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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 851 to 860 of 23,179

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851 According to the 1910 census she had only the one child.

Godmother to Myrtle Hendrickson. 
BENSON, Hannah (I4255)
 
852 According to the 1910 census, both of Anna’s parents were born in Russia. ENNS, Anna (I20980)
 
853 According to the 1910 census, her father was born in Sweden and her mother in Wisconsin. She had had five childen, three still living.

In the 1920 census, she was called Mathilde. Mathilda in the 1930 census. 
ALM, Anna Mathilda (I25202)
 
854 According to the 1910 census, her parents were born in Iowa. JOHNSON, Hilda Louise (I27008)
 
855 According to the 1910 census, his parents were born in Norway. PETERSON, Peter Julius (I27007)
 
856 According to the 1910 census, she had had 1 child, 1 still living. SANDBEAU, May (I5382)
 
857 According to the 1910 census, this was his second marriage, her first. Family: Charles A MARSHALL / Ethel CHRISTY (F10824)
 
858 According to the 1910 census, when he and his parents and brother lived in Fayette County, Iowa, his father was of German extraction.

He is probably the 21 year-old Ivan B Thompson in the 1930 census who lived on a farm very near the Iversons.

According to their marriage certificate, the Ivan Thompson who married Mable Iverson was 24 years old when they married and resided in Montrose. The location at which their marriage was solemnized was Salem in McCook County. 
THOMPSON, Ivan B (I16023)
 
859 According to the 1920 and 1930 censuses, she came to the U.S. in 1911. That was the date she was married. In her passport application, she claimed to have been a resident of the U.S. continuously from 1885 to 1925 and in Portland, Oregon, continuously from 1911 to 1925. She also claimed in her passport application to have emigrated to the U.S. in the last part of June, 1885. {This was when Jøger emigrated, not her.} She was naturalized as a citizen of the U.S. in Northfield and Hennepin County on July 16, 1900.

She is the Bertha Ellingbo, of 118 E. 26th Street N., Portland, Oregon, who arrived in New York on August 21, 1925, aboard the S.S. Stavangerfjord which had departed Oslo on August 11th. By her passport application, she was to have departed from New York on the Bergensfjord on April 11th. Her purpose for visiting Norway was to visit her father.

An article in the April 29, 1929, edition of The Oregonian lists Mrs. J. T. Ellingbo as a speaker “at the meeting of the women” as part of the three-day convention of the Oregon circuit of the Lutheran church which would meet at the Bethlehem Norwegian Lutheran Church.

An article in the December 22, 1929, edition of The Oregonian listed choral singers at various churches. Mrs. J. T. Ellingbo was listed as singing “O Holy Night” at the Bethlehem Norwegian Lutheran Church at 14th between Couch and Davis.

There were several articles in The Oregonian in the 1920s in which she was listed as as singing at the church. In one, she was specifically mentioned as Bertha Ellingbo, contralto. A 1921 article refers to her as Bertha Ellingbo, voice student of Ella Hoberg Tripp.

She is listed 16 times in the Portland city directory, in all of which she was the spouse of Joger. The earliest listing is 1914, the last is 1931.

It’s likely that she is the same person as I16530.

A Bertha Ellingboe, b. 27 Jul 1883, made a claim on Social Security on 18 Oct 1948. Her name was clarified as Bertha Ellingboe on 9 Dec 1977.

The person closest to the birthdate shown here, for Vang, is Berith Torsteinsdatter Kjørlien, b. 22 Jul 1885. It’s unlikely that she was born in Vang. 
Bertha (I10694)
 
860 According to the 1920 census, both of his parents were born in Norway. According to the 1910 census, his mother was born in Iowa.

Called Wilhelm T Iverson of Enger Twp, Steele County, North Dakota, in the 1910 census. At that time he was married to Selma, they had been married for three years, and they had had only the two children. Also in the household was Henry O Iverson, Wilhelm’s brother, and Jennie Larson, a servant. Wilhelm was a farmer.

In the 1920 census, he was married to Cora. The family lived in Fargo where William was a salesman of stock. Living with the family were William’s brother Henry, who had no occupation, and their sister Amanda, a railroad stenographer.

In the 1930 census, he was a farmer in Roosevelt Twp, Beltrami County, Minnesota. Alice and Arthur were no longer at home.

In the 1940 census, he was still a farmer in Roosevelt Twp. William had been educated through the eighth grade. Cora was a college graduate. 
IVERSON, William (I20426)
 

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