lördag 31 maj 2014

This day 1520 - Gustav Vasa

On this day in 1520 the nobleman Gustav Eriksson Vasa set foot on Swedish land after being imprisoned in Denmark for a year. Two years earlier, in 1518, the Danish king Kristian II had demanded hostages in exchange for making negotiations with the head of the Swedish nation, Sten Sture, in Stockholm. Instead of holding his word he sailed home to Denmark with the five hostages, Gustav Vasa beinge the youngest of them. Gustav spent a year in prison at Kalö castle before escaping to Lübeck where he stayed for eight months.

King Kristian beat Sten Sture at the battle on the ice of Åsunden in January 1520. The Swedish resistance stood without a leader. What really happened when Gustav set foot south of Kalmar has been debated. He was still very young, only 24 years old, and maybe leader of the resistance and becoming king was not on top of his agenda.

Negotiations between Swedes and Kristian II took place from June until a deal was made in early September. Everything would be forgotten and nobody would be harmed because of their actions. The king entered Stockholm 7 September and the church bells were ringing to honor the new ruler.

Gustav was at the time visiting his brother-in-law, Joakim Brahe, near Nyköping when he heard the news. Brahe was called to Stockholm and would not listen to Gustav's warnings. Kristian was crowned King of Sweden 4 November and 8-9 November over 80 Swedish noblemen were executed, there among Joakim Brahe and Gustav's father, Erik Johansson Vasa. Gustav became a fugitiv, wanted by the Danes, and now his war against Kristian II really took off.




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fredag 30 maj 2014

Ätran Turist

I have spent 24 hours with my nineth graders and therefor I have not been able to post anything on this blog. Wednesday evening we all met in a village called Ätran deep in the woods of Halland on the west coast. We had rented some cottages and were ready for 24 hours of fun and games. It started of with a contest between two teams were we competed in air rifle shooting, bow, blow pipe and two exercises were we had to co-operate. After that we had a barbeque and some of the kids went swiming and jumping off the trampoline into the heated pool.


We spent the night in the cottages. Some have been newly renovated and were really nice. There are two bedrooms with bunk beds and there was also a bunk bed in the living room. There was a bathroom with a shower and a fully equipped kitchen. The place is popular among German and Danish tourists. There is a lake where you can go fishing or canoeing.

Kubb

The next day we all had breakfast out doors because the weather was really nice. The rest of the day we spent playing kubb, football,  rounders, swiming and just hanging out together. We finished our class trip at a restaurant in Ullared. All the kids seamed really happy about what we did. They have worked really hard to gather money but did not manage to get enough to go to Krakow like we wanted to but in the end what was most important that they did something together.


Ätran Tursit http://www.atrans-turist.nu/

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tisdag 27 maj 2014

Tombstone Tuesday - Kåvestam of Gällstad


Karl Wilhelm Karlsson, also known as KW, started in 1918 a small textile trading company together with Algot Johansson. The business was set up inte parish of Gällstad in the province of Västergötland which held the heart of the Swedish textile industry. When the company started to grow after the first world war the company was turned into a incorporated company, AB KW Karlsson. The positive development continued and new factories were built as the same time as the number of outworkers grew.

In the 1950's the company made business with several European countries. The machines could meet the demand from the shifting fashion industry. In the 1956 winter Olympics the Swedish team wore clothes made by AB KW Karlsson. The blow came in the 1960's and 70's when the Swedish textile industry started to decrease and the company was shut down in 1974.

KW was born 1892 in Gällstad parish. During his life he held several important positions in the local community. He died in 1980 after being a widower for 20 years.

The eight children of KW and his wife Sofia took the sirname Kåvestam, after how the initials K and W sound together when pronounced in Swedish together with the word stam which means trunk of a tree . Their son Åke married my grandmother's cousin Svea.

Source:
Gällstad: Knalle-, bonde- och indsutrisocken by Gällstads Hembygdsförening, published in 1986



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måndag 26 maj 2014

Famous American Swedes - Alexander Samuelson and Coca-Cola


In 1915 the Coca-Cola Comapany regiestered a patent for three different bottles, there among the conture bottle that Alexander Samuelson designed.

Alexander, who was born in 1862 in Kareby parish on the upper west coast, had emigrated from Surte near Gothenburg in 1882, only 20 years old, and was an established and very coveted glass designer. Coca-Cola wanted a bottle that would be easy to recognize in the dark and if the bottle broke the shards would also show from what bottle they came. 16 glassworks were given the task to compete by designing a new bottle. One of the glassworks was CJ Root Glass Company in Terre Haute, Indiana where Alexander Samuelson was super intendant. He and his co-workers were inspired by the shape of the cola-nut and made the bottle in green glass. They won the competition.


