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Rev Torger Andreas Torgerson

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Rev Torger Andreas Torgerson

Birth
Nistesvag, Risør kommune, Aust-Agder fylke, Norway
Death
7 Jan 1906 (aged 67)
Silver Lake, Worth County, Iowa, USA
Burial
Bristol, Worth County, Iowa, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Torger came with his family to America at the age of twelve. The family engaged in farming in Waupaca Co. Wisconsin. He worked in logging camps to earn money to attend colleges: Concordia College, Ft. Wayne, Indiana and Concordia Theological Seminary , St. Louis, MO. He served as a first lieutenant in a regiment organized for the defense of St. Louis during the Civil War. He was a Lutheran pastor in Iowa until his death, and served as a Professor of Theology at Luther Seminary, Madison, Wisconsin.

The Reverand Torger Andreas Torgerson arrived in America in the spring of 1853 from the "iron works of Ness" in the southern part of Norway. He studied for the ministry 1858-1865 under the prominent Lutheran theologian C. F. W. Walther at the Missouri Synod seminary in St. Louis, Missouri. He was ordained and installed at the Norwegian Evangelical Lutheran congregations of Silver Lake, Lime Creek, and Shell Rock by August of 1865, and served Lutherans in that area until his death in 1906. The Rev. Torgerson traveled throughout the countryside an area of 150 miles north to south by fifty miles east to west because he was stationed the furthest west of any Norwegian Lutheran pastor at that time. He served whomever needed a Lutheran pastor and for a short time visited as many as twenty-three groups in this large area. The first worship service with the people of North Prairie was held by Pastor Torgerson in 1866, and the congregation was organized three years later. He remained pastor of this congregation until 1873 when he was replaced by the Rev. J. M. Dahl. The church that would eventually be called Immanuel Lutheran Church, was also organized by Pastor Torgerson in the area later known as Scarville, Iowa. He encouraged the families which lived in this area north of Lime Creek Lutheran Church to congregate in their homes until they could build a new church. Pastor Torgerson served this new group until 1887. His son, the Rev. A. J. Torgerson, took over the duties at Scarville, and by 1896, services were held more regularly with a church finally being built in 1901.
Torger came with his family to America at the age of twelve. The family engaged in farming in Waupaca Co. Wisconsin. He worked in logging camps to earn money to attend colleges: Concordia College, Ft. Wayne, Indiana and Concordia Theological Seminary , St. Louis, MO. He served as a first lieutenant in a regiment organized for the defense of St. Louis during the Civil War. He was a Lutheran pastor in Iowa until his death, and served as a Professor of Theology at Luther Seminary, Madison, Wisconsin.

The Reverand Torger Andreas Torgerson arrived in America in the spring of 1853 from the "iron works of Ness" in the southern part of Norway. He studied for the ministry 1858-1865 under the prominent Lutheran theologian C. F. W. Walther at the Missouri Synod seminary in St. Louis, Missouri. He was ordained and installed at the Norwegian Evangelical Lutheran congregations of Silver Lake, Lime Creek, and Shell Rock by August of 1865, and served Lutherans in that area until his death in 1906. The Rev. Torgerson traveled throughout the countryside an area of 150 miles north to south by fifty miles east to west because he was stationed the furthest west of any Norwegian Lutheran pastor at that time. He served whomever needed a Lutheran pastor and for a short time visited as many as twenty-three groups in this large area. The first worship service with the people of North Prairie was held by Pastor Torgerson in 1866, and the congregation was organized three years later. He remained pastor of this congregation until 1873 when he was replaced by the Rev. J. M. Dahl. The church that would eventually be called Immanuel Lutheran Church, was also organized by Pastor Torgerson in the area later known as Scarville, Iowa. He encouraged the families which lived in this area north of Lime Creek Lutheran Church to congregate in their homes until they could build a new church. Pastor Torgerson served this new group until 1887. His son, the Rev. A. J. Torgerson, took over the duties at Scarville, and by 1896, services were held more regularly with a church finally being built in 1901.


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