Tofterå Slettemoen genealogy

Notes


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Matches 451 to 500 of 14,518

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451 1865, Korsmotæppen, Hof, Hedmark
1880, Rustmoteppen, Hof, Hedmark
gm. Ole Gunders. Halvorsen Rauåsberget (1829-1884) 
Korntorpet, Maren Syversdtr. (I44821)
 
452 1865, legdslem på Qvale i Fusa, hos Haldor Engelsen og Ingeborg Hansdtr.
1875, fattiglem under fattigforsørgelse på Nordre Fjældsbø i Lindås, hos Lars Eliasen. 
Holsund, Lars Johan Haldors. (I40594)
 
453 1865, Lungegaarden arbeiderbolig, ug. tjenestepike Lønroth, Anne Carine (I40556)
 
454 1865, matros i Skudesnæshavn hos halvbroren Levard Kristiansen (Bjerga) (Kuvik bnr. 1)
1868 fekk han sonen Jakob Sigvart med Olene Fredriksdtr Hovdastad, han emigrerte til USA.
side 487-Sk. (Karmøy bygdebok)
1875, matros med familie i Kovik 174, Skudeneshavn ladested
Seinare jakteskipper. 
Kuvik, Oliver Ivers. (I38482)
 
455 1865, rode 9-104: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01038249008622

Konfirmert 1869 i Domkirken: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/view/279/pk00000002773414

1875, syerske på 11-36a, ugift og tok seg av moren og sønnen Bernhard: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01052295009548

1891, Nygårdsgaten 76, helt av fattigvæsenet i Bergen, fortsatt gift:
https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01052994014592

1900, Skivebakken, forsørget av sønnen Bernhard som var malersvend, og fattigvesenet, registrert som enke: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01037335049117

1910, Claus Fastings gate 7: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01036708072508
1920, Tordenskjoldsgate: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01074034067254 
Eriksen, Helene Marie Ellingsdtr. (I43131)
 
456 1865, skomakerdreng: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01038249000729

1882 Skuteviken
1887, matros
1888, Bakkegaden 9, arbeidsmann
1891, Bakkesmuget 9: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01052994042243
1912, Bødkergaten 10, 3. etasje: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01105551007201
1917, Bødkergaten 10: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01130584006480
1934, Bødkergaten 10: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/view/108/pc00000000483022

Hadde blant andre barna Ingeborg Magdalene 6. oktober 1878, Birgit Petrine 1880, Anton Bernhard Berentzen (1882-1961), Agnes Dorthea (1884-1979) (g 1907 Jackson, Missouri med Oscar Emil Brandin fra Skåne. Agnes død i Penn Hills, Allegheny, Pennsylvania), Berent ca 1887, dødfødt i 1888 og Bertil Kornelius 1890. 
Bertelsen Larsen, Berent Kornelius (I43157)
 
457 1865, Steien, Bardu, emigrerte derfra i april 1866.

Letter from Peter Olsen to granddaughter:
"Rice Lake, Wisc., March 27th, 1933

My dear Marian Janet,

As you are my youngest grand-daughter, and consequently, not much aquainted with me, I will here tell you of a few of the very few important angles of my trail through life up to this, my 78th birthday.

I was born on the 25th day of March, 1855 in Sovig, Helgeland, Norway, which is located near the Arctic Circle. When I was about six years old, my father, Jens Johan Olsen, and my mother, Anna Elise, moved with us four boys, Peter, Hans, Ole, and John to Bardodalen, adjoining Monselvdalen. Here father contracted for a job of road building. When I was eight years old, I got a job herding cattle at a satter up in a nearby mountain. (A satter is a place where cattle are pastured during summer, and where butter and cheese are made.) I held this job for two summers. When I was in my tenth year, Father and Mother decided to move to America (Apr. 1866 from Steien, Bardu, Målselv, Troms). I now had one more brother, Helmer, two months old (born Oct 1865).

