or who preferred to read the news
in THE BIKUBEN, their own Danish language weekly newspaper which came in Thursday's mail. They loved this
newspaper and were always there to get it promptly every Thursday.
The club included Charley Shoemaker (Charles C. E. Petersen), Chris Cottonwood (Christian
Rasmussen), Pete Poker (Peter M. Jensen), and others. They visited while the incoming mall was being sorted.
As soon as the general delivery window was opened, one of them came to the window and asked, "Ska da
Bikuben heah? " When his Bikuben was handed to him, his face lighted up with a happy smile. About 50
subscribers lived in Mt. Pleasant at that time.
The Bikuben was published in Salt Lake City by the L. D. S. Church for more than 59 years for the
benefit of its Danish converts. When the Danes passed on and the subscription list dwindled, publication was
suspended in 1935.
I never knew what Bikuben meant. In downtown Copenhagen I was amazed to find on a large building
a sign BIKUBEN with an old style beehive at each end of the sign similar to the one on the masthead of the
Bikuben newspaper and the seal of the State of Utah. I went inside and found that this was a large bank and
that Bikuben means beehive or bee cabin. This is a symbol of industry in both Denmark and Utah. Then I
realized why the newspaper had been named Bikuben.
Back in Mt. Pleasant I talked with families of former Bikuben subscribers. All of them remembered the
newspaper, but no one I found knew that Bikuben means beehive.
Source: Early Utah Journalism by J. Cecil Alter
Personal recollections of the author.

Saga of the Sanpitch 1982 p58




More References to the Mormon Bikuben


Andrew Jensen and the Mormon Bikuben (Beehive)

Andrew immigrated with his family to the United States in 1866. His journey by ship and across the plains is one of the unique recordings of such an experience by a teenage boy. One of the most poignant experiences he recalled years later was the hunger that he faced in the journey. He was reminiscing with a Mr. William H. Jackson, who as a young boy had traveled east from Salt Lake City. Jackson followed behind a wagon load of apples and ate apples until he couldn’t lift another one. Andrew replied, “Yes, I know. . . . Here it is in my journal, the record of coming along the next day. I was a hungry youth of 15, and I saw those peelings. You mayn’t believe it, but I collected all the peelings I could find, and ate them. They were pretty thin, but they tasted mighty good to me then.”[5]
The Jensons settled in Pleasant Grove, Utah, where young Andrew took up many occupations to sustain himself and assist in supporting his family. Although he preferred study to hard manual labor, he was forced to work as a farmhand, a railroad construction crew laborer, and a cowboy. His journal provides an excellent description of a nineteenth-century cattle drover.[6]
At age twenty-two Elder Andrew Jenson was called on his first of ten missions for the Church. The call was to his native Denmark. While on this mission his interest in producing historical works was further intensified. He began by writing a history of the Aalborg Conference. “And so that is how I came to myself, and found myself walking in the Aalborg Conference, preaching and commencing my historical career.”[7]
After his return home, he married and began his family. To support his new family he continued to perform manual labor, which proved very unsatisfactory. He had learned from experience that farming was not his natural vocation and that he was not gifted in doing mechanical work as was his father. From his youth he “had been of a studious nature,” particularly fascinated by the reading and writing of history. As he meditated and prayed about his future, the thought came to him “as if by direct inspiration from heaven” to continue the work that he had contemplated, to translate certain portions of the history of Joseph Smith into Danish. He called his new workJoseph Smith Levnetsløb.[8]
Thus began a new and lifetime career of translating and writing the history of the Church. Because of the limited funds of the Danish Saints, Jenson was forced to publish his literary venture in serialized form, selling the weekly series to his subscribers. Only after the entire series was completed would he then have the series bound into a single volume. This pattern of publishing his history would continue throughout his life, since he financed almost all of his historical works himself. Only near the end of his life did the Church assist in financing his works.


From this modest beginning his historical works started to increase greatly. His next work was to assist in the publication of the Danish-Norwegian paper Bikuben (Beehive). This work was interrupted by another call to a mission in Denmark. While there, following the death of the mission president, Andrew served as president for a brief period of time. Following his return, Jenson continued his work in providing Scandinavian Latter-day Saints with the history of the Church by publishing Morgenstjernen (Morning Star). As was his first venture, this work was possible because he sold subscriptions in advance of publication. Although sales ofMorgenstjernen grew steadily, it was not enthusiastically received by all the Scandinavian Saints.  https://rsc.byu.edu/archived/supporting-saints-life-stories-nineteenth-century-mormons/4-andrew-jenson-zealous-chronolog


