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Monday, February 26, 2024

The Stutzman-Hochstetlers : Our Swiss-German Amish Line

Family Line Links: (WikiTree.com)(Ancestry.com)(FamilySearch.org)


Our Stutzman line has been a tricky one to research. Believe it or not, there were no less than 3 different Christian Stutzman's living in Berks Co., PA during the mid-1700s! Sorting them out has been no easy task, especially given the wide variety of incorrect information that currently abounds on the internet. Of course, I can't promise that I haven't made my own errors here. But I have looked over everything currently available to draw my conclusions, and I will try to lay out my own assumptions clearly in the Notes section. The effort has been well worth it, because this is a fascinating story.

Lake Thun area of Canton Bern, Switzerland, near where our Stutzman line is likely from. Due to the isolation created by its mountainous valley landscape, the area is largely rural with dairy farming, fruit, and cheese as some of its main exports. This geography has also led to a people with an independence streak regarding both church and state. During the Reformation, it became an early stronghold for Anabaptists sentiments, and was also the birthplace of Jakob Ammann, founder of the Amish.

Map showing the Canton of Bern within Switzerland. Most followers of Jakob Ammann were from the Lake Thun and Obersimmental-Saanen (Oberland) areas. Ammann was born in Erlenbach, which lies within the Simme Valley of Oberland.

Historical Background

To begin with, you might be wondering what it means to be an Amish. Especially a Swiss-German one like in our line. It all goes back, once again, to that fateful posting of the 95-Theses on the church doors by Martin Luther in 1517. His questioning of the Roman Catholic Church's authority kicked off the Protestant Reformation throughout Europe. The resulting reexamination of where the authority of a governing body should come from eventually had revolutionary repercussions throughout the Western World. However, the Reformation's newfound freedom for religious scholars to question doctrine also allowed for many different interpretations to be reached. While people in future Germany and France began to convert to Lutheranism, or Calvinism, in Switzerland it was the Anabaptist movement that primarily took hold instead.

One of the early distinguishing beliefs of the Anabaptist movement was the "believer's baptism" (ie the idea that one should not be baptized until they are able to make a conscious profession of their faith, as opposed to as an infant). Michael Sattler (b.1490) was an early founder of the Anabaptist movement. Sattler was originally a Benedictine Monk, born in the now German city of Staufen (back then considered a part of the Holy Roman Empire). However, he came to believe that the only true moral authority on religious doctrine was that which came through strict interpretation of the Bible itself. In 1525, he chose to leave the Catholic Church, and instead began a mission to teach this scripture-based theology, thus beginning the Anabaptist movement. His followers across Baden-Württemberg (SW Germany) and northern Switzerland, became known as the Swiss Brethren.

Swiss Brethren Believers Baptism, based on Acts 2:41. Interestingly, the Amish tradition for males of a beard without a mustache is a symbol of both their non-violence doctrine and a show of commitment and fidelity to their spouse.

 In 1527, Sattler is believed to have written the seven articles of the Schleitheim Confession, considered the most representative statement of Anabaptist principles. In addition to a "believer's baptism", another key doctrine in its articles is that of non-resistance to violence, patterned after the words of Christ in which he told his followers to "turn the other cheek" to an attack (Matthew 5:38-40). For this reason, Anabaptists refused to participate in the military defense of the nations which they inhabited. These two Anabaptist doctrines in particular placed them in direct conflict with the Roman Catholic Church, which was the same as the government at that time. Because of this, the Swiss Brethren were severely persecuted, sometimes to the point of death, and often expelled from their homelands. The Anabaptist Hutterites of Moravia/Slovakia, as well as the Mennonites of the Netherlands/Northern Germany, experienced similar forms of oppression.

Mass execution of Anabaptists in Alzey, Kurpflaz, Germany in 1539, during the 30 Years War. Women in the Anabaptist faith were able to take on roles of higher authority than in most other religions at that time, and thus were arrested and punished at a higher rate than occurred within most other religiously persecuted groups in history.

Starting in the mid-1600s, large numbers of Anabaptists from persecuted regions began to flee (or be expelled) to more religiously tolerant areas of western Europe, such as the Palatinate region (now in western Germany), the Netherlands, and the Alsace region (now in eastern France). In about 1680, a man from Canton Bern, Switzerland named Jakob Ammann fled to Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines, Alsace with a group of about 60 religious refugee families. Ammann had even stricter views on scriptural doctrine than many of his fellow Swiss Brethren at that time, particularly on the issue of "shunning" those who had committed transgressions (based on 2 Thessalonians 3:14). In 1693, his teachings created a rift within the Anabaptists, with Ammann's side, mainly in Alsace, becoming known as the Amish, while the opposing side, mainly in Switzerland and the Palatinate, being called Mennonites (or Reists).

