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Matches 51 to 100 of 142

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
51 Lived in Yakima, WA Denbrook Lorraine Hattie (I155415)
 
52 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I155655)
 
53 Marriage Notes for CARL SPLITTGERBER and EVA DAMROSE:
J. Savre wrote: "I found the marriage record of August Splittgerber andEva Dumrose. It's dated 24 December 1843, and
reads: Bachelor August Splittgerber, resident of Debenke and maiden Eva Dumrose of the same place were married in the
church in Debenke. August's age is given as 25 years and 3 months. If that's right, it means he was born about September
1818." 
Splittgerber Carl August (I155509)
 
54 Massinglokken: little place with a fence around it that is part of the Massing farm.

Source: Ragnhild Kjorstad
 
Massinglokken Ane M. Amundsdatter (I145733)
 
55 Massinglokken: little place with a fence around it that is part of the Massing farm.

Source: Ragnhild Kjorstad
 
Massinglokken Ammel Amund Amundsen (I145763)
 
56 Massinglokken: little place with a fence around it that is part of the Massing farm.

Source: Ragnhild Kjorstad
 
Massinglokken Mathias J. Amundsen (I145764)
 
57 Massinglokken: little place with a fence around it that is part of the Massing farm.

Source: Ragnhild Kjorstad
 
Massinglokken Amund Amundsen (I146264)
 
58 More information came from:
http://ludvigsen.slektsweb.no/individual.php?pid=I3339&ged=ludvigsen
 
Holteeie Nils Olsen (I155329)
 
59 Nils worked for a man named Jon Ilsend on a farm called Vela.

source: From a talk with Ole Nelson in November, 1984. 
Berget Nils Evenson (I155382)
 
60 Note Written by Elizabeth Olson. "I met some interesting and very nice people in the short while I lived near Carlisle. My folks lived on the Haldorson farm for a little over 3 years. I was in school in Fergus Falls a good part of that time and also did housework. But I was also home on that farm with my folks during the summer and one winter. We had nice neighbors - north of us a 1/2 miles two bachelors the Faldalen Brothers were. They were cozy men to visit. The one brother baked the most delicious white bread. They were jolly and fun. Then around us were farmers like Saterns, Fosse's, Nelsons, Laugens - but a 1/4 mile or so south of us lived the Andrew Bakken's. They loved music and singing. Andrew sang with a quartette for years and they were popular and requested to sing in many churches. Morris, too, loved to sing. I first met "Morrie" after he came home from Gillette Hospital in Mpls. where he took treatment for after affects of Polio (I understood). While he was in the hospital he was so lonesome and asked the young folks of the Hedemarken Church to write to him. A few of us did. We often got together somewhere to practice, or sing for fun. The quartette (my dad was one of the quartette) also Philip Fjestad and Bernard Lein, plus Andrew and my Dad, Severin Olson. One afternoon "Ma" Bakken called and said come over right away. So I went - and everyone was so excited and singing because Bakken's had just got a new piano!! So we sang and played till late and many evenings after that - many happy hours. My cousin from Sisseton, South Dakota came to visit us. Morrie was so sociable he called and took us to a lovely Park - north and east of Pelican. He was always so generous and loved company - so did Andrew, Ma, and Arthur. We got together at the Haldorson farm and played games and sang too. In those days we didn't have private lines on our phones. So if your "ring" came (maybe one short and 2 long or so) you would answer and you would also hear a soft klick here and another, etc. If it was an interesting conversation - sometimes Ma Bakken would join in. It was fun sometimes. And at the end of the day - when the sun was sinking lower in the west - there came a welcome inviting, home-coming call from "Ma" to Andrew to "come in now for supper and the evening rest." It put a smile on many a face that heard that call - you couldn't help but hear it and smile - hear it for several miles! When my brothers came to visit me from Washington D. C. we went to visit Art - the only one left of the family. He(Art) was in pain but very cheerful and happy to see friends.