DANISH IMMIGRATION AND LIFE IN UTAH
Denmark supplied more immigrants to Utah in the nineteenth century than any other country except Great Britain. Most of these Danes--nearly 17,000--were converts to the LDS Church, heeding an urgent millennialistic call to gather to "Zion."
Generally, Danes were relatively slow to respond to the enticements of America. But the stirrings of the revolutionary year 1848 left Denmark with a liberal constitution (1849) providing for freedom of religion, without the repressive backlash that numbed much of the rest of Europe. This was fertile soil for Mormon proselytizing, initiated in 1850 by Erastus Snow and three fellow believers--a Dane, a Swede, and an American. Benefiting from religious awakenings kindled by Baptists, Methodists, and reformers within the Lutheran state church, the Latter-day Saints also moved forward on their own in less-traveled byways, particularly in northern Jutland. A key to their success was the cadre of enthusiastic young local recruits--many of them journeyman artisans--who soon devoted their full energy to proclaiming the Mormon message. A significant part of that message was the doctrine of the gathering. Thus Danish Latter-day Saints were in the vanguard of emigration from their homeland to the United States.
Danish emigration to Utah began January 31, 1852, when a group of nine Mormons left Copenhagen for Hamburg, continued by steamer to England, and eventually sailed from Liverpool with nineteen additional Danes who joined them there under the leadership of Erastus Snow. Arriving in New Orleans, they traveled by river steamboat up the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers to present-day Council Bluffs, where they joined a larger company of Mormon emigrants for the overland journey to Utah. It took these first Danish emigrants nine months to reach Salt Lake City; thousands who followed took much the same route. New Orleans was the American port of entry until New York and other eastern ports supplanted it in 1855. A few companies sailed directly from Hamburg to America.
Scandinavian converts traveled together, often as part of larger companies including British LDS emigrants, on ships chartered by Mormon agents. After travel by rail or river steamboat, immigrants reached a frontier outfitting post where arrangements were made for their final overland trek to Utah. Beginning in 1869 steam powered the entire journey to Utah, by ship and by rail.
The peak of Danish emigration to Utah came in the years 1862 and 1863, when tensions in Europe were reaching a boiling point over Denmark's attempted annexation of Schleswig, and while the Civil War raged in the United States. In those two years alone nearly 2,000 Mormons emigrated from Denmark, the vast majority destined for Utah. Some, subject to military service, were leaving to avoid becoming cannon fodder in Denmark's armed conflict that would soon break out with Prussia and Austria.
The heaviest Danish Mormon immigration came during the first formative quarter-century of the Latter-day Saint settlement of Utah. No exclusively Danish communities were established, although the village of Mantua in Box Elder County was predominantly Danish in its earliest years. Danes played particularly significant roles in the settlement of Box Elder and Cache counties in the north and of Sanpete and Sevier counties in the south. Sanpete County's Danish-born residents made up twenty-four percent of its population in 1870; with their children born in Utah they were undoubtedly more than one-third of the county's population. One-third of all the Danes in Utah were located in Sanpete County. Droll Danish humor became part of popular Sanpete folklore. Also in 1870, 10.5 percent of Box Elder County's residents were born in Denmark, as were 7.8 percent of Cache County's residents. Although emigration from Denmark to Utah declined after the 1860s, still 10 percent of the state's population in 1890 either were born in Denmark or had at least one parent born in Denmark. Mormon leaders consistently encouraged assimilation, and many Danish converts began to learn English before emigrating. After reaching Utah, wherever possible, they were asked to participate fully in the activities of local Mormon English-speaking wards (congregations). Still, LDS "Scandinavian Meetings" organizations served as a secondary focal point for religious, social, and cultural activities in the mother tongue. Scandinavians joined forces for outings and reunions, choirs, and dramatic productions. Partly because of the central place the Scandinavian LDS Meetings held among the immigrant community, such organizations as Dansk Broderskab (Danish Brotherhood) enjoyed only limited participation in Utah.
Periodicals in their native language served combined audiences of Danes and Norwegians, and sometimes Swedes as well. The most successful of these was the Danish-Norwegian newspaper Bikuben (The Beehive), published in Salt Lake City from 1876 through 1935 (under LDS Church ownership in later years).
Whether disaffected or in search of economic opportunities, some Danish LDS immigrants originally bound for Utah left their traveling companies in the Midwest, or returned there after experiencing Utah. Many of these were among early settlers of Iowa and Nebraska. After a sojourn in Utah and Idaho in the 1860s, Jens (later James) Borglum and his family settled down in Nebraska, where he became a physician. His son Solon, born in Ogden, became a prominent sculptor, as did son Gutzon, born in southern Idaho, who later created the massive monumental sculpture at Mount Rushmore.
After the coming of the railroad to Utah in 1869 Presbyterians, Methodists, Baptists, and Lutherans established churches and schools in Utah aimed specifically at reclaiming Scandinavians from Mormonism. This became a significant factor in the education of many Danish-American youth and won a limited number of proselytes.
The majority of early Danish immigrants to Utah came from agricultural backgrounds. Among the remainder, artisans outnumbered unskilled laborers. While some had been prosperous and the majority were able to at least pay for the ocean voyage to America, most were relatively poor by the time they reached Utah. Several devoted much of their means to help with the expenses of fellow immigrants.
The number of Danish natives living in Utah peaked in 1900 at 9,132 and then declined gradually as more died than immigrated. Yet as late as 1960, Danes and their children made up one-tenth of the state's "foreign stock"--residents who either were born outside the United States or had at least one parent born outside the US. While the 1980 census estimated that only 998 Utah residents were born in Denmark, 137,941 Utahans had at least one Danish ancestor. Continuing interchange with Denmark was facilitated by a Danish consulate for Utah and Nevada in Salt Lake City.
The influence of Danes on the development of Utah is mirrored only slightly in official place-names. Elsinore, Sevier County, was named after the Danish town housing the legendary castle of Hamlet. Jensen, Uintah County, took its name from Lars Jensen, who built a ferry on the Green River. Danish nicknames were more common in the nineteenth century; Mantua was nicknamed "Little Copenhagen," and several communities were often called "Little Denmark."
Anthony H. Lund (1844-1921), who settled in Sanpete County, was Utah's most prominent Danish-American. An 1862 immigrant, Lund served as a member of Utah's territorial legislature. As counselor in the First Presidency of the LDS Church for twenty years, as Church Historian, and as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, Lund exerted a significant influence on the development of Utah and of his church.
In his art, poetry, and social criticism C. C. A. Christensen (1831-1912) was a representative spokesperson for Utah's Mormons and Scandinavians. His "Mormon Panorama", a series of historical paintings accompanied by a lecture, memorialized early Mormon history.
Andrew Jenson (1850-1941), a self-taught historian, made major contributions to the preservation of Utah and Mormon history.
Language barriers hindered full participation by many bright and capable Danish immigrants in Utah society. Frederik Ferdinand Samuelsen (1865-1929) emigrated to Utah after serving as a member of the Danish parliament. From 1925 to 1927 he presided over weekly Scandinavian meetings in the Assembly Hall on Temple Square in Salt Lake City. A close friend indicated that Samuelsen was deeply disappointed that his lack of fluency in English precluded his further involvement in public life.
Other Danes were influential in their communities and made significant contributions in their professions or vocations. As long-time bishop in Gunnison (1876-1900), strong-willed Christian A. Madsen (1822-1907) helped shape that town. Sophie Valentine (1861-1940), a poet and author of short stories, served as associate editor of Bikuben. Christian Daniel Fjeldsted (1829-1905) was one of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventies in the LDS Church. Peter W. Madsen (1852-1922) founder of Madsen Furniture Company, was prominent in business affairs in Salt Lake City.

