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genealogy and family history of the Carlson, Ellingboe, Everson and Johnson families of Minnesota and Wisconsin
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Virgil Glen CARLSON

Male 1923 - 1988  (65 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Virgil Glen CARLSON was born on 9 Mar 1923 (son of Olaf CARLSON and Betsy JOHNSON); died on 17 Dec 1988.

    Virgil married M.K. MICHALUK [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Danny William CARLSON was born on 15 Aug 1950; died on 3 Nov 1963.
    2. Patricia Ann CARLSON was born on 8 Jul 1953; died on 3 Nov 1963.
    3. Jacky Miles CARLSON was born on 18 Jul 1954; died on 3 Nov 1963.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Olaf CARLSON was born on 27 Sep 1893 in Summit, Roberts County, South Dakota; died on 28 Jul 1960.

    Notes:

    Olaf’s wife Betsy wrote this entry for Olaf’s and her family for “Lines of the Past”, the local history book put out by the Preeceville Historical Society in 1982.

    Olaf was born in Summit, South Dakota. He was about twelve years old when he came to Canada with his parents and settled on a farm in the Hassan area. Hi filed on a homestead in the Robinson Creek district in 1915.

    In 1918 he married Betsy, daughter of Charlie and Ida Johnson. Olaf sold his homestead in 1918 and bought land at Hassan, Sask. The family lived on the Hassan farm until about 1962. Olaf died from a heart attack in 1960. Betsy retired to Sturgis, Sask.

    Olaf and Betsy had seven boys and one girl.

    Chester, the oldest, served overseas in WW II. He married Irene Oftebro. They lived in Sturgis. Chester died in 1966.

    Stanley, the youngest of the boys, was killed in a car accident that same year, 1966.

    The only daughter of Olaf and Betsy, Ida (Mrs. Ralph Lee) died in 1980 from a long illness of cancer.

    Roy, a university graduate, works in Alberta.

    Virgil, Walter, Elmer, and Archie are farmers, truck drivers, and mechanics. Elmer married a Robinson Creek district girl, Loretta Rosenkerr. They reside in Sturgis.

    Birth:
    SD Births

    Olaf married Betsy JOHNSON on 14 Dec 1918 in Preeceville, Saskatchewan, Canada. Betsy (daughter of Karl (Charlie) JOHNSON and Ida Marie LUNDBERG) was born on 1 Dec 1901 in Barton, Pierce County, North Dakota; died on 15 Apr 1995; was buried in Lutheran Cemetery, Preeceville, Saskatchewan, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Betsy JOHNSON was born on 1 Dec 1901 in Barton, Pierce County, North Dakota (daughter of Karl (Charlie) JOHNSON and Ida Marie LUNDBERG); died on 15 Apr 1995; was buried in Lutheran Cemetery, Preeceville, Saskatchewan, Canada.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Confirmation: 18 Nov 1915, Ketchen Lutheran Church, Ketchen, Saskatchewan, Canada

    Notes:

    Betsy said that she was born in 1900.

    Lived in the Preeceville area of eastern Saskatchewan.

    Betsy had seven boys and one girl. Terry J. says that he has the names and some phone numbers of all of Betsy’s children.

    Ida Deiters’s estate settlement papers show a reimbursement of $10 paid to “Mrs. Betsy Carlson in Canada” for obtaining two death certificates. The date was December 15, 1964.

    Betsy wrote this entry on her parents’ family for “Lines of the Past”, the local history book put out by the Preeceville Historical Society in 1982.

    My parents came from Barton, North Dakota. Father was of Norwegian descent and mother was Swedish. They came to claim a homestead in the southeast quarter of Section 14 in the year of 1910. There were four children: myself (Betsy), Alice, Emery, and Walter. We were all born in the States and we all attended Robinson Creek School.

    Father drove oxen for a couple of years. He also worked out when work was available. He trapped fur-bearing animals in the winter and later on he herded cattle for several farmers. This all brought in extra money for improving the farm and building a house and other buildings for livestock and poultry.

    Once a month, a trip would be made to the closest store, which was in Buchanan. Word would go around that a neighbor was going to Buchanan. The farmer going to purchase groceries, etc., would have several orders to bring back.

    Wild fruit such as strawberries, raspberries, currants, cranberries, and chokecherries were plentiful. Mother canned without adding sugar and we often ate the fruit without sweetening.