We started for Bodo to board the sailship "Norden". We had orders to provision ourself for seven weeks, which was the time specified to cross the Atlantic. When the seven weeks were up, we were only about half way across, and our provisions were running low. We hailed an English ship and got supplies to last four weeks more. Our delay on the Atlantic was caused by three storms, one breaking three masts. It wasn't such a pleasure trip as it is now with steam power and modern cabins. In our case, there were five hundred passengers, old and young, in the bowels of the ship with chests and boxes for seats and tables. We landed in Quebec, Canada, in eleven weeks.

At Quebec, we were guided into what I have since learned was railroad freight cars. (One night I saw small balls of fire in the air, and learned later that they were fire flies. I had never seen the like before.) From this box car, we were loaded on to a steamboat, but where we traveled, I don't know. I do remember when a high wave washed across the deck, soaking everything. Then we were transferred to a smaller boat. The next I remember is that we were landed at a dock about midnight, and on a wall was a named which I undertook to read. After some spelling, I made out the name, "LaCross". I told the folks that I could read English.

Next day, we boarded a small boat again, and after one half day and two nights, we landed at Prescott, Wisconsin, after dark. We walked down a narrow gang-plank to the gravel at the edge of the river with our two chests. Father and our only fellow passenger thought best to walk up into the city after they had mother and we boys seated on our chests, to see what could be done about getting out to Martell. So, of course, I had to go along. On the way up, we met a man. Father spoke to him, at which our companion said to Father, "Don't you know better than to speak to him? He can't understand you." But, to our surprise, the man answered in Swedish. He went on to say that he had been asked by Jacob Olsen to see if there might be any newcomers. Jacob was looking for his brother Jens, (my father) and wanted this man to give him a ride to Martell if he was there. (Uncle Jacob came to America one year before we did.) This was surely lucky for us. We piled our chests into his lumber wagon, and he drove us into Martell.

Mother was not feeling well on the journey across the Atlanic, and by the time we arrived at the Swede's home, she was quite ill. After five days, she died. So father was left with us five boys to care for, and without money. The good neighbors took one each of us boys to their homes, excpet Helmer, who was sick. He was left at the Swede's home, and he died about a month later, at the age of five months. Father worked among the neighbors, doing what he could to support Hans, Ole, and John. This was in 1865 (66!), and being about ten years, I was considered old enough to make my own way.

After some time, father heard about the big saw mill at Menomonie, and went there for more steady work. Time went on, and after nearly three years, he sent word with a man that worked at the mill and walked to Martell for a visit, that if Iverson would consent and I was willing, I had better come to Menomonie to work in the mill. Of couse, I wanted to go. In six days, the man was ready to walk back to Menomonie. It was forty-five miles to Menomonie with much of the way only a track between the trees. One morning before sunrise, we started our walk. I held all my wealth in a satchel weighing about twenty-four pounds. When we got to within two miles of Menomonie, my legs refused to go any further. We laid down for a rest. Nils was as willing to take a rest as I was. After a few minutes rest, we started again. This time we got to within one-half a mile of Menomonie, when my feet gave out. I lay down and told Nils to go on and I would come after resting. But Nils sat down also. After a few minutes, he said "Do you see that hill? When we get on top of it, we can see the mill and town just below the hill." At that I jumped up, all nerves, picked up my satchel and led Nils a merry walk. I had not known how near we were to the end. We reached the big pump between the mill and store at 6:50 o'clock. The men were just coming from the boarding house, and among them I saw father. On the second day at Menomonie, I went to work at the mill at $12.00 per month and board. Hours were from six to six. This was in August, 1868.

My job in the mill lasted two weeks, for one day Mr. Dean, Mgr., came to the mill looking for someone to work in the kitchen. I was selected, and my job began with waiting on tables where fifty hungry lumberjacks ate. Among them was "Butter Huns", a big German who liked butter especially well, and from which he derived his name. I also had to wash dishes, and help in a general way wherever I could be useful.

That fall I was sent to the camp at Rice Lake. The lake at that time was only a small pond, and not a big house here except the lumber camp. I helped to cut down the big pine where the city is now located. I helped the cook about the camp in a general way. In the spring it was down the river with the log drive to Menomonie. There I got a job in a barber shop for Mr. Kemenske, together with Fred Sharlou. After about a year I got a job as clerk in a General Store, where I worked about three years. During these three years, I homesteaded 120 acres near Colfax, Wisconsin. Father had taken 160 acres the previous year. On this land I had a small house built and 30 acres broke.

