Nothing to Do But Stay: My Pioneer Mother

Front Cover
University of Iowa Press, 1991 - Biography & Autobiography - 117 pages

Carrine Gafkjen was, as her daughter remembers, at once the most liberated and unliberated of women. If she had considered the subject at all she would have thought it a waste of time. She firmly believed in destiny; what fate planned for her she dealt with head-on.

In the early 1900s the twenty-five-year-old Gafkjen boarded a train from Minneapolis to claim a homestead for herself on the western North Dakota prairies. She lived alone in her claim shack, barred her door at night against the coyotes, existed on potatoes and salt, and walked five miles to the nearest creek to wash her clothes. A decade later she had, by her own ingenuity, doubled her landholdings and became a secure women of property. Then, at an age when most other women would have been declared spinsters, Carrine Gafkjen married Sever Berg and had six children.

Nothing to Do but Stay tells the story of this uncommon woman with warmth and good humor. It gives testimony to the lasting spirit of our pioneer heritage and, in these uncertain times, to the staying power of family and tradition. This book will appeal to all those with an interest in the settlement of the West, the history of the Great Plains, women's studies, and the perseverance of the early-twentieth-century farmers.

 

Contents

The Education of a Family
1
The Seedling Years
34
Prairie Cook
49
The Last Turkey
63
Ole and Anna
70
A Fourth of July in North Dakota
89
The Best of Both Worlds
99
Thanks for the Last
106
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About the author (1991)

A native of North Dakota and a graduate of the University of Minnesota, Carrie Young has lived for many years on a farm in Ohio. She is the author of Nothing to Do But Stay (Iowa, 1991), Prairie Cooks (Iowa, 1993), and Green Broke, for which she received the Ohioana Library Association’s Florence Roberts Head Memorial Award.