See: William Mulder, Homeward to Zion (1957) and Mulder, "Scandinavian Saga," in Helen Z. Papanikolas, ed., The Peoples of Utah (1976).

Richard L. Jensen
Utah History Encyclopedia p. 178

Monday, January 29, 2024

Items Shared by Judy Malkiewicz. (from our archives)

 


Hans Peter Jensen's (10 Mar 1858 to 26 Feb 1937) father was Christian J. Jensen (25 Dec 1866 to 30 Jan 1932). Christian J. Jensen was one of Mt. Pleasant, Utah's earliest settlers. When he died in 1932, his obituary lists a daughter, Mrs. H. P. Sorensen of Mt. Pleasant Utah who was Han Peter Jensen's sister.






Since I sent the picture of the Sorensen children, I have discovered their link to my grandmother, Hazel Theora (Jensen) Anderson Lundberg.

First, let me explain that my grandmother, Hazel Theora (Jensen) Anderson Lundberg was born to Mt. Pleasant, Utah parents:

Hans Peter Jensen (10 Mar 1858 to 26 Feb 1937) and Hilda Jensen Jensen (her maiden name is the same as her married name, 31 Oct 1862 to 18 Mar 1954).

Hans Peter Jensen and Hilda Jensen Jensen gave my grandmother, Hazel Theora Jensen as an infant to Hannah Persson Jensen Anderson (26 Jan 1841) and her husband Claus Anderson (1838-1923) both of Mt. Pleasant, Utah to raise as their own. Hannah Persson Jensen Anderson (1841-1925) was the sister to Hilda Jensen Jensen’s father, Andrew Peter Jensen (1837-1921). My grandmother, Hazel Theora (Jensen) Anderson grew up in Mt. Pleasant never knowing she was adopted by her great aunt and uncle until well in to her adulthood.






This is Hans Peter Jensen's obituary from 1937.



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Here are Claus Anderson's Obituaries from 1923. He was also one of Mt. Pleasant's earliest settlers.