Then, in 1712, King Louis XIV issued an edict expelling the Anabaptist from Alsace, France as well. Most Amish were forced to flee to nearby territories, where they began searching, once again, for a safe place to call home. Their prayers were answered by William Penn's desire to create a British colony based on the ideal of religious tolerance. Starting in 1736 (Note 0), small groups of Alsace Amish began undertaking the treacherous sea voyage to America, in order to seek religious freedom. Most settled in upper Berks County (then Lancaster Co.), PA, spreading outward from the Northkill Creek and the Schuylkill River into what is today Upper Bern, Penn, and Tilden Twps. One of these Alsace refugees was Maudlin Stutzman (b.1700), a widow with at least two children, Johann "Hans" and Christian Stutzman (Note 1). In 1738, Maudlin Stutzman warranted 50 acres of land in Upper Bern, Berks Co., PA near Wolf Creek. Then, in 1747, her now adult son Hans settled on adjacent land, while her son Christian resurveyed and expanded the original homestead. (See Note 2) (Ref 2).

Upper Bern Township within Berks Co., PA (originally Lancaster Co. until 1752). The Northkill Creek defines its western boundary with Upper Tulpehocken Township. Penn Twp. lies to its southwest, while Tilden Twp. lies to the east, bounded by the Schuylkill River. (Of note, the "kill" part of these two names comes from the word "kil" used by early Northern European explorers of the area, which meant creek.

Northkill Creek, near the former Hochstetler farm, about a mile west of Shartlesville, PA

Approximate location of Maudlin Stutman's (and later Christian Stutzman and Barbara Hostetler's) homestead. The original land of Maudlin Stutzman lied between Wolf Creek Rd and Valley Rd., on the north side of Pheasant Drive. Hans Stutzman purchased adjacent land to the east of Wolf Creek, while Christian later expanded his land holding to the west of Wolf Creek, both north and south of Feick Dr. The Jacob Hostetler farm was located off Olde 22, between Northkill and Wolf Creek roads.

Anabaptists had started coming to PA as early as 1683, initially settling in Germantown, now a northern suburb of Philadelphia. However, wanting to stay true to their beliefs, the Amish tried to set themselves apart from other Anabaptists by settling separately in more remote areas. They lived a very simple way of life in which they avoided new fashions and technologies, and kept themselves removed from politics and government affairs. This was seen as the way to humble themselves before God and remain outside the “sinful nature” of the wider world (Ref 3). The settlement of the Northkill Amish Community, officially established in 1740, is often cited as the first known Amish settlement of the New World. However, there was also an early Amish settlement founded in Oley Twp., Berks Co., PA in 1714, which included the Yoder family among its first inhabitants.

William Penn's 1681 advertisement (in German) encouraging religious refugees to come to Pennsylvania in order to seek their religious freedom.

Our Stutzman Family Line

Maudlin's son Christian Stutzman, (born by 1725 in Alsace, France), married Barbara Hochstetler, the daughter of Jacob Hochstetler (b.1712) in 1752 (Ref 4). Barbara's family had a similar background to Christian's own. The Hochstetler line was originally from Schwarzenburg, Bern, Switzerland, but was forced to flee to Echery, Haut-Rhin, Alsace in the late 1600s. Jacob was born there in 1712, where he later married Anna Burki (Note 3). In 1738, at the age 26, he and his wife left for Pennsylvania with their two young children, John and Barbara (b.1732). They initially warranted for 58 acres of land in Oct. 1739, and would eventually increase their holdings to 310 acres by 1755. Their son-in-law, Christian Stutzman, lived just to the south with their daughter Barbara's growing family.


Land warranted to the Stutzmans (blue) and the Hochstetlers (green). A larger version of this document can be viewed here

The Northkill settlement was located at the westernmost frontier of Pennsylvania at that time. At its peak, it contained about 200 Amish families. It was situated at the southern base of the Blue Mountains, to the north of which was Delaware (Lenape) Indian territory, while farther west were the Shawnee tribes. Both the Lenape and the Amish were generally peaceful peoples, and for the first 18 years of the settlement’s existence, they lived without major conflicts despite frequent encounters (Ref 5). Then the French and Indian War (ie The Seven Years' War) began in 1754.

