DANUBE, MINN. – The Danube Hawks will be forever remembered in the area surrounding this small town in west central Minnesota, as long as twin sisters Pam Freiborg and Deb Holwerda, and like-minded friends, are here to maintain the legacy.
The high school went away in 1988 in a merger with Renville and Sacred Heart, longtime rivals in the defunct 212 Conference. The merged school is Renville County West.
Danube had a centennial celebration in 2001 and a great amount of village memorabilia was assembled. It was agreed this cache should be preserved.
What was required for this was a historic home. The original town depot had been moved to Olivia as a companion to a restaurant, but it was now available.
“They didn’t want it anymore, and sold the depot to us for a dollar,” Holwerda said. “Then, we had to raise $5,000 to move it the five miles west on [Hwy.] 212.”
The depot was placed on a small plot of land and became home to the Danube Historical Society. The twins are unofficial curators of the two stuffed floors of memorabilia, which include endless newspaper clippings from the West Central Tribune (Willmar), the area weeklies including the defunct Danube Enterprise, and the Twin Cities dailies.
“We don’t have much from the Renville County Register,” Holwerda said. “In our dad’s era as a student here, from ‘48 to ‘53, the Hawks went 35 games without a loss in football. Five miles away and a bigger town, Renville didn’t like getting beat by us every year and stopped carrying stories about Danube.”
Pam and Deb were born in 1960, the daughters of Rod and Mary Lee Black. Rod returned to his hometown after college and became the long-serving coach of the Hawks. He was voted into the Minnesota Basketball Coaches Hall of Fame in 1988.