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~





Here is Hannah Jensen Anderson's obituary from 1925
~~~~~~

Dr. Benjamin R. Johnson, C. B. Johnson and Frank F. Pyott practiced in Mt. Pleasant and Sanpete County



The history of chiropractic in Utah  is closely related with legal procedure.  As soon as the first chiropractors came to the state and commenced the practice of their profession, they received letters stating the following, "Dear Doctor, You are hereby notified to cease Chiropractic Adjustments or treatments until you have complied with the law." Signed by R. W. Fisher, Secretary, Board of Medical Examiners of the State of Utah, Salt Lake City, September 16, 1908.

Some of the chiropractors, after receiving such a letter, rather than be placed in an unfavorable light before the public and made to fight the case in the courts, decided to leave the state and let the rough pioneering fall on other practitioners.  There were many, however, who took but little or no notice of these letters and continued their practices. 

In 1915 Benjamin R. Johnson, C. B. Johnson and Frank F. Pyott began their chiropractic services in Sanpete County and built up successful practices in Mount Pleasant, Ephraim, and Manti.  In September of 1915 they were arrested.  Their trials terminated unsuccessfully in September of 1916, with a sentene of $100. or 100 days in jail.  Doctor Pyott paid his fine and Doctor Johnson decided rather than pay a fine he preferred to go to jail.  He commenced serving his sentence on September 26, 1916, in the Sanpete County jail at Manti. His friends were highly wrought up over this affair and practically every taxpayer in the county signed a petition to the board of pardons asking for his release.  The Mount Pleasant Pyramid published on December 2, 1916 

 "CITIZENS DEMAND RELEASE OF CHIROPRACTOR" 
 "About fifty of Dr. B. R. Johnson's patients from nearly every town in Sanpete County called at the County Courthouse in Manti, Wednesday, November 29th and unknown to him, paid the unexpired portion of his fine in pennies, obtained his release and stormed his cell.  The release was presented to Doctor Johnson by little Arba Sanders of Fairview, upon whose case he was convicted of  'practicing medicine' some two months ago.  Doctor Johnson received a pardon by the State Board of Pardons recently conditioned upon his refraining from giving his services to the public until he secured a medical license.  This condition was impossible to comply with because the state medical examiners refuse to consider his application for a license because he is not a graduate of a medical college.  The medical examiners do not recognize a chiropractic college, of which Doctor Johnson is a graduate.  Therefore he refused to accept the pardon because his duty to the sick would not permit it.  Doctor Johnson's friends and patients were not satisfied with the action of the board of pardons, so they decided to take matters in their own hands with the result of Doctor Johnson was released and spent Thanksgiving with his wife and family in Mount Pleasant."

It can be said to the credit of the chiropractic profession in Utah that its upholders are men and women of integrity, ability and devotion to duty.  They are a people who will sacrifice much for the principle and rather than flee from the state to safety they prefer to be classed as lawbreakers, subject to arrest, criminal prosecution, fine and imprisonment, for the high regard for duty which they feel they owe the people of this state.

Practically every reputable chiropractor in the state has been subjected to one or two arrests, and some of them have had false serious charges preferred against them which have had a tendency to cast reflection on their ability, integrity and patriotism, but notwithstanding this they are still giving their services to the public.  They maintain that it is far better to jeopardize their personal welfare in serving the people of this state than to elect a path of least resistance by going to a state where the science of chiropractic has legal recognition and regulation.

To remedy the controversies in the courts, each legislative session since 1911 has been asked by those interested in chiropractic to give adequate consideration to this matter.  At first the request was practically ignored, but in later sessions the legislators were so flooded with requests from the people by petitions and personal letters to regulate the science of chiropractic that much support was given the subject by the legislators.  A bill to regulate chiropractic and drugless healing was introduced in the senate of the 1913 session and passed with but two opposing votes.  This bill was sifted out by the house sifting committee.  In 1915 there was introduced into the house a bill to recognize chiropractic.  This bill passed with only one vote against it.  The senate adjourned before a vote was taken on the measure.  In each of these sessions a great deal  of opposition from medical sources was manifest and the legislators were at a loss to know just what to do.  But, apparently, the fact that medical ideas have been given credence for so long led them to believe that such opposition could not be mistaken and therefore the chiropractic position must be wrong. 

