From Voss Most of the immigrants from
Voss,
Norway, who came in 1839, located either in
Chicago or in
La Salle County, Illinois. Not all of those who went to the
Fox River Settlement region located there permanently. The land there was mostly taken, and the Norwegians from Voss did not like the prairie; they were in search of a location where timber and water was near at hand, so some of them decided to locate in Wisconsin, where they had heard there was plenty of forest land with many lakes and rivers. The party from Voss had been in La Salle County, Illinois only a few weeks, when three of them decided to go and investigate for themselves. These three were Nils Bolstad, Nils Gilderhus, and Magne Bystölen. They engaged Odd J. Himle (who had emigrated from Voss in 1837), then living in
Illinois, to accompany them as their guide and interpreter. Bystölen, being taken sick and thus prevented from going, gave instructions to the rest to select land for him if the region was satisfactory to the rest. Bolstad, Gilderhus, and Himle started on foot for
Milwaukee, a distance of a . Having arrived there in safety, they procured maps and whatever information they could with reference to the regions that were open to settlement in the interior of the state. Then they walked west about inspecting the land on the way, and after two weeks, reached the eastern part of Dane County. The spot where they stopped was about east of the site of the present village of
Cambridge. Here a man by the name of Snell had shortly before established a tavern for trappers and frontiersmen; with him, the Voss party of homeseekers put up, and from him they received instructions as to the "government markings" of the sections and the stakes placed at the corner of sections and quarter sections, giving the number of each. They then traveled westward to Koshkonong Prairie. Himle, Gilderhus and Bolstad inspected the whole prairie from one end to the other. After returning to Cambridge, they finally decided on a parcel of land a little over northwest of that place, lying on both sides of the boundary line between the towns of Christiana and Deerfield. Here Gilderhus and Bolstad selected each, and for Bystölen. This locality was chosen because of its abundance of hardwood timber, the hay on the marshes, and good fishing in Koshkonong Creek nearby.
From Stavanger The third group of settlers, most of them immigrants from
Stavanger, were living in La Salle County, Illinois. These four men were Thorsten Olson Bjaaland, Amund Anderson Hornefjeld, Björn Anderson Kvelve, and Lars Olson Dugstad. Bjaaland had come in the sloop in 1825; he was the only
slooper who came to Wisconsin. Hornefjeld was also from the province of Stavanger, being born on
Moster Island in 1806. He came to the U.S. in 1836, and settled in La Salle County, where he lived for four years. Kvelve also arrived in the U.S. in 1836; he lived mostly in Chicago and La Salle County. He had come from Vikedal Parish in Ryfylke. Three other men, Erick Johanneson Savik, Lars Scheie, and Amund Anderson Rossaland, intimate friends of Kvelve, were of the party, but these did not settle on Koshkonong. In the spring of 1840, these seven men decided to go north in search of homesteads. From Gilderhus and Bolstad they had received information of Koshkonong and they decided also to go there and inspect the locality. After reaching the southern line of Dane County, they stopped in Albion, near Koshkonong Creek. Here they found country that suited them. The Stavangerings, as the Vossings, looked for wood and water, and in this region, the party selected land. Amund Hornefjeld chose the east half of the southeast quarter of section one, and Björn Kvelve, the west half of the same quarter section. Bjaaland chose immediately north of Kvelve's, while Dugstad took the east half of the southwest quarter of section one. Rossaland selected a piece of land near that of Kvelve, but he was later informed that it had already been taken, so Rossaland went to Jefferson Prairie, as did also Scheie. The whole party then returned to La Salle County, Illinois, and did not move to Albion Township and take possession of their land before the spring of 1841. Savik became ill upon their return to La Salle County where he died in June 1840. Savik and wife, Ingeborg, had emigrated from Kvindherred in 1836, locating in Rochester, New York before removing he following year to La Salle County. Early in the spring, Kvelve and Bjaaland moved to Koshkonong with their families. Dugstad came north from La Salle County about the same time as Kvelve and Bjaaland. Amund Hornefjeld married Ingeborg Johnson, widow of Erik Savik, in La Salle County, in June 1841, and they came north to Albion a few weeks later. ==Notes==