Thrown Into the Sea
Wednesday, November 4, 2020
Road construction
Friday, October 16, 2020
Caroline Heglie
Follow-up post to Ole Heglie.
Caroline Margaretha Heglie was born October 1, 1860 to Mikkel Olsen Heglie and Martha Gusta Andreasdatter Heggenstrom in Stod, Nord Trøndelag Norway, their first child. Mikkel and Martha had been married just a week prior on September 25, 1860. Caroline emigrated to the United States with her family in 1869 and settled in Holt Township, Fillmore County, Minnesota.
Caroline went to school through sixth grade and married Ole Thompson on February 20, 1882. Ole, 33, was twelve years Caroline's senior when they married.
Ole Thompson was born on November 15, 1848 in Norway and emigrated to the United States in 1868. It does not appear that he arrived with any family. Like Caroline, he also received a sixth grade education. Ole, like Caroline's brother Ole, was a section hand for the railroad (1880 Federal census). Perhaps this is how they met.
In 1900, Ole Thompson tried his hand at farming in Norway Township, just east of Lanesboro. By 1910, Ole and Caroline moved to Lanesboro where Ole worked as a street laborer.
Caroline and Ole never had any children. Caroline died January 16, 1942, at the age of 81. Ole died May 5, 1942, at the age of 93. They are both buried in Lanesboro Cemetery.
Thursday, October 15, 2020
Ole Heglie
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| Ole with his older sisters Caroline (b. 1860) and Ellen Marie (b. 1864) |
Ole Andreas Heglie was born April 28, 1868 in Stod, Norway to Mikkel Olsen Heglie and Martha Gusta Andreasdatter Heggenstrom. Ole was third of eight children, and the last to be born in Norway. Ole emigrated to the United States with his family in 1869 and settled in Holt Township, Fillmore County, Minnesota.
Ole is living in the same area in the 1895 Minnesota, 1900 Federal and 1905 Minnesota censuses. They list Ole as living with his parents and working as a railroad worker (1900 Federal) and a day laborer (1895/1905 Minnesota). Interestingly, the 1905 Minnesota census lists his grandmother, Martha’s mother, as being born in Sweden. The 1900 Federal maintains Norway.
The 1900 Federal also lists the family as living on 3rd Street in Carrolton Township, Minnesota. Carrolton and Holt Townships split the town of Lanesboro in half. Depending which census taker they met, there seems to be a different answer on where exactly they lived. But consistently, they seem not to actually live in Lanesboro itself.
The 1910 Federal census lists Martha’s mother as being born in Norway. I am not sure which census taker got the correct information. It does list Martha as speaking Norwegian and not English, however.
Ole’s fate after 1910 is a bit of a mystery. He is buried in Lanesboro Cemetery but the stone only appears to give a birth date. It does not appear that he ever married or had any children. I think this is his death notice:
Fargo Forum and Daily Republican (Fargo, N.D.) October 16, 1917.
Wednesday, October 14, 2020
Assembling the elevator
I recently purchased Walthers' Farmers Cooperative Rural Grain Elevator. Time to put it together. I am just assembling it for now—painting, weathering, and placement will be another day.
Thursday, April 23, 2020
Friday, July 6, 2018
Sto. Domingo
1 I believe this is a weird reference to Goethe's Faust.↩
Monday, December 11, 2017
On shipwrecks.
On the Plausibility and Purpose of Paul’s Sea Voyage in Acts 27


















