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Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Vikings in Lake County

In 1951, Ronald Mason was driving a bakery delivery truck on the north side of Waukegan when he spotted an animal horn in the road. The horn had carvings on it, and though it was interesting, Mason just kept it on a shelf and occasionally drank beer from it.

In the early 1960s, an acquaintance of Mason's met Dr. O.G. Landsverk who identified the piece as being a "Viking horn." According to Landsverk, the carvings on the horn depicted ancient Norse gods and legends. The horn became known as the "Waukegan Horn" and members of the Leif Erickson Society felt it could prove that Vikings had explored the St. Lawrence River and traveled through the Great Lakes.

No, this is not an April Fool's joke.

The "Viking Horn" or "Waukegan Horn" as photographed for the News-Sun, July 29, 1978.
 
The buzz about the horn continued into the 1980s when it was sent to the University of Arizona in Tuscon for Carbon 14 dating. You may recall that this same university also had the privilege of dating the Shroud of Turin.

Everyone was convinced the horn would pre-date Christopher Columbus's voyages of the 1400s. As it turned out, the bovine horn was dated to about 1920, and was probably carved by a Swedish immigrant to Lake County.

Though that may have been a let down for many, it did heighten awareness of Scandanavian immigration to this region. Swedish immigration began en masse to the United States in the 1840s, and in earnest by the end of the 1860s due to a series of famines in Sweden. The fertile farmland of the Midwest became the destination for many of these Swedes.

As a child, my knowledge of the area's Scandanavian heritage was limited, but represents some of my favorite memories. For instance, my favorite local landmark was the giant Viking ship constructed in a guy's backyard next to the Shirl's Drive-In on Washington Street in Waukegan. It was awesome with its classic dragon head and one of the reasons why I loved going to Shirl's. We'd get our soft serve ice cream cone and look at the ship from the Shirl's parking lot.

Another favorite spot was the Swedish Glee Club located at 621 Belvidere Street, and shown here in a Curt Teich postcard from 1957.

The Waukegan based Swedish Glee Club had its roots in 1892 when Hjalmar Fredbeck formed a Swedish quartet. In 1905, the quartet expanded to a chorus and became known as the “Swedish Glee Club.” By the 1950s, the club had its own building for performances and dinners, and became popular with not only Swedes, but also the surrounding communities.

My Irish grandfather was a member of the Glee Club. They had terrific dinners and the building was very open and full of light from its large windows. When we went there, my grandfather had to present his membership card before the door would open to let us in. What an experience!

There was also the Independent Order of the Vikings who bought property on Deep Lake to build a recreation center, but decided the site was too difficult to get to from Chicago. They then purchased property from David Beidler off “old” Grand Avenue in Gurnee in 1912. The Gurnee property was adjacent to the railroad line. The Vikings held annual picnics at this location, drawing upwards of 18,000 Swedish-Americans from the Chicago area. Below is a photo of the Viking Club House from the collections of the Warren Township Historical Society.

Also, at this location from 1925 to 1967, the Vikings ran a nursing home for Swedish-Americans. The building was sold to the village, then to the Special Education District of Lake County, and finally razed in 1973. Today, the site is owned and operated by the Gurnee Park District as Viking Park--a testament to the Swedish-American organization that once called it home.

So, Vikings in Lake County? Swedish-Americans would certainly agree!

11 comments:

Always Changing said...

My dad was a bartender at various places when he was a young dad trying to raise a family of 5. One of his bartender jobs was at the Swedish Glee Club. We would go to visit him at the bar once in a while. Some of the older guys that were fixtures at the bar taught my brother and me "the song". Apparently, if you didn't know "the song" you just couldn't really be a Swedish American. It was a simple and repetitive song and I'm not sure what the actual title was. I also never had any idea what it meant. I know now that it means something like, "Swallow the first drink of Akavit down. It was a drinking song, and Akavit (aqua vitae - the water of life) is a Scandinavian spirit and it is customary to drink shots in rapid succession, referred to as "drinking snaps". The song is sung at the beginning of a dinner, a round of shots, or just for hell of it. Let the swallowing of Akavit begin!

Helan går
Sjung hopp faderallan lallan lej
Helan går
Sjung hopp faderallan lej
Och den som inte helan tar *)
Han heller inte halvan får
Helan går
(Drink)
Sjung hopp faderallan lej

Gary Turk
Born in Waukegan in 1953 - now in Colorado

teresa said...

hi,
do you have more info about the carbon dating of the "viking" horn?
I read that has been dated to 2006: it is possible?
many thanks

D_Dretske said...

The University of Arizona in Tuscon dated the "Viking horn" to about 1920.

teresa said...

in the London Times, 7 august 1988, in an article about the shroud of Turin Nick Rufford wrote:
«Another laboratory in Tucson, which is participating in the shroud tests, dated a Viking cow horn in 2006, 18 years in the future.»
unfortunately I can not find news on this date of 2006 anywhere else and I wondered if others had heard about.
thanks anyway

D_Dretske said...

How strange about the horn's date! Thank you for clarifying that. I will have to keep my eyes open for more information.

Fabrizio said...

Hi, I'm trying to find more information about the Waukegan horn, particularly about its radiocarbon dating by the University of Arizona. Maybe you could help me: do you know if the C14 dating was published in some journal? I checked the relevant scientific journals but was unable to find mentions of the horn.
Do you know who commissioned the study?
Thank you very much in advance
Best
Fabrizio

D_Dretske said...

I do not know where the Carbon 14 findings were published. Professor Austin Long of the geosciences dept. at the University of Arizona-Tuscon, was among the researchers involved in dating the horn.

If you are interested, I have a pdf file of O.G. Landsverk's letters and research on the subject. Please email me at ddretske@LCFPD.org

Graham Mason said...

Anyone wanting to know or talk about Waukegan horn I am current owner and grandson of Ronald Mason

Graham Mason said...

I'm your guy I own it and am grandson of Ronald Mason

Scott Shell said...

Hi, Graham. I have some questions about the horn. Can you send me an email at scott.shell@berkeley.edu? Thanks.

Fabrizio said...

Dear Mr. Mason, I'd like to know if you have in your possession the results of the carbon-14 test done on the horn by the University of Arizona in the 80s. Thank you in advance