Monday, November 26, 2018

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks – Week 47 Thankful for a Compiled Service Record!


This week is about “being thankful” and while I have a lot to be thankful for, I will concentrate on a genealogy find I am very grateful to have received.

Oloff Hansson was one of my husband’s 2nd great-grandfathers. Oloff was born somewhere in Sweden. He first appears in the US Federal Census for Michigan City, La Porte, Indiana. He and his wife Marie were living in house # 132 and his stated occupation was fisherman.[i]  They were a seemingly poor family but over time they had children which increased the family to nine children.

Oloff served with Company E in the 4th Regiment of the Indiana Calvary from August of 1862 until June of 1865 [ii], he then returned to Michigan City to resume life with his family,

The family moved to Chicago before 1880 when they appear in the census living at 254 West Chicago Ave and Oloff continued to his occupation as a fisherman. The youngest child in the family was Enert who was six months old.[iii]

Oloff died in March of 1900, before the census was taken. It seemed I was at a brick wall since I had never found his parents or birthplace. I could find no trace of his widow in the 1900 census and the children were all married by then.

His pension did not appear in the online records at fold three although I was able to find an application and pension number. None of Oloff’s naturalization papers gave a place of birth other than Sweden.

I sent off to NARA for his Compiled Service Record which held quite a bit of biographical information. While I still don’t have his parent’s names or know where he was born, I did get the answers to some of my questions.

According to his pension application, Oloff left Sweden about 1855 and traveled to Germany. In Hamburg he married Maria Hepke at the American Consulate and they left Germany for the United States about 1857. I also learned that Marie had died of childbirth in 1881. After the 1880 census there is no record of the infant Enert so it is possible that he died then as well.

So now I am looking for a Swede who emigrated to Germany and then a married couple, he born in Sweden and she born in Germany, leaving Hamburg about 1857-1859 for America.

I am grateful for this find since it limits my search parameters.


[i] ear: 1860; Census Place: Michigan City, La Porte, Indiana; Roll: M653_275; Page: 389; Image: 391; Family History Library Film: 803275
[ii] Historical Data Systems, comp. U.S., Civil War Soldier Records and Profiles, 1861-1865 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2009.
[iii] Year: 1880; Census Place: Chicago, Cook, Illinois; Roll: 195; Family History Film: 1254195; Page: 163B; Enumeration District: 141; Image: 0521

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