Source:
http://www.coca-cola.se/nordic-corp/cc/se_SV/pages/company/history.html
http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Samuelson


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söndag 25 maj 2014

Mother's day and voting in the EU election.

I believe no Swede missed that there are to important things happening today. First of all it is mother's day. A lot of people got confused a couple of weeks ago when our princess Madelen wished the Queen happy mother's day on the day when Americans celebrate their mothers. "Was that today? I thought it was in a couple of weeks!". How we celebrate mother's day is very different from family to family. Some mothers get gifts (my sister in law got a new outdoor clothes horse), many get flowers, some have a cake, and some go out to lunch or dinner. We went out to lunch with appetizers and a main course before we went to my mother-in-law (who we gave flowers] where we had coffee and cake.
Appetizer: West Coast Sallad on dark bread.
The scond thing that has been on people's minds is the election for the European Parliament. In 1979 63%  of the members in the EU voted but the number has decreased to 43% in 2009 (45% of the Swedes). It is believed that this election will see an increase in number of Swedish voters, 56%. It is mainly young people who are starting to show interest in what is happening in the EU. The issues that have been raised are; animal rights, free trade within the EU, enviromental laws and rules, we pay too much to the EU compared with what we get, and the EU has to much power over the individual countries. These are issues both for and against the European Parliament.

Voting card.


Sources:
http://www.aftonbladet.se/nyheter/valaret2014/article18946548.ab
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elections_to_the_European_Parliament
http://www.expressen.se/nyheter/viktigaste-fragorna-for-partierna-i-eu-valet/

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lördag 24 maj 2014

International Street Market, Kulturskolan and a painted face


The "International Street Market" visits different places in Sweden during the year and this week they have been in Halmstad in Halland on the west coast. It is a busy schedule from April to October with a new town almost every week. The main focus is on food from different countries; Thai, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Spain, Australia, France and more. Fudge and cheese from Great Britain, sausages from Germany, Salami and Biscotti from Italy, Crocodileburgers from Australia and lots more. There are so many different kinds of smells and you just want to try everything. I always buy British cheddar and some Italian biscotti. This time I tried langos for the first time and I loved it.

Langos with sour cream, cheese, red onions and caviar.
International Street Market on Facebook. https://www.facebook.com/gmsltd?fref=ts

Kulturskolan is run by the municipality and today was Kulsturskolan's day. Its main purpose is to let children and teenagers learn how to play instruments or sing, theater, art/photography and dancind for a reasonable price. Many say that this is the reason why Sweden have so many good musicians. In Halmstad there were stages in one of the parks where all the children and teenagers performed but there was also a parade that went from the park to city hall.
Children with baloons in the parade.
The whole town was filled with activities of different sorts. Choirs and bands performed in the streets, politicians were trying to get people to vote for their party in tomorrow's EU-election and one of my former studens painted the faces of children for a small fee. My daughter loves to get her face painted and usually she wants to look like a tiger but today she wanted a butterfly. The former student is Isabella Kurkimäki who also has designed the logo for "Your Swedish Heritage".




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fredag 23 maj 2014

Military Memories - Propaganda: A Swedish Tiger



In fall of 1941 Bertil Almqvist created a symbol for the awareness campaign that started in November the same year. The campaign wanted to encourage the Swedish people to keep quiet about anything that could harm neutral Sweden.

At this time Sweden's neighbouring countries were occupied wither by the Germans or the Soviet Union. The symbol was a tiger with yellow and blue stripes with the text En Svensk Tiger. The Swedish word tiger both means the animal and keeps quiet. Apart from wanting people to be quiet the symbol would encourage people to stay strong, just like the tiger.

The symbol has become the symbol of the Swedish Armed Forces but the "Museum of Readiness" owns the rights to the symbol.

Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/En_svensk_tiger

Picture:
Ensvensktigerskylt2 djuramossa
By: Anders Lagerås original by sv:Bertil Almqvist (1902-1972)
License: CC BY-SA 3.0


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torsdag 22 maj 2014

Swedish Author Jan Guillou

Jan Guillou

Author Jan Guillou was born in 1944 in Stockholm. He studied law for two years after finnishing school and after that he became a journalist for Fib/Aktuellt in 1966. In the beginning  the magazine used to publish people's stories but after a while it more and more turned towards being an adult magazine. In 1970 he started working for the magazine Folket i Bild/Kulturfront where he uncoverd the IB-affair, that the government had been doing espoinage. The story made Jan famous.

