Details for The Oslo Community

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5195003857

Data

Marker Number 3857
Atlas Number 5195003857
Marker Title The Oslo Community
Index Entry Oslo Community, The
Address 8605 CR F
City Gruver
County Hansford
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 273095
UTM Northing 4034729
Subject Codes cities and towns; Norweigan settlement; land surveys, land companies, promotional towns
Marker Year 1981
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location From Gruver take S.H. 136 about 6 miles north; head west on F.M. 2535 about 6 miles; turn north on F.M. 1262, continue for 5 miles, then turn west on F.M. 2349 to Oslo Community. Marker is between Oslo Lutheran Church and Oslo Cemetery.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text In 1908 Anders L. Mordt, a native of Norway, secured form R. M. Thomson and R. T. Anderson the sales rights to 100 sections of Hansford County land he named Oslo. The first settlers were recruited from existing Norwegian colonies in the midwestern United States. To promote the development, Mordt advertised his inexpensive Texas land in major Norwegian language publications across the nation. He also published a weekly newspaper, The "Oslo Posten", and organized an annual Norwegian Independence Day celebration, "Syttende Mai" (May 17), which attracted crowds from surrounding towns in Oklahoma and Texas. Community worship services were first conducted at the Oslo schoolhouse in 1909 by the Rev. Christian Heltne. Officially organized the following year, the Olso Lutheran Church became the center of the farming settlement. Mordt's land sales ended in 1913 as a result of a severe drought. When the Denver and Gulf Railroad decided to bypass the area, the townsite of Oslo (2.5 miles south) declined. Although many settlers moved away, more than thirty families remained. Today the Olso Lutheran Church serves as a remainder of the area's Norwegian heritage. (1981)

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