Chris and Elizabeth Boilesen
The Parents of Floyd, Lester, Lois, Fern, Axel and Garold
By Doug Boilesen (one of the grandchildren of Chris and Elizabeth)
2009.
This is an annotated family scrapbook of
Chris and Elizabeth Boilesen, the parents of Floyd (1915-1988), Lester
(1918-1994), Lois (1919-2007), Fern (1921-1990), Axel (1923-2013),
and Garold (1935-2023).
Photos, newspaper clippings, and
some recollections are primary sources.
That research and what's on these pages is written from my perspective unless otherwise noted. I've tried to reference all sources, as applicable.
Hopefully, this family history scrapbook is interesting and tells some stories that resonate. For future generations, perhaps it will be a resource where Chris and Elizabeth Boilesen and their children are introduced to those who never knew them: "Chris, Elizabeth, Floyd, Lester, Lois, Fern, Axel and Garold."
For those of us who did know them, it's a way of remembering them, their families, and the love that was shared in sickness and in health, in good times and not.
Chris Boilesen
Chris Boilesen (aka 'Pop'
or 'Papa') was born on March 24, 1889 in Dannevirke, Nebraska
and died on February 19, 1976. Chris had seven sisters and two
brothers. Chris's father, Axel Christian Boilesen, died on July
20, 1903. Chris's mother married Martinus Andersen on July 3,
1906. Chris soon ventured to California but returned to Nebraska
and married "Lizzie" Jensen on April 8, 1914.
Elizabeth "Lizzie' Adel Jensen
Elizabeth 'Lizzie' Adel Jensen
Boilesen (aka 'Mom' or 'Momma') was born on March 29,1896
in Dannevirke, Nebraska and died on May 27, 1968. Lizzie had one
brother and six sisters.
Chris and Elizabeth - Glimpses of their Lives
"In his young days Pop worked
in California" according to Garold, his youngest son, but
he never did discuss his time in California with Garold. This
5" x 7" photograph is simply identified in pencil on
the back "Del Ray Calif 1908" and it is believed that
Chris worked on a truck farm while in California.

Del Ray, California
1908

Postcard taken at a photo studio
in Sioux City, Iowa and sent to Lizzie Jensen November 27, 1913
(L-R Chris Boilesen, Chris Gregerson, Chris Nielsen)

Chris and Elizabeth
were married on April 8, 1914 at St. Paul, Nebraska.
One hundred and eighty
(180) Howard County men were called for Examination at the Court
House for the World War I first draft, August 1, 1917. Chris Boilesen
was Draft Order Number 138, Serial Number 388. As a farmer he
received a deferment. The
Phonograph newspaper in St. Paul, Nebraska published the list
of the 180 on August 2, 1917
Chris and Lizzie had four boys and
two girls.

Chris and Elizabeth Boilesen family
portrait, circa 1941, Cotesfield, NE; Back row L-R: Floyd, Axel,
Lester; Front row L-R: Fern, Garold, Elizabeth, Chris, Lois.
When you live in a small town like
Cotesfield a variety of family activities are reported in the
local newspaper. Communities in Howard County each had their own
correspondent who would provide their town's news to the local
newspaper, The Phonograph, in St. Paul, Nebraska.
The following include Cotesfield
items in The Phonograph newspaper that document some
Boilesen "news" during the years Chris and Lizzie were
raising their family. Other references can be found in The
Phonograph related to their 'birthday and wedding anniversaries',
visitors coming to dinner, funerals, and gatherings they attended.
Most of these clippings here, however, are glimpses of their lives
"in sickness and in health" and are like reading from
a family diary about things that otherwise would not now be known.

The Cotesfield
Department: The St. Paul Phonograph, Monday, July 15, 1918
In the above account Floyd (two-years
9 months) was the baby thrown from the wagon with his mother.
Lester would be born six weeks later.
The Cotesfield
Department: The St. Paul Phonograph, Thursday, July 18,
1918
This seems to be additional
information about the previous week's Saturday evening when Mrs.
Boilesen was returning home from Dannebrog and was thrown out from
the wagon with her baby (see July 15, 1918 above).

Cotesfield:
The St. Paul Phonograph, February 15, 1922

Cotesfield:
The Phonograph, St. Paul, Nebraska February 3. 1926.
All six children of
Chris and Elizabeth were born and raised on their farm west of Cotesfield,

Photo taken in 1996, 70 years after the Parker
house (on right) was moved and added to the Boilesen house west
of Cotesfield.
The original Chris and Elizabeth
Boilesen homestead barn as seen in 2013 approximately 100 years
after it was built. The house and blacksmith shop are no longer
standing nor are there any of the other
'systems' that Chris added to make life better for his family
in the 1920's and 30's.

