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are designed to illustrate this process. The homeland is explored through memories of family and childhood and then viewed in the context of the decision to emigrate. The new land is encountered and analyzed, both physically and psychologically, on the immigrant journey and during the early years of adjustment. New lives are forged around work and family, but remain informed by tradition.

      In the early decades of the twentieth century, the typical Scandinavian emigrants were young, unmarried adults, motivated by economic pressures to seek employment overseas. Among them were a large number of women; by 1905, between thirty-five and fifty percent of the emigrants from the individual Nordic countries were female. In recognition of this fact, and to counter the male bias of earlier research in the field, the documentation of women’s experiences served as a priority for the oral history project. The shape of this book has also been influenced by a strong commitment to inclusiveness. Because immigrant women typically filled the role of tradition bearers, their insights and actions are critical to an understanding of the legacy of the European homeland.

      To set the context for the individual immigrant voices, I offer an overview of the emigration from Scandinavia followed by a discussion of the oral source material and the editorial principles that have guided me in presenting the material in written form.

      The Emigration from Scandinavia

      During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the Scandinavian countries sent a high percentage of their populations to North America. Altogether, some two and a half million residents of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden traversed the Atlantic during the period of mass emigration. The magnitude of the population movements is illustrated by the fact that Norway lost as many citizens as had comprised her total population in 1800.

      The rate of emigration fluctuated in response to economic and social conditions in both Scandinavia and the United States. But overall, there was a mushrooming effect—the greater the number of emigrants, the greater the returning stream of America letters and the greater the number of both published and informal accounts of American life available to the populace in Scandinavia. Such firsthand information instilled confidence in those who remained behind. Prepaid tickets sent by relatives in the new land and energetic promotion efforts by steamship and railroad agents added to the enticement. For those infected with “America fever,” the only cure was to venture across the ocean.

      Areas of Scandinavian settlement developed in the Upper Midwest, particularly in Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, and North Dakota. Then, after the settling of the middle western territories, the immigrants began turning their faces farther westward and a favored destination became the Pacific Northwest, the Puget Sound region in particular.

      The Oral History Project

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