One day Lena Saga came into the store with a young lady whom she introduced to me as her cousin Miss Amelia Johnson from Winchester, Wisconsin. The next day when I met Lena, I told her that Amelia was going to be my girl. So it turned out to be. Lena at that time was keeping company with my friend, John Steendahl. I was then in my early twenties. On March 15th, I quit my job at the store, and on March 16th, 1881, John and Lena, and Amelia and I, got married in that little brick Lutheran church at Menomonie in a double wedding ceremony. After dinner, at banker S.B. French's home, where Lena had worked, we started on our wedding tour with a team of horses hitched to a two-seated cutter and in a snow storm drove out to my homestead. John and Lena drove back to Menomonie, next morning. Your grandmother Amelia, and I, spent about three years on the farm.

One day I got a letter from Ohnstad & Peterson at Menomonie offering me a job as clerk in their store. We sold the homestead and moved back to Menomonie again. I worked in the store about three years, until Oliver Ohnstad graduated from college. He then came home to work in the store. Buisness at that time was such that they could do without my help, so I got a job at the Company Store. After about a year there the company asked me to go to their store in Rice Lake to take charge of the clothing and furnishing goods department. In November 1886, we moved to Rice Lake. In about four years, the logging in that section was about done, trade in the store fell off, and help was cut down. I started a grocery and feed store which I operated until 1897, when I was comissioned as postmaster at Rice Lake by President McKinley. I acted in this capacity until suceeded by W. H. Dunn, during President's Wilson's administration, February, 1916.

We then traded our home (that we had built on Newton Street while working in the Company Store) for a 160 acre farm at Earl, Wisconsin, and then after three years, we sold the farm and moved back to Rice Lake.

I then went to work for the Omaha Railroad Company as coach cleaner until I reached the company's age limit.

On May 25th, 1928, your grandmother, Amelia died. Since then I have been at home with your Aunt Mary and Uncle Abner, your Aunt Alba and Uncle Oliver, your Aunt Palma and Uncle Wendell, and am now with your Aunt Evelyn and Uncle Jasper. I expect to go to Aunt Ardys and Uncle Philemon sometime in the future.

Such is the main trail I have traveled during these 78 years. Up and down many a hill, with many a turn in the trail. I have found both joy and sorrow on the way. God has been good to me, yes, better than I deserve..."
Shared by Hannah Stenberg on Ancestry

Children 1936: Son Orva, died 1916, son Orva, died in 1916. Jasper E. Olsen, who is in the insurance business, Mrs. Oliver Stark (Alba), and Abner Olsen of Hammond-Olsen Lbr. Co., all of Rice Lake; Mrs. Wendell Olson (Palma) of White Rock, S. D.; Marshall Olsen, Presbyterian pastor at Minneapolis; Harold Olsen, assistant athletic director and head basketball coach, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio; and Philemon Olsen with Beckwith Lbr. Co., Hayward. 
Olsen, Petter Edvard Jens. (I45881)
 
458 1865, tjente på garden hos mora og Abraham.
1874, på Såtendal då han gifta seg.
1875, matros ombord på barkskipet Marie. 
Haugland, Johannes Mons. (I605)
 
459 1865, tjente på Kaland:
https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01038241002477

Tjente hos smedemester Christopher Trumpy i Bergen in 1870: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01053362028295

1920 med kår på Nordre Hjellestad hos sønnen Anders: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01074020012900 
Indre Hamre, Monsine Martine Monsdtr. (I43203)
 
460 1865, vaskepike, 1875, lem i fattighus, og i 1885 på Stranges Fattighus i Klostergaten 28 Lønroth, Christiane Marie (I40558)
 
461 1865, Østre Bagholmen Sædahl, Lars Johan Lars. (I28422)
 
462 1865,Tydskebryggen - No. 1 i Kjøbmandsgaarden, tjenesteytende Lønroth, Catharine Christine (I40559)
 
463 1865-census:
Severin Andreas Eriks. age 21 , born Levanger, Ingeborg Anna Eriksdtr. age 19 born Trondheim, Carl Helmer Eriks. age 14, born Strinden, Morten Anton Eriks age 11 born Strinden, Eline Hendriette Eriksdtr. age 7 born Strinden and Ole Peder Eriks. age 4 born Strinden.