Cotesfield:
The Phonograph, St. Paul, Nebraska September 7, 1927

Cotesfield News:
The Phonograph, St. Paul, Nebraska April 4, 1928

Cotesfield News:
The Phonograph, St. Paul, Nebraska January 30, 1929
(In a January
9 newspaper article Axel was identified as the sick child)

Cotesfield Department:
The Howard County Herald, St. Paul, Nebraska August 14, 1929

Cotesfield News:
The Phonograph, St. Paul, Nebraska November 14, 1934

The Phonograph,
St. Paul, Nebraska Wednesday, May 5, 1937
The Friday evening
reference would mean that Fern must have gone into Hospital on the
previous Friday, April 30, 1937.

The Phonograph,
St. Paul, Nebraska May 12, 1937

The Phonograph,
St. Paul, Nebraska May 12, 1937
Fern was released from
hospital on June 9, 1937, 5 weeks after surgery.
From these items we learn that Fern
had an emergency
operation for appenditis and was in hospital from April 30
until June 9. The seriousness of Fern's operation and her recovery
may be the reason that her mother ended her daughters' participation
in dancing and playing cards, and may also have triggered a re-emphasis
on the importance of religion.

The Phonograph,
St. Paul, Nebraska October 27, 1937
Garold summarized his mom's religion
as being "pretty strict" recalling that she didn't approve
of working or shopping on Sundays; no going to the movies although
in high school after the Youth Meeting on Sunday evenings Garold
and a couple of his friends would chip in for gas and drive to
St. Paul in his '41 Buick to catch the last movie of the night.
When he would come home late his parents were already in bed but
his mom would always call out "Is that you Garold?"
and he would say yes and then go upstairs to bed so her acceptance
of movies had apparently softened.
Garold remembers that every Sunday
he would go to Sunday School while his parents went to adult Sunday
School and then they would all go to church service together.
When he was really young on one occasion Garold said he was once
so disruptive in Sunday School that the teacher told him if he
didn't shape up he was going to get separated. Garold said he
didn't know what that meant but that he knew what a cream separator
did and was quite worried that his punishment would involve that
separator.

""Momma &
Axel planting potatoes in the old garden, 30th April" (ca.
1938)

The Phonograph,
St. Paul, Nebraska February 17, 1937
In the Home
One of the activities I didn't realize
went on for so long at my grandparents' farm was their butter
making. According to Garold when he was a boy in the early 1940's
one of his chores was to 'churn' the butter. This involved moving
the wooden dasher up and down in their four-gallon churn (i.e.,
stoneware crock with lid and hole in its center). The first butter
factories appeared in the United States in the early 1860s and
at the end of the 19th century even the small town of Elba, just
south of Cotesfield, had their own cheese and butter factory.
Elba's butter factory didn't last but even if had survived it's
doubtful that my grandparents would have spent their money on
that butter or butter from any store. They had a few milk cows,
a cream separator and it was something they had always done. My
only surprise was how long they continued to do it.

Making and mending clothes was another
activity that is hard for later generations to fully appreciate
what a difference something like the invention of the sewing machine
meant to a family.
My grandmother's treadle (non-electric)
sewing machine was positioned against the wall in the front room
of their house. It was one of the few pieces of 'furniture' that
I remember and its functionality made it an important part of
their home. I'm not sure my grandmother ever had another model
than this gold stenciled "Wright Special" Manufactured
by Wright & Wilhelmy Co., Omaha, Nebr. According to the Douglas
County Historical Society "the Omaha-based Wright
& Wilhelmy Co. Wholesale Hardware firm was rather ubiquitous in
eastern Nebraska for much of the 20th century. The company was
founded by John F. Wilhelmy and H. Larson in Nebraska City in
1871. They functioned as both a retail and wholesale hardware
supplier." It seems likely, therefore, that Wright &
Wilhelmy weren't manufacturing sewing machines but were buying
sewing machines and then selling them with under their company
name by catalogue or as a wholesaler to local stores.




Speaking of needles,
and as a Phonographian, I also love the following Wright &
Wilhelmy Co. photograph of their salesmen's Fords with sample
phonographs strapped to the backs since there is a close connection
between the phonograph and sewing machines.


