The Ekdahlsgenealogyresearch
Ekdahl,Bondesson,Viktor,Lundh,Hahlin,Törngren,Konstenius
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 #   Noteringar   Länkad till 
651 Minst en levande person är länkad till denna notering - Detaljer visas inte. Segerlund, Gustav (I1414)
 
652 He had a small restaurant and an equipment supply place in 1971. He was ill in 1981. He lived on the home place which his father had bought of his father Nilo. The house had been built of logs from a storage building on the island. He had built a sauna on the shore. Konstenius, Heikki (I1348)
 
653 He had been injured in the Winter War and died of his injuries 27 juni 1974. He was buried 7 juli 1977. Enna lives just at the beginning of the road leading to her mothers home. She herself needs a walker now because of multiple sclerosis. Koivunen, Lauri Lassila (I1614)
 
654 He has been a teacher and director in the Haparanda schools. He is also handy as a carpenter and builthimself a summer home. He is divorced and remarried. Törngren, Sven (I24)
 
655 Minst en levande person är länkad till denna notering - Detaljer visas inte. Juntii, Rune Evald (I1604)
 
656 Minst en levande person är länkad till denna notering - Detaljer visas inte. Danell, Paul Gustaf (I1584)
 
657 He is a specialist of rebuilding Harley Davidsson. One of his motorbikes were on the first page of one of the big magazines in USA..

Specialist på att bygga om Harley Davidsson motorcyklar. En av hans motorcyklar fick en förstasida på en av de största motorcykeltidningarna i USA. 
Klein, Robert (I732)
 
658 Minst en levande person är länkad till denna notering - Detaljer visas inte. Törngren, Per-Otto (I28)
 
659 He is an ambulance driver. She works as secretary to the diocese. She has a small greenhouse and grows tomatoes and other tender crops. Bjarnestig, Karl Henrik (I66)
 
660 Minst en levande person är länkad till denna notering - Detaljer visas inte. Nurmos, Kaukko (I1431)
 
661 Minst en levande person är länkad till denna notering - Detaljer visas inte. Makikallio, Heikki Eero (I1628)
 
662 Minst en levande person är länkad till denna notering - Detaljer visas inte. Törngren, Carl-Erik (I29)
 
663 He lived above the Arctic Circle at Joksengi. He had installed a sauna in the upstairs of his home where he had a rental unit at some time. Kentta, Paavo Wiljami (I1394)
 
664 He lives in Embarrass, Minnesota, where he worked as a steam shovel operator in the open pit mines. As a young man he had worked on the railroads. He served in the Korean War. He invented a toy steam shovel which he has been unable to market. He and Evelyn were divorced in 1986. Konstenius, Wilbert Pellervo (I1409)
 
665 He may have been injured before birth for he could not go far in school. He loved to walk to visit at his uncle Erik Emils home and to go to town (Ironwood) from there. he got along well with adults as he talked so seriously about grown-up matters yet he was under developed menatally and could act really silly and childishly at other times. He thought a great deal of his mother and was her nurse when she was ill. He wandered all over the country and seemed to manage himself. He became blind but even then found friends to help him out. He died away from home. Mantyla, Walfred (I1378)
 
666 Minst en levande person är länkad till denna notering - Detaljer visas inte. Vuollo, Taimi Kyllikki (I1524)
 
667 Minst en levande person är länkad till denna notering - Detaljer visas inte. Tuomaranta, Reijo Aaro Johannes (I1425)
 
668 He was injured in the Winter War with Russia and died as a result of those injuries. Many young men were lost from the Karunki area as they enlisted together and remained as a unit. Later they broke up such groups so a community would not suffer the loss of so many of their young men. His brother Sakari helped decide what kind of memorial would be erected at the Karunki churchyard for those dying in that war.

His share of the Konstenius estate was the northern strip. It seems logs from the island home or one of the other structures was used to build his home which he called Nurmi. He took the name of Nurmos for his family as the Tuoma name was beeing used by others. His home was built much like the island one except that it was smaller. The inner walls were of logs and covered with what Erik Emil called buffie paper which is heavier than wall-paper. It seems Konstu and his sister Raili bought out the other children. They have built a sauna on the shore and were remoddeling the old house in the summer of 1981 by replacing the floor for one thing. 
Konstenius, Viljami (I1353)
 
669 He was the last home and then only after the death of his mother. He used to visit his uncle Erik Emil frequently on Saturday night or take out his cousin Florence if she was home from college or her teaching positions. He helped Florence choose linoleums for her parents living and dining rooms as well as curtains from the Sears catalog. He worked in a pet shop when he moved to Milwaukee. His wife came from a well off family and wanted an expensive home. He forgot to open the garage doors when adding anti-freeze to his car and was gassed to death. Mantyla, Woodrow (I1376)
 
670 He was undecided betwen a carrer in law or in the military. He took speech in High School and became acquainted with lawyer/politicians Frank Hook and Alvin L. Rummel. Summers he went to Citizens Military Training Camps. After attending the Gogebic Junior College and Nothern Michigan University he went to Washington DC where he worked for the post office in the Department of Agriculture and attended George Washington University.

