Skriv ut sidan - SV: Maja Caisa Safgren Birth & Death Certificates
Anbytarforum
Titel: SV: Maja Caisa Safgren Birth & Death Certificates
Skrivet av: Staffan Bergh skrivet 2019-07-17, 10:36
Hi,
have to be a wet blanket again, sorry :(
Citera
#1425 Johan Carl Palmstrøm, b1829 1855 (?) Kristiansand a), Norway Australia
If the guys behind the palmstrom.net (http://palmstrom.net) website decided to take this off the tree, it's most likely because they have some kind of data behind the decision. Did you ask them about that? I seriously doubt they are trying to hide anything -- you wouldn't put up a website if that is how you are thinking ...
Jonas Palmströms unnamed son #255 must have been born before 1760 (since Jonas died then). Since there is a probate after Jonas, he would probably have been named there, unless he was already dead by 1760. So, no kids after #255 ...
The name Palmström is not very common in Sweden, but:
there is one family of smiths mostly around Vedevåg, Linde (T) around 1750-1800
there's a bunch in Finland (and that may be the source of your P. in Västerbotten: a lot of people fled from the russians when they invaded Finland, and came to Västerbotten and around)
and there are a few soldiers called Palmström
Citera
Peter Andreas Palmstrøm (1803) & Andreas Palmstrøm (1805) (Lorentz 1828 and Elisebeth 1844 & Ole Lauritz 1838 lived in the same street in Tyholmen in Arendal in 1865) They knew each other.
1865 is 10 years after Johan Carl left Kristiansand for the States, and he was born 30 years before that. Lorentz moved to Norway in the 1850's, Andreas (b 1805, his father) came after in 1864. From Wikipedia it appears Tyholmen is the old part of Arendal -- in 1865 maybe everyone in Arendal lived there?
You won't find the Swedish parents of Johan Peter Palmström, the master carpenter, from indexed births -- there will be literally thousands of Johan's and/or Peter/Petter/Per's born during the (guessed) time span of 1760/65, in the part of Sweden closest to Norway alone. Since it doesn't appear to be one of the indexed Palmströms, your hope lies in following the trail backwards. One suggestion is the city archivist of Kristiansand: the sources for the "borgarrulle" are apparently in a card index kept at the city archives. Maybe those sources have a clue?