A Year on the FarmThe Life of Sjur Torgersen in Deerfield, Wisconsin - 1867
In the late winter of 1867, Sjur Torgersen stood at sixty-two years old, a Norwegian immigrant who had traded the steep mountains of Voss for the gently rolling farmland of Dane County, Wisconsin. After ten years in America, he was finally moving his family to their own land—forty acres in Section 23 of Deerfield township that he had purchased the previous fall. It was a new beginning, a milestone that represented everything he had hoped for when he and Brita had boarded the sailing ship Hebe ten years earlier.
This is the story of that year, 1867, when Sjur established his permanent homestead and his family began to sink deep roots into American soil.
Winter: The Move to Section 23
The move took place in early 1867, when the Wisconsin winter still held the land in its grip. Sjur loaded their belongings onto a borrowed wagon—furniture they had built or acquired over the past ten years, tools, cooking pots, bedding, clothes. Brita, now forty-eight, wrapped the children warmly and packed food for the journey, though it was only a few miles to the new property.
Their family had grown and changed since arriving in America. Torger, their eldest at sixteen, was nearly a man now, strong enough to do a full day's work alongside his father. Ole, at fourteen, was tall and quick with his hands, already showing an interest in carpentry and mechanical things. The girls—Ingeborg at nine and Anna at six—helped their mother with household tasks and chattered excitedly about the new house.
The house on their new forty acres was simple but solid. Sjur had built it with help from neighbors, following the barn-raising tradition that bound the immigrant community together. It had a main room that served as kitchen and living space, with a large fireplace for heating and cooking. There was a separate bedroom for Sjur and Brita, and a loft where the children slept. It wasn't fancy, but it was theirs, built on land that belonged to them.
That first night in the new house, with snow falling softly outside and the fire crackling in the hearth, Sjur felt a deep satisfaction. He had been a landless farm laborer in Norway, working other men's fields. Now he was a landowner in America. Forty acres. It wasn't a huge spread, but it was enough. With hard work and God's blessing, they would make it prosper.
Winter Work and Routines
Even in winter, there was work to be done. Sjur and Torger cared for their livestock—a milk cow, a team of oxen, some chickens, and a pig they were fattening for butchering. Every morning before dawn, they bundled up and headed to the small barn to feed and water the animals. The warmth of the cow's body and the smell of hay reminded Sjur of his boyhood in Voss.
Ole's job was to keep the woodpile stocked. Wisconsin winters were fierce—not so different from Norway, really—and the fireplace consumed wood at an alarming rate. He spent hours each week with axe and saw, splitting logs and stacking them under the eaves where they would stay dry.
Inside, Brita and the girls maintained the household. Brita cooked on the fireplace—porridge in the morning, stews and soups for midday dinner, bread baked in the Dutch oven. Ingeborg was learning to spin wool and to knit, skills she would need as a wife someday. Little Anna helped feed the chickens and collect eggs, though she often came back with her hands half-frozen, needing her mother to warm them by the fire.
In the evenings, the family gathered around the fireplace. Sjur was not a reading man—he had little formal education, and English was still difficult for him—but he could tell stories. He told the children about Voss, about the mountains and the lake, about his own father Torgeir and the old ways. Sometimes neighbors would visit—other Norwegian families, the Lelands from nearby farms, people who shared their language and memories of the old country. They would talk late into the night, speaking Norwegian, laughing at old jokes, keeping their culture alive in this new land.
Spring: Breaking Ground
When spring finally came to Wisconsin, it came with a rush. The snow melted, the frozen ground thawed into mud, and suddenly there was urgent work to be done. Sjur had purchased this land the previous year, and much of it was still unbroken prairie. Now he and Torger had to prepare fields for planting.
Breaking prairie was brutal work. The native grasses had roots that went down deep, tangled and tough. Sjur hitched his oxen to the breaking plow—a massive iron blade that could cut through the sod—and guided them across the field. Behind him, the earth turned over in long, heavy strips, dark and rich. The oxen strained in their yokes, breath steaming, and Sjur walked behind them for hours at a time, arms aching from holding the plow steady.
Torger followed with a harrow, breaking up the larger clods of earth. It was a young man's work, and Torger had grown strong. Sjur felt a surge of pride watching his son work. This was why they had come to America—so that Torger could have his own land someday, so that he wouldn't have to work as a hired man on someone else's farm the way Sjur had in Norway.