He enlisted before he could be drafted and was sent to Camp Rucker in Alabama. One day when the drill master was called in, he asked if someone would take over. Bill volunteered since he had been the head of his high school R.O.T.C unit and was familiar witk drills. The drill master was so surprised at the precision with which Bill was drilling the men that he was recommended for Officers Training School at Fort Benning, Georgia. After getting his commission as a second lieutenant he was assigned to cadre at Camp Wolters, Texas. He met Jackie there after someone asked if he would like to meet someone his own size. Her family took to him and they were married shortly. His sisters Florence and Jenny visited them during the Christmas holidays when Bill was acting commander and invited them to eat at the Officers Club. Bill was eventually shipped out with one of the groups he had trained. Jackie and his sister Florence spent his last days in the States with him in DC. (from Florence Elisabeth Konstenius)

He was sent overseas shortly after D-day. He was wounded in action later. His own boys left him for dead after taking whatever valuable he had on him. He heard German being spoken when he first regained consciousness and thought he was a prisoner of war. instead he was in England and found that one of the Ironwood girls, Catherine Yelich, was one of his nurses.

Despite the unhealed wounds in his abdomen he was sent back to the front. Later he was returned to the States and to Eagle Nest, New Mexico, where his wife was staying with her parents. they moved to the Detroit area where Bill entered law school at Wayne University and worked as a claim adjuster for State Farm Insurance. He had to take driving lessons in a hurry in order to keep the job.

After graduation from law school the family now grown to four moved to Baraga in Michigan Upper Penisula where Bill set up a law practice and ran for prosecuting attorney eventually. In later years he was elected a judge and covered a large circuit including Crystal Falls. The district was later reapportioned leaving him just courthouses in Keewenaw Pennisula.. 
Konstenius, William George (I1405)
 
671 He worked for the post office. After Heikkis death he fixed up the home his mother and her brother Heikki had shared. The floor boards were turned over. Everything was painted with a light varnish. A bathroom was installed in part of the old kitchen which was now a bright sunny room. An open stairway to the attic was also part of the kitchen. Konstenius, Olavi (I1422)
 
672 He worked on the farm for his parents for many years and then went to Detroit where he worked in machine shops. He was very attached to his family and home. Mantyla, Theodore (I1374)
 
673 Hela familjen emigrerade till USA 1891 /Bjärasläkten Åke Wiberg Andersson, Jöns (I8539)
 
674 Hela familjen flyttade till Köpinge 22 november 1892. Nydahl, Per (I220)
 
675 Helge gifte sig 30 aug 1911 i Kristina Församling i Jönköping med Signe Brandt och står då noterad som 1:e Konstapeln vid Jönköpings regemente. Han bodde då på Smålands Artilleriregemente, Jönköping och Signe på Liljeholmen 69, Jönköpings län och dog år 1944 i Stockholm, Stockholms län. (källa Lars Ekdahl) Wiberg, Helge Valdemar (I5134)
 
676 HELGE Wiberg I tab 300, II sid 403, enda barn t Sigvald och Anna Maria. G först m CARLA OLSÉN, sedan m MARIA ANNA OLLMERT Wallentin, Helge Frank Anders Sigvald Wiberg (I4226)
 
677 Helsingborgs stadsförsamling Viktor, Miner Carl (I273)
 
678 Hemmansbrukare i Vanneberga 3, Trolle-Ljungby (L). (mtl). Var änkling 1776. Hade hustru 1777-1800. Död efter 1788. Hade 3 barn 1790-1794. Åbo 1795 men inhyses på Vanneberga 3 1796 med hustru och 2 Barn. Hade hustru och 1 barn 1797-1800. Levde 1800. Eriksson, Jöns (I7906)
 
