Carl Oscar Ericson Biography This biography appears on page 523-524 in "History of Minnehaha County, South Dakota" by Dana R. Bailey and was scanned, OCRed and edited by Joy Fisher, http://www.rootsweb.com/~archreg/vols/00001.html#0000031 . This file may be freely copied by individuals and non-profit organizations for their private use. Any other use, including publication, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission by electronic, mechanical, or other means requires the written approval of the file's author. This file is part of the SDGENWEB Archives. If you arrived here inside a frame or from a link from somewhere else, our front door is at http://www.usgwarchives.net/sd/sdfiles.htm ERICSON, CARL OSCAR, was born in Sweden April 15, 1853. His father was a manufacturer of tower clocks, watches and other clocks on quite an extensive scale, and the time he could spare from his studies was spent in the shops, where he soon learned to master the intricacies of machinery and watchmaking with wonderful accuracy. When only seventeen years of age he was employed to regulate and remodel a great number of clocks of exceedingly fine workmanship for the royal family of Sweden, and daily visited the royal palace at Stockholm. In 1872 he was taken with the fever of seeing America, and setting out for that country landed in Quebec, Canada, where he engaged in the watchmaking and jewelry business for about five years; came to the United States and after looking the country over located at Brodhead, Wis., until he removed to Sioux Falls, where he arrived in the fall of 1879. He opened a jewelry store on Phillips avenue, and soon after commenced building the tower clock which is now doing duty in the Masonic Temple at Sioux Falls, and was the first tower clock in Dakota. In 1886 he was induced to take charge of the Electric Light plant at Sioux Falls, which was then in its infancy, and he remained its superintendent and manager through all its stages of development until it became one of the largest and best running plants in the Northwest, and gained for himself quite an enviable reputation as an electrician. He was a mechanical genius and made several inventions, one of which in particular attracted the attention of the scientific world and was discussed at length in the Scientific American and other kindred papers, and for which the Inventors' Academy of Paris, France, awarded him on the 12th of August, 1893 the "Great Gold Medal," and conferred upon him the title of Member of Honor of the Academy. During the latter part of 1896 his health commenced failing and he was compelled to resign his position at the electric light works and went to Calfornia in the hope of regaining his health, but after a few months stay in that country returned to Sioux Falls, where after a lingering illness he died on the 4th day of February, 1898. Mr. Ericson was a conscientious, upright and highly respected citizen, and his death was deeply regretted by his large circle of friends.