North Dakota
After 96 years, North Dakota man still holds record for longest beard
WASHINGTON, D.C. — No doubt it was an odd thing to do after a funeral. Instead of having open-faced sandwiches and coffee in the church basement, Hans Langseth’s children took out a pair of scissors and cut off their dead father’s beard before his casket, with him in it, was lowered into the ground. (As good Norwegians, the coffee and sandwiches, no doubt, came later).
Cutting the beard and saving it for posterity was actually Hans Langseth’s last wish. After all, he pretty much dedicated his entire life to growing it. Now the time had come to see just how long it had gotten.
After 62 years of growth, Langseth’s beard was measured at 17.6 feet long – a Guinness World Record for “The Longest Natural Beard Locks ever (male)” which still stands today.
A beard so long you could jump rope with it
The cut beard was tucked away in an attic for 40 years before Langseth’s family donated it to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., in 1967. The beard was on display for years at the Smithsonian’s Natural History Museum, before it was retired and packed away again.
But this fall, some of Langseth’s relatives will get to see those locks again. Great-great-grandson Dan Backer of New Ulm, Minnesota, along with his wife, Jeanine, plan a visit to the Smithsonian where they have received special permission to view the beard.
Backer, who is descended from Hans’ daughter Emma, says he doesn’t remember the first time he learned about his famous ancestor, but Hans has been part of family lore for a long time.
“When I was a fifth grader we had a show-and-tell and were supposed to say something interesting about our families. Well, I must have used this story hundreds of times. People are like ‘No way!’ and I have to say ‘No, this is legit.’ We actually have a big picture of him in our dining room on the wall because it’s a great story and a great conversation piece.”
So what exactly is the story of Backer’s great-great-grandfather Hans Langseth, the man better known by some as “King of Whiskers?”
From Norway to North Dakota
Langseth was born in Norway in 1846 and immigrated to the United States when he was 21. He settled in Iowa, where he built a life with his young bride Anna Berntsen, The couple had six children before Anne died in 1891. She was only 40. For whatever reason, the family moved north. The 1900 census shows Langseth and at least one son living in Elkton Township in Clay County, Minnesota (about 20 miles southeast of Moorhead).
By 1910, they had moved to Antelope, Richland County, North Dakota (about 20 miles west of Wahpeton), where Langseth farmed. But Hans was getting known for more than growing crops. That beard of his was something else. It had been growing since he was 19 and had entered a beard-growing contest back in Norway.
There is no information on whether he won anything in that contest but he never stopped trying. Backer says he doesn’t know what motivated his great-great-grandfather to keep growing his beard.
“I don’t remember anyone in the family really talking about that,” he says.
By the turn of the 20th century the beard was getting to be several feet long. In a story about Langseth in
Smithsonian Magazine
, physical and forensic anthropologist Dr. David Hunt said because beard hair can only grow about 4 or 5 feet before dying off, Langseth matted the dead hair together in a coil, like dreadlocks, to further lengthen and strengthen the beard. Then he’d roll it around a corncob and carry it in a pouch around his neck or tuck it into his clothing.
In this rare film of Langseth, he demonstrates how he rolled up his beard, played jump rope with it, and even used it for fishing line.
He eventually toured with a sideshow exhibition, where he went by the name of “King of Whiskers.” The show traveled throughout the United States and Backer says it appears the show even visited Europe. According to family members, Langseth later quit his sideshow job because he didn’t like people pulling on his beard insisting it was fake. But he did like it when the Fat Lady washed it.
In 1922, Langseth entered another “Longest Beard” contest in Sacramento, California. He finished first. The beard measured 17 feet at that point. Langseth died just 5 years later and seemingly his beard had grown another 6 inches to reach the record-breaking mark of 17.6 feet.
However, Backer and the rest of the family say his beard was actually closer to 18-and-a-half feet long, since the son who cut the beard left his dad with about a 12-inch beard as he lay in the casket. Backer doesn’t quite know why, but perhaps the family didn’t want him buried clean shaven as they only knew him with a beard.
