Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Magda Alvilde Nilsdatter Hagfors - birth record



Nina (L) and Magda Hagfors (R), sisters

Magda Alvilde Nilsdatter Hagfors was born on 7 May 1898 to Nils Mikal Nilsen, sawmill worker and fisherman, and Petra Amalie Nilsdatter at Hagfors, Vefsn, Nordland, Norway.  She was bapitized on 19 June 1898.
 
Vefsn Parish Register, births / baptisms 1898


Sunday, October 2, 2011

Fustvatnet in Vefsn

This postcard from the 1920's shows the Fustvatnet. The lake is the largest lake in all of Vefsn, and is situated 10 km to the north from Mosjoen. Many of our ancestors were farmers and cotters around this lake. Some of the farms they lived in are: Forsmo, Aspnes, Haukland, Risnes, Ånes, Åkvik, Brækken (Lille Smedseng) and Store-Smedseng ("Big Smedseng") . They also lived in farms in the hills that surrounds the lake, like Hellefjellet and Reinfjellet.

The Forsmo farm were Mathea and Andreas Forsmo were farmers, is south of the lake. Matheas younger sister, Josefine Dorthea, lived in the Aspnes farm with her husband Edvard. This farm was sold out of the family in the 1970`s, and today this is a camping site. Josefine and Edvard had a son, Noralf ("i Aspneset") who emmigrated to the U.S., and died in Arlington, Snohomish county, Washington.
The sisters grew up in the Brekken ("Brækken") farm,  north-east of the lake. Their parents were Nils and Bina (Jakobine Agersborg) Brekken. Their younger brother, Johan Brekken ("Brækken"), became farmer on Brekken when their paretns retired. His granddaughter, Gunnbjørg, is farmer here today.


Aspnes Camping

Aspnes Camping webpage


Aspnes Camping
Graven/Aspnes family page on facebook:
Aspnes camping on facebook

Saturday, September 17, 2011

The Dolstad Church of Vefsn Parish, where our family worshipped since 1735

Our Forsmo and Hagfors families and many of their ancestors worshipped at the Dolstad Church since its construction in 1735.  It was rebuilt over an existing medieval church, where they had previously worshipped. 


DOLSTAD CHURCH, VEFSN PARISH, MOSJOEN, NORWAY


Wikipedia Norway:
http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolstad_kirke

Norwegian Architectural Study:
http://www.ub.uit.no/baser/arkinord/details.php?image_id=511&sessionid=a33c981d9bf468bf3a65f55801d12ccf

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Tormod Andreasen Forsmo - birth record

Tom Fossmo was born as Tormod Andreasen Forsmo on 30 Jan 1894, at Mosjoen, Vefsn, Nordland, Norway, the son of Andreas Petersen Forsmo and Mathea Pauline Nilsdatter.  He was baptized on April 15, 1894 at Dolstad Church.

Tom and Asger Fossmo, 1915 Iowa Census

Tom Fossmo (Tormod Forsmo) and his brother Asger show up in the 1915 state census for Iowa.  They were working as carpenters and lived in Sioux City, Iowa.


Saturday, June 11, 2011

Petra Hagfors' parents, Nils Mikkel Renfjeld & Nikoline Jorgine Oyen

Nils Mikkel Mikkelsen Renfjeld (Reinfjell) also went by the name of Nils på Øya. He was born on 17 Jul 1851 at Mosjoen, Nordland, Norway, son of Mikkel Jakobsen Reinfjell and Ane Sophie Gyth Jonsdatter . He married Nikoline Jorgine Olsdatter Øyen, , on 28 Jun 1874 at Vefsn. He appeared on the census of 1875 at Renfjeld. He died on 21 Apr 1922 at age 70. Nikoline Jorgine Olsdatter Øyen (Øien) was born on 14 Apr 1854 at Mosjoen, Nordland, Norway, daughter of daughter of Ole Pettersen Hundalvatnet and Anna Nilsdatter Øyen. She died on 16 Jul 1917 at age 63.