Since then Jan has been the host of TV-shows and written over 40 books. Ten of them are about Carl Hamilton, a Swedish James Bond, which have all been turned into movies. Another really popular serie is the  four books about the Knights Templar Arn Magnusson and his heirs. Only the two of the books have been turned into movies but they became really popular. The books acutally created a whole new tourist industry for the area where the books take place, in Västergötland. The story is about Arn and the love of his life, Cecilia. They are punished by the church for having sex before they got married and the fact that Arn had slept with Cecilia's sister. Therefor they must make penance for twenty years, he as a Knights Templar in Jerusalem, and she in convent. The story is fascinating and there has been a lot of research done for the story. Jan mixes facts with fiction in a very good way. There are lots of details about people and places that have excisted and that has been important both for Swedish history and world history. While reading you learn about Sweden's early history, how it really became a country.

Guillou's latest serie is about three Norwegian brothers and their lives from 1901 and onwards. I have not read these myself but listening to the story about Arn has made me really curious about his other books and this serie has been recomended to me by a friend who likes the same type of books as I do.

Source:
Jan's own publishing house Pirat Förlaget: http://www.piratforlaget.se/jan-guillou/fakta-om-jan-guillou/

Picture: Jan Guillou på Bok- och biblioteksmässan 2013.
By Albi Olsson
Under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

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onsdag 21 maj 2014

Wordless Wednesday and Wedding Wednesday

This photo comes from my grandfathers collection but I have no clue who the people in the picture are. Neither is there any information about the photographer Noak Jönsson, only one more photo by him in Porträttfynd.

According to Bröllopsguiden, the folk costume went out of fashion towards the end of the 19th century and people started looking more at how the nobility dressed. Since common people could not afford to own a lot of dresses they needed one that could be used for more than one occation so therefor the dress was black up until the 1920's. The bride started carrying a boucet towards the end of the 19th century so we can pin the photo to have been taken somewhere between 1850 and 1920 so far. Wikipedia says that the men held the bouqet from the 18th century and it was not until 1888 that the women held and chose the bouqet so now we have trimmed of almost 40 years. So the picture was taken between 1888 and 1920. The man is wearing a frock coat and those were common up until around 1920 as well.

I am afraid that I will not get any further with this picture but I will keep my eyes open for more information on the photographer.

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tisdag 20 maj 2014

Tuesday's Tip - Uniforms of the Swedish Army

Hans Högman has a site about his genealogy and much more. One thing I found really useful is his information about uniforms of the Swedish Army so I thought I would make it a Tuesday's Tip. I had several photos with men in military uniforms and thanks to Hans's information and pictures I am able to place the pictures in the right time frame.

http://www.algonet.se/~hogman/militaria.htm

Grey uniforms m/1910 and dark blue uniforms m/1886 with hats m/1865-1899


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måndag 19 maj 2014

Matrilineal Monday - My great great grandmother Carolina Boström

Last week I wrote about my great grandmother Agnes Hjelte, and today I will write about her mother Carolina Boström.
Carolina Boström


Carolina was born in April 1849 as the daughter of crofter Adolf Boström and his wife Maja Greta Persdotter. She was the fifth child of seven. The family lived in Risinge parish in Östergötland's county. When Carolina was 21 she gave birth to her first bastard child, a daughter by the name of Emelia Carolina who only lived to be sixteen. She was at the time employed as a maid at a farm not far from her parents' home.

In 1875 she gave birth to her second bastard daughter, Augusta Wilhelmina while whe was living with her parents. Two months after the girl is born the church records say that Carolina is betrothed to Karl Gustaf Andersson who worked as a farm hand on a farm in the same parish. The couple never live on the same farm as far as the church records tell but they stay betrothed without getting married for several years.

Carolina moves around and works as a farm maid in several places. The oldest daughter moves in with her grandparents where she lives when she dies. Carolina and the youngest girl move to the soldier's cottage Svärdstorp in Östra Eneby parish in 1883.  The solder who lived there was Johan Alfred Hjelte, born in 1860, and in November 1884 a bastard son is born, Carl Erik. Carolina is still betrothed but the church records show that she was given a letter releasing her from Karl Gustaf and in December 1885 Johan Alfred and Carolina get married. Agnes, my great grandmother, was born in June 1886 and her younger sister Hanna in June 1888. Karl Erik died in November 1885.