Pontiac's Rebellion by Robert W. Griffing

The French openly encouraged Native American tribes to attack the English settlers. In exchange, they promised the return of land to them that had been taken by the encroaching British. Many other PA settlements set up "vigilante groups" at this time, who set about trying to "rid themselves" of the "Indian menace" (Ref 6). In contrast, the Northkill Amish maintained their pacifist beliefs, and were thus accused of "not being realistic" about the dangers the colonists faced. In Nov 1755, Indians began to attack south of the Blue Mountains for the first time (Ref 4, p.23). On Nov 2, 1756, an attack finally came directly to the Northkill Amish community, when a daughter of Andrew Wolbeck was captured and taken away to an unknown fate.


Over the next year and a half, at least 7 other attacks occurred on this close-knit community, including several murders, one of which involved the Miller family only 3 miles away from our Stutzman-Hochstetlers (Ref 4, p.24). Then, on Sept 19-20, 1757, tragedy struck for our family line as well, at the home of Barbara (Hochstetler) Stutzman's parents. [Note, most of the account to follow is taken from Ref 4., p.24-34. Other sources show some variation in the exact timing and details of events.] That night, after a social evening of paring and slicing apples with the neighbors, Jacob Hochstetler's son, Jacob, Jr. was awakened by a noise in the yard. When he opened the front door to assess the situation, he was shot in the leg by a group of about 8-10 Indians standing in the yard near the bake oven. Jacob Jr. managed to close and lock the door before the Indian's could enter, while the rest of the family raced to their feet. Jacob's sons, Joseph and Christian (aged 13 and 11 at the time), grabbed hunting rifles and prepared to fight. But their father admonished them that it was never God's Will to take another's life, even to save one's own. After a few unfettered minutes of consultation, the small group of Shawnee Native American's decided to set fire to the house instead, trapping the family inside.


The family of 6 huddled in the cellar, trying to withstand the fire by sprinkling cider on the burning embers that fell down below. Meanwhile, their eldest son John, already married and living on an adjacent farm with his wife, Catherine Hertzler, heard the commotion and came out to investigate. Quickly assessing the situation, he ran home to hide his wife and young child, concealing them in some nearby brush. He then ran back to his parent's home and hid himself as he watched the rest of the night's events unfold in horror, wondering what he could possibly do to save them. Initially, the family almost escaped. Despite the heat and smoke, they came out from their hiding through a cellar window only much later, after they believed the Shawnee had finally left. Unfortunately, they misjudged, as one man (Tom Lyons) still lingered behind, gathering apples from the prior day's bounty. When he saw them appear, he quickly called the rest of the group back to his side. 

Depiction of the Hochstetler Farm Massacre

It was said that the mother, Anna, was "of ample means" and had difficulty getting herself out of the window, which slowed the family's escape. Their son Joseph managed to run quickly up into the hills, where he hid himself behind a large log. But the rest of the family was soon surrounded. The oldest son, Jacob Jr, who had been previously shot, was of no use to the Indians given his injury. He was tomahawked and scalped, as was the youngest daughter (considered a warrior's death). The mother was stabbed instead, and then scalped, supposedly for some previous slight involving the refusal to give food to passing tribesmen (Ref 4, p.25). Jacob Hochstetler Sr. and his son Christian, as well as his son Joseph, who was soon found hiding by the log, were taken prisoner. The oldest two married Hochstetler children, John and Barbara (our ancestor), were left behind to grieve their family's destruction.

Map (use link to enlarge) showing the western route Jocob Hochstetler and his two sons were forced to march for 17 days after being taken into captivity. Also depicted is the escape route Jacob used when fleeing back home to the Northkill community.

The captives were taken west into Ohio territory and separated from one another. Christian Hochstetler was the youngest of the abducted family members, about 11 at the time. He was said to have had striking blue eyes that enamored the Shawnee. An elder Indian adopted him as a son and Christian became very attached to him. After the old man's death, Christian was allowed to choose an Indian brother, and became very close with him also. His brother, Joseph, who was about 13 at the time of his capture, was similarly treated. He was taken to the Native American town of Tulhillas, where he was also adopted and became close enough to a few of the Shawnee that he considered them as his brothers. It was only Jacob Sr. Hochstetler who was continually watched by the Shawnee with suspicion. As well they should have given that he never lost his desire to return home. Unfortunately, the Indians had taken them so far from their homeland that Jacob saw nothing familiar around him to help orient his way back. Additionally, they changed camps frequently with the seasons. His luck changed about three years into his captivity when he happened upon a group of older men explaining the local geography to a group of Shawnee boys by drawing in the ashes with a stick. Jacob pretended not to know what they were discussing, but he heard the names of various rivers and mountain ranges spoken as they were pointed to on the crude map.

