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Finding
​Swedish Studies
in
America


Finding Swedish Studies lists colleges and universities that offer courses in the Swedish language, culture, and history.  These Swedish courses are usually found within the Scandinavian Studies or Germanic Studies in these institutions.

To find these courses, look below.


Heritage Swedish Augustana Lutheran Colleges
1860 Augustana College, Rock Island, Ill.
​        Go HERE & HERE


1862 Gustavus Adolphus College, St. Peter, Minn.
         ​Go HERE

1881 Bethany College, Lindsborg, KS - Found in Catalog
          Courses:  Elementary Swedish 1
                            Elementary Swedish 2
        Not sponsored by Bethany College or Lindsborg:
        For a Swedish American Smoky Valley study of college and town, history
        contributed by college alumni, Lindsborg citizens and Smoky Valley neighbors,
        compiled by alum Fran Cochran, go HERE; and for the 'Table of Contacts" go HERE. 


Heritage Swedish Evangelical Covenant Church College
1891 North Park University, Chicago, Ill
 
        Go HERE
Heritage English Protestant Affiliated College/University
​​​1754 Columbia University, New York, NY
         Go HERE
​Private Ivy League Research University
1865 Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
         Go HERE

​1636 Harvard University, Boston, Mass
         Go HERE
Public Land-Grant Research Universities' Swedish Studies 
1740 University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia  
         Go HERE


​1817 University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
         Go HERE 

1851 University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
         Go HERE and go ​
HERE

1854 University of Washington, Seattle
         Go HERE

1863 University of Massachusetts, Amherst
         Go HERE

​1867 University of Illinois, Urbana-Champagne 

         Go HERE

1868 University of California, Berkeley
         Go HERE

1868, Minnesota State University, Mankato
         Go
HERE


1870 Ohio State University, Columbus
         Go HERE


1876 University of Oregon, Eugene
         Go HERE

1881 University of California, Los Angeles
​         Go HERE

1883 University of Texas, Austin
         Go HERE


1885 University of Wisconsin, Madison
         Go HERE and HERE



1946–1964 Portland State University, Oregon 
           Go HERE


[The names were taken from the article "Swedish American Education in the United States from the 3-2009 Sweden & America publication, page 14.]
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Go HERE to "Swedish News"

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" H I G H L I G H T I N G "

Chicago
(a Swedish American story)

         With Swedish roots dating back to the 19th century, Chicago was founded in the late 1780s by Jean Baptiste Point du Sable.  In 1848 statistics show that 40 Swedes lived in Chicago; in 1860 that increased to 816; in 1870 it reached 6,154.  In the 1880s, Chicago was noted as having the largest Swedish enclave in America.  The 1900 census showed that the number of Swedish born citizens in Chicago exceeded the population of Gothenburg, Sweden's second largest city, so at that particular time Chicago had become the "Second City" of Sweden! *
     
  Chicago's Swedish American Museum was opened by His Majesty Carl XVI Gustaf,  King of Sweden, during the United States Bicentennial Year of 1976. 
 And with the opening, the dream of "preserving Swedish American heritage in Chicago" by Swedish immigrant Kurt Mathiasson (1929-2000), Andersonville leader and original organizer of the Andersonville Midsommarfest, had been realized,  and it continues today.
    The Swedish American Museum is located in the very heart of Andersonville, the "Little Sweden" of Chicago.  Its mission is stated as follows: "Through its arts and educational programs and its permanent collection, the Swedish American Museum interprets the immigrant experience for children and adults and promotes an appreciation of contemporary Swedish-American culture." **
   
To read about "Lost Communities of Chicago - Swede Town Neighborhood," go HERE.
​

           Immigrant Wall
PictureCourtesy of the Swedish American Museum, Chicago
      In continuing the dream of Kurt Mathiasson and to honor and recognize him, the Swedish American Museum established "The Kurt Mathiasson Heritage Society."  It has also established the "Immigrant Wall" to honor and recognize the pioneer Swedes immigrating to America through Chicago.  This "Immigrant Wall" offers Swedish American descendants the opportunity of having their loved ones names and years of immigration inscribed on a brass plaque adhered to a brick and placed in this special wall reflecting the Chicago story of Swedish immigration to America.
       To learn more about the Swedish American Museum, the
 Kurt Mathiasson Heritage Society and the Immigrant Wall, go HERE.

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These photos were taken in 2010 during "Chicago's North Park University Swedish American Conference," November 5 & 6, on Augustana and Covenant ‘Contact, Conflict and Confluence, 1860-2010’  sponsored by the Swedish American Historical Society.

2010 Chicago's Andersonville on Clark Street
Picture
For a fun story of this Swedish Water Tower needing a big repair job in 2014, go HERE.
Picture
Chicago's Andersonville's Swedish Dala Horse
The owner and proprietor of the SVEA Restaurant seen in the slide to come was Kurt Mathiasson.
*  Sources: -- Swedish American Museum website;  Anita Olson Gustafson, the Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago;  Leif Carlsson, Kulturparken Smålan of Utvandrarnas Hus,"Swedes in American Cities"
**
Swedish American Museum website Mission Statement.

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SwedishAmericana
~ restoring, preserving and promoting Swedish American histories & cultures ~
~ sharing the Swedish American tapestry with all ~

All color photography throughout SwedishAmericana is by Fran Cochran unless otherwise indicated.
Copyright © since 2015 www.swedishamericana.org  All rights reserved.

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