The following is an introduction
written by John Yngve to the journal
that his mother kept as a girl living on the North Side of
St. Louis Park:
Esther Johnson wrote this journal
during the school year, 1911-1912, when she was a senior
in the St. Louis Park High School, then called the
Lincoln School that was located at the SE corner of
Alabama and 37th Street. Esther had started school in
St. Louis Park when her family lived on a farm and home
where the Aldersgate Methodist Church is now located.
When Esther was in the eighth grade the family moved to
a farm on the north side of St. Louis Park, located
roughly between Zarthan Ave. and Dakota Ave, a block
south of what is now Highway 394. When this journal was
written, she lived there with her parents, John A. and
Hannah Johnson, two older brothers, George and Carl, and
four younger sisters, Clara, Verna, Alice and Irene.
After graduation from high school she helped her parents
on the farm and in the milk business that was conducted
from the farm until she went to the University of
Minnesota from which she graduated in 1918 with a degree
in Home Economics. She then left for northern Minnesota
to teach school where in Thief River Falls she met and
married Anton Yngve. The family with two sons, John and
Albert, moved back to St. Louis Park in 1930 to live in
a home that had been built by Esther's father on the
farm property.
Esther following her husband into the study of law
graduated from the Minneapolis College of Law and
started a law practice in the St. Louis Park Theatre
Building in 1941 being the first lawyer to have an
office in St. Louis Park. She continued to live in St.
Louis Park until her death in 1968.
The journal describes the busy life of
a senior at "Lincoln High."
She was one of 8 seniors that year, four each, girls and
boys. Esther had a busy social life with parties,
dances, etc. The girls also slept over at each other's
houses quite a bit, which was preferred to going home in the
cold and dark in an open sleigh. The girls apparently didn't
have much regard for the boys, as evidenced by this entry on
February 22, 1912:
Oh those awful boys! I guess
we gave them a snubbing last night and I think we will
keep on doing it if they act as mean all the time.
All of us girls were angry.
The other graduates were Reta Lucinda
Shepard, Albert Preston "Bert"
Baston, Etta Irene Hembre, Alma Edna Newberg, Paul
Leonard Haskell, Charles Gibson, and Floyd Hamilton Fuller.
Esther was valedictorian of her class.
This information comes from a variety of sources: newspapers, books, yearbooks, phone directories, interviews, etc. Given the varied sources, we cannot guarantee that all of this information is correct, and welcome any additions and corrections. Please contact us with your contributions and comments.