Jacob shared what he had learned with another captive man named John Specht, and they made their escape together that night, finding an enclosed area some ways from the village to sleep. Unfortunately, a lone Indian from another camp had had a similar idea and came upon them by accident. They made a pretense of being on a hunting mission, saying that they needed to gather wood for a bigger fire and find some game for dinner, while actually planning to meet again further up the nearby brook. Specht, however, never reappeared at the new site, and Jacob feared he had been killed by the suspicious Indian. From that point on, he fled by night only, concealing himself during the day. He often waded through streams and avoided paths to prevent being tracked. Eventually, the river grew large enough that he was able to make a log raft. Tired and starving, at one point he came to a sharp turn in the river that caused him to fear he was headed in the wrong direction. He went to shore in despair and fell asleep, during which time his dead wife appeared to him in a dream and told him to continue, for he was on the right path. When he awoke, he did just that, never hesitating again.


By the time his raft reached Fort Augusta in PA, he was too weak to stand, and his rescue came just in time. He was taken to Fort Harris for debriefing, where one of the women at the fort nursed him back to health, and before long he was able to continue on his journey home. Once reunited with his remaining family, Jacob began seeking a way to bring his 2 sons home as well. Though the war still continued, at times prisoner exchanges were negotiated, although the Native Americans often claimed that most of the captives did not want to return. On Aug 13, 1762, a friend helped Jacob to write a petition to the Govenor directly, asking him to intercede on behalf of his sons. Finally, on Oct 17, 1764, as the war was coming to an end, an agreement to return the remaining 103 White prisoners was accepted by the Shawnee. A number were returned in Nov of 1764, just before the winter set in. The remainder rejoined their prior communities in the Spring of 1765. It is unknown when, exactly, Joseph and Christian were reunited with their birth family. What is known is that after having made a family for themselves among the Shawnee, they both struggled with the decision of whether or not to return. Joseph is said to have continued to visit with his Native American brothers for many years after. Christian is said to have "dramatically" converted to the Dunkard faith, who practiced baptism by immersion, and soon became a preacher in Somerset Co. Both he and Joseph eventually married and settled down within their White communities, but were also said to have retained "unusual" habits that never fully left them.

Northkill Amish Historical Marker found on Old US Hwy. 22, just west of Shartlesville, VA

Grave marker at the end of the drive where the old Jacob Hochstetler homestead was located

Barbara (Hochstetler) Stutzman must have been overjoyed to have her remaining family members returned. On the day of the massacre in 1757, Barbara was about 25 years old, and she and her husband Christian had 3 young children, with one more on the way. Living a half mile away, they probably did not hear the initial commotion, though they likely saw the smoke when they awoke. Their child Christian Stutzman, Jr. (our direct ancestor) was born just three and half months after the attack in Jan. 1758. While Jacob Hochstetler and his two sons were gone, Christian Stutzman Sr. is said to have helped Jacob Hochstetler's oldest son John to manage his father's large farm. By the time her younger brothers were returned, he and Barbara had added 3 more children, and in 1770 they completed their family of 11.


After the attacks, a number of the original Amish families began to move away from the Northkill community, though the settlement continued to grow until the 1780s. In 1760, one group resettled near Churchtown in Lancaster Co., PA in what is now the oldest Amish community still in existence. Then, in 1772, after land west of the Allegheny mountains was opened for settlement, another group set out for Somerset Co., PA, near Johnstown, which is now the second oldest Amish community (Brothersvalley). Many of Christian Sr. and Barbara (Hochstetler) Stutzman's children chose to resettle in the Somerset community upon reaching adulthood. As the oldest son, however, Christian Jr. Stutzman chose to stay in Berks Co., where he inherited his father's land after his death in 1770. His first wife, Esther Steiner, died shortly after they were married, perhaps in childbirth. By 1786, he had remarried to Susanna Miller/Müller and started a family of what would become 11 children (Note 4). His third born child, Abraham Stutzman (b. 1787), was our direct ancestor.


After the Revolutionary War ended in 1783, the west began to open up further. In 1791, several Amish families in Lancaster Co. decided to purchase farmland in the Big Valley (Kishacoquillas Valley) of Mifflin Co., PA. The land there was very fertile, and it became a prosperous community. By 1800, the settlement had grown to about 50 Amish households. Though getting on in their years, in about 1812, Christian Jr. and Susanna (Miller) Stutzman decided to join with the Big Valley Amish group, accompanied by most of the families of their adult children as well (Ref. 7, p.48; Ref 4, p.612). Between 1810-1820, a number of other Northkill Amish community members made a similar journey. Christian Jr. and Susanna purchased 150 acres of land in Derry Township, which they later sold to their son Abraham in about 1817 (Ref 13, Gen 2 & endnotes, Ref 14, p.420).