Carolina had a long life. She lived to be 83 years old. Her husband died in 1918 at an age of 58.

I have often wondered about the bad luck the women in my family have had with men but finding out about my great grandmother Agnes becoming a widow twice and her mother's bastards and being betrothed for ten years I can only make one assumption; it is in our genes. ;)



Karolina in front of the cottage where she lived and unkown relatives.


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söndag 18 maj 2014

Sunday's Obituary - Osvald Johansson

My great grandfather Osvald Johansson held several important posts at the town hall and the local worker's union. Therefor it is not strange that there was a large article about him when he passed away at an age of 74. Here are what it says about him:

Osvald Johansson in Ålberga dead 

One of southern Sörmland's most known municipal men, the minicipal accountant, Osvald Johansson, Hälsogården, Ålberga, died last Wednesday 74 years old. He was born in Sundsvall and grew up in Luleå. He was drawn to the south and has been a toolman in Södertälje. There he belonged to the volenteer fire department. In 1916 he came to Stafsjö ironworks.

It was not long before the deceased joined the worker's movement in Stavsjö and became the arbetarkommunen's (branch of the Swedish Social Democrats) chairman when it started in 1917, then as club under Ålberga's arbetarkommun. He has also been the chairman and accountant in the Metal Worker's local branch. Stavsjö's consumtion assosiation has also been one of the deceased's many volunteer field of work, as an auditor and pruduct controller.

His largest contribution has however been in the municipal political field. In 1921 he became a member of what then was Kila municipal executive board and the same year he became a member of the worker's club commitee, in 1924 alternate member of the municipal representative assembly and vice president of the municipal executive board. He has further been a member of the assessment commitee of the social welfare obard, the pension commitee and more. In 1934 he was chosen as chairman of the municipal executive board which he was until the merger of municipalities in 1942.... (unfortunately some of the article has been cut off).

My mother, her sister and their cousin has told me about how the town hall actually was a part of Osvald and his wife Jenny's apartment. The municipalities were not very big back then.




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lördag 17 maj 2014

Snöstorp Parish

Snöstorp parish is located in Halmstad municipality, in the county of Halland, on the west coast of Sweden. Its borders have changed over the years. In 1928 the municipality of Nyhem was transfered to the town of Halmstad and in 2013 more land was added to the parish.

Large parts of the parish used to belong to the Sperlingsholm estate, which manor house is in the parish of Enslöv, but the lord of the manor, Kuylenstjerna, started to sell some of it in the very beginning of the 20th century. It was expencive to buy and build houses within the town limits of Halmstad so the land quickly became populated. There were no rules on how to build houses, meaning the new landowners could build their houses any way they wanted. There were several industries and the railroad in the area or in walking distance which also led to the areas popularity among the working class. School was a problem because the children had to walk either to the village of Snöstorp or Furet so in 1906 Kuylenstjerna donated land so that Nyem would get its own school. Kuylenstjerna also built a watertower and adjoining water pipes in 1908 and in 1912 he gave them five years of free electricity to run the street lights. The school, the janitor's house and the teacher's room also got electricity.

The townsfolk of Nyhem and the countryfolk of the rest of the parish had troubles seeing eye to eye which led to several disputes so it was probably a relief to some when Nyhem was incorporated into the town of Halmstad in 1928.

The church was finnished in 1883. It is one of Sweden's eleven Langlet churches, Langlet being the name of the architect. He was inspired by old Roman cirkular churches but gave the church in Snöstorp six walls. The pulpit is placed in the middle so that the word of God would always be in the centre.



Sources:
http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sn%C3%B6storps_kyrka
The church of Snöstorp: http://www.svenskakyrkan.se/snostorp/snostorps-kyrka
Sperlingsholm: http://runeberg.org/nfcf/0371.html
Nyhem municipality: http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyhems_municipalsamh%C3%A4lle

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fredag 16 maj 2014

Monopoly on alcohol - Systembolaget

During the early 19th century the consumtion of alcohol bacame, as in so many other places in the world, a huge problem in Sweden. This led to the founding of sobriety groups in 1930 and later to teetotalism groups. Falun was the first town to, in 1850, get a firm that would be in charge of all the commerce with booze.

