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Lauritz A. Vigness (1864-1947) was born in the Norwegian-American
immigrant community of Fillmore County, MN. He was educated at Augustana
College, now located in Sioux Falls, SD, and at the seminary of the
Augustana Synod. He began his career as a teacher of Latin and Greek
at Augustana. In 1894-95, he served as the first president of Jewell
College, Jewell, Iowa, before becoming president of Pleasant View Luther
College in Ottawa, Illinois (1895-1914). Neither institution has survived.
Welcomed by President Kildahl and
the faculty upon his arrival in Northfield, Vigness was installed in
Hoyme Chapel on the college's 40th anniversary, November 6, 1914. Platform
participants included Northfield Mayor C. W. Lyman, Carleton President
Donald J. Cowling, and numerous church dignitaries.
The brief Vigness presidency was marked
by transitions and challenges. The college secured formal accreditation.
A 1917 church merger affiliated St. Olaf with the new Norwegian Lutheran
Church in America. The academy department was moved, becoming a part
of the Red Wing Seminary, while the Red Wing college department was
consolidated with St. Olaf. U.S. entrance into World War I directed
students from their studies into military training and service or into
Red Cross activities. Ethnic traditions were challenged by a wave of
nationalism. Vigness's old-school manners and gentle disposition were
challenged by increasing student assertiveness: relations were strained
by a 1916 student body vote for a change of administration. Vigness
resigned in 1918, taking the position of his successor Lars Boe as executive
secretary to the board of education of the Norwegian Lutheran Church.
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