The 1917 session was characterized by a stormy fight in the house of representatives, the chiropractic bill losing by a vote of twenty to twenty three.  The session of 1919 was even more stormy.  The chiropractic measure was introduced early in the house of representatives and it was fought strenuously at every angle, but finally passed with but a few votes in opposition.  The opponents of the measure, realizing that an overwhelming majority of the legislators were in favor of chiropractic, resorted to new tactics.  It consisted in assuming a willingness to have chiropractic regulated, but insisted that the science and practitioners of chiropractic be placed under the control of the regular medical board.  This appealed to many senators as being the proper solution of the problem, consequently a bill which had been introduced by the medical interests passed.  The chiropractic bill was laid on the table in the senate and was never recalled, although several ineffectual attempts were made to resurrect it.  The medical substitute bill was killed in the house by a big majority.  At this writing the law stands as it was eight years ago. (1919)

The chiropractors of the state have organized themselves into state and county organizations and through this means have been able to protect and conserve the interests of chiropractic and chiropractors.  The officeship of the Utah Chiropractors Association for 1919 is:  N. L. Cottam, president; Mrs F. M. Colson, vice presicent; Frank F.Pyott, secretary treasurer; and M. G. Hansen and J. M. Grant, directors.  The Salt Lake County Chiropractors Association is presided over by W. H. Pyot, B. R. Johnson, vice president, and P. E. Erickson, secretary-treasurer.  Through these organizations the services of chiropractors have been offered free of charge to the city, state and national government during the progress of the war.  It is with regret by the chiropractors that such offers were not accepted.  As the the final triumph of the science of the chiropractic in Utah, no member of the profession will be a theme for eulogy by the coming generations. 

(taken from "UTAH SINCE STATEHOOD 1919,  Volume I, pages 715-720





The above newspaper article  and advertisement were found by Judy Malkiewicz.  Thankyou Judy

+  








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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

Judy Malkiewicz 1950-2013


Malkiewicz passed away at her home on September 25, 2013 in her beloved Mackay, Idaho after a 2 1/2 year battle with high risk Multiple Myeloma.  Judith Ann was born December 8, 1950 in Fort Dix, New Jersey to Frank and Marjorie Christine Malkiewicz.

Judy graduated high school in 1969 from H. H. Arnold High School in Wiesbaden, Germany and earned a Bachelor’s of Science in Nursing from the University of Northern Colorado in Greeley, Colorado in 1973.  She was employed as a registered nurse at Children’s Hospital in Denver, Colorado following graduation. In 1975, Judy began her 29-year teaching career at the University of Northern Colorado School of Nursing where she retired as a Professor of Nursing in 2004.  Judy earned her Masters of Nursing in 1975 and PhD in Nursing in 1991 from the University of Colorado. 

The thread that ran through Judy’s entire life was the intensity and dedication she brought to any task at any given time.  During her time at the University of Northern Colorado, she was a dedicated mentor and professor – and Judy challenged and expected much from her students.  Judy helped educate hundreds of nurses, as many would attest when chance meetings would occur in various hospital settings.  Their eyes would light up when they talked about what a wonderful professor she was.  In addition, Judy was regarded by her peers as one of UNC’s top professors of pediatric nursing.   While at UNC, she was awarded the M. Lucile Harrison Award, a prestigious teaching award recognizing her outstanding contributions to nursing education and teaching.  Judy was the first founding member and president of Sigma Theta Tau, Zeta Omicron Chapter at UNC, an international honor society for nursing research and professional development.  Judy loved her job, guiding and mentoring future nurses in the art and science of nursing.

When not at work, she was always exploring, doing and engaging others in some adventure.  Creating Christmas ornaments by the hundreds, making hundreds of handmade greeting cards, training for and running in a marathon, researching her family genealogy - you knew if Judy was involved, she was going to do it 110%.

When Judy retired in 2004 to Mackay, Idaho, hometown of her grandmother and the birthplace of her mother, she became a vital part of the Mackay community where she became immersed in the daily life and brought that same enthusiasm to her new community.  During her time in the Lost River Valley, she was a Mackay Food Bank volunteer, helped edit and publish a book called “The Mackay I Remember” with John Powers, was a former president of South Custer Historical Society, volunteered at Mackay Elementary helping at preschool and recognition assemblies, served as former Secretary of Mackay Women’s Club, volunteered at the annual Custer County Fair, was a member of Mackay’s Lion’s Club, was a member of American Legion Auxiliary and Poppy Coordinator, created and contribute daily to the “MacKay, Idaho 83251 Blog” and initiated putting Mackay’s families laid to rest in the Mount McCaleb Cemetery into “Find a Grave” and organized Mt. McCaleb Cemetery names and identification of veteran grave sites.  She was especially proud of her Mt. McCaleb Cemetery plot map that she created and used to help people locate the graves of their loved ones.

Judy also created a blog about her illness, “jm’s Adventure with Multiple Myeloma,” which was read by thousands of people in the U.S. and around the world.  Her daily updates were graphic, medically thorough, often humorous, and filled with many many photos that allowed her family, friends, health professionals and other’s who suffered from Multiple Myeloma with endless information about this disease.

No remembrance of Judy would be complete without mention of her love of photography.  She documented and recorded the beautiful Lost River Valley as well as friends and family and her journey fighting high risk Multiple Myeloma.  Judy felt strongly that the pictures could document important elements of our life, from the mundane to historical facts of life in rural America or the details of what life is like fighting Multiple Myeloma so others could learn from her experience.  