They planted wheat, oats, corn, and potatoes. Brita and the girls planted a kitchen garden near the house—carrots, onions, cabbages, beans. Every seed in the ground was hope for the future, a bet that the weather would cooperate, that the crops would grow, that they would have enough to eat and maybe some to sell.
Sunday at Church
Sunday was for church. The Norwegian Lutheran community in Deerfield gathered at what would become St. Paul's Liberty Lutheran Church. Services were in Norwegian, led by a pastor who understood the immigrant experience. Here, Sjur and Brita could worship in their own language, sing the old hymns they had learned as children, hear the Word of God in words that resonated in their hearts.
Church was more than worship—it was community. After the service, families lingered outside, catching up on news. Who was sick? Whose cow had calved? Which farms needed help with planting? The men discussed crops and weather and politics, though politics were confusing in this new country. The women shared recipes and remedies, gossiped about engagements and births, offered sympathy for losses.
The children ran and played, shouting in a mixture of Norwegian and English. Torger and Ole spent time with other young men their age, young Norwegian-Americans who straddled two worlds. Ingeborg and Anna played with other girls, their English already better than their parents' would ever be.
Sometimes Sjur's brother Ivar and his family would make the trip from Spring Prairie in Walworth County to visit. The brothers would clasp hands and speak of the old country, of their parents who were long dead, of the life they had left behind. Ivar had taken the name Leland, his wife Kari was born on Liland farm near Voss, and Sjur’s family took the name also connecting to their roots. The brothers had crossed an ocean and built new lives, but they remained bound by blood and memory.
Summer: The Growing Season
Summer in Wisconsin was hot and humid, so different from the cool Norwegian summers Sjur remembered. The crops grew tall in the fields—wheat ripening to gold, corn reaching for the sky, potatoes spreading their green leaves in neat rows. Every day, Sjur walked his fields, checking for weeds, for pests, for any sign of disease. A farmer's work was never done.
There was hoeing and weeding, endless weeding. Ole worked alongside his father and brother, learning to spot the difference between a young corn plant and the weeds that threatened to choke it. The sun beat down on their backs, and by midday they were soaked with sweat. Brita brought them water and cold buttermilk from the springhouse, and they would rest for a few minutes in whatever shade they could find before returning to work.
But summer had its pleasures too. On Sunday afternoons after church, there might be a social gathering—families coming together for a meal, children playing games, men pitching horseshoes or competing at target shooting. Sometimes there was music. Someone might bring a fiddle, and there would be dancing. Sjur was too old for dancing now, but he enjoyed watching, tapping his foot to the old Norwegian tunes.
On warm evenings, the family would sit outside after supper, enjoying the coolness that came with dusk. Fireflies danced in the gathering darkness—Sjur had never seen fireflies in Norway, and they still delighted him. The children chased them, catching them in their hands, marveling at the light. Brita would sit with her mending, and Sjur would smoke his pipe, and for a little while they could rest.
The Fourth of July
In early July, the family made the trip to the nearby village of London for Independence Day celebrations. This was an American holiday, still somewhat foreign to Sjur, but he understood its importance. His children were Americans, after all. They needed to understand and embrace their new country's traditions.
There were speeches—long speeches in English that Sjur struggled to follow—and patriotic songs. There was a parade with flags and drums. The children were given peppermint sticks and lemonade. There were races and competitions, and Ole entered the footrace for boys his age, though he didn't win. There was a community meal with tables groaning under the weight of food—roasted meats, pies, cakes, fresh bread.
As evening fell, there were fireworks—explosions of light and color in the darkening sky. Anna clung to her mother, frightened by the noise, while Ingeborg watched wide-eyed with wonder. Sjur thought about how far he had come, how different his life was now from what it had been in Voss. He was an American now, or at least his children were. This was their country, their future.
Fall: Harvest and Preparation
Harvest time was the culmination of all the year's work. By late summer, the wheat was ready. Sjur, Torger, and Ole worked from dawn to dusk, cutting the grain with scythes, binding it into sheaves, stacking the sheaves in shocks to dry. Their backs ached, their hands blistered, but there was satisfaction in seeing the results of their labor.
Neighbors helped each other with harvest, moving from farm to farm in a cooperative spirit. When it was time to thresh the wheat—separating the grain from the chaff—several families would gather. The men wielded flails, beating the grain on the threshing floor, while the women prepared huge meals to feed the workers. It was hard work, but there was camaraderie in it, a sense of shared purpose.
