Sunday, September 30, 2012

Elsie Axelina and Anna Aurora Dahlgren







Bruno and Emma’s two daughters and son, Elsie, Anna and Alexander, survived to adulthood.   Elsie and Anna’s stories are the topics for this week’s blog:
____________________________________________________________________
When I was a young girl my Aunt Elsie, William Dahlgren’s sister, would visit and tell family stories.  The story of her father’s sisters Anna and Elsie – her namesake – always touched me deeply.  She told of her father's parents, Bruno and Emma Dahlgren, losing most of their children through sickness and the remaining children taken to live in a New York orphanage.   I imagined all kinds of scenarios about the two girls, my great-aunts, and wondered what had happened to them.  This is what we know today:

ELSIE AXELINA DAHLGREN
Bruno and Emma’s second daughter was born 21 February 1895 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut.  Sometime between 1895 and 1900 the family moved back to Brooklyn, New York and in 1902 Emma died giving birth to their eighth child.  Bruno decided Pennsylvania would be a healthier climate for his remaining children and moved to Bradford, Pennsylvania.  (There is a large Swedish community that gathered close to Bradford in the adjacent town, Jamestown, New York, during this time.) 
Shortly after arriving in Bradford, Ethel, the youngest daughter died from meningitis and was buried in Oakhill Cemetery.  Looking for a better situation for his daughters, Bruno took Elsie and her sister back to New York and placed them in the Kallman Orphanage for Swedish Children. 
New York City Fed Census 1905 listing Elsie and Anna Dahlgren as residents at Kallman's Orphanage.
1905 Census Link:  
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-267-11816-158183-79?cc=1463113



The Kallman Orphanage was opened during a time when the streets of  New York were overrun with orphaned children. Philanthropic groups galvanized people across the U.S. to take in children using the now famous  Orphan Trains.   In New York City,  Gustaf Kallman, a young man from Sweden, saw the same horrific situation among the children from Swedish immigrants. He felt divinely called to help the children of the Swedish population who were not only without parents, but could not speak English.


Kallman's Swedish Children's Orphanage circa 1910.
Kallman's Orphanage History Link:
Shortly after being placed in the orphanage, Anna was adopted.  Elsie was left behind, living out her young life at Kallman’s  separated from her father, brother and sister.  We know very little about her life from this point.  She probably worked in New York and then returned to live near her brother and father in Bradford.  This picture of Alexander with his first wife, Hilda, and their two sons, Francis and Robert include young Elsie in her twenties.
Hilda Dahlgren and her two sons Francis and Robert, Elsie Dahlgren, Alexander Dahlgren
Elsie passed away from tuberculosis at the Stonywold Sanitorium for Single Women near New York City.   Her sister, Anna Aurora Dahlgren Jansen, took her body back to Brooklyn for burial.  According to my father's autobiography,  Alexander remained very close to Elsie.    "The  death of Elsie hit Alexander the hardest as he had helped her to go through secretarial school;   and had high hopes for her.” (1)  Elsie's place of burial in New York City is unknown at this time.
  
Stonywold Sanitorium

Stonywold Sanatorium History Link:
http://localwiki.net/hsl/Stony_Wold_Sanatorium



Brief obituary for Elsie Dahlgren posted by her sister, Anna A. Janson.



Alexander later named his third daughter after his sister, Elsie.  As a child my father would tell me about his dad and the terrible fear that came over him whenever the children became sick.  I specifically remember a story about his sister Elsie that is recounted in his personal history:
 “ It was the winter of ’34 that was the back breaker…as again illness struck everyone in the family in one form or another.  The more seriously effected was Elsie who developed diphtheria…and would miss most of the (school year).  As usual illness in the family would hit Dad very hard and in the case of Elsie he was most upset as he had seen so many of his family die from (similar diseases).  When Elsie survived he was so relieved that he made her a fur coat and adopted her as his pet.” (2)

  1. William Dahlgren’s Personal History, William Dahlgren, pg:8.
  2. William Dahlgren’s Personal History, William Dahlgren, pg:38.
by, Lisa Dahlgren