    Mother was a very thrifty homemaker. Soap was scarce in our household; mother used wood ashes in the wash water. This saved soap and was also very helpful in removing heavy soil from father’s and brothers’ work clothes.

    Mother spun and carded wool and knit socks and mitts and often sweaters for the family and she sewed a lot of clothes.

    I remember I wanted a new dress so bad for a fair day in Preeceville. Father did not have the money but I was determined to have a new dress so I went out and dug seneca root, took it to town, and sold it in the green state. I bought material and mother sewed me a dress.

    Mother acted as midwife often in the neighbourhood. In 1927 a neighbour came to get her for this purpose. While she was getting into the buggy the horses became frightened and overpowered the driver. They ran at a breakneck speed down the road before the driver was in control again. Mother was hurt quite bad and could not walk for days. But, nevertheless, she attended the birth of the child even though she was in agony. She suffered for years with an injured knee cap. That baby boy born that September night in 1927 was Orval Nordtweten.

    The flies and mosquitoes were terrible in those early years. Big smudges had to be built every night for the animals to give them rest and relief from the bites and stings.

    There were house parties. There was no booze at these parties. Everyone had a good time dancing ‘till daybreak.

    When I was 11 years old, I had rheumatic fever. Mother treated me with homemade remedies and cured me. Walter and Emery were sick too but they were worse and did not respond to mother’s treatment. They were taken to the Canora hospital.

    Mother passed away in 1963 from a heart attack at the age of 79. Father died in April, 1966. They are buried in Preeceville cemetery.

    I (Betsy) was born in 1900. I married Olaf Carlson in 1918. We moved to Hassan. (More about my family in Olaf Carlson history.)

    Sister Alice, the youngest, was born in 1907 and married Grant Halvorson in 1926. Alice stayed home and helped until her marriage. The family lived on a farm in the Rockford district for several years then moved to Quesnel, B.C. Grant worked in the lumbering industry and Alice took care of welfare children for 12 years. Alice and Grant have four children: Teddy, Walter, Lila, and Betty.

    Brother Emery was born in 1903. He worked out most of the time after leaving school. He married Myrtle Hanson in 1924. They lived in the Robinson Creek district for several years and also farmed in the Ketchen area for some years. They had one daughter, Lila. The family moved to Quesnel, B.C., in the 1950s. Emery’s wife died in August, 1969.

    Brother Walter was born in 1905 and grew up to be a superb dancer. Like his brother Emery, he loved horses. He was killed in a freak accident in 1939 when the truck he was riding in hit a rack pulled by a tractor. A piece of the 2x4 lumber crashed through the windshield and struck Walter. He died just a few hours later. Walter was married to Violet Hanson. Their only child died at birth in 1935.

    Children:
    1. Chester R CARLSON was born on 5 May 1919; died in Dec 1966.
    2. A.W. CARLSON
    3. 1. Virgil Glen CARLSON was born on 9 Mar 1923; died on 17 Dec 1988.
    4. Elmer Olaf CARLSON was born on 18 Feb 1925; died in 1998 in Sturgis, Saskatchewan, Canada.
    5. Ida Mary CARLSON was born on 13 Apr 1927; died in 1980.
    6. Stanley Robert CARLSON was born on 31 Aug 1939; died on 20 Jun 1966.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Karl (Charlie) JOHNSON was born on 2 Dec 1875 in Willmar, Kandiyohi County, Minnesota (son of Johannes JOHNSON and Lena); died on 2 Apr 1966; was buried in Preeceville, Saskatchewan, Canada.

    Notes:

    Ida and her husband moved to Preeceville, Saskatchewan, in 1910. Charley Lundberg homesteaded in Naicam, Saskatchewan in 1910 but he also had land in Preeceville, Saskatchewan so he may have gone back and forth.

    Charlie Johnson was of Norwegian extraction. He and his brother-in-law, Ole Peterson, were first cousins.

    In the 1911 census, he is Charles Johnson, 36 (Sept 1874), farming in the Mackenzie district of Saskatchewan. His family includes Ida, 26 (Feb 1885, born in Sweden), Bessie, 10 (Dec 1900), Emil, 7 (June 1903), Walter, 6 (Nov 1904), and Alice, 4 (Feb 1907). The family is Lutheran and came to Canada in 1910. All of the children were born in the U.S.A although they are now of Canadian nationality. Their parents, however, are “American.”

