This group is for anyone interested in Swedish ancestry, or resources.
Members: 259
Latest Activity: Feb 15, 2020
This is an amazing site with a clickable map to track your ancestors migration in the U.S.
Started by william Michael Schummer Jun 20, 2015. 0 Replies 0 Likes
Started by Lynn Anderson. Last reply by Lynn Anderson May 13, 2015. 10 Replies 0 Likes
Started by Dana Kelly. Last reply by Dana Kelly Jul 15, 2014. 2 Replies 0 Likes
Started by serena clarkson. Last reply by serena clarkson Mar 15, 2014. 8 Replies 0 Likes
Started by Jasper Ann Stain. Last reply by serena clarkson Mar 15, 2014. 8 Replies 0 Likes
Started by Erv Nelson. Last reply by Erv Nelson Feb 17, 2014. 11 Replies 0 Likes
Started by Ron Townsend. Last reply by M Graham May 25, 2013. 12 Replies 0 Likes
Started by beverley whiting. Last reply by beverley whiting Dec 22, 2012. 2 Replies 0 Likes
Started by Virginia Bunn. Last reply by Virginia Bunn Oct 11, 2012. 5 Replies 0 Likes
Started by Nancy Walker. Last reply by Nancy Walker Sep 17, 2012. 1 Reply 0 Likes
Comment
Hello! I am researching my maternal grandfather's family. Last name is Peterson (go figure!) and I have traced it back to a man named Per Johansen
He had a Daughter named Gertrude.
Gertrude married a man named Peter
Peter and Gertrude had a son named Oscar William Peterson. He is my great grandfather.
It is said that Per raised Oscar.
I have these notes regarding Oscar William Peterson:
... and I should add, too, it is very important to get all 3 of the unique Swedish letters right and type them in when searching for place names.
Allan, other places to learn more about a parish in Sweden (they will all be in Swedish!):
The Swedish (state) Church seems to have some web posting for most parish churches... is Ljung kyrka including a picture of the church
Rosenberg, C M. "Geografisk-Statistik Handlexicon Over Sverige." book published in 1880s gave brief notes on most place names in Sweden. Available on microfilm and on line thru Project Runeberg. Not yet finished but all page images are up.
"Svensk Ortförteckning." book in some big libraries. Published periodically by Swedish postal service, telephone service and railways in the 1960s. Down to farm names.
Thank you, Lorraine and Lynn, for your very helpful comments! I am excited to learn about these resources that are helpful in locating old place names.
Allan, I also like to always look to wiki.familysearch.org and type in the parish name if I know it to get a little briefing on the parish. Since it is a wiki, a user augmented encyclopedia, many time there may not be much data added yet, but every parish in Sweden should be there. And of course, it doe not hurt to inquire at google.com just to see what comes up. Be careful though, some common parish names may exist in more than one place in Sweden. Ljung may be one of those. Make sure you get the right one.
It is in Östergötland County, almost straight west of Norrköpping and east of Motala. It was a Parish in the District of Gullberg in the maps prior to 1952.
This is from Genealogical Guidebook & Atlas of Sweden by Finn A Thomsen 1998
Can anyone give me specific info where "Kohagen, Ljungs Land Ljung, Ostergotlands" is located?
Did he die or immigrate? NYQVIST, Gustaf Adolf Severin was born June 14, 1886 (parents Carl Oscar Johansson Nyqvist and Augusta Charlotta Fahlström) in Örgryte parish. Carl died 19 February 1894 and Augusta 24 December 1895. Gustaf was first put in a poor house in Örgryte parish, then in a foster home in Forshälla from Feb 2 1898 to 13 Dec 1901 when he returned to Örgryte. On 4 December 1909 he was listed in the Household Record of Örgryte BII:3 (1908-1913) Bild 141 as being moved to the Book of Missing Persons. I could not find this book, a death record nor a immigration record. Does anyone know what happened to him?
A few various resources for Sweden found at NordicGenealogy.org
© 2024 Created by IIGSExecDirector. Powered by
You need to be a member of Sweden and Swedish Ancestry to add comments!