679 Hemmansklyvning - Kronogården har blivet "skatteköpt"
Nils Andersson från Horna gifter sig med Svendborg Hansdotter
Hans Olssons dotter Svendborg gifte sig med Nils Andersson från Horna som flyttade till Håslöv 1785. Gården ingick i indelningsverket som skattehäst-hemman i utbyte mot befrielse från grundskatt till kronan.
Nils får under sin tid som bonde uppleva skiftande skördar på sina åkrar. Reformen från 1757 om storskifte har ej givet något resultat, Tegskifteskartan över Håslöv tillkom redan under 1765. Det dröjer till 1799 innan kartan kommer till användning för sitt verkliga ändamål.
Hos Nils Anderssons föds fem barn, tre flickor och två pojkar. Fyra barn avlider i tidig ålder av olika orsaker. Mässling och koppor var vanliga dödsorsaker. Ensamt barn i gården överlever dottern Hanna.
(Hans Månsson Viby)
 
Hansdotter, Svendborg (I831)
 
680 Hemmansklyvning - Kronogården har blivet "skatteköpt"
Nils Andersson från Horna gifter sig med Svendborg Hansdotter
Hans Olssons dotter Svendborg gifte sig med Nils Andersson från Horna som flyttade till Håslöv 1785. Gården ingick i indelningsverket som skattehäst-hemman i utbyte mot befrielse från grundskatt till kronan.
Nils får under sin tid som bonde uppleva skiftande skördar på sina åkrar. Reformen från 1757 om storskifte har ej givet något resultat, Tegskifteskartan över Håslöv tillkom redan under 1765. Det dröjer till 1799 innan kartan kommer till användning för sitt verkliga ändamål.
Hos Nils Anderssons föds fem barn, tre flickor och två pojkar. Fyra barn avlider i tidig ålder av olika orsaker. Mässling och koppor var vanliga dödsorsaker. Ensamt barn i gården överlever dottern Hanna.
(Hans Månsson Viby) 
Andersson, Skattehemmansåbon Nils (I832)
 
681 Her ancestor was a man with a blackbeard who opposed the King of Sweden in 1550. Mustaparta, Elina (I1449)
 
682 Her husband had many deer or elk heads to show from his hunting. He is now deceased. Segerlund, Jenny (I1389)
 
683 Minst en levande person är länkad till denna notering - Detaljer visas inte. Törngren, Anna-Lisa (I27)
 
684 His family lived on the same island as Hilda's family. Some ancestor had been a bell-maker and thus the family name. His mother did not think Hilda or her family were good enough for her son. Hilda is known to have said that his mother could keep him in a glass case for all she cared. Konstenius, Hilda Kristiina (I1355)
 
685 His father Jöns Pehrsson Nlsson. My brother Ralph when a little boy at Sain Louis MissoriBorn 18 may 1889 died 24 maj 1964. Sjögren was his stepfather.

Ralph and Lillian eventually moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma, where they are both buried. They had three children, Ralph II (my grandfather whose nicknames were Bud and Ace), Violet, and Roger (whose nicknames were Toot and Shorty). At one time, Ralph had the largest paint contracting companies in Oklahoma. His sons worked with him. They painted for the wealthy oil barons, and painted many of the large buildings downtown as they were being built. They were the first ones to paint the "Golden Driller", a giant statue that stands in front of our main fairgrounds exposition building. During the oil boom of the 1950s or 1960s, all their families, including Violet's family, drove in four "silver bullet" motorhomes around the country, painting the Phillips 66 gas stations as they were being built. My mom remembers riding in theirs as a child.
 
Seegren, Ralph (I176)
 
686 His first wife a teacher died after having one child, He then married a half cousin. They have a large herd of dairy cows which are taken care of by a son and a son in law. Segerlund, Joni (I1388)
 
687 Hjalmar Nilsson flyttade från Kärrstorp till Berlin och gifte sig med Paula Schmolls. De fick en dotter, Gerda den 19
april 1886 då de bodde på Langenbeckstrasse 10, 1tr i Berlin. Gerda har genomgått den Hagenska (dotterskolan?) i
Berlin. Hon blev förlovad med filmfotograf Max Filipson i Berlin september 1919. Blev sedan gift med George Düring
september 1921. Skild 1930. Som gift bodde hon i villastaden Erkner utanför Berlin. Efter skillsmässan flyttade hon
åter till föräldrahemmet i Golm som hon sköter om efter moderns död. Hon har i många år tagit lektioner i sång, men
till följd av dålig hälsa har hon inte helt kunnat ägnasig åt sången, som hennes tanke varit. Hon var sista gången i
Sverige 1939. Pappa Hjalmar dog i januari 1945 innan kriget tog slut när Ryskt arteleri fick in 20 fullträffar på deras
hus i Golm. 
Nilsson, Hjalmar (I6558)
 
688 HJALTE Ewert Wiberg, I tab 313, II sid 313-4, född 9 mars 1899, död 14 april 1976. Gift med Inez (ISA) Lundbohm, född 10 okt 1901, död 1 juli 1985
Yrkesmilitär, blev major på A4 1941, överstelöjtnant på A6 1946, överste 1951 och var försvarsområdesbefälhavare 1950-59.
 