ANNA AURORA DAHLGREN JANSON ALHOUSE

Anna was born in Southington, Connecticut on the 21 Dec 1896 to Bruno and Emma (Johnson) Dahlgren.  She was just six years old when she lost her mother and 8 years old when she lost her younger sister, Ethel.  After the loss of her sister, Bruno, her father, felt he could no longer care for his children and put Anna and her older sister Elsie in the Kallman Scandinavian Orphanage in Brooklyn, New York in 1904.
Anna was adopted a year later by a well to do Swedish couple, Charles and Hilda Janson.  The Jansons worked as furriers and had a shop on 261 5th Avenue in Manhattan where they also lived. Anna was well loved and taken care of by the Jansons.   Anna missed her sister, Elsie.  Even in her older years Anna would get upset when speaking about Elsie and that she was not adopted with her.  Elsie and Anna kept in touch throughout their lives.
Anna met and fell in love with William Alhouse, the son of German immigrants, Mathais and Anna (Gerkin) Alhouse.  The Jansons did not approve of William at first because he had been previously married and had a young daughter, Arlene, who his parents were helping to raise.  Anna married William anyway.  They eloped and were married in Manhattan, NY on 8 May 1924.  Anna and William first settled down in Jamaica, Queens, NY where their first son William George Alhouse, Jr was born on 10 Jun 1925. 
Anna Aurora  and  William Alhouse
Anna’s adopted father, Charles Janson, passed away on 23 Nov 1927 at which time her adopted mother moved in with Anna and her family.  Anna would take care of Hilda until Hilda’s death.  Bill Alhouse, Jr said he remembered Hilda and Anna speaking in Swedish together especially when they did not want him to understand their conversation.  Bill learned Swedish from hearing his mother and grandmother converse, but he never let them know he understood a word they spoke! Anna and William had their second son in 16 Apr 1935 in New York.  Hilda passed away about 1937.   The family later moved to Stamford, Connecticut.


William Alhouse, Sr. worked as an importer/exporter of chocolate for the Nestles company. He traveled out of country with his work to Belize, Bermuda, Bahamas, and Puerto Rico.  William passed away on 8 May 1962.  Sometime after her husband’s death, Anna moved to California to live close to her oldest son, Bill.   Anna had the opportunity to travel to Sweden once, and she was delighted to have the chance to walk along the streets of Stockholm and to be in the land of her family. There are not many pictures of Anna because she was almost always the person behind the camera taking pictures of everyone else.

Anna passed away in Los Altos, California on 17 Nov 1985. 
by, Paula Dahlgren







Sunday, September 23, 2012

Bruno and Emma Dahlgren - Part II





Bruno and Emma - Southington, Connecticut
Bruno and Emma returned to Brooklyn sometime between 1896 and 1898.  There they had one other little girl, Ethel, born in 1898.  Bruno worked as a tailor for a while and then tried working as an agent.  (United State agents met new immigrants at the dock and helped them find housing and jobs.)  In 1902, tragedy struck again when Emma died in premature childbirth. Bruno was left a widower with four children.  In 1903, he left for Bradford, Pennsylvania and lived on Bank Street in the Swedish settlement, working as a tailor in Bradford.  Aunt Mary once said that he moved to Bradford for the good air, hoping it would be better for the children.  But, even the good air couldn’t protect the family from more loss.  The baby of the family, seven year old, Ethel passed away from meningitis in February 1904. She was buried at Oakhill Cemetery in Bradford.
An advertisement for Bruno's shop in Connecticut

After the loss of Ethel, Bruno seemed to have lost heart.  He returned to Brooklyn in the summer of 1904 and placed his two remaining daughters in the Kallman Scandinavian Orphanage in Brooklyn, leaving Alexander to work for himself in the city at age 16.   The Kallman Orphanage was a Christian home run by a Swedish emigrant who felt called to help other Swedish emigrants who fell on hard times in the new country. Anna, was adopted by a well to do Swedish couple who ran a furrier shop on 5th Avenue in Manhattan.  Anna lived a very happy life and married William Alhouse, an executive for Nestles Chocolate Company.  Elsie was never adopted and spent the rest of her childhood at Kallman’s.
Kallman's Swedish Children's Orphanage where Anna and Elsie lived after Bruno left Bradford, Pennsylvania