Judy is survived by her father Frank J. Malkiewicz, her siblings Jeff (Carol) Malkiewicz and Jani (Robbyn Wacker) Malkiewicz, her nephew Nicholas Malkiewicz, her Uncle and Aunt Walter and Hedwig Dynia, numerous cousins and her beloved golden retriever Kemmer.  She was preceded in death by her mother Marjorie Christine Lundberg Malkiewicz and niece Lindsay Katherine Malkiewicz.

Graveside services will be held Saturday, September 28, 2013 at 1 p.m. at the Mt. McCaleb Cemetery in Mackay, Idaho. 

In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the one of Judy’s favorite charities, the Mackay Food Bank, c/o Otto Higbee, P.O. Box 133, Mackay, Idaho 83251.



We certainly thank Judy for all this information.
We are happy to share it all with our readers.

Sunday, January 28, 2024

HAZEL THEORA JENSEN ANDERSON LUNDBERG

 



Hazel Theora Jensen Anderson Lundberg Part 1 of 2
Born 22 January 1889 in Mt. Pleasant, Utah and Died 11 October 1985 in Arco, Idaho

Hazel Theora Jensen Anderson Lundberg's birth mother was Hilda Jensen Jensen (1862-1954 - maiden name the same as her married name) and Hazel's birth father was Hans Peter Jensen (1858-1937). Hilda was 27 years old when Hazel was born in Mt. Pleasant, Utah. Hazel was their 4th born child. Photos of her birth parents.
At birth, Hazel was adopted by her great-aunt and uncle, Hanna (Perrson) Jensen Anderson (b 1841, d 13 May 1925) and Claus Anderson (b 1838 in Sweden, d 6 Jan 1923). Hanna was Hilda's father's, Andrew Peter Jensen (1837-1921) sister. Claus Wilhelm Anderson (born 1 Apr 1838 in Sweden and died 6 Jan 1923 in Mount Pleasant, Sanpete, Utah. Claus immigrated in 1867 from Sweden and Hanna immigrated in 1871. Claus and Hanna were married  25 June 1873 in Mt. Pleasant, Utah. Photos of her adoptive parents followed by their genogram.



Claus W. Anderson immigrated to Utah with his parents, Joseph Anderson and Marie Christena Lundberg Anderson in 1861. They settled in Mt. Pleasant, Utah. 

Claus Anderson took part in the Black Hawk Indian War and was awarded a $12/month pension as a result.


Hanna Jensen Anderson immigrated  to Utah after her first marriage in Sweden in 1871. Hannah’s father was Per Jensen (b 22 Feb 1801 in Sweden) and her mother was Hannah Hansen (b 12 May 1811 in Sweden).

Hanna was 48 years old when she and Claus adopted Hazel.

Hanna had been married in Sweden prior to 1871 and had four children there. It was said that her husband and all four children died in Sweden, however, this may not be completely accurate as a record from the John Heber Stansfield History (married to Elvina Elvira or Mina Jensen) that Hanna left her first husband, Hans Andersson, in Sweden to immigrate with the Mormon Saints to Utah in 1871 leaving behind at least one daughter, Kjersinta, and bringing one daughter with her, Hanna. Her two other children with Hans Andersson had died in Sweden - a daughter name unknown and a son, Anders who died at age 1 year.

Hanna Perrson (Jensen) Anderrson Anderson came to Mt. Pleasant, Utah in 1871 where she was married to Claus W. Anderson (alternate name Clas Wilhelm Josephsson or Anderson, son of Joseph and Marie Hogenson Anderson) on 25 June 1873. Claus had a sister, Matilda Josephine Anderson (b Mar 1853 and d 1936) aka Mrs. James Burns, Rodolphus N. Bennett. Matilda Josephine Burns Bennett first married Sheriff James Burns in 1869. Sheriff Burns was killed by outlaws in Spring City. Matilida  married a second time to Rodolphus N. Bennett in 1902. Five children survived Matilda Anderson Burns Bennett.
    • Mrs. Lydia Williams, Willow Creek
    • A. A. Burns, Willow Creek
    • Mrs. Beatrice Olson, Mt. Pleasant
    • J.H. Burns, Marysvale
    • Reed Burns, Manhattan Beach, California
Claus also had a brother, Oscar Anderson (1849 -1936), of Mt. Pleasant, Utah married to Chastie N Anderson (1860-1939). They had a son, Gerald L. Anderson born 6 Aug 1891 and died 23 Apr 1912 at the age of 20 years.

Hannah and Claus Anderson had five children and only two survived to adulthood, William Clarence Anderson (1874-1965) and adopted great-niece, Hazel Theora Jensen Anderson Lundberg (1889-1985).

Hence, Hazel's adoptive mother was really her Great-Aunt on the paternal side. She probably did not learn of her adoption until she was in her mid-thirties.

Note:
Hazel's adoptive mother, Hanna Perrson (Jensen) Anderson was a twin with Anna Jensen Fredricksen (1841-1929). Twin Anna was married to Lars Peter Fredricksen (1840-1914) on 11 March 1964. Anna Jensen Fredricksen came to Mt. Pleasant, Utah in 1862 with her brother, Neils (or Nils) Jensen after the death of her father, Neils (or Nils) Jensen (same name as son). Anna Jensen and Lars Peter Fredricksen had eleven children.

Hazel's adoptive father, Claus W. Anderson (1838-1923) was really her Great Uncle by marriage and he was one of the pioneer founding fathers of Mt. Pleasant, Sanpete, Utah immigrating from Sweden in 1866, as was her Grandfather (by birth) Andrew Peter Jensen (1837-1921).

Hazel listed with her birth siblings:
Alvin Peter Jensen (Wife May Woodward) (1884-1946)
Aldeva Hilda Jensen (1886-1957)
Hazel Theora Jensen Anderson Lundberg (husband Maple H. Lundberg) (1889-1985)
Percy Clifford Jensen (1891-1981)
May Chrystal Anna Jensen Phillips (husband Douglas B. Phillips) (1892-1974)
Alta Lavon Jensen Turner (husband William Turner; husband Gilbert Rhees) (1895-1977)
Nora Marston Jensen Newton (husband Edgar Leon Newton) (1897-1992)

Hazel listed with her adoptive siblings:
William Clarence Anderson (1874-1965). William aka Will was really Hazel's great-cousin since his mother, Hannah Perrson (Jensen) Anderson was Hazel's adoptive mother and Hannah was the Aunt to Hilda Jensen Jensen, Hazel's birth mother.