Friday, June 10, 2011

The Hagfors farm in Moose Lake, Minnesota

This wonderful drawing of the Hagfors Farm in Moose Lake, Minnesota was done by Rick Hagford in 1984 as a Christmas card.  The Nils and Petra Hagfors family lived here from 1919 onward.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Mother of Nils Hagfors, Nikolina Maria Nielsdatter Nedre Bjorna

Nikolina Maria Nielsdatter Bjørna Nedre.  She was born on 17 Jan 1842 at Mosjoen, Nordland, Norway.  She appeared on the census of 1865 at Hagfors.  She married Nils Lai Stenersen Hagfors, son of Stener Eriksen and Oline Persdatter Hundalen, on 14 Oct 1866 at Mosjoen, Nordland, Norway.  She appeared on the census of 1900 at Hagfors.  She died on 1 Jun 1923 at age 81.


Nils & Petra Hagfors Family, photographed 1914

This is a photograph of the Nils & Petra Hagfors family, taken in front of their home at "Over Oyen".  Nils Hagfors emigrated from Mosjoen, Norway in 1914.  This photo was taken the day before he left. 

Magda Hagfors is standing in the back, behind her mother Petra and her baby brother.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Tom Fossmo, 63rd Balloon Company, US Army Air Service, WW1

Tom Fossmo (Tormod Andressen Forsmo) joined the U. S. Army during World War I while living in South Dakota and working as a carpenter.  He enlisted as a private and was sent to the University of North Dakota - Grand Forks, School of Mines Training Detachment for training (8 Jul 1918 - 29 Aug 1918).  He was transferred to the 63rd Balloon Company, Air Service, U.S. Army, Fort Omaha, Nebraska on Aug 30, 1918.   Fort Omaha was the base for the 9th Naval District - Balloon and Airship Division, as was of the largest training centers for observation balloon crews in the United States.  On 21 Feb 1919, he was promoted to Private 1st Class.  Discharged on May 29th, 1919 at Fort Omaha.


Fort Omaha, 1919


More info on the Fort Omaha Balloon School can be found here:
http://www.omahahistory.org/fort_omaha.htm#Balloon%20School

Sunday, May 15, 2011

The family of Tom Fossmo

The Forsmo farm, where Tom Fossmo (Tormod Andreasen Forsmo) was born, is situated south of the Fustvatnet (the Fusta lake), about 12 kilometres north of Mosjoen. His father, Andreas Petersen, was from the Langmoen farm in the same area, and was a son of farmer Peter Andreas Jørgensen and Petrine Andersdatter. They had an older son called Anders Petersen, who later became the farmer on Langmoen after them. His oldest son, Peter Andersen Langmo, appears to have emigrated to America in 1912. Andreas Petersen married Mathea Pauline Nilsdatter Brækken in 1888. It is written that their oldest son, Magnus, was born on the Langmoen farm in 1889. Their second oldest son, Asgar, was born on the Forsmo farm the following year. Then a daughter, Sara, was born in 1892, Tormod in 1894, another daughter, Gudrun, in 1895, Øistein in 1899 and Erling in 1901.

The mother, Mathea Pauline, was from Brækken, one of the Smedseng farms on the other side of the Fustvatnet. She was known as Forsmo-Mathea among her family. She had two younger brothers who went to America. Mikal Alfred went to America in 1892, but returned to Norway after a few years, and married a teacher from the Trøndelag district named Anna Bleke, whom he had met in Vefsn. Another brother, Andreas Mørk, arrived in Alaska in 1903 and became civil in Chicago in 1913. He also changed his name to Andrew Brakken. It is said that he became a logger in Arlington, Washington (Snohomish county), and married an (unknown) American woman. He only returned to Norway one time to visit his family.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Letter from Magnus Forsmo to Tom Fossmo - 1945 just after WW2

This was translated from a photocopy of a letter written in Norwegian to Tom Fossmo by his brother Magnus Forsmo, who had stayed in Norway.  It was written just months after the end of World War Two and is very interesting. 

Letter from Magnus Forsmo to Tom Fossmo
27 Aug 1945. Forsmo, Mosjoen, Norway

Inflation rate is high, goods for purchase are scarce.  Jobs are hard to find.  Magnus is working for Railroad in Mosjoen.  Food is rationed still.  He makes 100 Krone per day, but 20 goes to tax.  Would have made 70-80 Kr per day working for Germans, but he didn't even consider that.