Erik and Jonettas son Andreas Severin b. 1845 in Levanger, was born out of wedlock. He married Sophie Camilla b. 1852 and lived in Oslo as a cook on a ship according to 1875-cnsus. Their daughters: Hendriete Marie b. 1879, Anete Valborg b. 1881, Sigrid Ingeborg b. 1890, Margit Ingeborg b. 1893, Signe Kattarine b. 1895 and Marta b. 1898, all Hvidtbro in 1900-census.

1875-census for Trondheim:
Jonetta with Anna Sophie, f. 1857, Elline Hendriette, Karl Hilmar, age 23 (he had a son Emil Alfred b. 1872 out of wedlock by Anna Evensdtr. Holst), Anton Martin, age 20. 
Feragen, Jonetta Henriette (I22281)
 
464 1865-census: Working for her father on her brother's farm in Fræna. She had a son Edvart Lars Larssen Malme b/d 1866 in Fræna by Lars Andreas Rasmussen Nøssevik/Malme/Malmedal.
Reiste til New York på Harald Haarfagre i 1872. 
Selliken, Emerentse Odine (I23445)
 
465 1865-Hjemmedøbt 24/2 af Gd Niels Jørgensen Skaalevig Andreassen, Marte Cathrine (I37955)
 
466 1865-telling for Eritsvær, Tysnes: http://digitalarkivet.uib.no/cgi-win/webcens.exe?slag=visbase&filnamn=f61223&variabel=0&postnr=1469&fulle=true&spraak=n Ersvær, Mikkel Lars. (I11238)
 
467 1865-telling for Vernøen, Tysnes: http://digitalarkivet.uib.no/cgi-win/webcens.exe?slag=visbase&filnamn=f61223&variabel=0&postnr=1936&fulle=true&spraak=n Gift tre ganger. Far: Ole Olsen. 1900-telling for Vernøen, Tysnes: http://digitalarkivet.uib.no/cgi-win/webcens.exe?slag=visbase&filnamn=f01223.wc2&variabel=0&postnr=145&fulle=true&spraak=n Vernøy, Ole Ols. (I11236)
 
468 1865-telling Rolvsvaagbøden: http://129.177.171.80/cgi-win/webcens.exe?slag=visbase&filnamn=f61243&variabel=0&postnr=2218&fulle=true&spraak=n Rolvsvåg, Johanna Klausdtr. (I12400)
 
469 1865-tellinga, Hamre, Sund Nils Nils. Husfader Gaardbruger, Selveier g 27 m Sunds Prgj. 4 10 1 2 2 Brithe Eliasd. hans Kone g 24 k Sunds Prgj. Oline Nilsd. Tjenestepige ug 17 k Sunds Prgj. Mons Nils. hans Broder ug 15 m Sunds Prgj. Brithe Nilsd. hans Søster ug 24 k Sunds Prgj. sinsvag Nils Abrahams. Fostersøn ug 8 m Sunds Prgj. Anne Elisabet Nilsd. hans Datter ug 1 k Sunds Prgj. Hamre, Nils Nils. (I669)
 
470 1865-tellinga:

Distriknr 7 Skoledistrikt 4de Sogn Fane Prestegjeld Fane Gardsnavn SALBU Matrikkel 271 Fornavn Etternavn Familiestatus Yrke Sivilstand Alder Kjønn Fødested Elias Hendriksen hf Gaardbruger Selveier g 43 m Fana Herborg Gregoriusdatter Hans Kone g 39 k Fana Hans Eliassen Deres Søn ug 12 m Fana Hans Hendrik Eliassen Deres Søn ug 9 m Fana Lars Eliassen Deres Søn ug 7 m Fana Gregorius Eliassen Deres Søn ug 5 m Fana Kristi Eliasdatter Deres Datter ug 14 k Fana Martha Eliasdatter Deres Datter ug 2 k Fana Mikkel Hendriksen Tjenestekarl ug 36 m Fana Martha Susanna Hendriksdatter Tjenestepige ug 22 k Fana Hans Hendrik Eliassen Hans Fader Føderaadsmand e 70 m Fana 
Salbu, Elias Hendriks. (I1363)
 