To make booze for yourself became banned in 1860 and in 1865 Gothenburg started a company that would decide who got the right to sell booze and who did not. Several other towns would soon follow Gothenburg's example. It also became illegal for anyone under the age of 18 to buy alcohol. This was the start of Systembolaget - the government's monopoly on alcohol.

The firms that ran the alcohol businesses became very profitable and in 1863 the government decided that one fifth of the profit would go to the state and in 1870 that all of the profits would go to the state. L O Smith who was one of the leading producers of alcoholic beverages protested against the states decition and he also claimed that the companies that ran pubs sold bad products. Smith won the battle and became the sole provider for the companies.

A ration book was introduced in 1914 and if you wanted to buy an alcoholic bevarage at the pub you also had to order something to eat.

During the first world war alcohol became totally banned for a month and barley-broth was also banned for a time. After the war the ration book was introduced to the whole country. Finally, in 1922, alcoholic bevarages were banned all together after the Swedish people had voted on the issue. The ban however, was not in reality a total ban and it was soon abandoned. After nine years of investigations the ration book was cancelled in 1955 due to the bureaucracy and unfairness that came with it.

Everything became much easier. The legal age to buy alchol became 21, you were not allowed to be too intoxicated and you were not allowed to give or sell alcohol to people who were under age. 25% more alchol was sold during the first year. People now had to show their ID if asked when they wanted to buy alcohol and taxation on booze was increased a couple of times to get people to drink less.

The monopoly menat that the state totally controlled what people could buy and where they could buy it but this changed when Sweden became a part of the European Union in 1995. The monopoly on selling booze was kept but production, import, export and selling to restaurants became free.

So what are the consequences? The illegal production of booze in the home has decreased but smuggled booze and the amount of alcohol brought in from abroad has increased. Swedes drink more now than they have done in a hundred years. Now we both take a beer after work, a glass of wine for dinner and drink untill we get really drunk on the weekends.

Source: http://www.systembolaget.se/OmSystembolaget/Systembolagets-historia/historien-om-systembolaget21/

P.S. This does not apply to all Swedes, not all of us get drunk every weekend but a large number still do. D.S.

Copas-vino by Amanda Velocet

Picture license: CC BY-SA 3.0


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torsdag 15 maj 2014

National Tests

Every spring all children in grades 3, 6, and 9 take national tests. Third grades do tests in Swedish and maths, while six-graders and nineth-graders take have them in English, maths, Swedish, natural science (chemistry, physics and biology) and civics oriented subjects (history, civics, geography and religion. When it comes to natural science and civics oriented subjects (could be a bit Swinglish but I do not know how to translate it properly) only one of the subjects in each category is chosen for a school. This year our school got chemistry and history. Secoundary school also has national test for some subjects.

The tests are spread out over the whole semester and each subject has several tests. In English there is one listening test, one reading, one written and one oral. Science has two written exams and one lab text. In third grade the teachers decide when to have the tests where as sixth and nineth grade has specific dates set by the Swedish National Agency for Education, who also creates the tests. The exceptions are the oral tests which the teacher themselves can decide over. 

So why do Swedish students have to go through this? The tests funcion as a support for teachers, they are a guide line, so that they know that they are giving the students the right grades/scores/marks. For me it is a relief when my students pass the tests and show that I am not way off in their grades. The tests are not necessary for the students in any way when it comes to their choices in further studies. The scores are not used when they apply for a program or a school. I think that the tests are something the students both fear and look forward to because for them it is a receipt as well on what they have learned during their years in school.

Tomorrow is the nineth-graders last test and it is the second part in history. Even though it takes a long time grading the tests I always look forward to it because I am so curious about the end results.


Classroom by Håkan Dahlström

Picture source:



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onsdag 14 maj 2014

Workday Wednesday - The Farmer

A farmer's life is so much more than I can give information about here. Therefore I am only going to write down some information that I found interesting. In this case it ended up being about tractors and horses.

In 1900 only 2% of the Swedish population lived in the bigger towns and the rest lived in the country. So most of the population were self-catering farmers.


In 1930 there were about 650 000 hourses in Sweden, where most were used on farms. The number of tractors were less than 10 000 but the number slowly increased during the second world war. After that the number increased rappidly while the number of horses decreased just as quickly. In 1980 there were about 51 000 horses and 190 000 tractors.


Even small farms needed a lot of people in order to run it well. A normal family farm in the 1920's could be 20 acres big and had, apart from the farmer and his family, a farm girl, and a farm hand. The work load was really heavy but the tractors made life a bit easier.



