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 Charlotte Linn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charlotte Linn. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2023

How Noble/Nobel Are We?

My mind was just blown away, dynamite involved, I’m sure! When I shared this with my brother Myron, he felt the same way. Both stunned and completely excited!

Our ancestors, Linns, Olofsons, Andersons, Barquists, and many others, are made up of interesting people whom I’m happy to have gotten to know over the past 45 years of research.

Through my research, I’ve found non-parental events (birth out of wedlock), multiple marriages when a divorce or death happened, family members who adopted neighbor or friend’s children when a parent died, and foster children. I look at each of these combinations as OUR family whether the same blood passes through us all or not. The relationships, the care, the sustained love in these “non-traditional” families is what is important. And, as my ancestors become THEIRS, I believe that THEIR ancestors become mine.

Take a look at the following chart: Here, we see John Olausson Linn and his second wife Sarah Svensdotter, one of their 5 daughters Charlotte (Lottie) Linn married to William Rinquist, and their son Roy Oscar Reinquist. Roy is my second cousin, twice removed.



Now that we've seen the ancestral line from John Linn through Charlotte Linn to Roy, let's look at a second chart:



Here we see a Roy Oscar Hagerty, born on the same date, in the same place as our first Roy. But the parents are Harry Hagerty and Thea Josefina Wretling. Thea's parents are Theodore Adrick Wretling and Anna Brita Ersdotter. And Theodore's parents are Carl Wretling and Amalia Nobel.

So, are these two Roy Oscars, the same, or is this just a coincidence? They are the same person. 

You may recall two posts I wrote on 23 May 2021 and 3 July 2021 about the Rinquist boys being given to a Christian home in Nebraska by their parents, Harry and Thea. Roy Oscar was adopted by Charlottte and William Rinquist when he was 10 and raised as a Reinquist.

I had to stop for a moment in my research and ponder the idea that Amalia Nobel might be from THE Nobel family. Inventors, Nobel Prize. Wealthy. But no. Not in our family. 

But readers, family, friends, it's true. Amalia Nobel is the aunt of the very famous dynamite inventor and namesake of the Nobel Prizes, Alfred Nobel. Amalia's brother Immanual Nobel and his wife Andriette Ahshell had 4 sons:

  • Robert Nobel, a Swedish businessman, industrialist and investor. He was the founder of Branobel, and a pioneer in the Russian oil industry.
  • Ludwig Nobel, was a Swedish-Russian engineer, a noted businessman and a humanitarian. Ludvig Nobel built the largest fortune of any of the Nobel brothers and was one of the world's richest men.
  • Alfred Nobel, a Swedish chemist, engineer, inventor, businessman, and philantropist. He is best known for having bequeathed his fortune to establish the Nobel Prize, though he also made several important contributions to science, holding 355 patents in his lifetime. Nobel's most famous invention was dynamite. 
  • Emil Oscar Nobel, opened a workshop with foundry in St. Petersburg returning to Sweden in 1859 with his youngest sons Emil and Alfred. Emil was the only member of the family to go to college, attending the University of Uppsala. He died in an explosion while experimenting with nitroglycerine. 

And father Immanual Nobel was a Swedish engineer, architect, inventor, and industrialist. He was the inventory of the rotary lathe used in plywood manufacturing.

And so, we are related through adoption to the very famous Nobel family!

Of course, this always leads me to new questions. Why did Theodore Wretling and his wife uproot their family with 8 children to come to the US and settle in Texas? What happened to the family wealth, the knowledge, the ability to invent, their philanthropy? 

In the 3 June 2021 post, we do see an award that Roy Oscar received for his charitable works in Florida. A Linn trait perhaps? Or Nobel trait? Raised by giving, loving parents William and Charlotte Linn Rinquist? Always more to research!



Sunday, May 23, 2021

ADOPTION OF THE HAGERTY BOYS

I wish I knew the entire story. Today I’m sharing what I do know in the hope that one of you may have information that will help me complete the research on this family.

This is an interesting tale of sadness and joy, of love and sacrifice, a few lingering questions, and a portion of the Linn family.

Roy Oscar Hagerty was born on December 14, 1890; brother George Cleveland Hagerty followed on June 10, 1893; and John Henry Hagerty on May 21, 1895. They were born to Harry Hagerty and his wife Josephine Dorothy Wretling Hagerty. Josephine was born Thea Josefina Wretling in Frotuna, Stockholm, Sweden and came to the United States with her family in 1880 when she was just 9 years old. Her family eventually settled in Kansas where she met and married Harry Hagerty, a naturalized citizen from England or Ireland.

