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genealogy and family history of the Carlson, Ellingboe, Everson and Johnson families of Minnesota and Wisconsin
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Matches 861 to 870 of 23,616

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861 According to Carl Johan: Hököpinge parish, Malmöhus län. Family: Andreas Pehrsson (Anders Persson) Berger LUNDBERG / Kersti Olsdotter (F13641)
 
862 according to Carla PEDERSON, Norman Rudolph (I13826)
 
863 According to Cathy, Olaf trained as a baker in Trondheim. His dream was to come to America and have his own bakery, which he did in Virginia. It was called Bye's Bakery, circa 1928 to 1948. Bertha Knudsen was also from Bodø. Herman Iver Lerdahl met Mabel at Byes Bakery.

As Olaf Martin Bye, age 22, he arrived in the U.S. at Philadelphia in May of 1903 aboard the S.S. Noordland which had sailed from Liverpool on 22 Apr 1903. He was a baker. His last residence was Bodå in Norway. He was headed for Sioux Rapids, Iowa, where he was to meet his sister-in-law Madilla Knudson, who had been in the U.S. for 2 years. Traveling with him were two other men from Bodå (probably Bodø) and also headed to Sioux Rapids, Iowa, to meet Knudsons. The first listed was Oswald M. Karlsen, an 18 year-old butcher. He would meet his friend Sten Knudson in Sioux Rapids. The second listed was Sten Olai Knutson, an 18 year-old laborer. He would meet his sister Madilla Knutson. Listed a few lines up from Olaf Martin, Oswald, and Sten Olai were two men from Verdal.

In the 1910 census, as Olaf By, he was a baker living with his family in Biwabik. He had come to the U.S. in 1902. His wife Bertha had come to the U.S. with their oldest two children in 1905.

In the 1920 census, he was a baker in a bakery shop in Virginia, Minnesota. In this census, he is shown as having come to the U.S. in 1903.

In the 1930 census, he owns a bakery in Virginia, Minnesota.

He registered for the draft on 26 Apr 1942 in Virginia. He lived and worked at 208 South 5th Avenue in Virginia, Minnesota. 
BYE, Olaf Martin Hansen (I14039)
 
864 According to cemetery info. Not listed in the Washington death index. FERAGEN, Inga Estelle (I8107)
 
865 According to Charity, she was born in Durango, Mexico. VALENZUELA (I30838)
 
866 According to Connie: “After Synneva died in 1873 the kids were farmed out and Susanne grew up with Atley Peterson, an uncle.”

Connie says that Susanne and Olav were missionaries headed to China and that Susanne died in Norway, on the way to China, after giving birth to twin boys. 
FORTNEY, Susanne (I29724)
 
867 According to Cora, wealthy, may have owned and/or bred race horses. Supposedly killed by a horse, according to Cora.

Other sources say murdered and the villain was never caught. Murdered according to Jan Webb posting. Died in Berghem Andersgard.

According to the Kånna church book’s death record, as translated by Carl Johan: “Died very hurt. The skull cracked, probably during a fight (man to man). Beaten to death." Carl Johan’s additional comments: He died of a skull fracture. It seems that the authorities speculated that he was beaten to death. It also states that the main suspect has escaped.

Cora would have gotten her claim of “killed by a horse” from Al or from Bess or Maurice who heard it from Al. Perhaps Al really didn’t know or else was citing an alternative theory that the family (and his mother) may have preferred. Perhaps “the authorities” reasoned that a Traveller was as likely to have been murdered as to have been killed by a horse.

An alternative birth history for Salomon, according to Terry: 9-16-1839 in Hamneda, Kronoberg Iän, Smaland.

His age at death was “36 years, 3 months, 17 days” according to the death record. (That would put his birth at 6 Sep 1840.) His death record also shows that he was married when he died and that he was a bonden or peasant farmer.

In neither Annerstad nor Hamneda birth records for 1838, 1839, or 1840. There were only two Salomons born in that period in Annerstad. One was born on January 9, 1839, to Jonas Johansson and Brita Andersdotter. The other was born on June 17, 1840, to Pehr Bengstsson and Elin Andersdotter. No one was born in Annerstad on September 6, 1839. A Salomon Carlsson was born in 1839 in Södra Ljunga according to Patrick Johnson. That Salomon was born on March 5 (bapt. March 10) to Carl Andersson and Britta Maja Simonsdatter.

The Household Examination for Annerstad 1844-1851, p. 282 (”135/147, vol. 2”) shows Anna Andersdotter, pige (so unmarried), b. 10 Mar 1814, living with her two illegitimate children: Martha, b. 1 April 1843, and Salomon, b. 16 Sept 1839. The surname for Martha is not legible but it could be Carlson but seems more likely to be something like Christsson. Magdalena (#7261) should also have been listed here but wasn’t. There is no patronym for either child.

He and his family are not in the Annerstad Household Examination for 1872-1876.

Salomon and family moved to Berghem Andersgärd in Kånna on November 7, 1873.

Probably at least a half-brother of Magdalena (#7261). 
CARLSSON, Salomon (I20)
 
868 According to daughter Bonnie: Went by Tom among family and most friends. Those from the Army and from the US Postal Service knew him as Jim. During WWII he served in England and France. He was severely wounded on July 17, 1944. During his service he was awarded the Purple Heart for wounds received on July 17, 1944 in the European Theater of Operations. In his last years, he wrote out some of his memories from the war. JOYCE, James Thomas (I5966)
 
869 according to DeanPearson80 FLEMING, James C (I39933)
 
870 according to death certificate LA SOTA, Catherine R (I7828)
 

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