Road 13 Family History

Family History: Rudeen & Rademacher

  • Home
  • About
  • Topics
    • Frasier Family Letters
    • Research Pages
      • John Fraser (1800-1830)
      • John Andrew Frasier (1822-1881)
      • Elizabeth Tainsh (1795-1888)
      • Ann Campbell (1828-1902)
      • The John Martinson Project
    • Kreifels/Blommer Family History
    • Pearson/Brodd Letters
    • Rademacher History
    • Salathiel Timmons, Civil War Soldier
    • Saunders County Probate Records
    • The Curious Case of Daniel Dill
    • The Fraudulent Pension Claim of Benjamin Black
  • Photo Albums
    • Photo Album
  • Subscribe to Posts
  • Links
  • Tech
  • Family Tree
You are here: Home / Pearson / My Life’s Historie, Part 2

My Life’s Historie, Part 2

January 28, 2016 by karen

Next, Ellida writes about the house she lived in. She said it was owned by the coal company. The multi-story buildings housed six families each, and they had nicknames such “Red House” and “Ash House”. Ellida and her family lived in the “Aske husen” or “Ash House”. Unfortunately, the records only show these home by number, not by name. And it’s hard to tell which six are grouped together, they are just listed in numerical order.

Swedish metal workers
Swedish metal workers

Ellida and her family lived in house number 131 out of a total of 554 all together. This seems like a pretty big coal operation to me! She also said her father was a blacksmith at the mine. He sharpened tools and in his spare time, he made horseshoes and knives and did metal repair. As I mentioned last time, his stated occupation was a “stoker” so certainly he was indeed associated with metal work of some kind.

Ellida was very proud of her name and said she was the only girl in the village that had the name “Ellida”. She said it was a Viking name and associated with a magical Viking ship. This is really true! It is associated with the Norse myths about Frithiof the Bold.

She mentions in passing that another sister was born when she was two years old. This is true – we see in the record book that Hulda Lovisa was born in 1884.

Family household record, 1881-1885, showing youngest daughter Hulda Lovisa
Family household record, 1881-1885, showing youngest daughter Hulda Lovisa

Ellida writes very fondly about her sister Ida. She even suggests that Ida prevented her parents from allowing Ellida to be adopted by another family. She says that Ida emigrated to America in 1886 thanks to a ticket from an uncle. The family legend is that the uncle was none other than Christian Pearson! More about that next time.

Filed Under: Pearson

Stay Informed

Click here to subscribe to this website and get a notice evert time there’s an update (no more than once or twice a week)

Follow along

The John Martinson Project

Search this site

Previous Posts

Recent Posts

Whatever happened to Hilda Maria?

June 8, 2025 By karen 1 Comment

Spring Update

May 26, 2025 By karen

Mini-mystery Solved!

February 20, 2025 By karen

Categories

  • 52 Weeks (24)
  • Bass (1)
  • Black (12)
  • Brodd (29)
  • Burkey (11)
  • Campbell (9)
  • Cogburn (3)
  • Dill (22)
  • Frasier (54)
  • General (17)
  • Hanson (35)
  • Hultman (17)
  • John Martinson Project (4)
  • Kreifels (18)
  • Martinson (19)
  • Nebraska (1)
  • On This Date (6)
  • Pearson (63)
  • Photo Album (3)
  • Rademacher (36)
  • Rudeen (54)
  • Scotland Trip 2016 (9)
  • Sweden Trip 2013 (23)
  • Timmons (23)

Other Blogs of Note:

About

This website is where I post detailed information about my genealogy research and travels, plus related family stories and historical … -more-

Search

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in