471 1865-tellinga: sinsvag Hamre, Brithe Nilsdtr. (I2100)
 
472 1865-tellingen, enke på Lønningen i sitt 46. år.

http://digitalarkivet.uib.no/cgi-win/webcens.exe?slag=visbase&filnamn=f61249&variabel=0&postnr=3318&fulle=true&spraak=n 
Fana, Rakel Conradsdtr. (I11188)
 
473 1865-tellingen, Rolsvaagbøden, Samnanger: http://digitalarkivet.uib.no/cgi-win/webcens.exe?slag=visbase&filnamn=f61243&variabel=0&postnr=2218&fulle=true&spraak=n Holdhus, Claus Johns. (I12409)
 
474 1865-tellingen, Rolvsvågtræ, Samnanger: http://digitalarkivet.uib.no/cgi-win/webcens.exe?slag=visbase&filnamn=f61243&variabel=0&postnr=2258&fulle=true&spraak=n

Foreldre: Torsten Nesthus og Agathe Jørgensdtr. 
Nesthus, Torgjer Torstens. (I12414)
 
475 1865-tellingen, Stølsneset (nabogard til Nøtenæs), Manger: http://digitalarkivet.uib.no/cgi-win/webcens.exe?slag=visbase&filnamn=f61261&variabel=0&postnr=5218&fulle=true&spraak=n Nøtenæs, Kristoffer Gudmunds. (I12445)
 
476 1865: Borge vestre: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01038131004373
1875: Borgeskogen: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01052165003861
1891: Borgeskogen: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01052832004601

Vestre Borge 1865. Borgeskogen.

Matros, huseier
Peder Olsen fra Borgeskogen f. 30/3-1825 d. 17/11-1900 på Borgeskauen, s.a. Ole Jacobsen. Se Familie 7 - V. Borge 1835.
g. 2/12-1847 m. Helene Marie Knudsdatter fra Ønna u. Klepp f. 7/1-1818 d. 15/4-1897 på Borgeskogen, d.a. Knud Olsen.
1. Othilde Christine f. 17/12-1847 d. 23/4-1853 i Borgeskogen.
2. Marie Sofie Pedersdatter f. 21/1-1850.
3. Petrea Pedersdatter f. 1/11-1851.
4. Ole Christian Pedersen f. 19/9-1853. Overtok foreldrenes hus. Se Familie 19 - V. Borge 1891.
5. Othilde Christine Pedersdatter f. 11/10-1855 g.m. Andreas Fredriksen. Bodde på Borgestadholmen. Se Familie 12 - Borgestad 1910.
6. Maren Sofie Pedersdatter f. 26/4-1859 g.m. enkemann Ludvig Edvard Jacobsen. Se Familie 9 - Borgestad 1910.
7. Knud f. 20/2-1861 d. 27/2-1861. 
Borge, Peder Ols. (I540)
 
477 1865: Holt, Aust-Agder:
http://digitalarkivet.no/cgi-win/webcens.exe?slag=visbase&filnamn=f60914&personpostnr=1828&merk=1828
 
Normann, Henricke Jørgensdtr. (I22284)
 
478 1865: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01038268004717
1891: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01053018002100 
Sunde, Anders Mathias Jakobs. (I45441)
 
479 1865: Nygårdsvik, Serrine Sivertsdatter styrer Faderens Husholdning. Nygaardsvig, Serene Sivertsdtr. (I2021)
 
480 1865: Westre Gade: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01038310012473
1870 Vestre Gade 32, https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01053367017718
1885: Sannan 24a, Klostergaden, Øya: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01053300025833

Av yrke var Bernt trompetèr ved artilleriet, ved 9. batteri.
Da eldstedatteren Bergljot ble født var Bernt og Anna Marie naboer i Holstvei 2 og 10, men ennå ikke gift. Blant fadderne til Bergljot var madam Karen Holm og Jon Holm, og underoffiser Axel Nilsen.