Farms of the Big Valley in Mifflin Co., PA by Delmas Lehman (2017)

One of the earliest Berks Co. settlers to relocate to the Big Valley was the family of Joseph Yoder and Elizabeth (Jutzi). Joseph and Elizabeth had 9 children, and three of them were joined in marriage with the children of Christian Jr. and Susanna (Miller) Stutzman. Our ancestor, Abraham Stutzman, married Catherine Yoder in about 1815. Christian Jr. passed on 12 Sept 1825 (Note 5), leaving his sons Daniel and Abraham to administer his estate (Ref 8, Gen 2, fn 4). Shortly after his death, his son Michael moved his family to Green Twp., Wayne Co., OH, where his brother Daniel was helping to found a new Amish community which would eventually become the Oak Grove Amish Mennonite Church (Ref 10). However, starting in 1834, some Amish families broke away from this new community under the guidance of David Zook, to move southward into Fairfield Co., Ohio, and our Stutzman line seems to have been involved with this relocation (Ref 11). By 1850, the families of all but Christian and Susanna Stutzman's oldest daughter, Elizabeth Schmucker, had resettled in one of these two Ohio communities. Other related Amish Stutzman lines settled in Tuscarawas, Holmes Co., OH, which is still the largest Old Order Amish Community of the USA.

Modern day Amish Barn Raising Event in Holmes Co, OH. Jonas "Der Weiss" Stutzman settled here in 1809, near present day Walnut Creek, and built the areas first sawmill. He is said to have worn all white and carried about an oversized chair he built for "Christ to sit in judgement" upon at the second-coming.

Abraham and Catherine (Yoder) Stutzman moved to North Berne, Fairfield Co., OH (2 miles south of Colfax) by 1840. They had five children who lived to adulthood, though their daughter Elizabeth Plank died in childbirth at the age of only 21. Their oldest, Emanuel Stutzman (b.1816) was our direct ancestor. The Fairfield community thrived for a few decades, but cheap, fertile land out west continued to lure both old and new Anabaptist immigrants to westward locations. At the same time the Civil War was raging, the Stutzman's left this slowly withering community and made their way to the growing Lagrange-Elkhart Old Order Amish Settlement of Indiana (Ref 13). This community was founded in 1841 and still thrives today.

Indiana Amish/Mennonite Settlements as of 1950s. Isaac Schmucker (b.1810), a grandson of Christian and Susanna (Miller) Stutzman, became the first Amish Bishop of northern Indiana.

Abraham and Catherine (Yoder) Stutzman died within a few years of moving to Indiana and are buried in the Maple Grove Cemetery of Topeka, LaGrange Co., IN. In his 1867 Will, Abraham directed his property to be sold and the proceeds divided equally among his children, but he made sure to also include his grandson Amos Plank, the only child of his daughter Elizabeth who had died in childbirth. Our ancestor, Emmanuel Stutzman, had married Catherine Berkey back in 1839, and by 1867 had a family of 7 children (one having died as an infant). They settled in Eden Twp, LaGrange Co., IN. Their 4th child, Magdalena Stutzman (b.1846) was our direct ancestor.

Headstone of Abraham Stutzman (1787-1867) at the Maple Grove Cemetery of LaGrange Co., IN

Only three of Emmanuel and Catherine (Berkey) Stutzman's children stayed in the LaGrange-Elkhart Amish Settlement area. By the 1880s, most Native Americans had been confined to reservations, and the investment in railroad infrastructure following the Civil War had connected the nation like never before. The modernization of the industrial age caused tensions within Amish communities, particularly among the Old Order Amish who were more conservative. By 1878, most Amish communities had chosen to join with more progressive Mennonite communities (who are more accepting of new technologies), thus becoming Amish Mennonites, (many later dropped the Amish from the name altogether). It is noticeable that between 1870-1880, while these shifts within the Amish community were occurring, three of the families of Emmanuel and Catherine’s grown children chose to relocate. The family of their daughter Lizzie Plank moved on to Davis Co., IA, where a more progressive Mennonite community was forming. Their daughter Catherine Hartzler's family moved to a nearby Amish community in Starke Co., IN that tried to preserve more of the Old Order traditions. Meanwhile, their daughter Anna Crosby's family left for Rhea Co., TN, where no known Amish community existed. Their youngest, Ephriam, initially went back to the diverse Mennonite area encompassed by the Big Valley of PA, but eventually retired to CA. Even for the three children who remained, (Rebecca Greenwalt, Magdalena Kent, and Abraham Stutzman), the Amish-Mennonite Community of Elkhart-LaGrange fractured and evolved as well. 