Fergus Falls Weekly Journal, February 10, 1920 - Mr Andrew Bakken tells how Oscar Township go it's name. In looking over his father's (Mikkel Bakken's) old books, who was one of the first settlers, he found an account of the first township meeting. Some of the people wanted to name it after Ole Sletvold, the first settler, others suggested Christiania, after the capital of Norway. They finally decided to name it after King Oscar, at that time, the King of Norway and Sweden. 
Bakken Andrew August (I120007)
 
61 Notes - Before leaving for the west coast to make her future home, Mrs. Lars Welo, of this city, gave the society a cane used by her grandfather for many years. Her grandfather's name was Andreas O. Bakken and before coming to America he had the misfortune to freeze his feet very badly. He had gone up into the mountains to get fire wood and before he realized his condition, one foot particularly was almost beyond help. He managed to get home and immediately started thawing out his feet. He soon found however that mortification was setting in on the bad foot. It was a long distance to any doctor so he commenced by cutting off the toes but this did not heal and so a little later he amputated still further up. This also did not heal and so a third operation still further up toward the instep was done. The skin was drawn down over the stump and this time healed nicely. He left Norway for America about 1865 and a little later came to Ottertail county and settled in the Trondhjem neighborhood. The cane above was given by his grand daughter Mrs. Lars Welo. The courage of some of these Norsmen is almost beyond belief. Another settler in that neighborhood, I think his name was Engebret E. Wee got caught in the great blizzard of 1872 and froze his fingers on one hand so badly that amputation was necessary. It was a long distance to Fergus Falls and so Andreas Bakken took his knife and cut all the fingers off to the second joint. Then held the hand against a grind stone and rounded the edges of the bones and then lapped the skin over the end and they all healed nicely. However, the ends of the fingers were like a knobs and while conspicuous still he was able to do a hard days work for many years afterwards. Mrs. Welo also gave a pair of plyers which her grandfather used for making hooks and eyes for the ladies' dresses. The plyers were made by hand and she feels quite certain are 150 years old having come down through several generations.

Notes (Fergus Falls Historical Society) - Mrs. Lars L. Welo, this city, has given a black dress and blouse work by her mother Mrs. Amund Lerbakken (Karen) when she came to Oscar township in 1869. The style of dress worn by the pioneers of this or any other country is interestng and always attracts attention. I wish we had more of it as well as a nice cabinet to display it in. 
Lerbakken Mathia J. Amundsdatter (I145768)
 
62 Notes for Goodwin Houg
Goodwin Houg, 57, Dies After Brief Illness

Goodwin O. Haug, popular, well known barber in Fergus Falls for nearly 40 years, died at Lake Region hospital Saturday at 8:55 p. m. His death at 57., followed a stroke suffered Friday evening.

A son oj Mr. and Mrs. Ole Houg, he was born in Carlisle township Feb. 18, 1906. He graduated from the Fargo Barber College in 1924 and had been a barber in Fergus Falls since then. He operated his own shop on Washington avenue.

He was married to Esther Moen Aug. 29, 1928, at the Rothsay home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Moen, by the Rev. Fjaere. In Fergus Falls they made their home at 204 North Sheridan.

Mr. Haug was a member of the Bethlehem Lutheran Church. He belonged to the Elks club and served as a member of the Fergus Falls fire department for 20 years.

Surviving are his wife, two daughters, Mrs. Roy L. (Normal) Henry of Hearne, Texas, and Mrs. Duane (Geraldine) Kolle of Fergus Falls, and five grandchildren. He also leaves four sisters and two brothers. They are Mrs. Andrew Bakken, Mrs. Olga Nelson, Mrs. Frances Mobraten, Regina Houg and Otto Houg, all of Fergus Falls, and Arnold Houg of Kennewick, Wash.

Funeral services will be held at the Bethlehem Lutheran Church tomorrow at 2 p. m. with the Rev. Otto Dale officiating. Interment will be in Knollwood. Friends may call at the Glende Johnson Funeral Home.

Taken from: http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~mmoen/Rothsay/ps04/ps04_022.htm
 
Houg Goodwin Oliver (I145756)
 
63 Notes for Julius Mobraten
Carlisle Farmer Dies In Burning Meadow

Son Finds Body Of Julius P. Mobraten When
He Failed To Return Home for Dinner

Suffered Heart Attack -
Fell Into Flames-
Manager Of Carlisle Elevator 30 Years

Julius P. Mobraten, 64, life long resident of Oscar township, was found burned to death in a small meadow fire a mile north of his home shortly after noon Wednesday.

Mr. Mobraten had gone out about 10:30 in the morning to burn off old grass in the meadow. When he failed to return for his dinner at noon, his son Julius Jr., went to see what was delaying his father, and found his body, the clothes burned off, and the body indicating severe burns. Mr. Mobraten had suffered from heart trouble recently and it is believed he suffered a fatal heart attack or stroke and fell forward into the flames.

