http://www.roadsideamerica.com/attract/NDSTRwelk.htmlStrasburg, North Dakota
Lawrence Welk is North Dakota's favorite son, a local boy who made it big. He was born on the outskirts of Strasburg in a sod house and -- though North Dakotans may deny it -- hated the place. He hated farming, hated his parents, and for all we know hated North Dakota. The sixth of nine children, he essentially sold himself into paternal slavery to pay back $400 he borrowed to buy his first accordion. He left home for good on his 21st birthday and never looked back, playing weddings and radio barn dances until, in 1955, he finally debuted on national TV. His parents weren't around to appreciate it; they had been dead for 15 years.
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It's hard to believe that several thousand people come here every year. The place is deserted. We made the mistake of mentioning that to Edna, and added that some of the buildings must get dusty, unused as they are, over the course of a summer. "You don't think they're clean?" she cried, her face horrorstruck. "We always try to keep the place clean." "No, no," we quickly replied. "It's clean. It's very clean." We had forgotten the North Dakotan obsession with tidiness.
It's tempting to speculate that the emptiness at the Welk Farmstead means something: a passing of the torch to a new generation of livelier musicians, a sign that old mega-celebrities do indeed fade away. But no. It has always been empty here. . .