“Maybe it was a sign of respect to leave him with a beard of some kind,” Backer says.
While he spent his final years in Barney, North Dakota, Langseth is buried alongside his wife in Kensott, Iowa.
The Smithsonian Institution, one of America’s greatest museums, might be the perfect resting place for Langseth’s beard. After all, it’s a physical manifestation of history itself – an actual timeline of one pioneer’s life. The dark hair at the tip reflects his days as a young farmer. Smithsonian anthropologists actually found little wheat kernels in some of the dreadlocks.
Then the beard lightens as it reaches his face – the stark white hair of an old Norwegian-American farmer who endured the challenges of life working prairie land through drought, infestation and flooding.
Backer says he’s looking forward to visiting the Smithsonian this fall, where officials have been nice enough to get them special access to see the famous locks up close. He says knowing about the beard and even seeing it in person is one more step in keeping this family tradition alive.
“For Christmas a couple of years ago, I gave all three of my kids a photograph of him in a frame, ” Backer says. “I put who he is on the back because I want this to live on. We don’t tell stories anymore. They get forgotten. This is a great, fun piece for my kids to talk about their great-great-great-grandfather. We need to remember our history.”
STEP BACK IN TIME WITH TRACY BRIGGS
Hi, I’m Tracy Briggs. Thanks for reading my column! I love going “Back Then” every week with stories about interesting people, places and things from our past. Check out a few below. If you have an idea for a story, email me at tracy.briggs@forumcomm.com.
Tracy Briggs is an Emmy-nominated News, Lifestyle and History reporter with Forum Communications with more than 35 years of experience, in broadcast, print and digital journalism.
North Dakota
North Dakota Outdoors: Look back at ND spearfishing
Have you ever been darkhouse spearfishing for pike? It’s relatively new compared to most outdoor recreation, having started a mere 25 years ago, but for those who have taken the opportunity it’s hard to compare.
I remember the first time I went spearfishing at Spiritwood Lake. Sitting still in a darkhouse was like nothing I’d ever done before. I’m no expert but when the first northern drifted into the decoy as I sat undetected, I locked up. Not surprisingly, I missed it.
Maybe it’s close to the thrill of calling turkeys into a decoy? Others might describe the rush like sitting undetected in a tree stand archery hunting for deer. I can attest it’s a rush of its own unique draw.
Decoying a pike isn’t the same as decoying ducks or holding a draw on a deer. None of those take place in the middle of a frozen lake with nothing but ice and cold water between you and the pike.
If you’ve ever watched a pike come in and attack a decoy, it’s incomparable. To get to that point is not easy. The combination of cold, snow and dark could be why the popularity of darkhouse spearfishing hasn’t, and likely never will, rival the sun, waves and water of summer fishing?
Looking at last year’s spearfishing statistics prove how a warmer winter with poor ice conditions results in lower participation and success.
Greg Power fisheries division chief highlights a few notes:
– 3,109 individuals registered – 2,018 residents, 1,091 nonresidents from 29 states including 716 from Minnesota (23%); despite an open winter, the number of registrants were similar to the previous winter, which was greatly impacted by extreme cold weather and snowfall.
– 9,181 northern pike were harvested, the lowest number since 2010-11 and less than one-third of that harvested in 2017-18 (the record year).
– Average spearer was 42.8 years old and 88% were male.
– Survey respondents indicated participation in DHSF on a record 138 water bodies (up 32 from 2021-22).
– DHSF effort of the top 15 lakes accounted for nearly 75% of the effort with Sakakawea accounting for about 35% of the total effort (which basically equaled the effort of the next 10 water bodies).
– Top 14 lakes accounted for more than 73% of the DHSF pike harvest with Sakakawea accounting for 28% of the total harvest. The top four waters (Sakakawea, Devils Lake, Twin (LaMoure) and Horsehead lakes) accounted for 56% of the total pike harvest.