    Karl married Ida Marie LUNDBERG on 24 Aug 1900 in Barton, Pierce County, North Dakota. Ida (daughter of Carl Gustaf (Charley) LUNDBERG and Britta Maria (Mary Or Mare) SVENSDOTTER) was born on 28 Feb 1885 in Cannon Falls, Goodhue County, Minnesota; died on 3 Jun 1962 in Preeceville, Saskatchewan, Canada; was buried in Preeceville, Saskatchewan, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Ida Marie LUNDBERG was born on 28 Feb 1885 in Cannon Falls, Goodhue County, Minnesota (daughter of Carl Gustaf (Charley) LUNDBERG and Britta Maria (Mary Or Mare) SVENSDOTTER); died on 3 Jun 1962 in Preeceville, Saskatchewan, Canada; was buried in Preeceville, Saskatchewan, Canada.

    Notes:

    Not listed with her family in the 1885 census.

    Single and living with her parents and brother in Barton, North Dakota, at the time of the 1900 census.



    Roy Carlson says (in a letter to DRC dated October 6, 2005):

    Gramma Johnson visited us on the farm many times and stayed with us quite often to help Mother (her daughter Betsy) raise seven boys and one girl, Ida. She also spent many months during the winters housekeeping and cooking for a family in Nelson, B.C.

    Notes:

    Married:
    recorded in Pierce County

    Children:
    1. 3. Betsy JOHNSON was born on 1 Dec 1901 in Barton, Pierce County, North Dakota; died on 15 Apr 1995; was buried in Lutheran Cemetery, Preeceville, Saskatchewan, Canada.
    2. Emery JOHNSON was born in 1903 in North Dakota; died in Unknown.
    3. Walter JOHNSON was born in 1905 in North Dakota; died in 1939.
    4. Alice JOHNSON was born on 22 Feb 1907 in Pierce County, North Dakota; died on 10 Mar 1998 in British Columbia, Canada.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Johannes JOHNSON died in Unknown.

    Johannes married Lena. Lena died in Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Lena died in Unknown.
    Children:
    1. 6. Karl (Charlie) JOHNSON was born on 2 Dec 1875 in Willmar, Kandiyohi County, Minnesota; died on 2 Apr 1966; was buried in Preeceville, Saskatchewan, Canada.

  3. 14.  Carl Gustaf (Charley) LUNDBERG was born on 12 Feb 1850 in Rydö, Torup, Småland, Hallands län, Sweden (son of Johan Mårten (Martin) Persson LUNDBERG and Maja Lisa LIND); died on 23 Feb 1935 in Nelson, British Columbia; was buried on 27 Feb 1935 in Ymir Cemetery, Ymir, Central Kootenay Regional District, British Columbia, Canada.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptism: 14 Feb 1850, Torup, Hallands län, Sweden

    Notes:

    Terry says born born in south Sweden, just across the strait from Denmark.

    Or Karl.

    Karl Gustaf Lundberg, född 1850-02-12 i Rydö, Torup N. (f,hfl). E1881..
    Amerika 18810919-?.
    Adress Torup sn ?-18731202,
    Kånna sn Kvänjarp Södregård torpet Berget Dräng 18731202-18741002,
    Kånna sn Berghem Andersgård torpet Björkelund dräng
    18741002-18771029,
    Kånna sn Berghem Södregård torpet Berget 18771029-18810919,
    Amerika 18810919-?

    The 1871-1876 Kånna household examination suggests that Carl and Britta came to Ljunga, or at least Berghem Andersgård, on October 2, 1874, two months and twenty days before they were married.

    They lived near or with his sister Emelie and family on Andersgård.

    The Anbytartforum confirms this, saying: “Carl Gustaf came in December 1873 to Kånna from the parish of Thorup. He then moved in with his brother Carl Oscar at the Berget cottage under {near?} Kvänjarp. In October of 1874, he moved with his bride-to-be Britta Maria of the Björkelund cottage under {to? in?} Berghem Andersgård. They married that December. In October of 1877 they moved to Berget cottage under {in?} Berghem south farm. Then on July 17, 1881, the family emigrated to America.” (This may have been the date on which they were permitted to leave and actually left Sweden sometime in September.)

