My ancestors came from both Sweden and Bohemia, settling in Iowa. Through this blog I hope to share information with my own relatives about my Swedish ancestors. Please comment or share any interesting and relevant information you have on this family line.
Showing posts with label Andrew Lundblad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Lundblad. Show all posts

Friday, August 11, 2023

The Carlsson Cabin Update

On March 15 of this year, I posted the following about the Carlsson Cabin:

"One additional piece about this family, a story that has been passed down with photographs as truth is that Anna Maja Abrahamsdotter’s father, Abraham Carlsson (my 3rd great grandfather) built the Carlson cabin in 1850 near Dayton. I would question the accuracy of this for two reasons:

1.     Anna’s parents, Abraham Carlsson and Anna-Brita Johannesdotter never left Sweden. Abraham died there in 1849 and Anna-Brita in 1880.

2.    Even if the cabin were named for Anna Maja’s parents but thought to have been built by Anna’s husband Carl, that couldn’t have happened around 1850. Carl and Anna Maja and their 5 children didn’t emigrate from Sweden until 1884, well after the 1850 date that has been posted.

I wouldn’t doubt that someone from our family lived in that cabin, maybe even a Carlson or the Andersons, but it was likely built by someone else in 1850 who was not in our direct line. Or, someone has the incorrect date and the cabin was built sometime after 1884 when the Anderssons arrived. One person has speculated on Ancestry that Carl Andersson ADDED to the Carlsson cabin. That supposition holds some water as the Anderssons were a family of 7 and might have needed additional room. 

Again, one of the things I love about genealogy research is exploring and learning, but always being open to new information. If I’m incorrect about the cabin, I hope that someone will leave a comment or email me. It certainly would be nice to lay claim to the Carlson Cabin."



Today, I have an update on WHO might have lived in that cabin. It certainly wasn't Abraham Carlsson and his family, nor was it the Anderssons! 

The cabin pictured above lies near the Des Moines River north and east of Pilot Mound in Boone County. Recently, I came across the following narrative about another family who sometimes USED their given name of Carlsson, but also their father's military surname in Sweden of Lundblad.

In 1857 Anders Carlsson Lundblad, his wife Anna Catarina Johansdotter, and their four children, Alfred, Charlie, Charlotte and Mary Louise left for America. They crossed in a sailboat and it took them eight weeks. They went to Burlington, Iowa, and were met by Gus Linn, Andrew's brother-in-law, with an ox team. He took them to Boone, Iowa, where they settled in a log cabin on the banks of the Des Moines River about three miles east of Pilot Mound, Iowa. Augusta and Julia were born there. 

When they first came to America they used their name Lundblad, but it seemed too difficult for people to pronounce so they changed their name to the patronymic Carlson. But in time they found there were so many Carlsons that they changed back to Lundblad. In the family plot in the Linn Cemetery, about two miles north of where they first settled, there are four infants buried, two by the name of Carlson and two by the name of Lundblad.

In 1863 the Lundblads bought a farm up on the prairie two miles north of Pilot Mound, Iowa, and they lived there the rest of their lives. Their home was completely built of black walnut lumber, made from trees felled on their own river land.




The above 1860 US Federal Census is for Carson's Point, Boone County, Iowa, located in Section 9 in the map below. This was the post office spot for the people in this part of Pilot Mound Township. The  Des Moines River encompasses parts of Section 4, 10, 15, 22, etc. on the west side of the river. 

Notice that Gustus Lynn and his wife Catharina Lundblad Linn are listed on the same page; and below Andrew Lundblad's name is Peter Lynn, Gus' brother. Note the very incorrect spelling of the Lundblad name. It's written as "Lumbaugh". No wonder Anders/Andrew Lundblad changed his surname for a time to Carlsson!


Pilot Mound Township, Boone County.



Directly north of Pilot Mound on the above map is the farm Andrew Lundblad and his family lived on from 1863 until he and his wife died. This map is from 1896.

So, what do you think? Anders Carlsson Lundblad and his family living in that cabin on the river in Boone County? Using the name Carlsson during that time and later changing it back to Lundblad when they moved to a different farm? Using wood from their river cabin land to build their new farm house?

It all seems plausible to me. The timing seems right. The name Carlsson makes sense. And the story about the river cabin being in our family works. 

I'd enjoy reading your comments on this new-found information about the Carlsson cabin. Or should we say "Lundblad" cabin????


*Carlson = Carlsson
*Anders = Andrew





Sunday, May 20, 2018

Andrew and Anna Lundblad at Rest

Andrew and Anna Lundblad at rest in the Linn Cemetery
Thanks to Myron and our mom LaVonne for taking and sending this photo while decorating family graves for Memorial Day.

Catherine's Older Brother


Until I started this blog, I hadn't looked at Anders Lundblad very closely other than locating his birth and death and his marriage to Anna, plus a few details about their children. But after writing about Catherine and involving Andrew a bit in her story, off I went to find out more about him and his family. And a large family it was!

The only son of Carl Johan Lundblad and his wife Maria Andersdotter, Anders Carlsson (later known as Andrew Lundblad) was born on Saxebacken farm in Malexander Parish on September 21, 1819.

In the postings about his sister Catherine, we know that Anders left home when his father remarried, working as a laborer on various farms in Malexander Parish. He met Anna Catharina Johansdotter whom he married on December 27, 1844.