Now possible to go to Oslo by train, soon will be able to go to Bodo and Norvik.  The valley has developed much: railroad tracks everywhere and a station near the cemetery.  Germans did many things to the area: cut down forests that were previously protected, they build many new roads and bridges (Gjerdiakun Bridge, Voldakun Bridge).  German soldiers overtook Gamlehaugen.  In winter, the German Army came through with cars and horses from November (1944?) until end of war.  Soldiers' horses were eating wood off the new houses, many were destroyed.  Things were stolen. 

Fourteen German Army soldiers were stationed at Forsmo to watch the bridge (from 19Dec44 to 15May1945).  The Germans were kind, but stored their belongings in the kitchen.  The family was only allowed to cook in the evening, if they had anything to cook. 

German occupation was a nightmare.  Mosjoen became a military town: they built bunkers and barracks.  The Norwegians lived with violence all around, many jailed and beaten worse than wild animals.  Large mess to clean up the town.  After war, Nazi sympathizers were jailed (150-160 men and women).  German soldiers fathered a number of illegitimate children with Norwegian women.  Things will never be the same and life is looked at differently now.  Communism is more popular, especially with the young, but Magnus is against it.  Unemployment is a problem.  The old political parties are trying to restore power but the Workers party may join the communists for the October 8th election.

Magnus has been at Forsmo since the fall of Norway in 1940.  He traveled down with Erling from Arnes.  Erling was near Oslo for 1 year.  Magnus started Railroad work when he arrived.  Erling had an accident with a handgrenade, it is a miracle that he and Mom (Mathea) were not killed.  She lost her hearing and he hurt his hand (lost use for a while, a finger is crooked now). 

Magnus is not sure how long he will be at Forsmo, his family is in Tonsberg south of Olso and hasn't been there for 2 years.  Will try during summer vacation but hard to get time off.  Weather has been wet.  Sara and John visited 2 weeks ago, they drove from Korgen (Magnus hasn’t been there for 20 years).  Shortage of tobacco, no pipes to purchase so Magnus made his own.  Shoes and working clothes will not be available for another year.  

Will you (Tom) and Asger ever come back to visit?

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Surname/Farmname Origins

Our Forsmo and Hagfors surnames came from farms in the Vefsn municipality.  A comprehensive survey of all the farmnames in Norway was researched and published by Oluf Rygh in "Norske Gaardnavne".  Here are the entries from Rygh's research for the farms that generated our surnames:



Forsmo / Fossmo comes from the farm name Forsmoen Indre, which was a farm dating from at least 1610. It was north of Mosjoen, near the waterfalls at the outlet of the Fustavatn (Fusta Lake).  "Indre" meant "inner" or "nearby".  There was another Forsmoen, further north, but it was called "Ytre", since it was "further out" or "outer".

Hagfors was a farm also named after a waterfall, but south of Mosjoen near Skjerva.  It to dates from at least 1610. 

Friday, May 6, 2011

Mosjoen, Vefsn, Nordland, Norway

The Fossmo (Forsmo) and Hagfors families came from the town of Mosjoen, in the municipality of Vefsn,  the county of Nordland, Norway.  They were part of the Vefsn Parish, and had attended the Dolstad Lutheran Church. 

The town website is here:
http://www.mosjoen.com/

The community website is here:
http://www.vefsn.kommune.no/

Monday, May 2, 2011

Introduction

This blog is dedicated to the ancestors and descendants of Tormod Andreassen Forsmo (Tom Fossmo) and Magda Alvhilde Nilsdatter Hagfors.  Tom Fossmo immigrated into the United States at Ellis Island, New York with his father-in-law, Nils Mikael Nilsen Hagfors, on July 17, 1914.  They had come to America on the oceanliner Aquitania.  They settled in Moose Lake, Carlton County, Minnesota, where they established themselves, before Magda and her mother, Petra Amalie Nilsdatter Renfjeld, immigrated (Magda on August 27, 1915, with her sister Nanna; Petra on September 16, 1919 with 5 children).  The families had come from Mosjoen, Nordland, Norway, a town not far from the Artic Circle.  Tom's parents, Andreas Petersen Forsmo and Mathea Pauline Nilsdatter Smedseng remained in Norway.