Life Sketch of Nicolai Sorensen

Written by Frederick Chester Sorensen.

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Nicolai SorensenNicolai & Melena Sorensen

Nicholai Sorensen, son of Soren Abrahamsen and Catharine Jappe, was born third or twenty-third of June 1799 at Fjenneslev, Sorø Amt, Denmark. He married Magdelena (Malena) Olsen, 6th July 1830 and they had twelve children, all born in Haverup, Pedersborg Parish, Sorø Amt., Sjælland Island, Denmark.

  1. Catherine Sophie
  2. Peter
  3. Soren Christian
  4. Christena
  5. Frederik Abraham
  6. Frederik Isak
  7. Maria Carolina
  8. Jacob Frederik
  9. Soren Christian
  10. Still Born Son
  11. Henrik Carl Christien
  12. Ingeborg Kristine Larsine


Nicolai lived with his family at Haverup, a very small village outside of Pedersborg, about forty miles west of Copenhagen. He had a large farm for little Denmark and kept a milkmaid and a cook and two farm men. Besides his dairy business, he had a wheelwright shop in which he made everything from spinning wheels and farm wagons to coffins.

The Nicolai Sorensen family were independent landholders. Their home at Haverup was built to form a square about one hundred and fifty feet on each side. One wing was used for the family living quarters. A large recreation room was in the east end. Leading from this were living rooms, bedrooms, and a large kitchen with bake ovens. The bedrooms had two tiers of beds, the lower for the small children and the upper for the older members of the family. The other three wings of the building were used for farm machinery, hay, grain, and cattle. The inside of the buildings formed a court or yard. Outside of the buildings were the gardens, farmland and pastures.

The children started to school when they were seven. They had thorough training in speaking the Danish language and were taught reading, writing and arithmetic. Music and recreation had an important place in the education of all classes. They were taught to sing by note as well as rote, and most could play some musical instrument. They learned their national songs, folk songs, played and danced together. They were taught to do tasks and help about the home. All the boys were taught to work on the farm and in manhood were good farmers.

A lover of music, Nicolai sang many songs and played the violin. In his young manhood he belonged to an orchestra, which played in the famous Tivoli Park in Copenhagen. Nicolai worked at times for the Danish Government in checking forms of inns. Andrew Andersen who married his eldest daughter was an apprentice in his shop.

In 1854 Brother Fjeldstead, later of Logan, Utah, and his companion, were the first missionaries to preach the gospel to the Sorensen family. According to Isaac, one of Nicoali’s sons, “When I was fourteen years old the L.D.S. Elders came to our town, and in time all of our family was converted. Father sold his farm in the spring of 1856, and lived in his workshop until 1857,” when he left for Zion. He used much of his means to help many saints come to Zion.

According to his diary, Nicolai and his family left Haverup on April 14th, 1857 for Copenhagen. On April 18th, they left Copenhagen on the ship L. N. Hvidt bound for England, where they docked at Grimsby, England on April 21st. Crossing England by rail, on April 25th they left Liverpool on the sailing vessel Westmoreland and arrived in Philadelphia on May 31st, 1857. Malena the mother was sick most of the way.

Disembarking at Philadelphia, they went by rail to Iowa where they purchased a wagon and two teams of oxen with which to make the journey to Utah. When they arrived in Salt Lake Valley with the Mathias Cowley Company, September 13th, 1857. They settled in Mill Creek and spent the first winter on a small rented farm.

They lived here until the approach of Johnson’s Army, when they moved south and stayed at Pondtown, now Salem. Then returned again to Mill Creek. In 1859 Nicolai with two sons, Peter and Isaac went north to Cache Valley. Later in the year they went back to Salt Lake and moved their families to Mendon. They lived in the fort for some time, which consisted of two rows of houses running east and west through what is now the south side of the public square.

According to the account of Isaac Sorensen again: “In the spring of 1859 the move to Cache Valley began. I walked to Provo, forty miles south of Salt Lake, for my brother Peter. He and I with two yoke of oxen and a wagon spent nine days in reaching the site where Mendon now stands. The fort consisted of twenty-five log houses, with dirt floors. Our house had three rooms’, each room had a fire place. In the spring of 1864 the old fort was broken up and the city laid out, and homes built on the city lots of hewed logs with nice doors and lumber floors. We were each given twenty acres of farmland and a little hay land. 1867 was a year of much building, especially rock houses, and it was this year that fathers two story rock house was built.”

In America Nicolai’s financial status was far below the comfortable and highly respected plane he lived on in Denmark, but he never complained; rather he fervently thanked the Lord for bringing him to Zion.

According to Franklin Sorensen, a grandson of Nicolai; “When Nicolai was crossing the plains he offered to go back to search for a child which had been lost. On finding it and returning to the camp he was commended for his kindness and was told by one of the leaders to ask anything that his heart desired and it would be granted to him. He requested that he and his wife Malena, never be separated in this life. He realized this blessing as he and his wife died on the same day, 30 March, 1887, only a few hours apart and were buried in the same grave.”

Nicolai Sorensen and his wife died March 30, 1877 and were buried in the cemetery at Mendon, Cache County, Utah.

Frederick C. Sorensen