Sources:
http://www.ts.skane.se/fakta/1900talets-jordbruksforandringar


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tisdag 13 maj 2014

Prince Carl Philip's 35th Birthday

Carl Philip Edmund was born 13 May 1979 at the royal castle in Stockholm. For a short while he was the first heir to the throne after his father but the laws were changed and his older sister Viktoria became crown princess instead. He is today the third in line after Viktoria and her daughter Estelle.

The prince spent to years at a private school in Kent, Connecticut and after that he studied natural science in Sweden. In the military he got an officers degree in the navey and became captain in 2007. After his military service was finnished he studied graphical design for two years before doing an internship with National Geographic Society in Washington D.C. and studing graphical design in the states.

Back home he studied business economics and finished his military training but he returned to the states in the spring of 2007 to study design at Rhode Island School of Design. In the fall of 2008 he was back in Sweden to study agriculture which he now has a master's degree in.

Apart from design, agriculture and his military service the prince is also known for his interest in sports and has participated in several motorsports races.





Sourece:
http://www.kungahuset.se/kungafamiljen/hkhprinscarlphilip/biografi.4.187e1841020141a4c88000238.html

Picture source:
http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Philip_van_Zweden#mediaviewer/Bestand:Prins_Carl_Philip.jpg
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY_SA 3.0)
Frankie Fouganthin - Eigen werk


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måndag 12 maj 2014

Matrilineal Monday - My great grandmother Agnes Hjelte

Agnes was born 21 June 1886 as the daughter of Johan Alfred Hjelte and Karolina Boström. Johan Alfred was a soldier which ment that they had a small cottage and some land that came with his job. Karolina had two bastard daughters before she met Johan Alfred. She was engaged to another man since 1875 but they never lived together. She had a bastard son after she moved in with Johan Alfred and the church records say that there was a letter releasing her from the other man in 85. Johan Alfred and Karolina got married in December the same year and Agnes was born six months later. In 1888 the couple's youngest and last child was born, another daughter.

In October 1915 Agnes married Oskar Larsson but he died in June 1917 and Agnes moved back to her parents. In December of 1918 she moved to work as a maid in my great grandfather's household and they got married a year later. My grandmother was born in October 1920 and her sisters in 1922 and 1923. In December 1928 Konrad, my great grandfather, dies of septicimea and leaves Agnes a widow for the second time with three young girls and a farm to run.

When Agnes dies in 1950 she has gone from being a poor soldier's daughter to a poor worker's wife and widow to a stable farmer's wife and widow. At least she got ten good years with her second husband and with the farm they had it better than many others during that time. But it still makes me think about how unfair life can be and how greatful I am over how good I have it compared to those who came before me.

Agnes with her three daughters, Frideborg, Britta and Linnéa.

söndag 11 maj 2014

Military Memories - The Home Front; rations

Even though Sweden did not actively take part in the second world war and was not invaded it did feel the consequences. Every man who was healthy, not too old and had gone through basic military training were stationed somewhere in Sweden. Some fought with the Finns, some deserted to join the Germans and some to join the communists.

Sweden's trade with Great Britain, the USA and Latin America was greatly affected which made trade with the continent much more important. All and all trade with other countries decreased by half during the yars between 1940 and 1945.

Since many men had been called in to the military the Swedish farms could not produce as much as they had. This ment that there was a great shortage in food and Ration stamps were introduced as soon as the war broke out. Coffe, tea, sugar, cocao, flour, bread, pork, cheese, rice, food fat, candles, meats, cream, tobacco, salt, eggs, and a lot more were rationed. A visit to a restaurant needed stamps, as well as buying shoes and some textiles. Books and tips on how to make food last longer and how to reuse things became very popular.

It was, however, easier for people living on the country side than in the larger towns. They could much easier get fresh vegetables and meat without food stamps. My morfar, paternal grandfather, was stationed in Skåne, inte the south of Sweden, and his fondest memory of that time was when the matron on the farm where they were stationed invited them in for dinner one time. It was probably the only time during the war when he got well cooked food and could eat until he was full.

Ration stamps for coffe and tea.

Sources:
http://www.popularhistoria.se/lasarfragor/2012/06/ransonering-vid-krigsutbrottet/


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lördag 10 maj 2014

Gällstad parish

Gällstad parish lies in Västergötland, not far from Borås. During the 1900's the village became famous for its textile industry and women came from all of Sweden to buy cheap clothes from the outlet stores. There are still several stores that sell clothes in the village and therefor it is still a popular place to go shopping, but the number of factories have decreased immensly. When it became cheaper to make clothes in other parts of the world the Swedish textile industry suffered badly.

