Matches 7,941 to 7,950 of 23,616
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| 7941 |
He and his parents lived on the Saxhaug vestre farm (49c) in Inderøen, Nord-Trøndelag, in the 1865 Norwegian census.
In the 1895 state census, he was a laborer living in Clinton Twp with his wife and two children: Edwin, 2, and Henry, 10 months. He had been in the U.S. for 6 years and in the local area for 2.
In the 1900 census he is a farmer in Clinton Twp, St. Louis County. He came to the U.S. in 1883. In the 1910 census he is a bridge carpenter in Clinton Twp, St. Louis County.
In the 1930 census, he was a farmer in Clinton Twp, St. Louis County. Still at home were his children Alex R. and Marcus K. | SAXHAUG, Martin Ellingson (I8505)
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| 7942 |
He and his sister Emma died of diphtheria according to Find A Grave. | DAHLBERG, Edward Augustus (I18458)
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| 7943 |
He and his sister Liv arrived in New York (Ellis Island) on April 30, 1907, on the SS Oscar II. The ship had left Oslo on April 19th. Bernt was 32, Liv was 18. The final destination of both was Willow City, North Dakota. In both cases, the relative they were going to join in Willow City was their uncle, Mr. John Tveten. He was presumably the “uncle” who had paid for their tickets. Although Bernt claimed to have been born in Telemarken, Liv claimed “Vestfjorddalen.” Bernt was 5 feet 11 inches tall with black hair and blue eyes. Liv was five feet tall with brown hair and blue eyes.
Bernt has been in the U.S. for 8 years, 1899-1907, so he was apparently sent back to Norway to be a chaperone for his sister. He then returned to Norway for good in 1908.
The Tveito farm is between the Bjørkhaug and Ingolfsland farms. | BAKKEN, Herbjørn (Bernt) (I23024)
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| 7944 |
He and his sister Marie farmed in Colburn Twp, Chippewa County, Wisconsin, in the 1940 census. | EKUM, Harold (I17241)
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| 7945 |
He and his sister were adopted by one of Lina’s brothers, Otto Ostgulen and Otto’s wife Ida Sophie Peterson, after Lina died about a month after the twins were born.
He was an officer in the Army Air Corps during World War II and was part of the crew of a heavy bomber. He was captured and was a POW in the Stalag Luft I Bath-Vogelsang Prussia prisoner camp. | OSTGULEN, Norine Ole (I17826)
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| 7946 |
He and his wife and family came to the U.S. in 1904. | HEGGESTAD, Sjur Nilsen (I34175)
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| 7947 |
He and his wife and son came to the U.S. in 1911 according to the 1920 census. In that census, he worked as a stockman at the University of Minnesota. | WALLUM, John (I40116)
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| 7948 |
He and his wife and their children lived in Riverside, Illinois, in the 1950 census. They lived on the 2nd floor of the house for which his wife’s parents lived on the first floor. Stuart was a retail merchandise supervisor at a retail merchandise store. | HAGEN, Stuart (I36914)
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| 7949 |
He and his wife and their three youngest children lived on Tuff in Røen, Vestre Slidre, in the 1865 census. He was gaardbruger og selveier. | Endre Endresen (I25880)
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| 7950 |
He and his wife and three children arrived in the U.S. on August 16, 1919, at the port of New York aboard the Stavangersfjord. | HEMSING, Kristoffer Nilsen (I22979)
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