– Median and mean weights of the largest pike reported harvested by respondents were 10 and 10.5 pounds respectively. These metrics are the highest ever recorded.
– 2022-23 was the first winter that the taking of walleye (in addition to pike and rough fish) during DHSF was legal for Devils Lake, Stump Lake and the Missouri River System including lakes Sakakawea and Oahe. For this past winter (23-24), the following number of spearers harvested the following number of walleye: Sakakawea (88 spearers and 218 walleye), Devils Lake (26 spearers and 54 walleye), Missouri River (three spearers and three walleye) and Stump Lake(one spearer and one walleye).
2024-25 ND darkhouse spearing
Individuals required to possess a valid fishing license (age 16 and older) to darkhouse spearfish must first register online at the North Dakota Game and Fish Department website, gf.nd.gov.
Darkhouse spearing is allowed for all anglers with a valid fishing license and for youth under age 16.
Northern pike and nongame fish are the only legal species statewide, while walleye can be speared at Stump Lake and the Devils Lake complex south of U.S. Highway 2 and the Missouri River System (including lakes Oahe and Sakakawea and the Missouri River) up to the first tributary bridge.
Spearers and anglers are reminded that materials used to mark holes must be in possession as soon as a hole greater than 10 inches in diameter is made in the ice.
Registration and full details can be found on the Game and Fish Department’s website.
North Dakota
Nelson County farmer credited with saving men from freezing to death after crash
MCVILLE, N.D. — Nobody knows the land around North Dakota better than farmers, and that knowledge proved critical after a bizarre car crash in Nelson County.
Sheriff Kurt Schwind said an unnamed farmer’s help was lifesaving after rescue crews called off an initial search for the occupants of the vehicle and nearly halted a second one.
If the second search had been called off, Schwind said, two men likely would have frozen to death.
County dispatch received the call about the crash around 6 a.m. on Dec. 9; the caller became disconnected.
“Says he was sleeping, he was in the car with a couple guys, he was sleeping, woke up they were gone, the vehicle was crashed so he started walking,” Schwind said.
The call came from a refurbished phone, so officers were not able to call the person back, but a cellphone ping brought them to the farmstead.
Bodycam footage obtained by WDAY shows a Nelson County sheriff’s deputy talking with the farmer, who was curious about all of the police activity on his property.
After searching for about an hour and a half, police called off the search until sunrise.
“It was so dark and we had some blowing snow and stuff like that, so it was really hard to see anything at that point,” Schwind said.
When the sheriff returned after sunrise, the farmer showed him something.
“That’s when the landowner realized that this gate had been broken through,” Schwind said.
The tracks the farmer and police followed for a half-mile through a cow pasture were still visible days later. A wire fence was also driven through. It led investigators to the top of a ravine, and several hundred feet below, they spotted a four-door car.
“How they got through there with that BMW is amazing, because we had to use four-wheel drive, and we struggled getting down there,” Schwind said.
At about the same time, Schwind found the man who called 911. He had climbed the ravine and sought shelter in some hay. He had no shoes or coat. He told police he was alone.
“He was in bad shape. As soon as I got him into my vehicle, he had uncontrollable shivering; he was very incoherent,” Schwind said.
As the sheriff raced the man to the hospital, the farmer, who had stayed at the top of the ravine, made another key discovery.
“He got his binoculars out and saw him sitting in the trees,” Schwind said of another man.
It took rescue crews nearly an hour to rescue the second man. According to WDAY StormTRACKER meteorologists, the wind chill was below zero.
“I think if the landowner wouldn’t have met me back over here, that we would have been recovering as opposed to finding,” Schwind said.
The sheriff said the men were traveling from Grand Forks to Devils Lake, but it’s unclear how long they were in the ravine and how they ended up several miles off the main road.
“They both had phones that had charges left in them,” Schwind said. “For some reason, they didn’t call — they only called that one time and didn’t call again.”
While WDAY News was talking with the sheriff for this story, a deputy found a jacket, boots and phone a couple hundred feet from where the first man was found in the hay. What looked like methamphetamine was found in a pill container in the jacket pocket.