The Boilesen's 1940

On their farm across
the river east of Cotesfield ca. 1945

Newspaper ad, March
21, 1929, The Scotia Register
Eggs and cream were
two products that Mrs. Chris Boilesen would sell through the decades.
Garold remembers their cream separator and the cream that they would
take to the creamery in Cotesfield with the proceeds used for buying
groceries. Garold doesn't know if his parents ever sold milk but
since they only had a couple of dairy cows when he was growing up
he knows that the milk from those cows was for their own use and
for the cream that could be sold.
Husking Bee for Chris Boilesen

The Phonograph,
1948
Chris was seriously
injured in 1948 when his tractor rolled over on him while is was
mowing alfafa on the hill near the entrance to their farm. The frequency
of farm accidents is a statistic that too often goes unnoticed.
Likewise, the spirit of helping neighbors in times of hardships
is a proud tradition of Nebraska farmers and worthy of recognition.


40th Wedding Anniversary
- 1954

Chris and Lizzie in
the Mojave Desert, 1958. They travelled by train to visit Garold
who was stationed there in the Air Force and also to attend a Danish
Brotherhood Convention in San Bernardino. Garold remembers taking
his dad to a boxing match at a local venue in San Bernardino where
"the beer was flying."

1964 Golden Wedding
for Chris and Elizabeth Boilesen - L-R Floyd, Axel, Elizabeth, Chris,
Lois, Fern, Garold, Lester

Golden Wedding of Chris
and Elizabeth Boilesen - Grandchildren
L-R Janice, Russell,
Leila, Carol, Gloria, Gaylord, Sheryl, Crysta, Jeanne, Ila, Eugene,
Doug (front row Bev, Susan)

Popular Culture on the farm
In the years from 1915, when their
first child was born, until 1954 when the last one left, many changes
occurred in popular culture. The telephone, automobile, phonographs
and recorded sound, music, movies, radio, television and print media
altered what Americans were seeing, hearing and doing. Consumerism
changed what and how goods were produced and sold; the Rural Electrication
Act brought electric lights and power to rural communities. And,
of course, there were the life-changing events of those eras with
their indelible impact: the 1918 influenza pandemic, the Wall Street
Crash of 1929, the Great Depression, drought, two World Wars and
the Korean War.
On the farm in rural Nebraska having
chickens and a few pigs or cows and a garden provided food many
weren't as fortunate to have during economic hardtimes. On the other
hand, farming in the 1930's 'dust bowl' was a daily reminder that
without water nothing grows and all you could do was watch the topsoil
literary blow away. Axel remembered going out each day during the
drought years and walking behind his plow and horse and feeling
like he was simply walking in circles; it was hot and dusty, and
at the end of each day he felt
like nothing had been accomplished and that the same would be
true the next day.
Everyone in the family except Garold
lived all their growing up years on the original Boilesen farm west
of Cotesfield in the house where each had been born. Axel remembered
it as being a nice home. He shared a room with his two brothers
Floyd and Lester and they all slept in the same bed. Two would sleep
with their heads at the top of the bed while the third brother slept
at the other end with his feet pointing towards his two brothers'
heads. Axel said he didn't think their sleeping arrangement was
ever a problem. But when he did visit that farm home some sixty
years later he was surprised how small it seemed. Interestingly,
he also expressed some disappointment that he had even revisited
it as it was empty, run-down, and far different from what he remembered.
Books seem to have had a limited place
in the home except for the Bible which was kept on the parlor's
sideboard. The children had some books in the china cabinet. The
Big Little Books from the 1930's like Tarzan and Dick
Tracy were favorites. Garold remembers that after church every
Sunday they would go to their Cotesfield post office box and get
their Sunday newspaper which he enjoyed for its Sunday Funnies.
Garold listened to a few radio shows that were also in the comics
such as Jack Armstrong, The Lone Ranger and Terry
and the Pirates. Axel remembered The Katzenjammer Kids, Bringing
Up Father, Dick Tracy, Popeye and Little Orphan Annie as ones
that he had read.

1948 (Click
to see full panel)
Dick Tracy,
The Big Little Book (1936) and Tarzan of the Apes (1933)
Chris followed politics and liked
talking about the issues of the day but I don't know any books he
may have read. Elizabeth read the Bible but again I don't know any
other books she may have read.
Axel remembered a radio being in
the parlor. Garold remembers a small wooden cased radio in the kitchen
(probably in the 1940's and early 1950's). Because Chris was such
a supporter of FDR it seems likely that FDR's "Fireside Chats"
would always have been tuned in.
Interestingly, Chris attended a speech
of President Roosevelt in Omaha in 1936.