The current Amish population map closely mirrors the migration path taken by our Amish Stutzman ancestors. It is said that at one time, Amish communities were plentiful enough to create a migration trail network of settlements that reached all the way from PA to IN. Most of those settlements have gone extinct by today. 

Rebecca Greenwalt and Catherine Hartzler are found in Mennonite records, and most likely remained in the faith. Anna Crosby and Ephriam most likely did not. Our ancestor, Magdalena "Martha" Stutzman, married Robert Kent in 1870. Robert father, Orvin Kent, had described himself as a Swedenborgian, but his son Robert was a Methodist, and that seems to be the faith they followed. Martha was blessed with only 2 children, the first of whom died in early infancy, and perhaps that affected her faith as well. Their surviving son, Bernis Kent, shows no indications of having ever been affiliated with the Amish faith. Most likely we still have Amish Mennonite relatives out there somewhere though, and this Stutzman line has clearly been deeply involved in the Anabaptist movement for over 200 years!



Stutzman Descendancy



Research Notes

0) In 1732, the colony of PA secured a release from the Delaware Indians on the land that would later become Berks Co., thus allowing it to be opened for White settlement. In 1736, the immigration of the families of Melchoir Detweiler and Hans Sieber were sponsored by Amish church leaders from Alsace. They were to determine whether or not this new land was a suitable resettlement area for their Amish refugee community. They purchased land in future Upper Bern Twp., settling along both the Northkill and Irish Creeks. A favorable report soon followed, and the following year a ship called the Charming Nancy brought another 21 Amish families to the area. Additional ships soon followed, with another large group arriving in 1742, and smaller groups in between. (Duane Kauffman, Mifflin County Amish and Mennonite Story, 1791-1991, pp. 19-20.) 

1) Maudlin Stutzman is assumed to be a widow due to having purchased the land in her own name. Also, her name has not been found on any ship manifest from that time (Ref 15, Ref 13), which usually only recorded the names of male passengers at the age of 16 or older. It is furthermore assumed that her children were minors at the time of voyage, due both to them not appearing on any ship records, and to not having purchased any land of their own until 1747. (The minimum age for purchasing land was 21 at the time, so they must have been born by at least 1726. But to be less than age 16 in 1736, they must have been born after 1720 as well. Thus, Christian and Hans were probably about 10-15 years of age during the voyage.) It is possible that Maudlin had more children as well. We only know of her 2 sons because of land records, and so daughters or children who died before adulthood would be much harder to track. It is also possible that her husband died as late as on the ship journey itself, which at that time took about 2-3 months under horrible conditions. What is known is that many children did not survive early ocean crossings, particularly infants. Nor did the sick or elderly. 

2) There was a Christian Stutzman and Magdalena (Steck) banished from Bern, Switzerland in 1711 according to "Gingerich, Hugh F., and Kreider, Rachel W., Amish and Amish Mennonite genealogies. Gordonville, Pennsylvania: Pequea Publishers (1986), p.848". In the past it has been suggested that Magdalena was Maudlin were the same person, and thus Christian Stutzman was her husband, who must have died before 1738. However, newer research has shown this not to be the case. Not only are they too old, having been born in 1677 and 1674 respectively, but evidence shows them to have resettled and remained in the Netherlands instead. 

In 1747, the same year Hans Studzman warranted land on an adjacent plot to Mandlin Stuedsman (assumed to be Maudlin Stutzman), her son, Christian Stutzman, resurveyed and expanded the original land holding. When Maudlin died in 1760, this land was passed to him (Ref 7, p.65), suggesting that Christian was the oldest son (though it also appears Hans may have died by this time). Also of note, there are land records in the same area for two other Berks Co. Christian Stutzmans, as well as a couple unrelated Jacob Stutzmans. These land records were initially conflated by Harvey Hochstetler to be the same people, but that has since been disproven (Ref 13).

3) Many people in the past have cited Anna Lorenz (a notable family) as Jacob Hochstetler’s wife based purely on speculation put forth in Ref 4, but there has been no evidence to support this (see section titled “Mrs. Jacob Hochstetler”). Immigration records do show her first name as Anna. More recent evidence suggests her maiden name may have been Burki, though this has not yet been firmly established. Given the repeated presence of the Bürki/Berkey surname in our own Stutzman/Hochstetler lines, as well as the Berkey's that were living close to the Hochstetler's in Northkill, I find this to be a likely possibility. At the very least, it seems more likely than the prior Lorenz assumption, though neither option is yet based on primary sources.

