Little Sweden USA

A blog about Lindsborg

I had the very special pleasure to attend my first Midsummer’s Day festival in Lindsborg yesterday. It was a beautiful day, sunny but not too hot and the north(Swensson) park in Lindsborg was filled with people enjoying the day. There was a wide variety of good food available, and many local artists and crafts-people were on hand sharing the products of their creativity.

Sheryl and I had a lot of fun. We were a little busy at first, tending to our Midsummer’s Day committee responsibilities*, but for the most part we got to simply enjoy the day. For me, the were two highlights that stand out. They both speak to the timelessness nature of festivals and celebrations such as Lindsborg’s Midsummer’s Day.

In the mid-afternoon, watching the youthful Swedish dancers dancing to Swedish songs peformed by their classmates and leaders, I was struck by the thought that a very similar scene was likely played out a couple of hundred years ago, in Sweden, by the distant relatives of those I was watching perform. Timeless.

Later in the day, at Heritage Park (near the Smoky Hill River), came the traditional raising of the maypole. This was followed by more Swedish dancing, including one number that involved almost 1/3 of the audience. Charlotte Anderson, the dance director, did a wonderful job with this dance, especially considering how many of the audience had never done anything like it before. It was something to see!

I took around 280 photos yesterday and pulled out 39 I felt were worth sharing on Flickr; they are located at my Midsummer’s Day photo set; they’re also available as a Midsummer’s slide show. From that set I have posted 9 here**.

Midsummer's Day

Swedish dancers

Swedish dancers Swedish dancers

raising the maypole the maypole

procession of musicians

dancing around the maypole

the timeless maypole

Simu-posted at All the Pages and Little Sweden, USA.

* Sheryl is on the Midsummer’s program committee and I did publicity. That included working with local radio personality James Keith; he did 5 “live remotes” from the park, and I was the opening and closing guest.

** A note about my use of Flickr. I’m once again hosting my own images on this blog, and providing links to more images on Flickr. I’m in no way dissatisfied with Flickr; it’s just that I wanted this site to by augmented by Flickr, but to not depend on them for something as fundamental as the photos I’m blogging. Also, and this is secondary to simply wanting to host my own blog images, none of the available Flickr sizes quite worked for me. They were either too small or too large. Hosting my own images also means setting my own image size. I like using flickr for previously stated reasons: sharing with a larger audience, ability to view images in different sizes, and so on.

Lindsborg is located in McPherson county, and Progressive Farmer magazine has just declared the county to be one of the best places to live in rural America. Ranked number three overall, McPherson takes the top spot for the Midwest region.

Their top 10 list includes links to information about each of the leading locations, including an overview article, stats, and a photo show. The photo show is not bad, (perhaps I’m biased) but would be better if Lakeside Park in McPherson wasn’t listed as being in Lindsborg.

This is one of those, look what I found while searching for something else items.

It seems that the Swedish diplomatic corps have a web site available to them (and to us!) that calls itself “the web site for Swedish Diplomatic Missions abroad.” The site provides a country by country index of information pages, which the diplomats can use as background material about their host county.

In the listing for their Washington DC office is a link to an address book, and one of the entries is titled Swedish America.

It turns out it’s not a big page, and really doesn’t have much content at all; just 2 cities are listed … and one of them is Lindsborg!

The other is Bishop Hill, located in western Illinois. I know there are other Swedish American communities out there; I wonder how they chose our two towns?

Peg, who hails from KansasPrairie.net (Ellsworth in the real world), has lived an interesting life. For almost 80 years she has had a variety of exciting experiences, including:

… traveled extensively to remote places on the globe. She has flown the Goodyear blimp over Houston, handling the controls herself. She spent a day submerged in the Pacific inside the USS Topeka, a Los Angeles class nuclear submarine. …

Last September she spoke of her plans to visit Lindsborg as part of a day trip that would start in Ellsworth, pass by Kanopolis Lake and continue through Marquette before landing in Lindsborg. Looking forward to the trip with obvious anticipation, she wrote:

Then, some how we’ll find our way across country to Lindsborg to poke around there for awhile, and probably have lunch. There are always new things to see in Lindsborg, changes that are occurring in the old traditional things and people to chat with about the activities of the community.

Many happy returns, Peg. May you continue to enjoy visiting Lindsborg for a long time to come.

This is the first of an occasional series highlighting web and blog pages that relate personal experiences with our fair town of Lindsborg.