I 1889 reiste Bernt Marius til USA. 1891-tellinga sier han er soldat derover.
Han kom til New York 5. august 1889, via Liverpool og Queenstown (Irland) på skipet Servia. Skulle til Minnesota ifølge listene på Ellis Island.

I USA ble han gift på nytt, med Bessie Grisvold i 1895.

Han "enlisted" i US Army third infantry, ved Fort Snelling i 1890, registrert som musikant og løyntant. Her står det "discharged" 24. okt 1895. Så gikk han rett inn igjen 4. november 1895 til 4. november 98. Med kommentaren "excellent". Og igjen da han var 36 år og 9/12 månederi 3. november 1898 til dicharge 9. november 1901 i Manila.
Blant Minnesota Volunteers in the Spanish American War and the Philippine Insurrection, finner vi en Bernt Nielsen i US Army, third infantry. Han bodde da i Duluth.
Så er det "records of re-inlistments" 10. november 1904, 4. desember 1907 og endte sin term of service i 17th infantry med "service honest and faithful, excellent" 3. desember 1910, og inn igjen 4. desember 1910 (da han var 48 år) 17th infantry, og ut igjen 3. desember 1913 ved Fort McPherson, Georgia, med kommentaren "Exceptional service. Chief Musician. Excellent."

1930-census: Moscow, Latah, Idaho, i huset de eide på South Howard street 108. Teacher, band and music.

Da han døde var han bandmaster with R.C.T.C at University of Idaho, og det hadde han vært i 16 år. I USA brukte han 25. februar som fødselsdato, sikkert en feil innføring ved immigrasjonen. 
Nielsen, Bernt Marius (I235)
 
481 1865; inderst og omreisende handelskarl på Hjørnevig.
Far var Lars Larsen Rasdal.
Em. 1870
1875 Vernon, Dodge, Minnesota, USA 
Hjørnevik, Gulleik Lars. (I31591)
 
482 1868 reiste Magnus som dräng fra Stenbrohult til Danmark. Germundsson, Magnus (I43805)
 
483 1869 fikk Arne Nilsen Systad borgerbrev for handel i Bergen, oppsagt 1879: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/view/37/pc00000000001796
1870 bodde Arne hos søstera Anne som var gift med Ole Madsen Axe fra Hyllestad:
https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01053362006335
1875: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01052295011303 
Systad, Arne Nilsen (I44670)
 
484 1870 - Spring Water, Canoe, Winneshiek, Iowa med første kona Betsy (Brita J.) og foreldra. Andre kona, Martha, bor rett ved, med mor som er enke.
1895 - Clarkfield, Yellow Medicine, Minnesota, med ti barn; CB, Mari, Alfred, Josefine, Oskar, Alena, Lorence, Mathilda, Wallace, Ruth. CB var eldst, født i Iowa og medisinstudent. De andre barna født i Minnesota. Familien hadde vært i USA i 21 år, ifølge tellingen. Naboane heitte både Satendal, Egholmen, Stenevik, Kolbeinsvik, Storebo og Okland, og broren Sjur var ein av dei, det var og Endre Jacobson Heimark og sønene. 
Heimark, Ole Sjurs. (I32214)
 
485 1870 and 1880 Troy, Doniphan, Kansas, USA
1880-census their niece Norah (Mary Leonora) Massey b. 1866 as their adopted daughter.
1910Holton Ward 1, Jackson, Kansas, USA 
Berry, Francis (I20881)
 
486 1870 Bluffton, Winneshiek, Iowa
1900 Westover, Lyman, South Dakota. Då hadde ho vore 28 år gift og 31 år i USA (em. 1869). Står ho hadde født åtte born og hadde fem i live. Budde med sonen Peter og mannen Andrew. 
Troland, Brithe Colbensdtr. (I38417)
 
487 1870 Bluffton, Winneshiek, Iowa ved sidan av søstera Oline
Til Minnesota i 1879-80
1880 Lisbon, Yellow Medicine. Foreldra og broren Sjur bur på farmen med dei, og søstera Gjertrud og familien på nabobruket.
1885 aleine med broren Endre i i Lisbon, Yellow Medicine.
I 1930 bur ho med dottera Larsina (Louisa) Westberg i Montevideo, som Martha Berg. 
Heimark, Marthe Sjursdtr. (I32201)
 