Wiberg, Hjalte Ewert (I4260)
 
689 Hjärntumör Jönsson, Joel* Petrus (I7988)
 
690 Hjärsås Jönsdotter, Else (I12115)
 
691 Hjerseke Jönsdotter, Nilla (I9015)
 
692 Hjerseke Andersdotter, Elsa (I9072)
 
693 Hjorthålan Pettersson, Johan Per (I12213)
 
694 Hjorthålan 37 Pettersson, Nils (I12211)
 
695 Hjorthålan 37 Pettersdotter, Ingrid (I12209)
 
696 Hjorthålan 37 Pettersdotter, Elin (I12208)
 
697 Hofgården Olsdotter, Elna (I1972)
 
698 Höganäs began as a small fishing village in the parish of Väsby, documented in 1488 in the written form Høyenæss. In the middle of the 17th century it had 17 homes. Coal was found in the area, and mining started in 1797. In 1798 a railway with wooden rails was built. It was the first of its kind in Sweden and was used to transport coal from the mine to the harbour. The population started to grow and new dwellings were built for the miners. During the 19th century more industries were built using clay for making ceramic products. Höganäs is well known still today for ceramics

Yrke
Gruvarbetare, Kolfogde. Jordbrukare på Nya Zeeland (Miner, Coal Commissioner. Farmer in New Zealand

Norsewood is located in the heart of what was once the dense and towering forest known as the Seventy Mile Bush. The town was established in 1872, with the arrival of 372 Norwegians and 11 Swedes aboard the Norwegian ship Høvding, at Napier on 15 September 1872. The same day, the English ship Ballarat also arrived at Napier, its passengers including around 70 Danes. Høvding arrived again at Napier on 1 December 1873, this time with 369 Norwegians - bringing all together 752 immigrants on the two journeys. Most of these people became Norsewood's pioneer settlers. The remainder fulfilled the same role at the bush settlement of Dannevirke, some 22 kilometres away.

Over the next several years, hundreds of other settlers also found themselves struggling to establish a new life on the many 40-acre bush-covered 'farms' in the vicinity of Norsewood, which - in turn - became the district's main town. These people included many more Norwegians, as well as Swedes, Danes, Germans and Britons. Life for these people was very hard. Promises made by the New Zealand Government, the Hawkes Bay Provincial Government, and their agents, were not always kept. Poverty was well known in the district, as were natural calamities such as the Great Flood of 1880 that isolated the district for a few days, and the major fire of 1888, that destroyed much of Norsewood and left around 170 people homeless.
 
Frederikson, Zacharias (I39669)
 
699 Höganäs began as a small fishing village in the parish of Väsby, documented in 1488 in the written form Høyenæss. In the middle of the 17th century it had 17 homes. Coal was found in the area, and mining started in 1797. In 1798 a railway with wooden rails was built. It was the first of its kind in Sweden and was used to transport coal from the mine to the harbour. The population started to grow and new dwellings were built for the miners. During the 19th century more industries were built using clay for making ceramic products. Höganäs is well known still today for ceramics

Yrke
Gruvarbetare, Kolfogde. Jordbrukare på Nya Zeeland (Miner, Coal Commissioner. Farmer in New Zealand

Norsewood is located in the heart of what was once the dense and towering forest known as the Seventy Mile Bush. The town was established in 1872, with the arrival of 372 Norwegians and 11 Swedes aboard the Norwegian ship Høvding, at Napier on 15 September 1872. The same day, the English ship Ballarat also arrived at Napier, its passengers including around 70 Danes. Høvding arrived again at Napier on 1 December 1873, this time with 369 Norwegians - bringing all together 752 immigrants on the two journeys. Most of these people became Norsewood's pioneer settlers. The remainder fulfilled the same role at the bush settlement of Dannevirke, some 22 kilometres away.

Over the next several years, hundreds of other settlers also found themselves struggling to establish a new life on the many 40-acre bush-covered 'farms' in the vicinity of Norsewood, which - in turn - became the district's main town. These people included many more Norwegians, as well as Swedes, Danes, Germans and Britons. Life for these people was very hard. Promises made by the New Zealand Government, the Hawkes Bay Provincial Government, and their agents, were not always kept. Poverty was well known in the district, as were natural calamities such as the Great Flood of 1880 that isolated the district for a few days, and the major fire of 1888, that destroyed much of Norsewood and left around 170 people homeless.
 
Frederikson, Zacharias (I10652)
 
700 Höganäs Bruksförsamling, Malmöhus län, Skåne, Sverige Bogren, Johanna (I1970)
 

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