ATDTDA (3) Dynamitic mania, 80-86
Heikki Raudaskoski
hraudask at sun3.oulu.fi
Mon Feb 26 09:50:54 CST 2007
Wonderful post, Bekah. My mother comes from Pori too.
(Her late parents came from the Satakunta province
whose capital Pori is, as did the only Finnish
Nobel Laureate of Literature F.E. Sillanpaa.)
And thanks for the invitation to contribute, Monte.
'Veikko' is an oldish Finnish male name - e.g.
many Finnish athletes of the post-WWII period were
Veikkos. Etymologically, 'veikko' is a pet name
for 'veli', 'brother', coming later to mean
'buddy', 'pal', 'chum'.
'Rautavaara" is 'Iron Hills' indeed, but 'vaara'
refers to not only 'hill' but 'danger' too.
The guy who won the javelin at the 1948 London
Olympics was Tapio Rautavaara (d. 1979). Later
a world champion in archery, but also a famous
movie actor and singer nationwise. Musically,
he's something of the Johnny Cash of Finland; an
icon of street credibility idolized by rockers
too (incl., unfortunately, the singer of HIM).
Einojuhani Rautavaara (b. 1928) is a composer of
contemporary classical music. Arguably the most
famous Finnish composer of his generation.
Modernism, romanticism, mysticism - e.g. lots of
angelic references in his titles....during the
last decades, he has become a darling of the New
Age crowd.
I find some of the Finnish stuff somewhat
troubling, but must consult my copy of AtD before
continuing. That is, must get home from work first.
Best,
Heikki
On Sun, 25 Feb 2007, bekah wrote:
> At 6:16 PM -0500 2/25/07, Monte Davis wrote:
> >
> >I hope Heikki Raudaskoski will weigh in on Veikko Rautavaara ("iron
> >hills"??) and on Finland's restive status as a Grand Duchy within
> >the tsarist empire since 1809.
>
>
> I'm not Heikki but my grandmother's maiden name was Hilma Rantala, a
> good Finnish name, and she immigrated from the area of Pori in 1901.
> My grandfather, Oscar Lindroos, was from the Aland Islands, in the
> Bay of Bothnia.
>
> The Tsar's decision of compulsory military service for all Finnish
> men (a violation of their Duchy agreement) went into effect in 1901.
> Service would be for four years.
>
> My grandmother's first husband, Anton Anderson (Swedish name from
> the occupation) immigrated from Pori at about that time and directly
> because of the intensified Russification. (One dark night, he and
> his brothers swiped a Russian flag from atop a government building
> and brought it home where their mother tore it into strips and used
> it in a little rag rug. When the Russian authorities came
> investigating and looking for it, they walked on it. This was a big
> joke in the family for years; the Russians walked on their own flag.
> ) The Russians had helped Finland set up a reasonable
> constitutional democracy, but then had proceeded to overrule it.
> The increasing nationalism in both countries resulted in difficulties.
>
> And my grandmother, Hilma Rantala, followed Anton (her sweetheart) to
> Duluth, Minnesota a year later where they bought land right on the
> Mississippi River near Jacobsen, cleared it and started a farm. They
> had 4 children and Anton died in about 1916 (the time of the iron ore
> mining strike but I don't think he was involved).
>
> Anyway, my grandfather, a seaman, theologian and author had
> immigrated in about 1913 and moved straight to Wyoming for the
> mining. After a few years there, probably in the coal mines,
> Grandpa Oscar moved to Minnesota (1919?) where there were lots of
> good Finlanders living in a place called Jacobsen, near Hill City
> and Hibbing near the Masabi iron ore RANGE. (and Bobby Dylan)
>
> My grandmother was a widow by that time with 4 children and a farm
> so Oscar and Hilma married and had 3 more (including my dad).
> Oscar took to farming the land and being a custodian at the high
> school (I think). He and my grandmother were very religious in an
> atheist/ socialist community but splits like that were fairly common
> in the Finnish communities of the day. There was a co-op in
> Jacobsen which served as a socialist meeting hall but it was very
> difficult to do any union organizing there because for a long time
> the mining bosses ruled the iron mines and forcibly prevented the
> miners from forming unions by any and all means, no matter what the
> nationality (new groups).
>
> Although individuals Finns had come to the Colonies and Canada since
> the 17th century, most Finns immigrated between the years 1890 and
> 1920. Those who came prior to 1890 were religious and conservative
> and started Lutheran churches. Most of these were farmers and
> seamen. Some of this immigration was the result of "recruiting"
> efforts of US companies. My grandparents were both religious and
> conservative - although he came after 1900, Oscar was a seaman and
> a published author of theological books. Besides, he was from Aland
> Is. and I don't know what their relationship with the Tsar was.
>
> Those who came after 1890 were mostly unskilled laborers and they
> tended to be at least somewhat socialist (of the Utopian, not
> Scientific, variety - not Marxist), and started Socialist Clubs.
> The temperance societies were also very political and powerful ( many
> Finn in Finland and the US thought that a major problem for
> immigrants was the saloon.) There were two Temperance groups, one
> semi-affiliated with the Lutheran Church and one distinctly not. In
> 1913 there were four daily (!) Finnish Socialist newspapers which
> kept members informed. (A couple of them were around well into the
> 1960s; my dad worked with them. I think there is only one monthly
> left and it's in English.)
>
>
> In the Minnesota mines, when the bosses got rid of the questionable
> workers, more were shipped in from the East Coast in box cars or
> cattle cars. (Reminded me of Veikko's tale in AtD.) The new
> workers were new immigrants from Eastern Europe chosen because they
> would not to be able to communicate with the potential unionists.
> Finns had a very difficult time learning English and nobody ever
> learns Finnish unless they grew up with it. (probably a joke)
>
>
> Finns were important in many ways in Teluride in the 1900s.
> <http://www.multi.fi/~olimex/read_more/klippiga_bergen.htm> These
> folks came over earlier (1870s?) due to a massive crop failure in
> central Finland.
>
> In 1905 there was a large strike in Michigan (socialist and
> temperance groups joined up) in which several Finns were accused of
> murder. This made the national headlines.
>
> In Hanna, Wyoming a couple years later, The Mountain Rose Temperance
> Society (Vuoriston Ruusu Raitusseura) a very important, progressive,
> reform group (because alcohol was a huge! problem) together with
> the Finnish Kalevala Brotherhood, had been holding secret meetings
> in a run-down saloon for miners who worked in the Union Pacific coal
> mines. After a series of strikes, the company recognized the union.
> "Hurratkaa, pojat!"
>
>
> *************
> Some good resources:
>
> _Blueberry God: The Education of a Finnish American_ by Reino Nikkoli
> Hannula (out of print?) Excellent. This is the story of the Finnish
> socialist movement in the US.
>
> _The Journal of Otto Peltonen_ by William Durbin (This is a
> fictionalized young adult book but it's got the history right.)
>
> Finnish Immigrant Culture in America by Reino Kero Ph.D., University
> of Turku, Turku
> <http://www.genealogia.fi/emi/art/article266e.htm>
>
> Library of Congress Country Studies
> <http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/cshome.html> (and do a search)
>
> **
>
> Bekah
> Photos of my own Finlander connection:
> <http://homepage.mac.com/bekker2/PhotoAlbum77.html>
> Trip to FInland a few summers ago:
> <http://homepage.mac.com/bekker2/PhotoAlbum27.html> (scroll down)
More information about the Pynchon-l
mailing list