Roy, George, and John were all under the age of 10 when, on December 26, 1899, their parents surrendered them to the Christian Children’s Home in Holdrege, Nebraska. This home had opened in 1888 under the care of a pastor in that town. You can read more about the history of this home at the following site:

Christian Children's Home

From the accounts I’ve read, the Christian Children’s Home was clean, orderly, and disciplined, but not cruel or abusive. The three Hagerty boys would have attended school and church activities and had a group of other young children to play with.

Below is the first page of the intake papers for the 3 Hagerty boys in which we see that the parents have been counseled and believe “that it is for the best interest of the children that said adoption be made”.



We don’t know the complete reasons the Hagertys placed their 3 young sons in the Christian Children’s home, or how they came to select a place in the middle of Nebraska when they had been living in Oklahoma. But we can speculate that perhaps their marriage was troubled, it was too difficult to provide for a family of 5, there was abuse, or even that the parents were ill-equipped to be good parents. Whatever the reason, the day after Christmas in 1899, Roy, George and John Hagerty became the wards of the home. And in 1902, the mother Josephine remarries.

It wasn’t long after the boys were placed in the Christian Children’s Home that the eldest, Roy Oscar Hagerty, was adopted. His new family was William Rinquist and his wife, Charlotte Linn Rinquist. Charlotte (Lottie) was the daughter of John and Sarah Linn, thus our Linn connection to this story.

William Rinquist was born in Sweden in 1847 and came to the United States in 1871. Lottie, we know, was born in Iowa to John and Sarah on January 29, 1857. The couple married on July 3, 1884, in Denver, Colorado and moved to Kansas. They had two children, but only one survived.

We see in the 1900 US Federal Census for Diamond Valley, Kansas, William Rinquist, a farmer, his wife Lottie, and their two children Maria Edna Rinquist, born in July of 1890 in Kansas, and adopted son Roy Oscar Rinquist, born in December 1890. He and Maria were the same age. The census also states that Lottie had given birth to two children but one had died. I have no record of that other child.

We also see in the 1900 US Federal Census the listing for the 2 younger brothers, George and John Hagerty, listed as “inmates” at the Christian Children’s Home in Nebraska:


These two Hagerty boys didn’t have much longer to live at the Christian Children’s Home. In 1901, they were adopted by Carl and Betty Hord. In the 1910 US Federal Census, John is 14 and living with his adoptive parents in Plumgrove, Nebraska. George is listed as a 16-year-old hired hand on a farm in Union, Pottawatomie County, Kansas.

The boys’ biological mother, Josephine, remarried in 1902 to William Quilliam who became a captain in the Salvation Army until he was investigated for embezzling money from the organization. It appears that Josephine didn’t have great success with her husbands!

Several interesting facts surround these 3 young men as they grew up. From the article below, you can see that they all had contact with their birth mother. She knew where they were and additional articles show her visits with at least one of her sons.



I’ve tried to find additional info on the biological father, Henry Hagerty, but I’ve been unsuccessful.

John Henry, the youngest, used the last name Hoard/Hord as far as the 1910 census when he was 14 years old living with Carl and Betty Hord, but by the 1920 census, he had returned to using his birth name again, John Henry Hagerty; and he used that last name the rest of his life.

When William Rinquist died in Fresno, California in 1912, his will stipulated that his adopted son Roy Oscar would receive $50; his biological daughter Mary received $3,000.


Were there difficulties in the homes where these young men were raised? At the time, would there normally be a difference of money given either to men and women in a will or to an adopted child? I have no way of knowing as only facts are generally available to the family historian. But it does make me curious about the warmth and contact the 3 had with their birth mother, Josephine, the use of the original last name by one of the boys, and Roy Oscar Rinquist remaining in Kansas while the rest of his family moved to Fresno, perhaps leading to a breakdown in that family and a nominal inheritance.

Our Linn relative, Roy Oscar Hagerty Rinquist, served in World War I, enlisting on December 14, 1917, and discharged on October 3, 1919. Before entering service, he was a streetcar conductor in Kansas City. He was in the Aviation Corps, served in France and, on October 5, 1918, Roy was admitted to the hospital in Lorient, France, for a short stay and was dismissed on October 28 and sent to USN Base #19.

When he returned to the United States, Roy married in 1919 to Olivia Nordenberg and continued his work as a conductor. In 1927, the couple made an ocean trip back to Sweden, coming back through New York on September 5 of that year.

Sometime after the 1940 US Federal Census, the couple moved to Miami, Florida, where Olivia died in 1969. Roy remarried in 1971 to Hilda Nelson; and he died in April 1974. Roy had no children with either woman.

Roy and his brothers are not close relatives, second cousins twice removed. But their story is interesting to me; and at this point in my research, I’m much more interested in the life stories than in collecting more and more names and dates. These stories, I hope, show the humanity, the problems and joys, the lives of those who came before us.