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In May
of 1869, Jens Madsen was born in Fyn, Denmark. Perhaps it was this
setting that inspired Rev. Madsen to study landscape architecture
as this small island was christened "The Garden of Denmark"
by Hans Christian Andersen. Fyn, the smaller of the country's two
major islands, is dotted by beautiful beach glades and swan ponds.
In
the spring of 1893, Madsen set sail for the United States and entered
the Danish Lutheran Trinity Seminary in Blair, Nebraska. At that
time, his fiancée, Ane Neilsen, moved to the States and worked
at the home of Professor Vig in Chicago, Illinois, where Madsen
would eventually come to attend seminary.
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Below
is a picture of Ane Marie (Neilsen) Madsen
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Above
is pictured Rev. Madsen
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Rev. Madsen
was ordained October 19, 1902 by the Rev. G.B. Christiansen, President
of the United Evangelical Danish Lutheran Church at Hampton, Nebraska.
In September, 1903, he and his fiancée, Ane, were the first
couple to be married in the church that Rev. Madsen designed in
Potter, Nebraska.

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Rev.
Madsen in front of St. Peter's Church, Potter, Nebraska, 1903. Rev. Madsen
help build this church. |
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Around
the time of the marriage of Rev. Madsen and his wife, Ane (March
5, 1903), a group of men were asked to meet in the study of the
Rev. J. Moller, pastor of Bethany Lutheran Church in Denver. These
eleven men agreed to become the trustees of a new sanatorium and
the first deaconness motherhouse in Colorado. That evening, they
penned the constitution and by-laws for the "Lutheran Deaconess
Institute and Sanatorium Auxiliary."
In September,
1903, a discussion centered on a permanent location for the new sanatorium
and motherhouse. The Trustees decided to purchase thirty-five acres
near the railroad track in the town of Brush. The purchase was finalized
in February, 1904.
In
January, 1904, the first issue of Föbe (now known
as Phoebe) was published. The newsletter called Christian
women to consider coming to the sanatorium, and Miss Marie Hvidbjerg
was the first to answer the call. She agreed to come to Brush after
her Deaconess training at the motherhouse in
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Above is pictured Miss Marie Hvidbjerg, the first to answer the call
for nurses by the Trustees.
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Copenhagen,
Denmark. Maren Sorensen also indicated her interest in the newly established
mercy institute, and would move to Brush after her training in Omaha,
Nebraska.
The
second issue of Föbe announced that the new sanatorium
was to be named "Eben Ezer," a Hebrew term meaning "stone
of help." In March, 1904, Rev. and Mrs. Madsen moved to Brush
and even though the house they moved into was not large enough,
they took in their first patient, a man from Oconto, Wisconsin,
that same year.
The Trustees
met for a second time August, 1905, and on that occasion traveled to
Brush in order to see the land that had been purchased for the permanent
site of the sanatorium.
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Above is the second location of the sanatorium at 209 Carson Street. Pictured
is the house and three house-tents. |
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In
the fall, 1905, the Madsen's moved to a larger site at 209 Carson
Street in Brush. The quality of water was better on this side of
town, and in an effort to take advantage of this fact, they built
a wind mill and erected the first of the tent houses at that location.
The site was fondly referred to as "Little Eben Ezer."
While at this site, Madsen and workers built a 12x12 bathhouse.
Reportedly, this was the first bathroom in town when a shower, sink
and stool were installed.
In 1905,
Fobe reported the rates at Eben Ezer were $5.00 per week. This
change included room, three meals each day, nursing care, use of the
bathhouse, and a weekly visit from the doctor.
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1905 view of the houses, house-tents, bathhouse and windmill at "Little
Eben Ezer." |
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The staff
and patients of Little Eben Ezer prepared to move to the permanent site
in March, 1906. Two "brothers," who had decided to dedicate
their services to the new sanatorium, were putting the finishing touches
on the first house built on the Eben Ezer grounds. The house was called
"Nazareth," and its eight rooms were to accommodate some of
the patients and staff.
Nazareth
was dedicated on May 20, 1906. The members of the St. Ansgar congregation
joined the workers and staff in the celebration held on Nazareth's
front porch and lawn.
Spring,
1906, saw the construction of a 18x35 foot arbor, its top covered
with straw and branches to provide shade and a place to rest. The
arbor became a popular meeting place, and Rev. Madsen had a temporary
altar built there. On June 5, the arbor was the centerpiece for
the celebration of a Danish Independence Day.
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The bell tower in the background and the Arbor in the foreground around
1913. |
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November,
1906, saw the laying of a cornerstone for a building that would be named
"Bethesda."
On
April 18, 1906, Sister Ingeborg Hansen joined the workers at Eben
Ezer. Several days after her arrival, however, she fell ill with
typhoid. After regaining her health, she joined the other workers
where she devoted herself to fifty years of service. She was the
first Deaconess Sister to be invested at Eben Ezer and for many
years it was her responsibility to supervise the meals and care
of elderly residents.
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The Sanatorium building, Bethesda, started fall 1906. It was dedicated
August, 1907. |
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Dr. D.W.
Turner served as the first "house" doctor at Eben Ezer.
Another young doctor, A.C. Lusby, was at patient at Eben Ezer that
time and came under the care of Dr. Turner. As soon as he regained
his health, he assisted Dr. Turner and eventually took charge of
the consumptive patients at Eben Ezer. Dr. Lusby became an expert
in the study and treatment of tuberculosis. Both he and Dr. Turner
also instructed the Sisters in anatomy, physiology, and other courses
necessary for their training to become nurses.
In 1907,
Sister Sena Frandsen was welcomed to Eben Ezer as a deaconess candidate.
She served the institute for fifty years.
Other
events important to the establishment of Eben Ezer in these early
years included the arrival of electric power lines in 1908, a second
story was added to Nazareth in 1909, which included rooms for hospital
care and a small operating room, and in 1912, a wooden bell tower
was dedicated. The 575-pound bell was mounted in a tower built from
scrap lumber. Mr. and Mrs. H.C. Kjeldgaard donated the money for
a gold leaf cross at the top of the tower. As Mr. Kjeldgaard also
knew how to do this type of work, he donated his skills to the project
as well.
With the
efforts of all these people and more, Eben Ezer was established on its
permanent site.
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