The church of Gällstad and Södra Säm
The parish used to be the home of some of the most influential families in Sweden. They had close connections to the royal family and Håkan Knutsson Hand married the daughter of King Erik XIV. Håkan's father, Knut Håkansson Hand, died in the battle of Axtorna in Halland, the biggest battle to take place on Swedish soil, in 1565. He was buried inside the church and today the stone he was buried under has been placed on one of the walls in the new church. Knut's wife Märta came from the Drake (Dragon) family who also was one of the important families in Gällstad.



The family shield.


Sources:



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fredag 9 maj 2014

Inventor Gustaf de Laval

Gustaf de Laval was of French decent, the first de Laval's in Sweden arrived in the 1600's. He was born 9 May 1845 in Dalecarlia (Dalarna) as the son of Jacques de Laval, an officer and a land survayor. He took an interest to technology early in life and started building steamengines. His studies at the Institute of Technology in Stockholm went well but when he finished the economy was bad in Sweden and he had a hard time finding a job where he could work with what he had studied. He therefor continued to study at the univeristy of Uppsala and got a doctor's degree in chemistry.

After working with making glass bottles and an engineer he came up with the two inventions that would really start off his career. The first one was the seperator that seperates the cream from the milk and the second one was a steam turbine. Charles Parson had also constructed a steam turbine but de Laval's was much more efficient and it quickly became a big hit.

When Laval died in 1913, of cancer, he had gotten 92 patents and started 37 companies but was poor as a church mouse. He had a head for inventions but not for business.


Ad in Country Gentleman Magazine March 9, 1918
Source: http://www.tekniskamuseet.se/1/1915.html


Picture source: http://www.flickr.com/photos/dok1/12978243584/ by Don O'Brien
Creative Commons: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/

torsdag 8 maj 2014

Those Places Thursday - Kolmården Wildlife Park

Kolmården is the name of a large area, a forest, south of Stockholm, on the border between the provinces of Södermanland and Östergötland. Back in medieval times it was one of the forests that marked the border between Swedes and Geates. Due to the difficulty to travel through the forest the Baltic Sea was used for travels instead. Right on the border was a monestary and next to it an inn. The forest had a bad reputation, being a place for highwaymen and people staying away from the law so it was not a nice road to travel on. As time changed civilization came closer. An ironwork was founded, just north of where the monestary had been, in 1666 and this added to the traffic in the area. The railroad came and Riksväg 1 (highway one) was built through the forest, not far from the old road, and today it is one of the two big highways in Sweden.

The ruins of the churh where the monestary used to be.


For most Swedes the name Kolmården reminds them of the wildlife park that is named after the forest and also lies on the outskirts of it. It is a very popular place to visit and is known for its great dolphin show. The park was built in the early 1960's and is today one of the world's largest wildlife parks.




Link to Kolmården Wildlife Park in English:

http://www.kolmarden.com/sprak/english

onsdag 7 maj 2014

Wedding Wednesday - A Gold Anneversy

Last Sunday I wrote about August and Elin Nilsson's obituaries, today I will write about their Gold Anniversary. 15 February 1952 August and Elin had been married for 50 years. They had during their years as married gone from a small farm to having a proper farm of their own. Out of nine children seven were still alive when they celebrated their anniversary and one of their sons had taken over the farm. Five sons and four daughters gave them several grandchildren.


 There are not many pictures of August and Elin apart from some newspaper clippings, unlike my grandmother's other uncles and aunts whom there are several photos of. August and Elin lived farther from the other siblings and their families and that could have affected their relationship.

tisdag 6 maj 2014

Tuesday's Tip - Bygdeband



Bygdeband is a site managed by Sweden's Hembygdsförbund (local historical society). Here the local societies can upload pictures, information and documents about people, places and events that are tied to the area where the society is located. You can search by category (person, place, society, sources or files) or you can look at the list of societies ordered under counties.



Examples of what you can find are photos from confirmations or schools with names of the people in the picture. The pictures can be both old and new.





måndag 5 maj 2014

1912 Summer Olympic Games in Stockholm

The summer olympics of 1912, also known as the Sunshine olympics, took place during two months, May 5 - July 27, in Stockholm, Sweden. 2547 people (2490 men and 57 women) competed in 102 different events. A new stadium had been built and can still be visited today.