The potato harvest came next. The whole family worked together, digging up the potatoes, filling baskets and sacks, storing them in the root cellar where they would keep through the winter. Brita and the girls picked vegetables from the garden and preserved them—making sauerkraut from the cabbages, pickling cucumbers, drying beans and peas.
In October, they butchered the pig they had been fattening all year. This was a major event, requiring help from neighbors. The meat was salted and smoked, the fat rendered into lard, the intestines cleaned and used for sausage casings. Nothing was wasted. The fresh pork was a welcome change from their usual diet, and the salted pork would last through the winter.
Learning and Growing
Ingeborg and Anna attended the local school when they could be spared from farm work. The schoolhouse was a simple one-room building, and the teacher was an American woman who spoke no Norwegian. The girls learned to read and write English, to do arithmetic, to recite their lessons. They came home speaking English to each other, and sometimes Brita had to remind them to speak Norwegian at home.
Sjur himself had little formal education. He had learned to farm by working alongside his father in Norway, and he knew the skills he needed—how to read the weather, when to plant and when to harvest, how to care for animals, how to fix tools and equipment. Book learning had never been part of his life, and at sixty-two, he was too old to start now.
But he valued education for his children. Torger and Ole had learned to read and write, both in Norwegian from the church and in English from the school. They could keep accounts, read newspapers, write letters. That was more than Sjur had ever had, and he was proud of it. His children would have opportunities he had never known.
Winter Returns: The Year's End
As 1867 drew to a close, winter settled in again over Deerfield. The harvests were in, the livestock were snug in the barn, the root cellar was full of potatoes and vegetables, the smokehouse held salted pork and ham. The family had food enough to last until spring. It had been a good year, a successful year.
Christmas came, and with it the Norwegian traditions. Brita made lefse and fattigmann, the special holiday foods of their homeland. They attended Christmas services at church, singing hymns in Norwegian, celebrating the birth of Christ in the way their ancestors had celebrated for generations. On Christmas Eve, they exchanged small gifts—things they had made themselves, mostly, because money was tight.
As the year ended, Sjur took stock of his life. He was sixty-three years old now, no longer a young man. His body ached more than it used to, and the cold bothered him more than it had when he was younger. But he had much to be grateful for. He had a wife he loved, four healthy children, land of his own, and enough to eat. He had survived the transition from Norway to America, had built a new life in a new country.
He sat by the fire on a cold December evening, watching his family. Brita mended by candlelight, her face serene. Torger was becoming a man, serious and responsible. Ole worked on a woodcarving, his clever hands creating something beautiful from a piece of scrap wood. Ingeborg read aloud from a book, her English clear and confident. Anna sat at her mother's feet, half asleep in the warmth.
This was what he had crossed the ocean for. This moment, this family, this home. The journey had been long and hard, full of sacrifice and loss. But here they were, together, safe, with a future ahead of them. In the spring, they would plant again, and the cycle would continue. But for now, in the depths of winter, they could rest.
Outside, snow began to fall, soft and silent. Inside, the fire crackled and the family was warm. Sjur closed his eyes and said a quiet prayer of thanks. He was a farmer in Wisconsin, an immigrant from Norway, a man who had found his place in the world. And that was enough.
Epilogue
Sjur and Brita would remain on this forty-acre farm in Deerfield for the rest of their lives. They would see their children grow and marry. Torger would marry Anna Ellingsdatter Natvig in 1876 and give them ten grandchildren. Ole would remain a bachelor but become a skilled carpenter known throughout the community. Ingeborg would marry Anders Gulliekson Dykkesten in 1880 and move to Washington state. Anna would marry Charles Woelffer in 1880 but die young in 1892.
Sjur died on March 29, 1889, at the age of eighty-four, having spent thirty-three years in America. Brita lived six years longer, dying on September 3, 1895, at seventy-six. They are buried together in St. Paul's Liberty Lutheran Church Cemetery in Deerfield, their graves marking the final resting place of two Norwegian immigrants who helped settle Wisconsin and build a new life in America.
The farm they established in 1867 was the foundation for everything that came after—a permanent home, a legacy for their children, a piece of America that belonged to the Leland family. From forty acres in Deerfield, their descendants spread across the country, carrying with them the values of hard work, faith, and family that Sjur and Brita had brought from Norway and planted in American soil.
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The AI Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this story is in:
After I read these types of social history summaries, I wish that I could be a time traveler for one day to visit this Norwegian family in 1867 Massachusetts and witness their daily lives. I'm glad that the general lifestyles and occupations are known from historical records and witness accounts.
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