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Showing posts with label Haavig. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Haavig. Show all posts

Monday, November 7, 2016

Maritime Monday: Andreas Eriksen

My 2nd-great-grandmother's brother Andreas Eriksen was born on 18 May 1835 in Avaldsnes, Rogaland, Norway. He was the son of Erik Svendsen Haavig and Marthe Maria Jakobsdatter.

Rogaland fylke, Avaldsnes sokneprestkontor, H/Ha/Haa/L0005: Parish register (official) no. A 5.1, 1825-1841, p. 121. https://media.digitalarkivet.no/en/kb20051108030134

In 1865, he and his wife Marthe Johanne Hansdatter lived in Rennesøy, Rogaland, Norway with Anders Hansen and his family. Andreas was a styrmand (ship's mate).

Rogaland fylke, Rennesøy prestegjeld, Statlig folketelling [Rogaland County, Rennesøy parish, Government census] 178 (RA/S-2231/E), 1865-1865, p. 12.oppb: Riksarkivet. https://media.digitalarkivet.no/en/ft20090731650431

In 1875, Andreas and his family lived in Torvastad, Rogaland, Norway.  He worked as a skipper.

In 1885, Andreas and his family lived in Haugesund, Rogaland, Norway. By this time, he was a skipperborger (skipper/ship master, social layer above the working class).

Haugesund is located on northern end of the strait of Karmsund.

Physical map of Fjords and Sunds between Bergen and Stavanger. By Ulamm (www.maps-for-free.com) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], 29 January 2008. Available from Wikimedia Commons.

Fishing and shipping were important industries in Haugesund. Herring were plentiful in the coastal waters. (The Birth of the Town of Haugesund)

Nordre havn, Haugesund, Stavangers amt. 1900-1910. Riksarkivet [National Archives], Havnedirektoratet [Harbor Directorate]. Public domain. Arkivverkets fotoarkiv.

Monday, December 14, 2015

Mappy Monday: Urban Areas of Karmøy

Urban areas of Karmøy 2005. 20 June 2011. By Statistisk sentralbyrå (Statistisk sentralbyrå tettstedskart 2005) [CC BY 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0)]. Available from Wikimedia Commons.

This map shows the urban areas of  Karmøy, a municipality located in Rogaland, Norway. Most of  Karmøy is located on Karmøy Island.

My 2nd-great-grandmother Marthe Elisabeth Erickson (Eriksdatter) was from Avaldsnes, which is now part of the municipality of Karmøy. Her mother Marthe Maria Jacobsdatter was also from Avaldsnes. Her father Erik Svendsen Haavig was born in Torvastad, which is also now part of Karmøy.

The map also shows the nearby town of Haugesund. Marthe Elisabeth and her sister Marte Marie lived in Haugesund before they emigrated.

Saturday, January 3, 2015

52 Ancestors: Week 1 "Fresh Start": Marthe Elisabeth Erickson

My great-great-grandmother Marthe Elisabeth Erickson (Eriksdatter) was born on 8 April 1853 in Avaldsnes, Rogaland, Norway. She was the youngest child of Erik Svendsen Haavig and Marthe Maria Jacobsdatter.

When Marthe was three years old, her mother died. When she was twelve years old, her father died, and her family splintered into different households. In 1865, after her father's death, she lived with her first cousin Svend Knudsen Torvestad and his wife and son in Haugesund. Her sister Marte Marie lived nearby in Haugesund. Her sister Inger Oline and her brother Svend Jacob lived in separate households in Torvastad. Her brother Andreas lived with his wife in Rennesøy. Her brother Elias may have already immigrated to the United States.

In 1873, Marthe and her brother Svend Jacob immigrated to the United States. They sailed from Bergen, Norway on the Haakon Adelstein and arrived in New York on 20 May 1873. They settled in Chicago. Marthe lived with her sister Marie and Marie's husband Peter Johnson, and she worked in a custom vest shop.

On 31 March 1877, Marthe married Andrew T. Anderson (born Andreas Troedsson), a Swedish immigrant. Their first child, Anna Matilda, was born on 13 April 1878. Their second child, Emma Christina, was born 2 June 1880 according to Bible records, but is listed in the 1880 United States census as born in May 1880, and her age is given as 10 days. The family lived at 288 Division Street, Chicago in 1880. Andrew's niece Christine Nelson was also living with the family at that time.

