Scandinavians Today
As the 20th century moved forward,
Scandinavian America moved forward as well, and Scandinavian
immigrants and their descendants took leading roles in all areas
of American life.
Scandinavian Americans took an especially
prominent role in electoral politics, particularly in the heartland
of Scandinavian immigration. In 1895, the Norwegian immigrant
Knute Nelson became the first U.S. senator of Scandinavian descent,
serving the state of Minnesota for nearly 30 years. Ever since,
Minnesota has always had at least one senator of Scandinavian
descent. The Scandinavian Americans Walter Mondale and Hubert
Humphrey both reached the U.S. vice-presidency, though they
were defeated in their presidential campaigns. Earl Warren,
the son of a Norwegian father and a Swedish mother, served as
chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court from 1953 to 1969, and
ruled on many of the pivotal cases of the Civil Rights era.
Scandinavian Americans also found success
in business and academia. Entrepreneurs Arthur Andersen, Ole
Evinrude, Conrad Hilton, and John Nordstrom founded the businesses
that still bear their names. In academia, the chemists Christian
Anfinsen and Glenn Seaborg, as well as the physicist Ernest
Lawrence, were each awarded the Nobel Prize for their research.
The Swedish American Seaborg was involved in the discovery of
at least nine elements, including plutonium, and even had an element
named after him—Seaborgium.
In the 1920s
and 30s, the age of mass communications got underway, and Americans
of Scandinavian descent were among the first multimedia stars.
The actor and Swedish immigrant Greta Garbo, the Norwegian-American
athlete Babe
Didrikson Zaharias, the Norwegian-American crime fighter
Elliot Ness, and the Swedish-American aviator Charles
Lindbergh all helped launch the new culture of celebrity.
Meanwhile, Scandinavian Americans were also
undertaking distinguished careers in the arts. Carl Sandburg,
the son of Swedish immigrants, became one of the most-read poets
in United States, and was named the Poet Laureate of Chicago.
Novelist Nella Larsen, the daughter of a Danish mother and a
West Indian father, was one of the most promising writers of
the Harlem Renaissance. Later in the century, the Swedish immigrant
Claes
Oldenburg was hailed as a pioneer of the Pop Art movement,
and every year thousands of visitors walk under the St. Louis
Gateway Arch, one of the most beloved works of the Finnish-American
architect Eero Saarinen.
Today, the great era of Scandinavian immigration
is more than a century distant, but the cultural legacy of the
Scandinavian immigrants is alive and well. Many of the great
Scandinavian newspapers are still being published, and have
been joined by an increasing number of Web sites in Swedish,
Norwegian, Danish, Finnish, and Icelandic. Scandinavian-American
social clubs, choirs, debating societies, and sports teams can
still be found across the U.S., and every year tens of thousands
of Americans gather at conventions and festivals to celebrate
their Scandinavian-American heritage. |