    Lived in Kånna, a small town northwest of Södra Ljunga, until they emigrated. Left Sweden in September, 1881, with the destination of Red Wing, Minnesota. Terry says: They left from Malmo, Sweden on the Ship ALEXANDRA, arriving at Grimsby, England (east coast) taking the train to Liverpool. I have a picture of this ship. It never made it back to Sweden as it sunk in a major storm on the return trip to Sweden. Captain Johnson and crew probably all drowned but I never found about that yet. I have all the ship's crews names and home towns. The name of the ship owner was the South Sweden Steamship Company of Malmo, Sweden, which is on the south tip of Sweden directly across the Strait from Copenhagen in Denmark so there probably were Danish passengers too?
     
    The name of the shipping carrier was the INMAN Line with tickets to New York destined for RED WING, MINNESOTA. The big ships from Liverpool were usually called CITY of xxx......... but I have not found the exact ship name they were on yet as some of these ships had six hundred people on them and there were many ships each day to New York. Annerstad is near to Kånna and South Ljunga in Kronoberg län, SMALAND, Sweden.

    Britta, Tilda, and baby Emma (but, apparently, not Charley) arrived in New York from Liverpool on October 14, 1881, on the City of Paris which had sailed from the Swedish port of Malmö. The stated destination of the three was Red Wing, Minnesota. Carl Gustaf may have gone ahead earlier and then sent for his wife and children. All four are shown as leaving the Berghem Södregård parish at Kånna in 1881.

    According to Terry, Charley, a 31 year-old tinsmith traveled from Glasgow to New York on the Devonia, arriving June 7, 1881.

    In an 1885 census, the family was living in Cannon Falls Twp. The family consisted of Charles Lundberg, 35, Maria, 40, Mathilda M., 9, Nanny C., 6, Laurina, 4, and Alfred, 1.

    In the 1895 Minnesota state census, the family lives in Athens Twp, Isanti County. They had been there for a year-and-a-half.

    In the 1900 U.S. census, the family was living in East Barton, Pierce County, North Dakota. The family consisted of Carl, 50, Maria, 54, Walter, 18, and Ida, 14. Both children had been born in Minnesota. Carl is a farmer, Walter a farm laborer, and Ida a servant. Carl and Maria came to the U.S. in 1881. Maria has had 8 children, 5 still living. Carl and Maria had been married for 22 years.

    He moved to Naicam, Saskatchewan, Canada, with his second wife. But at the time of the 1910 U.S. census, he and Hannah were living in Milaca Township not too far from the John Quaid family.

    Not listed in the 1911 Canadian census.

    In the 1916 census, he and Hanna lived in Lake Lenore. He and Hanna came to Canada in 1911. Charles became a Canadia citizen in 1914, Hanna was still an American citizen. They were both Protestants.

    As Jan found, Charey and Hannah lived in Preeceville Twp, Saskatchewan, in Canada’s 1921 census. They lived alone and were still engaged in farming. They still claimed, respectively, Swedish and Danish citizenship. Both claimed to be Lutherans.

    Terry says: He probably never went to school since his land records in CANADA are marked by an " X" but even that I do not know for sure since he may have been able to write in Swedish and not in English.

    Terry says: the LUNDBERGS in Sweden always used that name which is very unusual as most Swedes used Johansson, Svensson, Pederson, etc. and changed their name every generation. I have most of the Swedish records but can not find them in the USA; maybe they became Carlssons, Johnson, Anderson, etc. and thus so common a name it is hard to trace them in the USA....?? 

    Jan says: Charlie Gustaf Lundberg's land

    16 NW 15 40 19 W2
    Part Section Township Range Meridian

    Reference:
    Liber: 748
    Folio: 436
    File reel number: C-6536
    Names: Charles G Lundberg

    Terry says:

    Yes, That is his Homestead in year 1912.
    NW Quarter of Section 15 Township 40 Range 19 West of 2nd Meridian.
    It is 1 Mile West and 1 mile south of John Quaid's Homestead.

    On Map Page 14 of Naicam History Book and on Page 58 You will see a Small Map that shows Oscar Johnson owning the Land next to the Quaid Homestead.

    Johan August Lundberg owned the Land across the Road from Paul Jestin.

    Fred Jestin owned the land to the east of John Quaid a mile plus or so.

