Archive for the 'Norwegian America' Category

Distribution of Ostrems in the U.S.

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

I stumbled across this info at Whitepages.com. Not surprisingly, it shows that the highest concentrations of people with my last name - Ostrem - are in states where many Norwegian immigrants settled, mostly in the Upper Midwest:

Top States for last Name Ostrem:
1. Wisconsin: 70 listings
2. Iowa: 57 listings
3. Minnesota: 35 listings
4. South Dakota: 24 listings
5. Washington: 23 listings

New bike company starts up in Northfield

Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

rawlandlogo

Local cyclist Eric Johnson informed me of this exciting news for my hometown: Northfield, Minnesota, resident Sean Virnig has established Rawland Cycles, a new bicycle company. Rawland offers two different steel frames, the Olaf and the Sogn, the former for fixed-gear or single-speed bikes and the latter for geared bikes. Both frames are designed to use 650B wheels, a newer size that is supposed to be more versatile. Information on complete bikes is available by request.

Like Virnig, I am of Norwegian descent, so I appreciate the Viking motif designed into one of the bikes: the decorative allusion to the sea serpent on the rear dropouts (the spot where the rear wheel attaches to the frame).

Judging by the News and Updates section of the Rawland web site, there has already been a lot of coverage of Rawland in the cycling world since the company debuted at the Interbike trade show in Las Vegas last September. Strangely enough, I haven’t heard anything about the company in the local and regional media.

I hope to find out more about Rawland, and I wish Mr. Virnig good fortune with his new company.

This Bill Ostrem isn’t me

Friday, June 15th, 2007

There’s another Bill Ostrem out there. He’s Bill Ostrem of California, a successful developer, and vastly more wealthy than I, I expect. Among his projects are the very large planned communities, EastLake, near San Diego, and Yokohl Ranch, near Visalia. I’d like to visit and learn more some time.

Reading about his projects and having lived in California myself from 2002 to 2004, I know that development in the Golden State makes developoment in the Midwest look like child’s play. They build big and fast out west. I remember when Elk Grove, a suburb of Sacramento, added something like four elementary schools in one year, probably around 2003.

I believe Mr. Ostrem may be descended from some Ostrems who settled in Illinois, most likely Norwegians like my Ostrem ancestors. I’ll try to find out more.

Celebrating Syttende Mai

Wednesday, May 17th, 2006

Happy Syttende Mai! That’s “17th of May” in Norwegian. This morning my wife and I attended the annual Syttende Mai Frokost (breakfast) at St. Olaf College. Syttende Mai is a Norwegian holiday celebrating the signing of that country’s constitution in 1814, which made it independent of Denmark. A forced union with Sweden, however, meant that Norway did not achieve full independence until 1905. Read the rest of this entry »

Celebrating Syttende Mai at St. Olaf College

Tuesday, May 17th, 2005

Today is Syttende Mai (Seventeenth of May), Norway’s Constitution Day. We were fortunate enough to celebrate the day at a “Syttende mai frokost” (breakfast) at St. Olaf College, an institution founded by Norwegian Americans. The food on hand included herring, salmon, goat cheese, and Norwegian waffles with lingonberry jam and sour cream.

As our family went to sit down, St. Olaf College president Chris Thomforde motioned for us to join him at his table. In my few meetings with him I’ve always found him to be an especially friendly person. He entertained us with some stories of his basketball-playing years, including his unsuccessful tryout with the New York Knicks. He eventually went on to graduate school at Yale and became a Lutheran minister.

The breakfast was sponsored by the St. Olaf Norwegian Department and the Norwegian House. It featured a short program of Hardanger fiddle music, a type of Norwegian folk music. The fiddle players wore traditional Norwegian costume and played on ornately decorated fiddles.

A handout at the program included some information about the holiday:

“The 17th of May celebrates the signing of the Norwegian constitution on May 17, 1814, at the end of the 400-year union with Denmark. Shortly afterward, Norway was forced into a union with Sweden that lasted from 1814 to 1905, when Norway finally won its independence.

“This year, Norway is observing the Centennial Anniversary of the peaceful dissolution of its union with Sweden, and there are many special events planned in Norway as well as in many other countries, including the United States. This summer, St. Olaf is planning to send its largest contingent ever to Norway for the Centennial Anniversary. In June, 260 musicians, 20 faculty and staff, and nearly 100 travelers in three different Study Travel programs will represent the college as they enjoy Norway’s festivities, scenery, and people.”

As part of the program, we sang the Norwegian anthem, “Ja, Vi Elsker,” and a patriotic tune called “Norge i rodt, hvitt og blatt” (”Norway in red, white and blue”). The latter celebrates the national colors, which the population was forbidden to wear during the Nazi occupation of Norway in the Second World War. Here are the lyrics in English:

Norway in Red, White and Blue

Wherever you go in the meadow and mountain,
a winter day, a summer evening
by the fjord and waterfall,
from the meadows and pine barrens,
from the ocean’s edge with fishing villages
and to the white reefs,
you meet the land in a tricolor dress,
cradled in the reflection of the colors of the flag.
See the white-stemmed birch on the hillside,
framing the patch of bluebells
against the red-painted cabin by the road;
it’s the flag that waves in the wind.
Yes, the snow is as white as the white of the flag,
and the evening sun has taken on the red color,
and to the glaciers the blue lends its color,
it is Norway in red, white and blue.