Hans Andersen Barlien (born 29 February 1772, dead 31 October 1842) was a Norwegian farmer and politician. He has been credited with the establishment of a Norwegian-American immigrant settlement in Sugar Creek, Iowa.[1]
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Barlien was born in Overhalla, Nord-Trøndelag 29 February 1772 to Anders Sørensen and Ane Hansdatter.[2] On 24 November 1793 he married Kjerstine Einarsdatter Skistad (b. 1768) in Overhalla, daughter of Einar Skistad and later Marie Sophie Christensdatter (1808–1897) in Sugar Creek, Iowa.[2] Barlien was grandfather to Norwegian engineer Albert Fenger-Krog (1835–1904) and Norwegian politician Hans Konrad Foosnæs (1846–1917).[2][3]
At the same time as his 1793 marriage, Barlien took over one of the Barli farms of Trondheim Cathedral.[2] The priest Hans Blytt was together with Barlien the very first to provide vaccinations against smallpox in Norway.[2] Blytt had imported lymph from Copenhagen and vaccinated first his own children, then the Barlien family.[2]
In May 1804 Hans Barlien moved with his wife and four children to Trondheim, where he bought a pottery on Prinsens gate.[2] He was later given citizenship as a watchmaker.[4]:61 Barlien was eager to improve the city's water supply, and initiated together with Otto Carlsen, a Haugean and Paul Anziøn, a new pump station at the farm Surviken.[2] Barlien received the Order of Dannebrog on 28 June 1809 for his technolocial competence and skill.[5]In 1812 Barlien bought the farm Ågård, Namdalseid for 7000 Norwegian rigsdaler.[2]
Barlien entered politics in 1814. He did not become a member of the Constituent Assembly, but was elected as MP in the period of 1815–1816—which became his only period.[2] He was the only politician with farmer background who was represented in Lagtinget. The regulation of Norway's monetary system was the most important political issue that the Parliament dealt with in the 1815–16 period, and Barlien gave his point of view in a tiny publication named Anmærkninger betræffende Pengevæsenet. En Nationalsag.[2] Barlien wanted to maintain the Eidsvoll Warranty, claiming that "each citizen of the state, should, in relation to fortune, participate in the compliance of the Warranty".[2][quote 1]
He was not reelected in the 1818 election. His liberal political and religious views had often put him at odds with both the clergy and the establishment. He could not run in 1820 and 1824 because of an ongoing trial against him.[2] In an article in the periodical Det norske Nationalblad, Barlien presented his views on Norwegian constitutional law and his experiences as an MP.[6] In that article, Barlien stated that the Norwegian people were the "producing and fabricating part of the state members".[2][quote 2]
In the year 1837 Hans Barlien emigrated from Norway to the United States. In June 1837 Barlien travelled to the United States aboard the ship Enigheden from Stavanger arriving about the middle of September, 1837. He subsequently visited the Fox River settlement of Norwegian immigrants in La Salle County, Illinois. [7] In 1838 he lived in St. Louis, Missouri. Hans Barlien is attributed with being the founder in late 1839 or early 1840 of the first Norwegian immigrant settlement in the state of Iowa, at Sugar Creek in Lee County. On 31 October 1842 he died in Sugar Creek, Iowa.[2][8]
In 1891 a memorial obelisk in honor of Hans Barlien was erected in Overhalla, near Namsos. Hans Barliens gate in Oslo is named for Hans Barlien.