.Julius P. Mobraten was born March 4, 1885, in Oscar township, the son of pioneer settlers. He spent all his life in that community with the exception of eight vears when he was manager of the elevator at Lundsvalley, N. D. He was married June 27, 1922 to Miss Frances Houg, at Rothsay, and they were the parents of eight children, all of whom with their mother are left to mourn the tragic death of a beloved and devoted husband and father.

Mr. Mobraten took an active interest in the community and was highly regarded, being one of the outstanding men of Carlisle township. He was manager of the Carlisle and Oscar Farmers Grain Elevator for thirty years, and a director of the Carlisle Telephone Company. He also services as treasurer of School District 111. In his tragic death the community and county have lost a good citizen. He was a member of Hedemarken church.

The surviving children are: Mrs. Wm. E. Johnson (anna) of Minneapolis; Mrs. Gene Duffy (Florence) Austin; Phyllis and Genevieve attending school in Minneapolis; Julius, Jr., Marie, Arthur and David at home. He also leaves to mourn his tragic death four sisters -- Mrs. Theo Moen and Mrs. Emil Moen, of Lundsvalley, N. D.,; Mrs. Peter Paulson, Stanley, N. D., Mrs. A. E. Skolrud, Hermiston, Ore; and two brothers, Oscar of Culver City, Calif., and Peter on the home farm. His parents and two sisters - Mrs. Otto Tweter and Mrs. John Ugstad preceded him in death.

Funeral services will be held Monday, May 2, at the Hedemarken church with Rev. E. Salveson officiating. Burial will be in the Hedemarken cemetery

Taken from: http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~mmoen/Rothsay/ps04/ps04_198.htm
 
Mobraten Julius P. (I120087)
 
64 Notes for Peter J. Mobraaten
Peter J. Mobraaten

The late Peter J. Mobraaten, who for years was one of the most active residents of Oscar township, this county, came to America from Norway in 1869. He landed at the port of New York and almost immediately thereafter started for Minnesota . Upon arriving in this state, he located in Fillmore county, where he remained for one year, at the end of which time, in 1871, he came to Otter Tail county, where he homesteaded a quarter of a section of land in Oscar township and there he spent the remainder of his life, his death occurring on July 27, 1913. Mr. Mobraaten was a fine farmer and a sturdy citizen , who was held in high regard in the neighborhood which he had done so much to help improve and he was widely mourned at the time of his death.

Peter J. Mobraaten was born in the kingdom of Norway on December 2, 1839, and there spent his youth and early manhood. In 1869 he decided to try his fortune in the promising land across the Atlantic. He came alone, landing at New York, proceeding thence to this state, where for one year he conducted a boarding house in Fillmore county . The next winter he spent in Alexandria, this state, and in the spring of 1871 he came to this county, entering one hundred and sixty acres of government land in sections 26 and 27, in Oscar township, which he proceeded to clear and make habitable. It was in that year, simultaneous to his coming to Otter Tail county, that Mr. Mobraaten married Bertha Spaberg, was born in Norway on December 5, 1845, daughter of Peter P. and Carrie (Torjet) Spaberg, and who, during the years they were engaged laboriously in making a home in the then wilderness, proved a most valuable and competent helpmate. Their home presently was made and as the years went by they accomplished the full task of bringing to a high state of cultivation their excellent farm, at the same time making themselves useful in many neighborly ways in that community, so that they came to be regarded as among the leaders in that particular locality, their influence ever being for good.

To Peter J. and Bertha (Spaberg) Mobraaten were born nine children, Peter P., Mary, Carrie, Julia, Minnie Bessie, Julius, Oscar and Petrine of whom, Mary, Julia, Minnie and Oscar are married. Mr. and Mrs. Mobraaten ever were active members of the Norwegian Lutheran church and their children were reared in that faith all growing up to be useful members of their community. Since the death of her husband, Mrs Mobraaten has continued to maker her home on the homestead farm, which is now cultivated under the active management of her eldest son, Peter P. Mobraaten, who was born on the homestead on December 20, 1871, and who is doing well his part in the community life of Oscar township and the Fergus Falls locality generally, he being held in high regard by all who know him, as are all the members of the late Peter J. Mobraaten. The Mobraaten farm was enlarged during the occupancy of the late owner by the addition of eighty acres adjoining, which Mr. Mobraaten purchased, the present farm of two hundred and forty acres being well kept and improved in a substantial manner

Taken from: History of Otter Tail County Minnesota, James W. Mason,, Illustrated 1916, Volume 2, Reproduced from the Collection of the Otter Tail County Historical Society?s Archives, Fergus Falls, Minnesota.
 