4) Regarding Christian Jr.’s 3 wives - Harvey Hochstetler identified his wife as Elizabeth Steiner (Ref.4, p.612), whereas Paul Hostetler identified her as Susanna Miller (Ref. 7, p.48). The record for his marriage to Elizabeth Steiner can be found in Ref 8. The evidence for his marriage to Susannah Miller can be found in Ref 9. In this source, a discussion of Christian Stutzman Jr.'s appointment to administer the estate of David Bearinger is presented, in which he is described as the deceased's brother-in-law. This relationship comes through the deceased's widow, Elizabeth Mueller/Miller, who was the sister of Susanna Mueller/Miller. Based on the 1786 date of this case, I have assigned our ancestor Abraham (b.1787) to be the son of Susanna Miller rather than Elizabeth Steiner. As for the third wife, Mary Beiler, I have found no direct proof of this, but it has been reported in enough places that I have kept it for now. The Beilers were a closely associated family within the early Amish settlements.

5) This date is often misstated as 3 Jan 1834, but this is actually the date for another Christian Stutzman who lived in Somerset Co. rather than Mifflin Co.


References

1) Baughman, J. Ross. "Apart from the world: an account of the origins and destinies of various Swiss Mennonites...", Edenburg, VA : Shenandoah History Publishers, 1997. https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/records/item/148167-apart-from-the-world-an-account-of-the-origins-and-destinies-of-various-swiss-mennonites-who-fled-from-their-homelands-in-remote-parts-of-the-cantons-zurich-aargau-and-bern-as-well-as-alsace-the-kurpflaz-sic-and-later-along-the-edges-of?offset= : 2024.

2) PA State Archives, Warrantee Township Maps. r017-Map2602-Berks-UpperBernTwpWeb.pdf (state.pa.us) : 2024. (Warrants 83, 101, 102, and 111).

3) Explore PA History, Northkill Amish Historical Marker. explorepahistory.com/hmarker.php?markerId=1-A-52 : 2024.

4) Hostetler, Harvey. "Descendants of Barbara Hochstedler and Christian Stutzman". Scottdale, Pa.: Mennonite Pub. House, 1938. Descendants of Barbara Hochstedler and Christian Stutzman : Hostetler, Harvey, 1857-1939 : 2024.

5) "Northkill Amish : The Hochstetler Story." Sheaf House Publishers : 2015.  The Hochstetler Story (northkill.com) : 2024.

6) Miller, J. Virgil. "From an Indian Perspective": Descendents of Jacob Hochstetler. Indian Issues & Interactions | hochstetler (jhfa.net) : 2024.

7) Hostetler, Paul V. "Bishop Jacob Hertzler and his Family". Hamden, CT : Privately-published, 1976. Bishop Jacob Hertzler and his family (familysearch.org) : 2024.

8) Stutzman, Charles J. "Genealogy Report: Descendants of Christian Stutzman". Geneology.com, 2003. Charles-J-Stutzman - User Trees - Genealogy.com : 2024.

9) Hostetler, James. TNG 14 Database. Swiss Anabaptist Genealogical Association, 2023. SAGA Home (saga-omii.org) : 2024.

10) Umble, John S. "Wayne County Amish (Ohio, USA)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1959. Web. 22 Feb 2024. Wayne County Amish (Ohio, USA) - GAMEO : 2024.

11) Umble, John S. "Fairfield County (Ohio, USA)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1956. Web. 22 Feb 2024. Fairfield County (Ohio, USA) - GAMEO : 2024.

12) Wenger, John C. and Russell R. Krabill. "Indiana (USA)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1987. Web. 22 Feb 2024. Indiana (USA) - GAMEO : 2024.


14) David Luthy. "The Amish In America: Settlements That Failed, 1840 - 1960", p.420. Pathway Publishers, Lagrange, Indiana : 1986. The Amish in America : settlements that failed, 1840-1960 (familysearch.org) : 2024.

15) Strassburger, Ralph Beaver, and Hinke William John. "Pennsylvania German Pioneers: a Publication of the Original Lists of Arrivals In the Port of Philadelphia From 1727 to 1808". Norristown, Pa.: Pennsylvania German Society, 1934. Catalog Record: Pennsylvania German pioneers; a publication... | HathiTrust Digital Librar : 2024.