488 1870 bur "Edwin" og "Esther" nær Morris, i Felix, Grundy, Illinois. Tre born hjå dei, John 4, Anna 3 og Ever 2. Med dei bur og Thomas og Malinda (Bergeson) Thompson f. 1845 og Andrew Anderson 18, alle fødd i Noreg. Kaltvedt, Evind Evinds. (I39229)
 
489 1870 Canoe, Winneshiek, Iowa, Magnilda Anderson, domestic servant hos Ole Severson
1880 og 1885 census for Lisbon, Matilda Oleson og Severt Oleson, hun mother-in-law hos Ole Torkelson og Martha. 
Heimark, Magnilde Endresdtr. (I15698)
 
490 1870 census for Jefferson, Wells, Indiana has William born in Pennsylvania, 1850 for Wooster, Wayne, OH has him born in OH.

1880 census for Lancaster, Wells, Indiana:
William and Mary E. with children: Levi H. Mc Afee age 9, James Mc Afee age 7, Orpha Mc Afee age 12.

Williams parents were both born in Ireland.

Second wife of William MacAfee, was Laura Funk b: in Trumbull County, OH d: February 1918 m: June 12, 1889 in Warsaw, IN. Source: http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/m/c/a/Daniel-D-Mcafee/ODT3-0001.html

They were living in Bluffton Ward 2, Wells, Indiana in the 1910 census. Census has William J. born in Ohio.

William has a long list of battles he was involved in in the Civil War.

Obituary for William McAfee : W.J. McAfee Died Suddenly in Detroit : Was Victim of Influenza -- Remains will be brought here for Burial. : Friends and relatives of W. J. McAfee, for years a familiar figure in : Bluffton and Wells County, IN, were saddened this morning by the announcement of : his death, which occurred at six o'clock Monday night at the home of his : daughter, Mrs. Bert Tucker, in Detroit, Michigan, at whose home he was visiting. : Death was caused by an attack of influenza.

: William J. McAfee was born in Wayne County, OH, October 3, 1841, a son of : James and Rachel (Dinsmore) McAfee, natives of County Antrim, Ireland. He came : with his parents to Wells County, IN when he was 12 years of age, and lived with : them here until July 12, 1861, when he enlisted in the United States army, being : the first man to enlist in the three years service in Wells County. : During his army experience, he saw much active service and was a : participant in many of the most important battles of the Civil War, namely: : Stone River, Chickamauga, Mission Ridge Atlanta, and the march to the Sea. He also participated in the grand review at Washington at the close of the war and : was honorably discharged August 5, 1865. He was wounded twice, in the head at : Mission Ridge and in the foot at Kenesaw Mountain. : At the close of the war, he returned to his home in Wells County and : engaged in farming on the old homestead first and later on a farm which he : bought, in Jefferson township. In 1870 he moved to Osage, Kansas and lived : there three years, when he returned to Wells County and lived on an eighty acre : farm in Lancaster township, later buying 160 acres in Harrison township, and in : March, 1885, he moved to Bluffton, where he was en gaged in business for a number : of years. In the later years of his active life he was a mail carrier on one of : the rural routes out of Bluffton for many years.

: Mr. McAfee was married on September 27, 1867 to Mary E. Taylor, a native of : Trumbull County, OH, who passed away many years ago. He was married a second : time on June 12, 1889 to Mrs. Laura Johnson (Funk) at Warsaw, IN, who also preceded him : to death several years ago.

