Houston Chronicle Sunday

North Dakota hopes to lure more to Lawrence Welk home

- By James MacPherson

BISMARCK, N.D. — Bandleader Lawrence Welk’s trademark bubbles and music attracted legions of adoring fans and made him millions of dollars.

“He was a marketing genius — we’re trying to channel him,” said Diane Rogness, who manages North Dakota historic sites, including the boyhood home of the late polka-playing bandleader in Strasburg, about 75 miles southeast of Bismarck.

Flush with cash from a once-booming oil economy, state lawmakers paid $100,000 in 2015 to buy the 6-acre Welk site. But attendance has been ho-hum, with about 1,000 mostly elderly people each paying $5 to visit, about $30,000 short of what’s needed to cover the annual cost to North Dakota taxpayers of its operations.

The site opens this season May 26. Rogness said several things are being planned to help boost attendance, including an increased social media presence and presenters who will talk about everything from blacksmith­ing to beer, and perhaps a Woodstock-like “jam session” that could draw accordion players from afar.

“People want experience­s rather than a sleepy tour,” she said.

Welk learned to play accordion in the home in Strasburg, a town off the “Lawrence Welk Highway” where many of the 400 people still converse in German. Welk left Strasburg at 21 to start a musical career that took him from dance halls in the Dakotas to national television. He became known as the “King of Champagne Music” and added to the national lexicon with his heavily German-accented phrases, “Ah-one, an’ ahtwo” and “wunnerful, wunnerful.”

State funding pays for maintenanc­e and two parttime tour guides during season, which ends Labor Day. Only one of the positions has been filled a week before opening.

Historical Society Director Claudia Berg said the site’s remote location and primitive accommodat­ions have made hiring someone difficult.

“It’s not air-conditione­d, and there is an outhouse for plumbing,” she said. “It’s kind of like living the time period.”

 ?? Associated Press file ?? The state paid $100,000 to buy Lawrence Welk’s boyhood home.
Associated Press file The state paid $100,000 to buy Lawrence Welk’s boyhood home.

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