Bethel University - Spire Yearbook (St Paul, MN)

 - Class of 1941

Page 12 of 76

 

Bethel University - Spire Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 12 of 76
Page 12 of 76



Bethel University - Spire Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 11
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Page 12 text:

uos man aUULu • • • that m Among the other duties that devolved upon Dr. Hagstrom was the securing of the present campus. The raising o: needed funds for the purchase. the erection of the buildings, the purchase of needed equipment, and the support of the school were not easy tasks. When President Hagstrom made a visit, yes, more then one, to Hon. James J. Hill, president o: the Great Northern Railroad, he received the premise of ten thousand dollars, the largest sum ever received from one person. Through the efforts of the president approximately seventy-five thousand dollars has been received for the work o: the Institute from the Eccrd of Education of the Northern Baptist Convention. As Dr J. O. Backlund states in his bock, Swedish Baptists in America, at the time when Dr. Hagstrom became president no duties comparable to those now laid on Dr. Hagstrom's shoulders had ever been placed on any man in the history of the Swedish Baptist denomination. In addition to ably discharging his duties at school. Dr. Hagstrom has served in a number of other positions. He was a member of the executive committee o: the Northern Baptist Convention from 1914 to 1919 and was elected to their Board of Promotion in 1920. He is a life member and director of the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society and has served on their Board of Managers since 192C. In addition, he has held a membership in the Commission of Baptist Ecdies Using Foreign Languages of the Northern Baptist Convention since 1923. Dr. Hagstrom has also been sent as a delegate to several conventions of the Baptist World Alliance. In such capacity he has attended the meetings of the Alliance in Philadelphia; Stockholm, Sweden; Toronto, Canada, and Atlanta, Georgia. During his travels he has made three trips to Europe, visiting twelve different countries on the continent. The General Conference honored Dr. Hagstrom further in 1930 by appointing him their general and promotional secretary, which office he held until 1933. Further responsibilities were added to Dr. Hagstrom's already numerous duties in 1931 when the present Junior College was founded as an integral part of Bethel Institute. As already evidenced by the foregoing, it is apparent that our president has written prodigiously. While he was pastor in St. Paul, he served as an editor of Veckobulletinen for five years. He also served as a department editor of the Swedish magazine Hemmets Van and of Barnens Tidning, a Sunday School paper printed in Swedish, and as co-editor of three Swedish hymnals. Valda Hymner, Ten

Page 11 text:

• • • to nuniLrsx oux dau± • • • derson cf Scandia, Minnesota. The young couple later adopted a daughter, Marion, who is now Mrs. L. J. Melrose of St. Paul. Together with his family, then, the young Rev. Hagstrom continued in the service of the Lord. Later Mrs. Hagstrom became ill and was unable to continue her active work. Perhaps the greatest sorrow in Dr. Hagstrom's life came when, in February 1933, his wife suddenly pcssed away. On July 26, 1934 he was married to Miss Ebba Brundin of Englewood Church in Chicago, an active member and recording secretary of that church and an active young people's worker. She has been a great help to Dr. Hagstrom ir. his later years, both in church v ork and in the home. In the churches during Rev. Hagstrom's early ministry there were as yet no organized young people's societies. Then only twenty-six himself, he felt the need for an organization of this sort and worked to accomplish the founding of a unified group. As c result of his efforts, the first young people's union met in Rockford, Illinois, on June 7.4, 1893, with the young minister as chairman. The same year he was appointed Sunday School missionary for the American Baptist Publication Society and the Illinois Sunday School Union. He also found time to accept a further task as co-editor of the Young People's Paper for Swedish Baptist. In 1896 the First Swedish Baptist Church of Chicago called Rev. Hagstrom to its pastorate and he served there until 1907. Shortly after coming to Chicago he founded a religious paper, The Church and Home, and continued as its editor until he left to fill another position. The General Conference had decided tc appoint a mission secretary in order to effectively coordinate and further develop home mission interests. Rev. Hagstrom was elected to this office and worked successfully for three years to develop a stronger denominational consciousness. He resigned from this position in 1909 to accept the pastorate of the First Swedish Baptist Church of St. Paul, where he served until 1913. Then the General Conference which met in Duluth in 1913 passed a decision that set the future course of Dr. Hagstrom's life. At that time the Conference voted to move the Seminary, rich in tradition, from Morgan Park, Illinois to St. Paul and to consolidate it with Bethel Academy, which had been founded in 1905. Dr. Hagstrom, having proved himself a capable leader throughout his public career, was elected to the presidency of the newly combined schools. In addition to his executive tasks he accepted the duties of a professor's chair in the Seminary. A'mo



Page 13 text:

• • • oux Triumfs Sanger, and Fridsroster. Among his other writings are the histories of the First Swedish Baptist Churches of Chicago, St. Paul, and Minneapolis. Dr. Hagstrom was active in establishing the first home for the aged among Swedish Baptists at Fridhem, Morgan Park, Illinois. To him also belongs the honor of being one of the three founders and original owners of the Bethany Beach Summer Assembly at Sawyer, Michigan, the first summer assembly among Swedish Baptists in America. Among the many offices Dr. Hagstrom holds at the present time is the combined office of trustee, secretary, and treasurer of the Northwestern Baptist Hospital Association. He is also secretary of the Baptist Hospital Fund, Inc. end a trustee of the Twin City Baptist Union. He holds a life membership in the Minnesota Historical Society and is a member of the Scandinavian American Foundation, the Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Language and Literature, the Swedish Historical Society of America, and Pi Gemma Mu. Confidence in his executive ability has been shown by the fact that he has been elected six times as the president of the Swedish Baptist General Conference of America and is serving his fourth consecutive term as president of the Minnesota Baptist Convention. As The Watchman-Examiner for December 12, 1940, states, in both the Swedish General Conference and in the Northern Convention, he has filled so many offices and performed so many duties that it is difficult to know hew one man could accomplish so much. It is a sign of the fruitfulness of his valuable life. And so we have a partial picture of Dr. Hagstrom as mirrored in his accomplishments. We have a portrayal of a literary man, a minister, an educator, and an executive. But there is a very personal side not yet seen. And that phase of man's life is best seen in his home life and in his use of leisure time. Dr. Hagstrom possesses a library of mere than two thousand volumes and is constantly adding to that number. Much of his spare time is spent in reading and writing. He still contributes material to some religious paper almost weekly. On his free evenings he usually works in his library or study until after midnight and never goes to bed until he feels tired. Once Dr. Hagstrom remarked, “I have golfed regularly for the last ten years—about once a year. His days are too busy to permit the leisurely enjoyment of hobbies. Once each summer, however. he travels to one of Minnesota's ten thousand Eleven

Suggestions in the Bethel University - Spire Yearbook (St Paul, MN) collection:

Bethel University - Spire Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Bethel University - Spire Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Bethel University - Spire Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Bethel University - Spire Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Bethel University - Spire Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Bethel University - Spire Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944


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