The couple had the following children in Sweden:

·         Anders Johan Alfred Lundblad (later known as Alfred), born August 6, 1845;
·         Carl August Lundblad (later known as Charles), born March 25, 1848;
·         Anna Charlotta Lundblad (known later as Charlotte), born May 14, 1850;
·         Hedda Matilda Lundblad, born July 12, 1852, and died March 17, 1856;
·         Maria Lovisa Lundblad (known later as Louisa), born July 19, 1854;
·         Gustaf Melker Lundblad, born June 20, 1856, and died April 14, 1857.

As we learned from the post two weeks ago, Andrew Lundblad and his family immigrated to the United States in 1857. We see them in the moving out records to North America on April 14, 1857. Does that date mean something? When we look at the date 9-month old Gustaf Melker died, they are the same. I had to look several times at the records to be certain I had it right. And I did. When I reviewed Gustaf’s death record, I see that he was buried on April 26, days after the rest of his family had left for North America.

As usual in genealogy research, one item often brings up additional questions or confusion. But I remind myself that the lives our ancestors lived were not the same as those we live today. Were the wheels in motion for sailing before Gustaf died? Tickets purchased? Travel arrangements made? If so, there was little choice this family had but to leave when scheduled. And one other thought: Today we have hospitals and doctors and medicine and tests that reduce child mortality tremendously. But it was not unusual for families to lose several children to what seems to us to be simple diseases. In this case, Gustaf contracted pneumonia, and his 9-month old body could not overcome that. It was just a very sad fact of life.

There was no time for grief. No time to bury their son. And so, Andrew and Anna Lundblad, along with their two surviving sons and two daughters, sailed in steerage for North America, arriving in Boston on July 3, 1857. Once settled in Pilot Mound, near his sister Catherine and her husband Gus Linn, they had more children:

·         Augusta Lundblad, born July 27, 1859;
·         Anna Julia Lundblad, born July 23, 1861;
·         Henrik Julius Lundblad, born July 28, 1866;
·         Edward Lundblad, born in 1868;
·         Maria Lundblad, no birth date known
·         William Lundblad, no birth date known but he died August 22, 1869.

Just like Gus and Catherine, Andrew did well for himself in this new country. He became a citizen and owned his own farm. In the 1870 Federal Agriculture Schedule, we see that the family owned 160 improved acres, 10 unimproved, worth $5,000 total. Machinery and farm implements totaled $250. They owned 8 horses, 7 milch cows, 6 working oxen, 13 other cattle, 11 sheep, 16 swine. They had 750 bushels of spring wheat and 3,000 bushels of Indian corn, in addition to other produce.

Looking at this family over the next several years, I find no news articles other than the usual "newsy, homey" kinds of articles about visiting neighbors or going to town. They led a quiet life, but one that clearly centered around their children. 

ARTICLE FROM DES MOINES REGISTER, JAN 5, 1905: Their 60th Wedding Anniversary
PILOT MOUND, IOWA Jan 5 several relatives and kind admiring friends met at the pleasant home of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Lundblad on Tuesday, December 27, to assist them in celebrating their 60th wedding anniversary.

Mr. and Mrs. Lundblad are pioneer settlers in this vicinity, coming to this country from Sweden in the early days and when the country was almost a wilderness, enduring all the hardships imminent to the life of a new country, and with the patience, determination, perseverance, bent all their energies to build up the happy home they now enjoy, surrounded by scores of kind friends and acquaintances.

It has been the writer's privilege to live a near neighbor to this illustrious couple for many years and they have always been ready to grant any favor of accommodation in their power. Many are the kind deeds that can be attributed to their willing hands, many the kind and encouraging words spoken by them to cheer, comfort and encourage their friends in diistress and trouble.

This venerable couple have seven children to comfort them in their declining years. Alfred Lundblad, Mrs. Charlotte Peterson and Mrs. Augusta Bergendahl living in Pilot Mound Township, C. A. Lundblad, Mrs. Mary L. Nelson and Miss Julia Lundblad, living in Dayton, Iowa, and Henry Lundblad, who lives near Laurens, Iowa.

Ten years ago this couple celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. At that time there were present seven children, twenty-three grandchildren and many friends. They now have twenty-eight grandchildren and twelve great grandchildren.

While this couple is quite aged, they are enjoying reasonably good health. Mrs. Lundblad doing her own housework, and Mr. Lundblad does light work and his own chores, while when the weather is fine, they drive eight miles to church.

Heaven has bounteously lengthened out the lives of this venerable couple and their many friends pray that the Father of all mercies will smile on their declining years and bless them.

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UNSOURCED INFORMATION: In 1894 Andrew and Anna celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. The Dayton Lutheran Church presented him with a gold headed cane and her with a gold band ring. After his death the cane went in turn to Alfred, Charlie and Henry and now is with Henry's son, Frank. The ring is with Charlotte's daughter, Callie Huglin.

NOTE: Wouldn't it be fun to see those two items? I hope they are still in their family.

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Anna Lundblad died on January 18, 1907, at age 82 and is buried in the Linn Cemetery. Husband Andrew Lundblad died a year later on February 23, 1908, at age 88 and is also buried at the Linn Cemetery.

Andrew, Catherine, and Maria, the three siblings, all died at the age of 88. An amazing fact!

Obituary in Dayton Review, January 31, 1907,
page 4

Obituary in Dayton Review, March 5, 1908,
page 1