History

Thorsby's Scandinavian Cemetery now featured at the Chilton Cemetary Association's website

The Chilton Cemetery Association has added Thorsby's Scandinavian Cemetery to their website. The cemetery has reecently been approved by the State Historical Commission to be added to the State Historical Landmarks. The link to the site is available under Community Interest on the Web Links page.

Town of Thorsby - A Historical Summary

Thorson HomeThorson HomeThorsby is a small, rural town in central Alabama that is proud of its Scandinavian heritage. Settled in 1865 by three Swedes, T. T. Thorson, John F. Peterson, John E. Hedberg, and one Norwegian, K. G. Faegre, the Town of Thorsby was declared a promised land for northerners looking to locate in a warmer climate, suitable for farming and better health. The founders formed the Concordia Land and Improvement Association and began advertising in northern newspapers about the ‘utopia’ they had discovered in the south. Many traveled by railroad to purchase a tract of land and start a better life. Thorsby became affectionately known as the little “Swede Town” by locals.

Today, the town has very few Scandinavians living among the 2,000 or so residents, but the architecture of the old homes and church are reminders of the days when all the shops and businesses were operated by Swedes, Norwegians, Finns and Danes. The home pictured was built in the late 1890’s by the main visionary for the town, Theodore T. Thorson, and has been beautifully restored. The town maintains a museum in the old Norwegian Lutheran Church named “Helen Jenkins Chapel”. A Scandinavian Cemetery is available for visits any time and a self-guided motor tour map is available from the Town Hall.

A yearly heritage festival is held around the middle of October, the Thorsby Swedish Fest, that celebrates and heralds the town’s Scandinavian roots. The festival hosts a beauty pageant, car show, entertainment, arts and crafts booths, food vendors, games, and fun for the entire family in the Richard H. Wood Memorial Park. The 2008 festival saw 4,000 or so visitors and each year continues to increase. There is a current movement among town residents to find more ways to connect with their Swedish beginnings. If you visit the town, you’re sure to enjoy finding Sweden in Alabama, USA.

-- Authored by Tricia Bussey

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