Alexander eventually moved to Jamestown, New York  to join his father.  While in Jamestown, Bruno met a widow by the name of Christine Berquist and they married in 1909.  Bruno’s life stabilized in Jamestown.  He and Christine rented a home and let out a couple of the rooms. Bruno’s daughter, Elsie came to live with them after spending her youth at the Kallman Orphange.  Bruno continued to work as a tailor and opened up a shop. He lived in the same place until his death in 1920.  While living in Jamestown, Bruno was involved in several benevolent societies such as Odd Fellows and the Swedish Hundreds Club.  Bruno is buried in Lakeview Cemetery in Jamestown, New York.
Bruno's gravesite in Lake View Cemetery,
Jamestown, New York

Bruno and Cristine's home in Jamestown, New York










       Next  Week:       Anna and Elsie Dahlgren

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Bruno and Emma Dahlgren

Bruno and his wife Emma Charlotta Johansdotter


Bruno was the youngest of six children born to Anders Andreasson and Maja Jonsdotter in Gestad, Älvsborg, Sweden. Getsad is next to Sweden's largest lake, Lake Vänern, which is rich farm land known for its excellent oats.  Local oats were exported to London for horse feed.  Bruno's family were well-to-do farmers in Gestad for centuries.  The family farm, named Skerrud, was passed down through out the years from father to son.  Eventually, many farms in Sweden became too small to subdivide between sons.  The Anders Andreasson family farm was sold during this time and all of his sons had to develop a craft to support themselves.

Bruno's mother died when he was thirteen and the following year he left for Gothenburg to learn the trade of tailoring.  He may have learned his trade from his uncle, Peter Andreasson, who worked as a tailor in Gothenburg.  Bruno's brothers chose careers in stone masonry.  Peter moved to Stockholm and worked in a quarry.  Lars moved to Västernorrland and worked in the Sundsvall area. (Sundsvall burned to the grond in 1888 and was rebuilt with only stone. Its nickname is Stenstaden - Stone City.)  Bruno had one other bother, Anders Johan, who worked in several stone quarries and had a few run-ins with the law.  His final whereabouts are unknown.

Bruno met his wife, Emma Charlotta Johansdotter, in Lidköping.  It is thought that she also worked in the sewing trade.  Perhaps that is how she and Bruno met.  Bruno and Emma married in 1886 and had their first child, Agnes Maria, the following year in 1887.  That same year, they left for America and settled in Brooklyn.  In 1888 Alexander Napoleon, also known as Alexius, was born in Brooklyn,New York.   Shortly, after Alexander's birth, Emma's brother Johan came to stay with them until he could find his own place in Brooklyn.  Two more of Emma's siblings came to the United States, Gustav and Anton.  Johan worked in construction and started a successful construction company.  Sadly, both Anton and Gustav died young.  
Bruno and Emma had one more child, Axel, in Brooklyn before moving to Southington, Connecticut.  They struggled financially, moving from place to place to live.  Bruno and Emma had three more children in Southington - Andrew, Elsie and Anna.   Agnes died from diphtheria, and Axel and Andrew died from scarlet fever within a week of each other while the family lived in Connecticut.

Advertisement for Bruno's store in New York


MORE TO COME....

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Headstone Project


Jan, Linda, Lisa and Paula
Kinzua Bridge - July 2012
During a recent visit to Bradford to see family and work on family research, we discussed what we wanted to do as a  memorial for my father, William Dahlgren who passed away 12 July 2012.  We decided the finest way we could memorialize all of our parents would be to learn about our ancestors and place makers on the graves of those past family members without headstones.  Check this blog for stories about your ancestors and updates on the headstone project!



Grandma Iva Pearl Dahlgren grew up in the area around the Kinzua Bridge.  She and her siblings went to a one room school house in the area and depending on where they lived, they would have to cross the Kinzua Bridge to get to school.  Legend has it that grandma, her brothers and sisters had to learn to walk along the rails and climb down on the trestles in case a train came before they crossed!