Mobraaten Peter J (I155931)
 
65 Obituary - After their marriage they farmed near his home place until 1917, when they moved to Williams County, North Dakota where they homesteaded and lived until they died. Lerbakken Syverin (I145766)
 
66 Obituary - Alice had a lifelong love of growing flowers and gardening. She also loved to play bingo, crochet and do embroidery work. Blossoms graced the yard of her home and most of the inside windows. She canned jellies, pickles, and all kinds of fruit during the years of raising her family. She prided herself on her ability to bake Norwegian Christmas cookies of many kinds. She was an active member of the United Lutheran Church in Elbow Lake attending circle and making quilts. Later in life, she and Verner spent winters in Mesa, Arizona. She was very active for her age. She was able to drive her own car and cut her lawn until her death. She loved walking her little dog Bailey several times each day. She also enjoyed travel, going on many trips with her husband Verner. She toured Norway with her daughter Barb. Three short weeks ago, she had a very enjoyable seven day Caribbean cruise with her daugters and grandchilren. On February 23, 2005, she had a sudden stroke and one week later God took her to her new home. Lerbakken Alice Lillian (I145039)
 
67 Obituary - Alma was raised and received her education in Oscar Township. She resided her entire lifetime on the home farm. She never married.l Lerbakken Alma Eunice (I120103)
 
68 Obituary - Arnold Peter Lerbakken, 35, well known Carlisle resident, died Monday forenoon at the Ottertail Sanitarium. He had been ill for the past three months and was taken to the Sanitarium last Thursday. His death occurred at 11 A.M. Monday. Lerbakken Arnold Peter (I145121)
 
69 Obituary - Esther grew up in the Rothsay area and attended high school in Moorhead. She took nurses training at St. Barnabas Hospital at Minneapolis and had worked for many years at Wright Hospital in Fergus Falls. She did a great amount of private duty nursing and had also been on the nursing staff at Lake Region Hospital following the merger. Moen Esther (I120089)
 
70 Obituary - He served in the Army during World War II. After his discharge in 1945, he returned to Rothsay and worked as a mehanic. They later moved to Breckenridge. Lerbakken Elmer Clifford (I145123)
 
71 Obituary - Morris Lerbakken passed away at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lerbakken, Sunday morning, after a lingering illness. A few months ago, Morris was operated on for Mastoid, in a Fergus Falls hospital, and apparently was recovering. He was taken home, but later, his condition became serious and his parents took him to Rochester for treatment. Nothing could be done for him there, so he was again taken to Fergus Falls, where his illness was diagnosed as an abscess of the brain. As a last resort, an operation was performed on the brain, May 9th, and he seemed to be getting better, so he was taken home. Since then he had been ailing off and on and Wednesday of last week, his condition became serious. Everthing possible was done to relieve his suffering but his life could not be saved. Morris was 17 years, 11 months, and 8 days at the time of his death. Lerbakken Morris J. (I145122)
 
72 Obituary - Mrs. Jacobson became a resident of Pelican Valley Health Car Center in 1984. She was a lifelong member of Hedemarken Lutheran Church and served in church offices as well as its ladies aid. Lerbakken Calma Olivia (I145038)
 
73 Obituary - Mrs. Lerbakken was one of the oldest residents of the county and died at the age of 94 years. Death was due to the infirmities of old age. She came to this country in 1870, making her home with the Gregor Evenson family near the three mile church. Halvorson Betsy (I145320)
 
74 Obituary - Mrs. Lerbakken was one of the oldest residents of the county and died at the age of 94 years. Death was due to the infirmities of old age. She came to this country in 1870, making her home with the Gregor Evenson family near the three mile church. Halvorson Betsy (I145320)
 
75 Ole Olsen immigrated from Norway to the USA with his wife and son and daughter in 1869. They arrived in New York on June 8, 1869. The name of their ship was the "Britannia". It sailed from Glasgow, Scotland and Londonderry, Ireland. (Line 27, Microfilm serial M237, Microfilm Roll 312, List Number 612) They went originally to a settlment near Salem, Wisconsin. It was there that Ouden Olsen Houg was born on February 17, 1870. In the spring, with an ox team, they made the long journey of some four hundred miles and immigrated to Oscar Township, Ottertail County, Minnesota. Ole homesteaded one hundred and fify-four acres of land in sedctions 26 and 27 of Oscar township. Houg Ole Olsen (I155442)
 
76 Page 381 of the 1876 County Directory for Fond du Lac has the following:

Totts, Wm., (m6,1) Eldorado, 80 acres, wheat, s line section 15, Eldorado-G.