    Birth:
    incorrectly entered as 2 Dec in the British Columbia Death Registrations on Family Search

    Died:
    Jan, on Find A Grave, says 26 Feb

    Buried:
    probably an unmarked grave

    Carl married Britta Maria (Mary Or Mare) SVENSDOTTER on 22 Dec 1874 in Södra Ljunga, Småland, Kronobergs län, Sweden. Britta (daughter of Sven JACOBSSON and Maja Lisa NILSDOTTER) was born on 18 Aug 1845 in Södra Ljunga, Småland, Kronobergs län, Sweden; died on 27 Oct 1902 in Foreston, Mille Lacs County, Minnesota. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  Britta Maria (Mary Or Mare) SVENSDOTTER was born on 18 Aug 1845 in Södra Ljunga, Småland, Kronobergs län, Sweden (daughter of Sven JACOBSSON and Maja Lisa NILSDOTTER); died on 27 Oct 1902 in Foreston, Mille Lacs County, Minnesota.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptism: 23 Aug 1845, Södra Ljunga, Småland, Kronobergs län, Sweden

    Notes:

    Britta, Tilda, and baby Emma arrived in New York from Liverpool on October 14, 1881, on the City of Paris, originating from Malmö. They had departed from Malmö on September 22nd with their place of origin shown as Kånna. Their destination is shown as Red Wing, Minnesota. Presumably, Carl Gustaf had left Sweden earlier and was waiting for them in Minnesota.

    From an entry found by Jan in the Anbytartforum, we learn that Britta Maria was born in the Jonsboda cottage on the Näs farm in Södra Ljunga. She was christened there on the 23rd. Witnesses were the soldier Johan Ekström from Hagatorp under {near? south of?} Össjö, farmhand Salomon Jonasson in Ljunga, maidservant Marie Jacobsdotter from {something to do with summer, summer estate?}, houswife Anna Lisa Larsdotter from Jonsboda.

    A descendant of Johan Ekström says:

    “His full name was: Johan Peter Jonasson/Jonsson Ekström [soldier surname] (1821-1868) whom I show living at torp Hagatorp, Össjö Norregården, S. Ljunga, Kronobergs län, Småland in Sweden in 1845. His son, Johan Salomon (1846-1928) emigrated to the US and settled with his family in Minneapolis, Minnesota.”

    Birth:
    an Anbytarforum source says 18 May

    Baptism:
    an Anbytarforum source says 23 May

    Died:
    an Anbytarforum source says she died in Goodhue County

    Notes:

    Married:
    an Anbytarforum source says Kånna

    Children:
    1. Thilda Maria (Tillie) LUNDBERG was born on 20 Mar 1875 in Kånna, Småland, Kronobergs län, Sweden; died on 7 Dec 1941 in Naicam, Saskatchewan, Canada; was buried on 12 Dec 1941 in Immanuel Lutheran Church Cemetery, Naicam, Saskatchewan, Canada.
    2. Johan Agot LUNDBERG was born on 11 Sep 1877 in Kånna, Småland, Kronobergs län, Sweden; died on 24 Mar 1878 in Kånna, Småland, Kronobergs län, Sweden.
    3. Nanny Emma Rebekka (Annie Rebecka) LUNDBERG was born on 10 May 1879 in Kånna, Småland, Kronobergs län, Sweden; died on 3 Feb 1936 in Naicam, Saskatchewan, Canada; was buried in Naicam Cemetery, Naicam, Saskatchewan, Canada.
    4. Josefina Laurina (Jose) LUNDBERG was born on 16 Dec 1881 in Cannon Falls, Goodhue County, Minnesota; died on 7 Jun 1964 in Preeceville, Saskatchewan, Canada.
    5. Walter LUNDBERG was born on 26 Mar 1884 in Cannon Falls, Goodhue County, Minnesota; died on 4 Mar 1906 in Foreston, Mille Lacs County, Minnesota.
    6. 7. Ida Marie LUNDBERG was born on 28 Feb 1885 in Cannon Falls, Goodhue County, Minnesota; died on 3 Jun 1962 in Preeceville, Saskatchewan, Canada; was buried in Preeceville, Saskatchewan, Canada.
    7. Albin LUNDBERG was born on 5 Feb 1888 in Cannon Falls, Goodhue County, Minnesota.