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Norwegian-American Places in the Twin Cities
Item 16 of 21
This is a contributing entry for Norwegian-American Places in the Twin Cities and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.

Founded on November 1, 1888 when the general council of Deaconess Homes and Hospitals had their annual meeting in Minneapolis that year. Dr. Passovant of Philadelphia recommended the group interested in establishing a deaconess hospital to get the services of a deaconess. A committee was established and Deaconess Elizabeth Fedde of Brooklyn was secured to begin the work.

By 1880, the Norwegian Lutheran Deaconess Institute was incorporated. The board of directors included Professor Georg Sverdrup, Rev. M. F. Gjertsen, Professor S. Oftedal, Lars Swenson, Olaf Hoff, Rev G. Hoyme, Sister Elizabeth Fedde, and Rev. M.H. Hegge. Two lots of land were purchased which included a mother house with dormitories, and a hospital. By 1916, a Nurses Training School was established with Inger Bergh in charge.

In 1973 the Lutheran Deaconess Hosptial consolidated with Fairview hospitals. In 1981, it was renamed Fairview Deaconess Hospital. The School of Nursing graduated its final class in 1987.


Building, Cloud, Sky, Car

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Sister Elizabeth Fedde was a Norwegian-born deaconess who began her career at the Deaconess Home in Christiania (now Oslo) in 1873, and who established a new medical house in Tromsø in 1878 with the help of another young deaconess. After working there in harsh conditions, Fedde came to New York in 1883, where she organized a deaconess program in connection with the Seaman's Mission Church in Brooklyn nine days after her arrival. Eventually she established deaconess hospitals in Brooklyn and in Minneapolis, after receiving invitations based on her work with the Lutheran Medical Center (now the NYU Lagone Hospital - Brooklyn). In the next two years, she established the Lutheran Deaconess Home and the Hospital of the Free Lutheran Church.

More information on Elizabeth Fedde, including her diary, can be found in the NAHA archives.

Lutheran Deaconess Home and Hospital (Minneapolis) Papers. Norwegian-American Historical Association, Northfield, Minnesota.

Elizabeth Fedde Papers. Norwegian-American Historical Association, Northfield, Minnesota.

Folkedahl, Beulah. "Elizabeth Fedde's Diary, 1883-88." Norwegian-American Studies, vol. 20, 1959, p. 170-196. Project MUSE, https://doi.org/10.1353/nor.1959.a798997.

Graves, Dan. Death of Deaconess Elisabeth Fedde, 1901-2000 Church History. April 28th, 2010. Accessed January 24th, 2024. https://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1901-2000/death-of-deaconness-elizabeth-fedde-11630724.html.

Lovoll, Odd. Elizabeth Fedde, Store norske leksikon. June 29th, 2022. Accessed January 24th, 2024. https://nbl.snl.no/Elizabeth_Fedde.

Image Sources(Click to expand)

https://www.hennepinhealthcare.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/timeline-hennepin-history.pdf