William Clarence Anderson (b 17 Mar 1874, d 22 Sept 1965) married Bertha Elizabeth Young Anderson (b 20 Sept 1878, d 11 Feb 1970) on 7 Nov 1898. They had 5 children:


  • Nathella Mary Anderson Hughes (b 22 Sept 1899, ), Melba, Idaho
  • Donald Edward Anderson (b 15 May 1903, d 26 May 1989)
  • Dorothea Constance Anderson Simmons (b 22 Aug 1908, d 2 Dec 1971) Salt Lake City, Utah
  • Clarence William Anderson (b  8 Sept 1912, d Sept 1981); Los Angeles, California
  •  ?
Hanna and Claus had four other unknown children who did not survive to adulthood included twin sons. Hanna had one son and one daughter with first husband, Hans Anderrson and they appeared to have died in Sweden and twin sons with Claus Anderson in Mt. Pleasant, Utah that also died early.

Hazel’s Childhood in Mt. Pleasant, Utah:
Hazel lived at home in Mt. Pleasant, Utah with her adoptive parents Claus Anderson and Hanna Jensen Anderson and her older brother, William Clarence Anderson (born 17 March 1874 and died 22 September 1965) who was 15 years old when Hazel was adopted. Here is their family home in Mt. Pleasant, Utah which still stands today in 2013 located at 308 Douth West, Mt. Pleasant, Utah Plat A Block 66 Lot 1. 

From the Mt. Pleasant, Utah http://mtpleasantpioneer.blogspot.com


Here is a photo of their house taken in 1 June 1994. Wonder what Claus would think of the carport and car????

Hazel attended the 1st Ward School in Mt. Pleasant, Utah in 1900 and continued her schooling through the 8th grade in Mt. Pleasant, Utah (see Row 3). Also note Maple Lundberg in Row 1.
Hazel was pictured at Carrie Nielsen’s birthday party in Mt. Pleasant, Utah circa 1900.
Back row L to R: Hazel Anderson, Lucile Rolph, Etta Rolph, Carrie Nielsen
Front Row L to R: Ada Jensen, Cloe Swenson, Elouise Poulson, Pauline Monson taken on Charley Renberg’s porch circa 1900 on 2nd West and 3rd South, Southeast Corner of Intersection.  From the Collection of Carrie Nielson Hafen From the Mt. Pleasant, Utah http://mtpleasantpioneer.blogspot.com

The 1900 Mt. Pleasant, Utah Census shows Hazel, age 11 years, living at home with her adoptive parents Claus W. Anderson (immigrated from Sweden) and Hanna Anderson (immigrated from Sweden). It lists Hazel’s birthdate as January 1888, but she was really born 22 January 1989.

Hazel as a young girl. Date Unknown.
From the Hazel (Jensen) Anderson Lundberg Collection.
Hazel T. Anderson at Fourth of July Celebration, Mt. Pleasant, Utah. Date Unknown

Hazel graduated from the 8th Grade in Mt. Pleasant, Utah in 1905 at the age of 16 years.  (See article below from Salt Lake Herald 22 May 1905). Hazel Anderson, age 16, at her 8th Grade Graduation, Mt. Pleasant, Utah 1905. From the Hazel (Jensen) Anderson Lundberg Collection

The photo below was taken during the 1904-1905 School Year.
Her principal was Mr. Joseph Hughes and her classmates included:
1.    Annie Therese Freston
2.    Harry G. Ericksen
3.    Evan A. Johnson
4.    Edgar R. Madsen
5.    Pauline Fuller
6.    Pauline Jensen
7.    Ada A. Barton
8.    Maggie L. Candland
9.    Mary M. Peterson
10.  Farrie Frandsen
11.  Bessie Wilcox
12.  Pauline Monsen
13.  Carrie Nielsen
14.  Nellie McArthur
15.  Annie Knudsen
16.  Hazel Anderson
17.  Lettie Hampshire
18.  Emma Lund
19.  Amanda E. Durfee
20.  Cleo C. Barton
21.  Mattie J. Durfee
22.  Annie C. Peterson
23.  Esther M. J. Lund
24.  Ida E. Merz
25.  Valentine Larsen
26.  Vernon G. Clemensen
27.  Otto F. Marsen
28.  Wilford Winkler
29.  Grace Nielsen
30.  Annie Estella McIntosh
31.  Verginlos L. Julilison (sp)
32.  Hans F. Jessen
33.  Wilford C. Larson


In 1908 (see Salt Lake Herald 19 January 1908), Miss Ebba Benson of Montrose, Colorado returned home after spending a month as the guest of Miss Hazel Anderson. [Note, Ebba Benson was not just a friend, but a cousin which Hazel was unaware of at the time]. Ebba’s mother was Fredricka Jensen Benson (sister to Hanna Jensen Anderson, Hazel’s adoptive mother) and Ebba’s father was Charles Benson.
Another article ran in the Eastern Utah Advocate on 23 January 1908 indicating that friend, Ebba Benson had returned to Colorado after visiting Hazel Anderson for a month.
The 1910 Mt. Pleasant, Utah Census shows Hazel, age 21 years, still living at home with her father Claus W. Anderson, age 72 [Claus immigrated in 1866 from Sweden and was working as a farmer on a general farm in the 1910 Census] and Hanna Anderson age 69 [Hanna immigrated in 1871; 1910 Census lists 9 children with only 2 living, plus she had been married to Claus for 31 years]. Hazel’s occupation is listed by as a sales lady in a dry goods store.

Hazel worked at the Mt. Pleasant, Utah Progress Store located in the Aldrich Brother’s Equitable Block on Main Street prior to her marriage in 1911. The Progress Store was located in the Equitable Building with the Aldrich sigh on the side.

Hazel Anderson, 3rd from the left working in Mt Pleasant Utah Progress Store. From the Hazel (Jensen) Anderson Lundberg Collection and Restored by Dave Gunderson.



Hazel's Marriage:



Hazel married Mt. Pleasant, Utah native, Maple "Mape" Henning Lundberg (12 May 1888-16 July 1934) on 1 November 1911 in Manti, Utah. Maple was the son of Mt. Pleasant dentist, Dr. August Lundberg and Christina Matilda Lundberg (deceased when Mape was just 8 years old). Hazel was 22 years old and Mape was 23 years old at the time of their marriage.




Prior to their wedding, a housekeeping shower was given to Hazel by Mrs. Chris Thompson and Miss Mary Fredericksen at Mary Fredericksen’s home in Mt. Pleasant, Utah (see article from Salt Lake Herald 29 October 1911 below). It was a happy affair and all of the guests wore dust caps and kitchen aprons. Miss Hazel was presented with a souvenir dust cap and apron (note photo later in the article showing Hazel in a dust cap and apron in Mackay, Idaho) and was initiated into the housekeepers’ association. Guests included:

