Nils Otto Tank was a Moravian Church missionary and pioneer land developer in Wisconsin.
Background
Nils Otto Tank was born near Halden, in Østfold county, Norway. He was the son of a wealthy politician and landowner. His father Carsten Tank (1766–1832) had been Minister of Finance on the governing council in Norway in 1814.
His mother, Cathrine von Cappelen Tank (1772–1837) was the daughter of Diderich von Cappelen, a wealthy land-owner and ship owner.
During that time, his daughter was born and his wife died.
Education
Tank was educated in various European universities.
Career
The manor house at the family estate, Rød Herregård, is now open to the public and operated by Østfold Museum (Østfold museene) In 1813 Tank was sent to a school in Oslo and in 1818 to a Moravian School in England. In 1834, he was sent to serve at the Moravian settlement in Christiansfeld, Denmark. Tank"s experience in Suriname ended on a bitter note.
In colony such as Suriname, the economy depended upon slaves for the labor-intensive plantations of sugar cane, timber, coffee and other tropical products.
lieutenant became increasingly clear to Tank that the treatment of the slaves in Suriname was intolerable. In 1847, he asked to be relieved of his duties in Suriname and returned to Europe.
In 1850 the family migrated to the United States. The Tanks traveled to Wisconsin near Green Bay where a group of Norwegian Moravian immigrants wished to form a settlement.
Tank purchased a tract on the west bank of the Fox River at Fort Howard, including the historic Tank Cottage.
Tank planned to establish a communal society. However, the religious community elected to settle elsewhere. Tank became associated with the Fox-Wisconsin River Improvement Company, but eventually lost heavily in the venture.
He then turned his promotional activities to land speculations in Menasha and Manitowoc, and to railroad ventures, chiefly the Green Bay and Minnesota Rail Road.
The Tank Cottage at Heritage Hill State Historic Park in Green Bay is reported to be the oldest house in Wisconsin. lieutenant was located on the west bank of the Fox River.
In 1850 Otto Tank bought the building and added both wings to the house. In 1975 the building came down the river on a barge and became a part of Heritage Hill State Historical Park.
The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places (added 1970 - Building - #70000028).