The following children survive to mourn a kind and : loving father: Harry and Ellsworth McAfee of Fort Wayne, IN, James McAfee of : Indianapolis, IN, Mrs. Bert Tucker of Detroit, MI, and Mrs. John Shoemaker. : There are also two (three?) step children, Mrs. Earl Myers of Portland, Oregon, : Guy Johnson of Fitzgerald, GA, and Mrs. George Goodspeed of Bluffton, IN. One : sister also survives him, Mrs. Mary McAfee of Murray, and one sister and one : brother, Mrs. James Earl and Sam McAfee, preceded him in death. : Mr. and Mrs. McAfee also took into their home two grandchildren, Mrs. : Arthur Lowe, of Farmington, Washington, and Mrs. Clinton Rice of Lawton, : Oklahoma, and raised them from early childhood. : Mr. McAfee was a member of the Presbyterian church of this city and was : also a prominent member of Lew Daily Post G. A. R. He was for a nnumber of : years commander of the post. : The body will be brought to Bluffton, IN from Detroit, MI Thursday morning : and taken to McBride's undertaking parlors. Complete funeral arrangements have : not yet been made, but the services will be conducted by the Rev. D. C. : Truesdale, paster of the Presbyterian church. Internment will be in Fairview. 
McAfee, William James (I22126)
 
491 1870 census, Montgomery, Ashland, Ohio:
William Ewing M 76y
Catharine Ewing 79y
Elmer Ewing M 27y (grandson, son of Levi)

William Ewing, of Vermillion township, an Ashland county pioneer, came here from Pennsylvania in 1813.

The gravestone of William Ewing which says age 84 7m 1d which puts his birthday at June 9, 1789. 
Ewing, William (I22223)
 
492 1870 census: farm laborer, 16 at the Levi Heller farm, Nottingham, Wells, Indiana Heckathorn, Benjamin Franklin (I22183)
 
493 1870 Glenwood, Winneshiek, Iowa
1885 Bloomfield, Winneshiek, Iowa

Barn født på Rosvold:
1. Johan Engelsen, 4 Jan 1848
2. Hans Michael Engelsen, 1 Apr 1849
3. Lars Johan Engelsen, 2 Mar 1851 (Lewis Hanson)
4. Georgine Cornelia Engelsdtr., 14 Jul 1852
5. Anna Helene Engelsdtr., 21 Feb 1854
6. Gerhard Parelius Engelsen, 22 Feb 1856
7. Engeline Dorthea Engelsdtr., 11 Mar 1858.
I Glenwood township, Decorah, Iowa:
8. Engeline Dorothea (Dora) Rosvold Dahlen, 1862-1944
9. Christian M. Rosvold, 1865-1951 
Rosvold, Engel Hans. (I28437)
 
494 1870 og 1880 - Mansfield, Freeborn, Minnesota Oleson, Kittil Taralds. (I31820)
 
495 1870 og 1880: Mansfield, Freeborn, Minnesota Oleson, Ole Taralds. (I31819)
 
496 1870 tjente hun hos gullsmed Samuel Bratland i Nykirkemarkeveien 44 rode 5.
1875, tjenestepike hos skipsfører Edvar Hagerup Nilsen som hadde syv barn i Bergen rode 4-44. 
Osen, Oline Sophie Sørensdtr. (I37215)
 
497 1870 vekter i Walsegaarden 16a rode 3 i Bergen.
1875 bord arbeidsmand, rode 23-81, Nordre Klevesmuget 7, med kona og datter hjemme.
Emigrerte i april 1882. 
Dahlseide, Johannes Johannes. (I21954)
 
498 1870 • Glenwood, Winneshiek, Iowa, USA
1880 • Minnetonka, Hennepin, Minnesota, USA
George Hanson Rosvold var nevnt i 1890 etter faren var død. 
Rosvold, Gerhard Parelius (I45472)
 
499 1870 • Hartland, Northwood, Worth, Iowa, USA Høgnerud, Guro Herleiksdtr. (I45617)
 
500 1870 • Trondheim: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01038310014805
1870 • Kristiansund: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01053366006117
1875 • Statsvik, Hitra, hattemaker i Kristiansund: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01052361004070
1880 • Colfax, Dunn, Wisconsin, USA hos broren Lars, med broren Halvor
Hjemme på besøk i 1891-tellingen, bosted i St. Paul, Amerika, farmer: https://www.digitalarkivet.no/census/person/pf01053101000155
1895 • St Paul Ward 3, Ramsey, Minnesota, USA
1900 • Licking, Whatcom, Washington, USA 
Knudson, Ole (I45548)
 

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