Marthe and Andrew's daughter Emma Christina died on 9 June 1881. Their next child, my great-grandfather Edward Theodore, was born on 10 August 1882 at the family's home on 97 Townsend Street, Chicago. After my great-grandfather's birth, Marthe and Andrew had four more children: Albert Bernard (born 28 March 1885), Esther Elizabeth (born 1 September 1889), Reuben Alexander (born 19 December 1892), and Ruth Elvira (born 18 June 1896).

In 1900, the family lived on 5915 South Morgan Street, Chicago. In 1910, they lived at 5922 Sangamon Street, Chicago.

Marthe's husband Andrew died on 24 January 1916. In 1920, Marthe lived at 911 W. 72nd, Chicago with her daughters Anna and Ruth. In 1930, she lived at 1511 Balmoral Avenue, Chicago with her daughter Anna.

Marthe died on 7 December 1930 at Swedish Covenant Hospital in Chicago. Her funeral was held at Bethlehem Lutheran Church. She was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery on 10 December 1930.

Rogaland county, Avaldsnes in Avaldsnes, Parish register copy nr. B 2 (1848-1856), Birth and baptism records 1853, page 90. http://www.arkivverket.no/URN:NBN:no-a1450-kb20070306640026.jpg

Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving at New York, New York, 1820-1897. Microfilm Publication M237, 675 rolls. Records of the U.S. Customs Service, Record Group 36. National Archives at Washington, D.C. Available from Ancestry.com. New York, Passenger Lists, 1820-1957 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010.

Cook County, Illinois. Marriage license and return, Andrew Anderson and Marte E. Eriksen, 1877.

Illinois Department of Public Health, Division of Vital Statistics. Death certificate, Martha Elizabeth Anderson, 7 December 1930, no. 32731.

Marthe, 1906

Thursday, June 26, 2014

Those Places Thursday: Avaldsnes, Rogaland, Norway

Avaldsnes med Avaldsnes kyrkje frå Karmsundet. Photo By Michael Spiller from Bradford, UK (Trees). File licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic. Available from Wikimedia Commons.

My great-great-grandmother Marthe Elisabeth Erickson (Eriksdatter) was born in Avaldsnes, Rogaland, Norway on 8 April 1853. Her mother Marthe Maria Jacobsdatter was also born in Avaldsnes. Avaldsnes is now part of the municipality of Karmøy, along with other towns on Karmøy Island, including Torvastad, the birthplace of Marthe's father Erik Svendsen Haavig (or Håvik).

Avaldsnes was named after King Augvald, who had lived there according to the Norse sagas. Harald Fairhair, the first king of Norway, resided at Avaldsnes after the unification of Norway about 870. Notow was a trading port in Avaldsnes.

King Håkon Håkonsson ordered the construction of a church about 1250. The church, St. Olav's Church of Avaldsnes (Olavskirken), was completed in the early 1300s.

 Avaldsneskirken, 2004. Photo by Tor-Egil Farestveit. Available from Wikimedia Commons.

The Virgin Mary's Sewing Needle is a monumental stone near the wall of the church.

Die Nähnadel der Jungfrau Maria [The Sewing Needle of the Virgin Mary]. 29 January 2011. Photo by Frank Hüncke. Available at Wikimedia Commons and www.huencke.de. File licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Germany.

Rekonstruiertes Winkingerlanghaus auf der Insel Bukkoya bei Avalsnes (Reconstructed Viking boathouse at the Nordvegen History Centre). 29 January 2011. Photo by Frank Hüncke.Available at Wikimedia Commons and www.huencke.de. File licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Germany.

Archaeological discoveries at Avaldsnes have shown that the coast of Norway was controlled by kings long before the Viking Age, and confirmed that a royal manor was present in the Middle Ages.

References
Avaldsnes
Avaldsnes – Norway’s oldest royal seat
Avaldsnes, Norway's oldest throne
Avaldsnes in Norway (Viking Ship Museum)
Viking Settlement at Avaldsnes - a feeling of being back in the Viking Age
Church of Avaldsnes
Nordvegen Historiesenter
Pre-Viking hotspot on the Norwegian Coast
Archaeologists discover medieval Royal Estate
Avaldsnes Royal manor project
13th Century Rural Residence Discovered in Norway
Medieval Royal Hall: Royal Norwegian Estate from 13th century found at Avaldsnes
Ancient coin confirms saga