Possibly the same person as Wilhelm Totz
 
Totz Wilhelm (I155507)
 
77 Possible info:

Parish Local Parish Farm
Froen Sødorp Byhre
 
Amund Jakobsen (I155300)
 
78 Possible info:
DoB Parish Local Parish Farm
1781 Froen Qvam Forbrigd
1790 Froen Qvichne Hage
 
Sylte Ragnhild Pedersdtr (I123345)
 
79 Possibly the father of Charles Denbrook Dornbrock Christian (I155945)
 
80 The 1870 US census has Charles Denbrook working as a farm laborer on the farm of Robert Abercrombie. The 1876 Fond du Lac County directory has the following entry on page 245:

Abercrombie, R. C., (m7,2) Alto, 210 acres, w line section 7, Fairwater-A. 
Denbrook Charles (I155333)
 
81 The 1920 directory for Fond du Lac lists their address as 70 Doty, Fond du Lac. Denbrook Lester Herman Gilbert (I100001)
 
82 The 1921 Directory "Wright Directory CO.'s" has the following listing:

Denbrook Fred W (Martha A), h 70 Doty

Provided by R.T. Elliott 
Denbrook Fred (I155308)
 
83 The 1930 census has Eloise Reedy with the Halls and listed as a step-daughter. She was born in ND, father was born in
Wisconsin, mother in Minnesota. She is a public school teacher.

From information sent by Vonnie Splittgerber 
Reedy Eloise (I155848)
 
84 The name "Christina" is not confirmed. This comes from the following source: https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XLD8-DQ4

The date of her death is also not confirmed. 
Schmidt Friderica Ernestine (I155493)
 
85 The original "Bakken" farm site was in Kvikne, Oppland, Norway. Andreas Olsen Harboe Berg (Bakken) bought and owned the farm in 1835. Andreas was "sort of a doctor" and healer and born in 1803. Prior to Andreas, there are indications of people on the "Bakken farm dating back to 1722. Ola Arnesen Bakken and Reidar Bakken owned the farm in 1722. Ola Arnesen Bakken lived there in 1750 with his wife Ingrid Stenersdatter. They sold the farm in 1794 to Hans Hansen (Ola's nephew). Hans was married to Gjertrud Olsdatter. They had a son, Ola Hansen. Ola Hansen drown in a small lake called Slangen in Skabu.

Andreas Olsen Harboe Berg (Bakken) married Anne Olsdatter (Klevstad) in 1824. Klevstad is located in Kvam, Oppland, Norway. When King Oscar the first of Norway decided to garnish farm land in the 1860's making land owners virtual slaves, Andreas and Anna (both at age 64) emigrated to America in July, 1869 with their daughter, Karen Andreasdatter Bakken (33) and her husband Amund Mortensen (Massinglokken) (35) and their children, Mathias(8), Ane(4), and Amund(2) The Massinglokken name later became Lerbakken. They traveled from Christiana, Norway to New York via Glasgow, Scotland. The ship was the SS Columbia, built in 1866. The description of the ship reads: Clipper stem, one funnel, three masts (ship-rigged for sail), iron construction, single screw and a speed of 10 knots. There were accommodations for 80 cabins and 540 3rd class passengers. After arriving in America, they first settled near LaCrosse, in Washington Township, Wisconsin. The 1870 census shows their location as Washington Township, LaCrosse County, Wisconsin. Bohemia (the post-office for Washington Township), was also just a couple of miles from Timber Coulee, Wisconsin where Andreas' grandson, Ole Olsen the Elder Bakken would start raising his family (about 13 years later). In about 1871, hearing of wide open fields of land for home steaders in Minnesota, Andreas and his daughter Karen and her husband Amund and their children crossed the Mississippi and re-located to Oscar Township, Ottertail County, Minnesota near Rothsay, Minnesota. It was during this re-location, that Mathias J. Amundsen (Lerbakken) at about age 10, accidently drowned in the Mississippi River. Andreas' wife Anne Olsdatter survived the ocean voyage and trip to Wisconsin, but did not survive her first year in America. The reason for her death is unknown. 
Bakken Andreas Olsen (I130689)
 
