Snoma
Snoma Finnish Cemetery’s unassuming sign stands behind barbed wire to keep freerange cattle out of the final resting place of early Finnish immigrants to South Dakota |
My visit in the Black Hills was fascinating. The area became well known
for its 19th century gold discovery. Celebrities who made their mark
in the area include Buffalo Bill, Calamity Jane, Wild Bill Hickock,
and Bat Masterson. The giant Homestake gold mine operated in the
town of Lead. In 1901, 950 Finns lived in the
town. The neighboring town of Deadwood is
legendary as a town of the Wild West. Finnish immigrants began to move to the
area in the 1880s. In the early phase, however, a significant portion of the Finnish
speaking immigrants were actually from Northern Sweden and Northern
Norway. They had a central role in, among other activities,
congregational organizing.
Many of those Scandinavian immigrants were Laestadians. The first services, according to tradition, were held in 1882-1884. The service location was the Oskari Forsman family home. Regular service activity began in 1885, when Alatornio-born Nels Pietilä (1847-1927) moved to the area from Calumet, Mich. He began to travel the Black Hills as a preacher right after moving to the area. The first Apostolic Lutheran (Laestadian) congregation was founded in Lead in 1886. In addition to Nels and Hilda Pietilä , one of the founding members was Solomon Johnson, who was born (1849) on the Swedish side in the village of Vojakkala, a locality neighboring Haparanda. He began working for a living at about 10 years old by herding cattle in his home village. As a 19-year-old, he had earned enough money to make his way to Northern Norway. There, fish were plentiful even in the famine years. In Norway he married Anna Rokaniemi. The couple moved to the United States in 1878, first to Michigan and hen very soon to the Black Hills area. The Johnson kept a boarding house for the miners.
Many of those Scandinavian immigrants were Laestadians. The first services, according to tradition, were held in 1882-1884. The service location was the Oskari Forsman family home. Regular service activity began in 1885, when Alatornio-born Nels Pietilä (1847-1927) moved to the area from Calumet, Mich. He began to travel the Black Hills as a preacher right after moving to the area. The first Apostolic Lutheran (Laestadian) congregation was founded in Lead in 1886. In addition to Nels and Hilda Pietilä , one of the founding members was Solomon Johnson, who was born (1849) on the Swedish side in the village of Vojakkala, a locality neighboring Haparanda. He began working for a living at about 10 years old by herding cattle in his home village. As a 19-year-old, he had earned enough money to make his way to Northern Norway. There, fish were plentiful even in the famine years. In Norway he married Anna Rokaniemi. The couple moved to the United States in 1878, first to Michigan and hen very soon to the Black Hills area. The Johnson kept a boarding house for the miners.
The Johnsons were
deeply religious. Solomon Johnson felled timber from the surrounding forests
for the mining company and at the same time for his own house. When Laestadian
believers built their first church in Lead in 1886, he donated the needed log
materials for framing from his own supply. Later, he served with Nels Pietilä as a pastor in the congregation.
That congregation was named the Finnish Apostolic Lutheran Congregation of the
City of Lead.
Solomon Johnson's headstone at Snoma Finnish Cemetery. Solomon Johnson (1849-1940) was a preacher and founder of Apostolic Lutheran church in Lead and later in Snoma. |
Solomon and Anna Johnson moved from the mountain town of
Lead some 20 miles north to the rolling prairie of the Belle Fourche River
Valley. The name of their new location has an interesting history. The Finnish
immigrants, who moved there starting in 1887, gave the area the name Suomi.
When a post office was established there, the officials did not have a command
of Finnish spelling [or perhaps handwriting] and they mistakenly recorded the
name as Snoma. Here also a Laestadian congregation was established. Among its
founders were again the aforementioned Pietiläs and
Johnsons.
Isaac Färdig's gravestone at Snoma Finnish Cemetery. Isaac Färdig was founder of the local Apostolic Lutheran Church and also preacher. |
Our July visit to
that now defunct congregation’s
graveyard spoke volumes. The small sign beside the road, which shimmered in the
prairie heat, went unnoticed at first. A barbed wire fence stood between us and
the cemetery. We hopped over the fence, and began to walk up a rough gravel
road. The actual cemetery was a few hundred yards up a hill from the main road.
At the gate, a sign read Snoma Finnish Cemetery. We were on the prairie, yet it
felt as if we were in Finland. The burial land and its surroundings were
comprised of a pine grove as is usual at home in Finland. It was likely the
only stand of pine for miles around. I suspect it was long ago chosen for the
Finnish Cemetery for that reason. The immigrants, who had gone far from their
home areas, wanted to buried like “there
at home.” Sap dripped on my shirt from
the ancient pines that drooped in the heat of the day. The prairie wind quietly
bent and swayed the tufted clumps of scorched grass. A perfect peace reigned. I
had come to the final resting place of a good 200 Finnish immigrants. The words
of an old hymn came to mind: “Saints
of God have peace forever—who
endeavored, while on earth to battle strive.”
View south from the Crooked Oaks Rd, near the Snoma Finnish Cemetery. The Snoma Finnish Cemetery is a cemetery located about 3.5 miles southeast of Fruitdale, in Butte County, South Dakota. If you come from highway 212, turn to Fruitdale, after a little bridge drive to the Snoma Rd and turn to the left. After about 2/3 miles turn to Crooked Oaks Rd, drive one mile and you will be at the right place. You should only walk 300 - 400 yards through pasture land. |
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