Peter Carlson (December 7, 1822 – August 13, 1909) was a Swedish-American Lutheran Minister who helped found the Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Synod and served as president of the Minnesota Conference for six years.
Carlson was born at Hjortsberga, in the parish of Alvesta, in Kronoberg, Sweden. He was the son of to Carl Andersson and Anna Isaksdotter of Småland. His life in Sweden was marked by poverty and lack of education. At 15 he became a carpenter to support his parents and four younger siblings. Peter married Christina (Stina Kajsa) Andersdotter when he was 25. They moved to the parish of Aneboda near the city of Växjö, Sweden. In May 1854 at the age of 32, he immigrated to the United States with his family and settled in St. Charles, Illinois before moving to Geneva. He was mentored by Pastor Erland Carlsson and began his ministry that November. He later met Dr. Eric Norelius at a synod meeting in Waverly, IL in 1855 and became close friends with Rev. Andrew Jackson.
In November 1857 he moved to Carver County, Minnesota, where he organized both East Union Lutheran Church and West Union Lutheran Church. Carlson was ordained in Chicago on September 13, 1859 and helped found the Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Synod on June 5, 1860.
Carlson left the Carver congregation in August 1879 to serve as a missionary in the Pacific Northwest. That December he organized Immanuel Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Church in Portland, Oregon, the first Augustana Synod church west of the Rocky Mountains. The following year he moved to Idaho with his family, where he established the Cordelia Swedish Lutheran Church, the first Lutheran church in the state.