The Nelson County Sheriff’s Office plans on presenting the farmer with an award for his lifesaving help.
The Sheriff’s Office is still investigating to determine if the men will face charges.
McVille is about 67 miles southwest of Grand Forks.
Matt Henson is an Emmy award-winning reporter/photographer/editor for WDAY. Prior to joining WDAY in 2019, Matt was the main anchor at WDAZ in Grand Forks for four years.
North Dakota
North Dakota sets new population record as state approaches 800,000 residents
BISMARCK — North Dakota’s population count is gaining momentum as it reaches a record of 796,568 in 2024, an increase of over 7,500 people since last year and more than 2% since 2020, according to census data.
According to population estimates released Thursday, Dec. 19, by the
U.S. Census Bureau,
Cass County exceeded the 200,000-resident mark by 945 people and Burleigh County hovered over 100,000 residents with a count of 103,107.
The two counties combined accounted for over 58% of the state’s growth in the last year.
“People continue to discover North Dakota’s abundant job opportunities, low taxes, strong education and health care systems, and unmatched quality of life with world-class outdoor recreation, hunting and fishing,” Gov. Kelly Armstrong said in a Thursday release.
The release also noted a net population increase of more than 18% since 2010, calling North Dakota one of the fastest-growing states in the country, though the Midwest overall had the lowest net population increase.
Most of the 43 states that grew in 2024 were southern states.
North Dakota’s population rise is part of a nationwide trend the Census Bureau attributes broadly to international migration and “natural increase” — when births outnumber deaths.
North Dakota had a natural increase of 2,725, with 6,867 deaths and 9,592 births in 2024.
While the state lost nearly 300 people to domestic migration, it gained 5,126 people by international migration for a net gain of 4,835 people moving into the state in 2024.
The U.S. population surpassed 340 million and grew by nearly a full percent between 2023 and 2024, the highest growth in decades, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. Nearly 84% of the nation’s 3.3 million new residents are associated with international migration.
Natural increase accounted for about 15.6% of national growth in the U.S. in 2024, with 519,000 more births than deaths — up from the historic low in 2021 when births outpaced deaths by 146,000.
“An annual growth rate of 1.0% is higher than what we’ve seen over recent years but well within historical norms,” Census Bureau Demographer Kristie Wilder
said in a Thursday release.
“What stands out is the diminishing role of natural increase over the last five years, as net international migration has become the primary driver of the nation’s growth.”
Since the last Census release, the bureau adjusted its migration estimate to account for a “notable” increase in “non-U.S.-born immigration” — the number of refugees, people released by U.S. Border Patrol and by those held on parole by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Office of Field Operations.
As a result, the 2024 international migration totals appear inflated in retrospective comparison to totals from previous years.
North Dakota officials see “legal immigration” as an opportunity to address statewide workforce shortages,
as recent population growth isn’t enough to fill the state’s nearly 30,000 job vacancies.
“We look forward to working with the state Legislature in the upcoming session to set North Dakota up for even greater success and population growth, including addressing much-needed property tax reform and relief,” Armstrong said in the Thursday release.
-
Politics7 days ago
Canadian premier threatens to cut off energy imports to US if Trump imposes tariff on country
-
Technology1 week ago
Inside the launch — and future — of ChatGPT
-
Technology6 days ago
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever says the way AI is built is about to change
-
Politics6 days ago
U.S. Supreme Court will decide if oil industry may sue to block California's zero-emissions goal
-
Technology7 days ago
Meta asks the US government to block OpenAI’s switch to a for-profit
-
Politics1 week ago
Conservative group debuts major ad buy in key senators' states as 'soft appeal' for Hegseth, Gabbard, Patel
-
Business5 days ago
Freddie Freeman's World Series walk-off grand slam baseball sells at auction for $1.56 million
-
Technology5 days ago
Meta’s Instagram boss: who posted something matters more in the AI age