Cotesfield News:
The Phonograph, St. Paul, Nebraska October 14, 1936
Elizabeth regularly listened to Reverend
Epp on "Back to the Bible" and to Rev. Charles Fuller
on The Old Fashioned Revival Hour. The farm and market reports
and the weather reports which had an early history and influence
on Nebraska farmers were a daily staple in the house. KFAB started
a program in 1926 (1) featuring
market reports and talks on farming and likewise KFKX Hastings (2)
and KMMJ Clay Center, Nebraska began broadcasting market reports
in 1926. (See Jim McKee's Memories
and Moments for more history of Rural Radio, Lincoln
Journal February 20, 2022)
They subscribed to several newspapers
over the years including The St. Paul Phonograph, aka Howard
County Herald, The Scotia Register and a Sunday newspaper
(perhaps the Omaha World Herald).

Cotesfield News:
The Phonograph, St. Paul, Nebraska January 25, 1928
Garold remembers The Saturday Evening
Post being in the house, the Farm Journal, Danish Brotherhood
newsletters, and perhaps Life magazine.
Catalogs like Montgomery Wards
and Sears were always welcomed as this was the wish book
era and actual shopping trips were limited.
An Edison Amberol Phonograph was in
their home in the 1920's and 1930's although Axel remembers it mostly
being kept in the closet. "The Jolly Coppersmith" was
one of his favorites. He also remembered that he used to watch Lois
and Fern dance around to its music. They had it until World War
II when it was donated to support the war effort with Chris thinking
that it might be used to entertain the troops.
There was never a television while
Garold lived at home so TV wasn't part of the Boilesen home until
sometime after 1954. The Lawrence Welk Show was a favorite
for both with Chris adding Saturday Night Wrestling to his
weekly program list. Garold didn't know what his mom thought about
that additonal selection by his dad.
The farm west of Cotesfield had a
icebox and an ice house but making ice cream was infrequent. The
Deland Drug Store was the place to go for a special ice cream (like
a peanut buster) or a frozen Milky Way. Visits there, however,
also weren't common.
Cotesfield had their own telephone
co-op and the Boilesen's always had a phone on their farm. Garold
remembers in high school that he once went to Deland's because it
was the only public telephone in town and he wanted to make a personal
call for a potential date (which he didn't want to do from home
because of his parents being around and because of their party-line).
The drug store phone, however, wasn't in a phone booth and was located
where Harry Deland and anyone else could listen. After surveying
the situation Garold left the store without making that call.

Chris and Lizzie in
their living room circa 1959

Wallpaper in
their across the river farm bedroom circa 1940's (post-1943).

Wallpaper with border in their farm house, circa 1940's (post-1943).

Wallpaper from their farm house, circa 1940's (post-1943).
Chris Boilesen's
work outside of farming
The family had a farm
west of Cotesfield until they moved to another farm east across
the river in the summer of 1943. Chris and Lizzie would make one
final move buying a house in Cotesfield in 1960 across the street
south of the school. They moved their kitchen cabinets and appliances
from their farm house to the Cotesfield house.
The sons did much of
the farming in the late1930's as Chris was working on Howard County
projects in St. Paul such as the Rural Electrication Association,
the Howard Country Public Power District and the district's new
Soil Conservation Program. Upon his retirement he received a watch
celebrating his year's of service to agriculture and the region
inscribed as follows: "March 1936 - January 1971 Howard
Greeley Public Power District Chris Boilesen Director."

The Howard County
Herald, St. Paul, Nebraska February 27, 1935

Chris Boilesen (front
row, second from left) worked for the REA in St. Paul Nebraska,
photo circa 1936

Cotesfield News:
The Phonograph, St. Paul, Nebraska March 18, 1936

The Howard County
Herald, St. Paul, Nebraska April 8, 1936

Cotesfield News:
The Phonograph, St. Paul, Nebraska April 29, 1936
Community Committees
under the Soil Conservation Program
Elected Committees
for 1938


The Phonograph,
St. Paul, Nebraska, December 15, 1937
HOWARD COUNTY A
LEADER IN RURAL ELECTRIFICATION

The Phonograph,
St. Paul, Nebraska, March 31, 1937, p.2

The Scotia Register,
December 18, 1947

The Scotia Register,
December 30, 1948

the magazine,
Vol. 2 No. 1, @1979 Department of English, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
For more about Chris and Elizabeth Boilesen's Parents, Siblings and Grandparents visit
Chris and Elizabeth Boilesen's Parents, Siblings and Grandparents
The Chris & Elizabeth Boilesen Family Album
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