There were both tragedies and funny stories from the Marathon. Portuguese Francisco Lazaro collapsed from dehydration and died the next day. In total half of the 68 people who started never finished because of the heat. A funnier story is about the Japanese Shizo Kanakuri who discontinued the race and instead sat down in a garden where the owners gave him some refreshments. The organizers did not now that he had left the race and 55 years later Kanakuri finished the race by crossing the finish line at the stadium during a visit to Sweden.

The King, Gustav V, attended and was the one who gave medals to the winners. The Swedish royal family has always been very interested in sports and always attends the olympic games.

The Swedes won most of the medals but they also had the biggest squad with almost 500 participants.


Opening ceremony at the 5th Olympic Games held in Stockholm


Prince William of Sweden, the Crown Prince, and King Gustav V of Sweden at the Olympic games

Sources: http://www.stockholmskallan.se/Tema/Olympiska-spelen-i-Stockholm-1912/
http://www.sok.se/olympiskhistoria/olympiskaspel/olympiskaspel/stockholm1912.5.18ea16851076df6362280009871.html

söndag 4 maj 2014

Sunday's Obituary - August and Elin Nilsson

I have four cuttings from newpapers about my mormor's uncle August and his wife Elin. The oldest is when they celebrated their 50th weddin aniversery  and the other three are about their deaths.

August was born in 1875 and Elin in 1881, both in the province of Södermanland. They got marrid in 1902 in Elin's home parish, Björkvik, two month after their first son was born. They then moved to the parish of Östra Husby in the provnice of Östergötland where they stayed for the rest of their lives.

Elin died September 19th, 1966, and August passed just four days later. There had alread been an obituary in the news paper for Elin but when August died they added Elin's facts to August's obituary. They were married for 64 years and had nine children together. They were buried the same day. 




lördag 3 maj 2014

Surname Saturday - Winter from Gotland

My great grandmother Jenny's maiden name was Winter. Growing up I always thought that it was a soldier's name like Hjelte (hero) or Björn (Bear). Grandfather also claimed that there were vallonians on the Winter side of the family. Naturally, I wanted to find out if this was true when I started my genealogy research many years later.

Jenny was born in 1891 in the province of Södermanland, just south of Stockholm. She was the eighth child out of twelve, nineth counting her oldest half brother. Her father was Johan Winter and I knew that he worked as an overseer on a famous estate in Södermanland but I had no idea that he was from Gotland. When I find Johan's birth in the church records it turns out that he was born outside of wedlock but his mother, Hedvig Elisabeth Westberg, moves in with Johan Henrik Winter soon after her son is born. Hedvig Elisabeth and Johan Henrik never marry but their four children all get the surname Winter and so does Hedvig Elisabeth's oldest son.

The Winters on Gotland can trace their roots back to the beginning of the 17th century. Back then there were three men with the surname Winter and two of them are believed to be brothers, Jöns and Mickel Jönsson Winter. Mickel was some sort of craftsman with the title master and Jöns kept records of what the poor people earned from a piece of land next to one of the churches. The third man, Mads or Mauritz, was a tax collector.

But where does the name come from? My theory is that it is German in origin. At the end of the 12th and first half of the 13th century there was a huge number of immigrants in Visby, mostly merchants from Germany. It was they who took the initative to build the ring wall that is still standing around the town of Visby. Of course there were other immigrants to the island as well, especially from Denmark when the island was Danish from 1361 to 1679, but there are several other German immigrants with the name Winter to Sweden later through history. There are no evidence that Winter would be a Vallonian name since they never came to the island, not in any great numbers at least.


Sources: http://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:199413/FULLTEXT01.pdf



fredag 2 maj 2014

The Big Strike of 1980

The conflict started April 25, 1980, when 1400 workers were chosen to strike. April 30 the workers' union LO said no to a conciliation proposal and the employers answer with a lock-out. Over 100 000 people were chosen to start a strike on Maj 1 which led to 700 000 workers being locked-out from their work places. The conflict endured until Maj 12 when SAF, the employers' union, gave in to LO's demand for raised salaries.

The consequences were big. In Stockholm there were no public transportation and all air traffic stopped. This was the largest strike since the strike of 1909 and the metal workers' strike of 1945.

Source: LO - Åren 1980-1999

Welcome!!

I have decided to change blog server because I think wix is very limited when it comes to blogging. I hope you will enjoy what I write here about everything Swedish. There will be much focus on genealogy and family history but I will try to add news, food and everything that ties Sweden and America together.