1.    Hazel Anderson

2.    Jennie Peel
3.    Tressa Larsen
4.    Annie Braby
5.    Aldeva Jensen (Hazel’s sister by birth)
6.    Selma Jensen
7.    Leona Jensen
8.    Alta Jensen
9.    Mary Fredericksen
10. Mrs. C. Thompson
11. Mrs. Hanna Fredericksen

Hazel also enjoyed a second kitchen shower and dinner before her marriage to Maple Lundberg held by hostess, Miss Tressa Larsen on Thursday, 26 October 1911 (see article from Salt Lake Herald 29 October 1911 below). Decorations were carried out in Halloween style. In the dining room a large pumpkin was placed in the center of the table. From the pumpkin a ribbon ran to each plate on the table and at the end of each ribbon in the pumpkin there were pieces of paper containing prognostications of the lives of the guests. The reading of each fortune furnished no end of amusement. The decorations in the parlor were festoons of leaves. A useful kitchen articles presented to Miss Anderson. The invited guests were:
1.    Florence Monsen
2.    Etta Rolph
3.    Stella McIntosh
4.    Hazel Ericksen
5.    Hazel Anderson
6.    Aldeva Jensen (Hazel’s sister by birth)
7.    Flossie Ericksen
8.    Hilda Madsen
9.    Anna Lewis of Scofield
10. Christie Neilson
11. Nellie McArthur
12. Jennie Peel
13. Hortense Syndergaard
14. Viola Whittaker
15. Ida Merz
16. Goldie Faux
17. Mrs. Lucile Seely
18. Mrs. Louie Seely
19. Mrs. Sarah Beal
20. Tressa Larsen


The official marriage records of Hazel Theora (Jensen) Anderson’s marriage to Maple Henning Lundberg in Manti, Utah on 1 November 1911.
Mape’s father remarried for a 3rd time in 1903 to Sarah Matilda Johansen Lundberg. Matilda was Mape’s stepmother. Dr. August Lundberg was credited with bringing the first automobile to Mt. Pleasant, Utah in 1908. His son, Mape, was a mechanic, probably due to his father’s interest in automobiles.

In the 5 November 1911 Salt Lake Herald (below), the announcement of Maple and Hazel’s marriage in Manti, Utah appeared. A reception was given the couple by the groom’s father and stepmother, Dr. August and Matilda Lundberg. However, none of their near relatives were invited. On their return home they were give a reception at the home of the groom’s parents (August and Matilda Lundberg) with only members of their immediate families being present.

In addition, a second newspaper article about their marriage from the Eastern Utah Advocate 16 Nov 1911 indicates that they were most popular young people who were highly esteemed by their many friends, who wished them a long and happy wedded life.
However, Mape and Hazel’s friends from the H.H.G. Club threw them a reception too (see article below from the Salt Lake Herald 1911-11-12). A delicious five-course dinner was served and they played games, sang, and had music. Boys of the club presented the newlyweds with a beautiful rocker upholstered with leather (Judy Malkiewicz, granddaughter living in Mackay, Idaho has the rocker in 2013).
Those present at the party included:
1.    Mr. and Mrs. W.C. (William Clarence) Anderson (Host and Hostess and Hazel’s adopted brother and his wife Bertha)
2.    Mr. and Mrs. Canute Beal of Ephraim
3.    Mr. and Mrs. William Erickson
4.    Mrs. Earl Seely
5.    Leo Seely
6.    Tressa Larsen
7.    Etta Rolph
8.    Jennie Peel
9.    Edna Sorensen
10.  Grace Neilsen
11. Max Seely
12. Francis Nilsen
13. Raphael Jensen
Percy Jensen (Hazel’s brother by birth) came in from Salt Lake City Wednesday and returned Thursday. He was a special guest at the dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M.H. Lundberg Thursday. Others present were Mrs. H.P. Jensen (Hazel’s birth mother); Aldeva Jensen (Hazel’s sister by birth); Alta Jensen (Hazel’s sister by birth) and Crystal Jensen (Hazel’s sister by birth) and the host and hostess. From the Eastern Utah Advocate 4 Jan 1912.
While living in Mt. Pleasant, Utah, Mape and Hazel had two sons, Rex Henning Lundberg (born 11 July 1912 and died 21 December 1991) and Edward Auer Lundberg (born 24 December 1913 and died 27 June 1981).

Rex Henning Lundberg was born 11 July 1912 in Mt. Pleasant, Utah.  Hazel had Rex 8 months and 10 days after her marriage to Mape.  Hazel married Mape on 1 Nov 1911 and Rex was born 11 July 1912 (see Salt Lake Herald 14 July 1912 below).
Mape and Hazel lived for a time in Mt. Pleasant, Utah and entertained friends on occasion.

Hazel and Mape entertained on 29 October 1912 at their home in Mt. Pleasant, Utah. Guests included (see Salt Lake Herald 3 Nov 1912 below):
1.    Mape and Hazel Lundberg
2.    Mr. and Mrs. Canute Beal of Ephraim
3.    Edward (aka Edwin) Lundberg (Mape’s older brother)
4.    Lucile Renberg (who helped Hazel with the are of her son, Rex)
5.    Harry Erickson
6.    Tressa Larsen
Lucille Renberg Circa 1912 from the Hazel T. (Jensen) Anderson Lundberg Collection

Lundberg Maple and Hazel Entertain in Mt. Pleasant Salt Lake Herald 1912-11-03.jpg
Guests included:
1.    Mr. and Mrs. Maple Lundberg (hosts)
2.    Mr. and Mrs. Canute Beal
3.    Edward aka Edwin Lundberg (Maple’s older brother)
4.    Lucile Renberg
5.    Harry Erickson
6.    Tressa Larsen
Hazel entertained guests on 25 May 1913 (see Salt Lake Herald 1913-05-25 below) to celebrate Tressa Larsen’s upcoming marriage included: 
1.    Mrs. Claus Anderson (adopted mother)
2.    Mape and Hazel Anderson (hosts)
3.    Tressa Larsen
4.    Mrs. A.L. Larsen
5.    Mrs. Leo Seeley
6.    Mrs. Harold Sorenson
7.    Mrs. Arthur Rasmussen
8.    Etta Rolph
9.    Florence Monson
10. Viola Whittaker
11. Virgle Whitlock
12. Hilda Madsen
13. Stella Truscott
14. Tina Erickson
15. Elma Nolands
16. Ida Merz
17. Minnie Christensen.

Second son, Edward Auer Lundberg, was born 24 December 1913 in Mt. Pleasant, Utah. Auer was just 17 months younger than his older brother, Rex.
Edward Auer Lundberg known as "Auer"