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Norwegian-American Places in the Twin Cities
Item 5 of 18

The Ebenezer Home Society was organized with only a vision for providing care for some members of the indigent aged community. The campus was a comparatively modest temporary house with accomodation for ten residents, with rapid expansion occurring in earnest over the next ten years. In order to stay affordable for patients, the home depended and still depends on voluntary contributions for maintenance, just as many hospitals and care centers do.[1]

Ebenezer Senior Living may have the largest senior housing operation in Minnesota now, but it originally started as one simple institution to assist unhoused senior citizens established in 1917 by a group of Lutherans in Minneapolis. Now an integral member of Fairview Health Services, Ebenezer administers many different types of and locations for senior living care.[2]

The first matron of this care institution was Sr. Caroline Unhjem, who, along with her fellow caregivers, lent her services to ten unhoused men, all of whom were aging and native to Norway. Unhjem also represented the beginning of the care center's financial endowment for continued care.[3]

Ebenezer, like all Norwegian-American institutions, was built with community care and development in mind, with its organizers taking direct part in achieving its goals. Norwegian-Americans are not interested in silent partnerships, they are chiefly invested in members of the community investing directly in the community's affairs.


Plant, Sky, Building, Property

[1]"Ebenezer Home for the Indigent Aged" article, undated, P0683, Box 3, Folder 3, Old People's Homes, Norw. Amer. Encyclopedia, Norwegian-American Historical Association, naha.stolaf.edu.

[2]About Us, Ebenezer . Accessed January 19th, 2024. https://www.ebenezercares.org/about-us.

[3]Ebenezer Foundation, Ebenezer Senior Living. Accessed January 24th, 2024. https://www.ebenezercares.org/ebenezer-foundation.

Image Sources(Click to expand)

https://www.ebenezercares.org/