MARIE ERIKSEN
6 NOVEMBER 1827 NES, HEDMARK, NORWAY |
Kept her LDS baptism a secret until her husband joined the Church |
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Went to Oslo, Norway after losing Petterborg land because of their LDS baptism |
Genealogy | Wrote a poem about her life the last two stanza's of which were written shortly before her death See Art Block, Marie |
Buried in Franklin, Idaho in 1876 shortly after her arrival in Idaho |
Please e-mail us if you have more information on this ancestor familyquilt@juno.com
Written by Helen Renee Evans Bench
This history was compiled from the personal histories of Anne Mathea
Olsen Millard, and Oliane Olsen Taylor.
When Beate (a daughter) was one, the entire future of her family's life was changed by the Latter-day Saint gospel for it was then they became converted to its teachings. Her mother was baptized first but she kept it a secret until a year later when her husband joined. When the Lutheran minister learned about them joining this new religion, he bade them to leave this Peterborg place they were renting. They had but a short time to dispose of a few personal belongings they couldn't take with them. It was a very sad parting for they had become so attached to the country and the lovely Peterborg place. They left no friends for these people had turned bitterly against them. These former friends tormented and made moving as disagreeable as possible. The family had no place to go so they decided to move to Oslo for employment and the family could be found more easily there.
Life in a big city goes well when one has plenty of money or a good job, but when work cannot be had and money for the necessities of life is scarce, it brings a sad chill over one to be there. The first winter in Oslo was a dreadful one. Her father sprained his back and was laid up the entire winter. Her mother suffered illness too. Lack of food and worry caused her mother to lose her baby prematurely that winter and to suffer with the sickness she had. This good mother divided the last morsels of food in the house to her children and went without herself because there was not enough for both.
Spring finally came. It was then that most of the family found employment in a brickyard. All, from the smallest to the largest were willing to work there to provide food for themselves although the salary was very small.
During the next years in Oslo, the family was blessed with much work, so along with their savings and scheming, they finally accumulated enough money to take them to Utah. In June 1875, her parents, Emil, 21, and Beate, 11, sailed for America on the ship "Idaho" and located in a little community east of Preston, Oneida (now Franklin County), Idaho. This little place was known as Worm Creek, and her parents settled just across the street from the present Preston Fifth Ward Chapel in Franklin Stake.
In 1876, Marie Ericksen Olsen passed away. She was unable to stand
the added hardships which came to her with pioneering. She had been
a sufferer of consumption for years. She left a song which she had composed
that told about her life from the cradle to the grave that gave solace
and inspiration to her children. The last verse was composed on her
deathbed.
The Petterborg farm
Petterborg is the first town so name in Prestmoen, in the community of Moen, which lay in a forest on the road from Skelve to Hove. All of the farms in the area had pastures. However, these were not as old as the places down by the beach. It seems to have bene cleared in the first half of the 1700s.
In 1865 the name of the tenant farmer in Petterborg was Ole Olsen.
He owned some of the land where he farmed. He was 41 years old.
He was married to Maria Eriksdatter in 1850. After that he was in
Vienna as an infantryman. Their children:
Anne, Mathea, Johan, Emil, Even, Oliane, and Beate
They were required in work 5 days in the wilderness portion of the land for 1 crown for a summer day and half that for a winter day's work. The rent for the farm was 120 crowns to 180 crowns. They got a horse in the spring for 8 mal. They were allowed to pasture their cows during the winter, and had permission to have 1 cow at home during the summer. They were also required to take care of the priest's cow during the summer. There was a strict prohibition against working in any part of the forest which had not been approved.
Bought in 1865 3 cows, 4 sheep (Ole and Marie were living at Petterborg
then)
Bought in 1875 1 cow, 3 sheep, and 1 pig
Sold in 1865 various vegetables (Ole and Marie were living at Petterborg
then)
Sold in 1875 various vegetables
Please email us if you would like more informartion about the Petterborg farm.