Note: This
blog will be mostly in pictures--I believe one picture is worth a
thousand words.
This blog is the final installment dealing with my experiences in
Norway in the summer of 2012. The entire three-week adventure
was fabulous. My cousin Shirley Augustine and I spent the first
two weeks, from August 15-30, touring with the Gudbrandsdalslag (see
Blog #20) and with the help of a local genealogist
visited ancestral farms and churches of our paternal
grandmother, Hannah Larson Enger. Following that tour we spent several
days in Ringerike with Jorun Nerdalen (see Blog #22) who gave us bed
and board and transported us to farms and churches related to our fathers'
paternal grandmother Anna Lee Bergsund Enger. The last five days of
our trip were spent in the village of Eggedal, Sigdal Kommune, Buskerud, where
our first immigrant ancestor, great grandfather Elling Pedersen Enger, was
born, raised and emigrated from to America in 1854.
Elling Pedersen Enger, our first immigrant ancestor to America in 1854 at age 19. He went to the gold fields, settled as a farmer in Spring Grove, Minnesota, married in 1865 to Anna Lee Bergsund, an immigrant from Ringerike, and they were the parents of my paternal grandfather Edvard Ellingsen Enger. Elling died in 1900 at his home near Granite Falls, Minnesota at the age of 61.
Jorun drove us to Eggedal where we would bunk in for the rest of our stay
with her brother Nils Nerdalen and wife Line in their lovely hillside home
overlooking the village. This was like old-home-week, since both Shirley
and I had stayed with them before during her 2000 trip and my 2010
trip. The Nerdalens are related to us (Family Tree Maker tells me they
are 4th cousins) through their g. g. grandmother Mari Enger Nerdalen, who was a
sister of our g. g. grandfather Peder Ellingsen Enger. We just call them
cousins!
At the Seter (mountain farm) above Eggedal where sisters Jorun and Bjørg
Nerdalen each have vacation cabins. The
Nerdalen family, Jorun Nerdalen with Lyka, Line and Nils Nerdalen, Shirley, Bjørg
and
Bjørn Nordlien.
The lovely home of Nils and Line
Nerdalen above Eggedal
Beautiful view from the Nerdalen
farm, looking down on Eggedal valley.
On Sunday we were invited to have dinner at the home of Per Kåre and
Anne Marie Enger who in the 1990's moved from the Enger farm which
their son Per now operates into their
retirement home just down the road. Dale
and I stayed with the Engers on our 2000 trip and since they didn't speak
English and we no Norwegian we had a great time trying out sign language!
Surprisingly we did a pretty good job and enjoyed it immensely. Anne
Marie, as usual, had a beautiful table ready for us, and the company also
included their daughter Mari and her son Andreas, and daughter Kari and
children Frida and Per Emil.
Shirley and me with Per Kåre and Anne
Marie Enger and daughter Mari
Kari Enger with children Frida and
Per Emil
Per Kåre and Anne Marie Enger with
Mari and her son Andreas, age 16
The Enger farm in Nedre (lower) Eggedal has been in the same family since
the 1700's. Most of the farms in Norway
have been divided up many times over the centuries. The section of the farm
that my g. g. grandfather owned was sold off before they immigrated to America in 1861.
Young Per Enger with wife Ingunn and children Peder 8, and Marie 12. They currently operate the farm and also a
construction business. Most farmers have
other jobs as the farms are too small to
support a family.
These two stabburs (storage buildings) have been used on the farm since the
1700's and are still in use today. They have been moved to their present spot
from other locations on the farm. Stabburs are designed to keep out unwanted
critters and are used for food, meat and clothing storage. Most farms have at
least one. The doors are above the snow line for winter access.
A sign for Per Enger's business, including
excavation, spring and well digging, road building, wood harvesting and
construction.
Young Per's great-grandparents Peder Pedersen Enger,
1859-1923, and Mari K. Kopseng, born
1857, reign over the present household from their places of honor. I teased Per
Kåre that their family was in a rut, with almost all the men named Peder or a variation therof.
Family heirlooms traditionally stay with the farm in
Norway and not with the residents. These antique pieces have stood their ground
at Enger for 200 or so years. The
original farm house was replaced in the 1970's.
Ingunn Enger displays the back and front of a
vintage Eggedal bunad which is one of the family heirlooms kept at the farm.
Bunads were, and still are, costumes
worn for special occasions such as baptisms, weddings and other festive occasions.
The Enger farm lies in the shadow of a legendary mountain, a noted landmark in the
Sigdal Kommune. The legend, loosely translated, says that a young man named Anders from
Engersroa fell deeply in love with a
girl and wanted to marry her. However, he could not have her unless he agreed
to make a bet that he could ski from the top of the mountain to the bottom, so
off he went. The line tracing his ski pole is still visible. He succeeded, married the girl and from that day the
mountain was called Andersnatten.
Eggedal
Kirke (Church) sits prominently in the town center. Built in 1878, it replaced
an old stave church that was higher up on the hillside and was eventually torn
down. Remnants of it are still visible but it is now part of a private property. Some items from the stave church, including
the altar, were saved and placed in the new church.
One
of Skredsvig's best known painting entitled "Idyll" depicting a man
with a cat has been transformed into a bronze statue in the village as a
tribute to the artist. Cousin Jorun made the comment once that she thought it was odd to memorialize the painting rather than the artist!
A favorite tourist spot is the Eggedal Mølle (Mill)
where you can watch barley and wheat grains being ground into flour by two old
water-powered mills from the early 1900's.
Also on property is a sawmill where logs are sawed into planks with a
vertical Gate saw which is also water-powered.
The vertical Gate saw is quite unique in that it
saws off the planks vertically. instead of running the logs through the saw
blade, the saw blade runs through the stationary log.
The
old Eggedal School is on the mill property and is part of the Old Mill Museum
tour. It was used in the 1800's by children that lived on neighboring farms.
Another beloved Sigdal landmark is the Eggedal Borgerstue, a hotel,gift shop and restaurant with scrumptious food
located in Eggedal town center. Some of our Sigdalslag tour group were housed and fed there during our time in Sigdal.
Two of our Sigdølers , Gilmore Lee and Dan Emert, played a medley of tunes for a tribute to our Norwegian hosts at the closing banquet. It
was sad to say goodbye to Eggedal, but hopefully not a final goodbye. If I have
my way I shall return--as soon as possible!