Swedish immigrant Hans Mattson was a prominent immigration booster and politician. Working for the state and for private companies, he recruited many Swedish and Norwegian immigrants to Minnesota during the late nineteenth century. He was also the first Scandinavian elected to Minnesota office. During his lifetime, Colonel Mattson was one of the best-known Swedish Americans in United States politics.
Mattson was born in 1832, on a small farm in southern Sweden. In 1851, he immigrated to the U.S. with a friend. He settled on a farm in an established Swedish colony in Illinois in 1853 and brought his family from Sweden to join him. But Mattson did not find Illinois promising. He left in search of better land just a few months after settling there.
In August 1853, Mattson led a group of several hundred Swedish immigrants to settle in Goodhue County, Minnesota. The settlement was soon known as Vasa, and it became home to prominent Swedish Americans including Governor John Lind. Mattson left the colony in 1856 for Red Wing. Yet new immigrants continued to arrive, sustaining Vasa's Swedish culture.
Shortly after moving to Red Wing, Mattson was financially ruined by the panic of 1857. He and his wife, Cherstin, had to start over. After getting on his feet again, Mattson was admitted to the bar and chose to pursue public life. He was elected city clerk of Red Wing in 1859 before becoming county auditor.
At the start of the Civil War in 1861, Mattson raised a company of Swedes and Norwegians to fight for the Union. Mattson was revered for his leadership of the Third Minnesota Regiment. He returned to Red Wing at the end of the war in 1865 at the rank of colonel.
After returning to Minnesota, Mattson began his work as an immigration booster. First he worked for private railroad companies. He started with the St. Paul & Pacific Railroad Co, where he worked as a protection agent to greet Swedish and Norwegian arrivals in Chicago.
Building on his experience, in 1866, Mattson proposed the creation of a state Board of Immigration. The board would recruit immigrants to homestead land in Minnesota. Until the 1880s, immigration to the U.S. was regulated by states rather than the federal government. In 1867, Governor William Marshall established the board and named Mattson to be its first secretary. The state was especially interested in recruiting Scandinavian immigrants, who were considered to have good moral character.
Mattson soon returned to working as a private immigration booster. In the late 1860s and 1870s, he was an immigration agent for the Lake Superior and Mississippi Railroad Company and for the Northern Pacific Railroad Company. His work as a private immigration booster sometimes overlapped with his service as a state official, but the state did not see it as a conflict.
As a booster, Mattson promoted Minnesota in Sweden and Norway. He also promoted the state to Scandinavian immigrant communities in the Eastern U.S. Mattson recruited immigrants to Minnesota by several means. He wrote for Swedish American newspapers; he encouraged immigrants to write letters to friends and family in Europe; and he published pamphlets about the benefits of Minnesota. During the course of his life, Mattson founded several Swedish newspapers in Chicago and Minneapolis, including the Minnesota Stats Tidning.
In 1870, Mattson was asked to run for Secretary of State. Scandinavian influence in Minnesota was growing, and the Republican Party sought Swedish and Norwegian candidates for office. Mattson was elected, becoming the first Swede elected to office in Minnesota. Mattson left the position in 1872, but he was re-elected and served again from 1887–1891. As a politician, Mattson promoted pan-Scandinavian unity, even though Swedish and Norwegian immigrants often were at odds.
In between his stints as Secretary of State, Mattson lived outside the U.S. He took his family to Sweden in the spring of 1871. He remained in Sweden for five years as a booster. From 1881–1883, Mattson served as U.S. Consul General in India. President James A. Garfield offered him a diplomatic post because Mattson had become one of the most prominent Swedish Americans in U.S. politics. Aside from these trips abroad, Mattson lived most of his later life in Minneapolis. That is where he died, on March 5, 1893.
Atkins, Annette. Creating Minnesota: A History from the Inside Out. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Pres, 2007.
Burnquist, Joseph A.A., ed. Minnesota and Its People. Chicago: S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1924.
Blegen, Theodore Christian. Minnesota, A History of the State. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1963.
Jaeger, Luth. "Hans Mattson," in Algot E. Strand, ed., A History of the Swedish-Americans of Minnesota. vol. 1. Chicago: Lewis Pub. Co., 1910.
Ljungmark, Lars. For Sale-Minnesota; Organized Promotion of Scandinavian Immigration, 1866–1873.
———. Swedish Exodus. Translated by Kermit B. Westerberg. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1979.
In 1853, Swedish immigrant Hans Mattson moves to Minnesota to establish a new Swedish colony. Although Mattson soon leaves the colony, known as Vasa, he goes on to become one of the most prominent Swedish American leaders in the United States.
Hans Mattson is born in Önnestad, Sweden on December 23.
Mattson sails to the United States with a friend.
Leaving an established Swedish American colony in Illinois, Mattson moves to Goodhue County, Minnesota.
Mattson's settlement in Minnesota is home to several hundred Swedes and becomes known as Vasa.
Mattson leaves the Vasa settlement; it retains its Swedish culture as new immigrants continue to settle there.
Mattson founds the Third Minnesota Regiment, rising from the rank of captain to colonel by 1865.
Mattson becomes the first secretary of the Minnesota Board of Immigration, serving until 1870.
Mattson begins his first term as Minnesota's Secretary of State, a position he holds until 1872.
Mattson is the U.S. Consul General in India until 1883.
Mattson begins his second term as Minnesota's secretary of state.
Mattson publishes his memoirs, Reminiscences.
Mattson dies on March 5, and his death is mourned widely in both the U.S. and Sweden.