
|
Dakota Datebook
April 13, 2004
"Oskar Hedman, Titanic Survivor"
|
|
On this date in 1912, 27 year-old Oskar Hedman was coming
back to North Dakota after conducting business and visiting family in
Sweden. Known to his friends as Happy, Oskar was a smallish
man with a Jimmy Durante face. He had lived around Bowman
for six years, farming, selling land and working as a settlement recruiter.
On this trip, Hedman and at least 15 prospective settlers
were traveling in 3rd class steerage on a new ocean liner, the Titanic.
The following is based on newspaper accounts posted on the website, Encyclopedia
Titanica.
On the evening of the 14th, Oskar was sleeping in a berth
he shared with 25 year-old Carl Jonsson, a laborer described as a giant
Swede. They woke to an unusual jolt. Oskar said they probably wouldve
paid no attention, except for the commotion that began minutes later.
He and Jonsson headed for the front of the ship through
water that soon reached their armpits. Hedman said, ...we found
great heaps of ice... the life boats were being lowered... but they were
already roped off, and officers with guns ordered us to stand back for
the women and children.
Husband and wife were obliged to part; sister and
brother, father and daughter were forced to leave each other, each realizing
that it was doubtful they would ever again see each other, Hedman
said. It was a sight that no man will care to witness a second time.
Hedman remembered giving his coat to a woman who appeared
on deck partly dressed. Then distress flares went up, and Jonsson realized
they were going down. They decided to jump. Both were expert swimmers,
but although the water was calm, it was deadly cold.
My friend grabbed something that floated by and
told me to hold onto it, Hedman said. It proved to be a dead
man inside a life preserver. I climbed on and rode like I was on horseback.
Meanwhile, Jonsson grabbed at an overturned life raft but was pushed away.
Theyd been in the water for 30 minutes already, and Jonsson went
under.
Headman neared a lifeboat filled with 40 women and children
when one of the four men aboard fell overboard and was lost. Someone yelled
out to Hedman, asking if he could row. He lied, saying he was an expert
rower. They pulled him in, and they rowed away from the sinking ship just
minutes before the boiler exploded. It was 2 a.m. when the deck caved
in the middle and untold numbers of people fell to the bottom of the hold
to be swallowed by the ocean. Hedman said the sight was too awful to put
into words, saying only that he thought again and again of watching grain
being sucked into the hopper on his farm.
Hedman was on Lifeboat 15, the last one launched before
the Titanic sunk. In an unexpected twist, Jonsson was found alive on a
floating door six hours later. The two men arrived in New York four days
later. Penniless, Oskar wired a former St. Paul employer for money, which
he split with Jonsson and an 18 year-old Finnish girl so they could all
reach their destinations.
Happy Hedmans ocean-crossing days were over. It appears he settled
in Beach for a time, then became a chiropractor. He died in 1961 in Onida,
South Dakota, where he was known as Doc.
This text and audio may not be copied without securing
prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
|