86 There are two farms listed for Nord-Fron, Oppland, Norway:

Graupe nedre and Graupe ovre 
Graupehaugen Karen Andreasdatter (I145732)
 
87 There is a farm listed for Nord-Fron, Oppland, Norway called Vistad og Tune sondre
 
Vistadeiet Amund Mortensen (I145731)
 
88 There is a record of an Even Nilsen born 1 Jan 1820 in Stange in the website: http://ludvigsen.slektsweb.no/placelist.php?action=show&parent[0]=Hedmark&parent[1]=Stange&level=2

 
Ostbyeie Even Nilsen ovre (I155327)
 
89 These records were found in the 1880 and 1890 census for Fond du Lac County, Eldorado Township, WI

Speculation is that August was a brother of Charles Denbrook, but the two records don't completely match

1880: Vol 9, Ed 36, Sheet 25, Line 41
1890: Vol 21, Ed 26, Sheet 7, Line 57
 
Denbrook August (I155446)
 
90 These records were found in the 1880 and 1890 census for Fond du Lac County, Eldorado Township, WI

Speculation is that August was a brother of Charles Denbrook, but the two records don't completely match

1880: Vol 9, Ed 36, Sheet 25, Line 41
1890: Vol 21, Ed 26, Sheet 7, Line 57
 
Denbrook Paulena (I155447)
 
91 These records were found in the 1880 and 1890 census for Fond du Lac County, Eldorado Township, WI

Speculation is that August was a brother of Charles Denbrook, but the two records don't completely match

1880: Vol 9, Ed 36, Sheet 25, Line 41
1890: Vol 21, Ed 26, Sheet 7, Line 57
 
Denbrook Inez (I155448)
 
92 These records were found in the 1880 and 1890 census for Fond du Lac County, Eldorado Township, WI

Speculation is that August was a brother of Charles Denbrook, but the two records don't completely match

1880: Vol 9, Ed 36, Sheet 25, Line 41
1890: Vol 21, Ed 26, Sheet 7, Line 57
 
Denbrook Willie (I155449)
 
93 These records were found in the 1880 and 1890 census for Fond du Lac County, Eldorado Township, WI

Speculation is that August was a brother of Charles Denbrook, but the two records don't completely match

1880: Vol 9, Ed 36, Sheet 25, Line 41
1890: Vol 21, Ed 26, Sheet 7, Line 57
 
Denbrook Ida (I155450)
 
94 These records were found in the 1880 and 1890 census for Fond du Lac County, Eldorado Township, WI

Speculation is that August was a brother of Charles Denbrook, but the two records don't completely match

1880: Vol 9, Ed 36, Sheet 25, Line 41
1890: Vol 21, Ed 26, Sheet 7, Line 57
 
Denbrook Elvena (I155451)
 
95 These records were found in the 1880 and 1890 census for Fond du Lac County, Eldorado Township, WI

Speculation is that August was a brother of Charles Denbrook, but the two records don't completely match

1880: Vol 9, Ed 36, Sheet 25, Line 41
1890: Vol 21, Ed 26, Sheet 7, Line 57
 
Family (F184736841)
 
96 This is a guess that this person is a brother of Charles Denbrook. This is based on that his father was also named Adolph Dornbrook and this person's mother is listed as "Schmitt" (Charles' mother is listed as "Schmidt"). Also, this person was married in Ripon, WI. Dornbrook August (I156030)
 
97 This is an assumption from one source. Need to verify this! Dornbrook Adolph (I155492)
 
98 This is an assumption from one source. Need to verify this! Schmidt Friderica Ernestine (I155493)
 
99 This is not confirmed. He is linked by DNA and is listed in the following trees:

Ancestry Member Trees 6
Bahe, Steege Family Tree by RobertTheisen25
0 Records

Farnell Family Tree by absuneson
0 Records

Giverhaug Family Tree by valgiverhaug
0 Records

holmstul Släktträd by Ragnhild Holmstul
0 Records

Korsberg/Bender Family Tree by lewfamily
0 Records

Ryan And Lacey Hernandez by Ryan Hernandez
0 Records 
Fossen Erik Amundsen (I156059)
 
100 This is not confirmed. He is linked via DNA and is listed in the following tree:

Trees Linked to DNA Matches 1
Bakken and Lind linked to cjamra
0 Records 
Olsen Giorgen (I156062)
 

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