KristineĀ (Michaelsen) Wickens ā73 says Trinity Lutheran Congregation and ŗ¬Šß²Ż“«Ć½ have been inseparable for a long time. She should know: Her family tree includes two Augsburg presidents, great grandfatherĀ Georg Sverdrup (1876-1907) and his son, George Sverdrup (1911-1937), and five generations of Trinity members and leaders. In 1993,Ā Trinity celebrated its 125thĀ anniversary by creating the Trinity Lutheran Scholarship at Augsburg. The endowed scholarship also remembers life-long Trinity member George Sverdrup Michaelsen ā31,Ā Kristineās father. Michaelsen, a professor of public health at the University of Minnesota, was president of Trinity,Ā chairman of the board of Lutheran Deaconess Hospital, andĀ chairĀ of the Augsburg Board of Regents. The scholarship fund was later augmented with an estate gift fromĀ Michaelsenās sisters, Katherine and Else MichaelsenĀ ā31.
Serving immigrants since 1868
The TrinityāAugsburg connection goes back to 1868, when Norwegian and Danish immigrants formed Trinity Lutheran. The congregation soon built a small wooden church at the corner of 12thĀ Avenue and 3rdĀ Street South, where US Bank Stadium now stands. Trinity leaders encouraged Augsburg Seminary to move from Wisconsin to the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood in 1872, and their collaboration led to the creation of Lutheran Deaconess Hospital in 1888. The trio of institutions became indispensible to the immigrant community, and by the 1890s Trinity had over 1,200 members. In 1897, Trinity earned the nickname, āThe Mother of the Free Church,ā when Trinity, Augsburg and a handful of other congregations formed the Lutheran Free Church, a group of independent congregations committed to congregational autonomy and personal Christianity.
āHomeless congregationā finds a place at Augsburg
In 1966, Trinityās 1000-seat building on 20thĀ Avenue was demolished to make way for I-94 construction. āRather than disbanding,Ā the congregation accepted offers from Riverside Presbyterian Church and then Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church for worship and office space,ā explains Wickens. āThere was a tremendous commitment to Cedar-Riverside, just as Augsburg has always been committed to its inner-city location and community.ā Augsburg began providing Trinity withĀ worship space in the 1990s. The two institutions and other partners host community suppers at Trinityās common space, and Augsburg students volunteer at Trinityās drop-in tutoring program for K-12 students from the neighborhood, many of whom are Muslim immigrants.
Campus Connections
The lives of the Sverdrup and Michaelsen families have been intertwined with Augsburg and Trinity for five generations. āThe campus was so familiar to me,ā remembersĀ Kristine, who grew up six blocks from campus. āEverything we did had some kind of Augsburg or Trinity connection.ā She remembers visiting her grandmother, Else Sverdrup Michaelsen (Georgās daughter) who, after the death of her husband Michael Michaelsen āxx continued to live on campus until her own death in 1965. Today,Ā KristineĀ and two of her siblings, Jennifer (Michaelsen)Ā WindingstadĀ ā67 and George MichaelsenĀ II, remain members of Trinity. Another sister, Mary (Michaelsen) Garmer ā69 andĀ her husband Reverend Gregory Garmer ā68 live in Duluth.Ā Peter Windingstad studied at Augsburg before transferring to the University of Wisconsin.Ā Many members of the family are donors to Augsburg.
Looking back on the two institutionsā shared history, KristineĀ sees theirs as a story of immigration; from the Scandinavians of the 19thĀ century to the East African and other immigrants living in the Cedar-Riverside area today, and all those in between.Ā āMy family were immigrants,ā she says. āItās essential that we welcome new people, include them in our lives and help them get established.ā