Monday, January 1, 2024

The "Vigdahl's" from Suldal, Rogaland, Norway

Family Line Links: (WikiTree.com)(Ancestry.com)(FamilySearch.org)

Researching family history in Norway can be a bit challenging due to the patronymic naming system that was widely used until 1923. On one hand, its nice because if your ancestor's name was Ole Jonsson or Lena Jonsdatter, then you already know that the father's first name was Jon. But you have no idea what his last name was, and you can't look anything up by surname since it changed every generation. That is where the farm names become so important. Up until the 1800s, 80-90% of Norway's inhabitants lived on farms and each farm had a name. Furthermore, mountainous inland areas like Suldal, generally allowed for only small, scattered settlement areas around river deltas or gorges. Back in the 1800s, these small hamlets generally held at most about 5 farms, so saying your farm name was almost like saying what town you were from. And thankfully, that is how Norwegian farmers often referred to themselves when baptizing a child, or answering a census worker. So if Ole Jonsson lived on the Guggedal farm in the town of Bratveit, Norway, he would refer to himself as Ole Jonsson Guggedal, or sometimes just Ole Guggedal. Not so bad, right? However, if his family decided to move to nearby Vetrhus farm instead, he now began to refer to himself as Ole Jonsson Vetrhus, or maybe just Ole Vetrhus. So it gets complicated to trace whose who. 

Fig 1: An example of the Norway's mountainous terrain, in which non-coastal farming is only possible in small, low-lying areas of land watered by the rivers of mountainous runoff (light green areas). Before industrialization and electricity, the inland population was contained mainly within these areas.


Map showing Nesflaten within the Suldal Parish of Rogaland County, Norway
 
Thankfully, the owners of most farms kept detailed farm books (bygdebøker) that listed the names of their inhabitants, as well as the day to day accounting of the farm's history. The earliest mention of the Vigdahl family line occurs in these farm books. According to Halvord Hoftun (Ref 0), Østen Knutson, b.1605 lived on Vik farm (Fig 1) in Jensaplasset, Suldal, Norway (son of Knut, b.1580, of Veka farm (Fig 1)) while raising his family. Østen did not own this farm, however, he was merely a worker, and so his children has no particular interest in staying on the land as adults. Thus, his son Jon Østenson, (b.1654, direct line), after marrying Kari Nilsdatter of Veka farm, left Vik to raise his own family on Fisketjon farm (Fig 1) in Suldalsosen. Likewise, his son, Østen Jonson (b.1691, direct line) went on to Gautun farm, where he married an older woman named Gjertrud Torkelsdatter, and together they had 3 children (Note 4). This seems to have been a lucky match for Østen, because somehow they eventually became owners of Gautun farm (Fig 2).

Guatun (Guattun) farm in Nesflaten, Suldal, Rogaland, Norway today

Fig 2: Satellite view of the farms along Suldal Lake from Veka to Nesflaten

Historical Background

Gautun farm (now Gauttun (Note 1)) lies at the western edge of the river delta hamlet of Nesflaten, Suldal, Norway. It is a quaint, rural village, overlooking the deep waters of Lake Suldal (Suldalsvatnet) and nestled within the rocky folds of Mount Melsnuten (Mælen). Suldal lake is the headwaters of the Suldal River (Suldalslågen), which travels a winding 30 miles westward to the city of Sand, and then empties into the Sands Fjord (Sandsfjorden). When the census was taken in 1664, Nesflaten contained 3 original undivided farms (matrikkelgård): Overskeid (Avinskei), Haugen, and Gautun. Amazingly, these 3 farms still exist today (along with a few more as well), as they probably have, in one form or another, for more than 1,000 years

Google Map showing the 29 mile route from Nesflaten to Sand. Lake Suldal feeds into the Suldal River just north of Suldalsosen (you can see this map in better resolution by clicking on the link). It is a long, skinny lake; about 18 miles in length and just over a mile wide. Today you can travel this route by car rather than boat, by following the historic National Road 13 (shown above). The family line lived at various farms along this route throughout the 17th-19th centuries, and probably for much longer.

Mapcarta satellite view of Nesflaten, Suldal, Norway, showing 5 of the farms now present there. Gauttum farm is found on the Westernmost end of the hamlet.

Norway is, of course, part of the original homeland of the Vikings, who were in power from about 800 to 1050 AD. While we tend to be more familiar with the Vikings that went around conquering places like England, the reality is that most Vikings were simple farming folk, just like in the rest of Europe. During the Viking era, extended families (and livestock) usually lived all together in large Turf or Longhouses and worshiped Norse gods like Odin. The Norse religious beliefs of the old country began to be slowly Christianized around 995 AD, after King Olaf Tryggvason was converted and baptized into the Roman Catholic faith during an expedition to England. By the end of the 11th century, there were likely at least 3 Catholic stave churches in the Suldal Parish, one in Jelsa, one in Sand, and closest to our ancestors, the Suldal Church in Sudalsosen. During the Protestant Reformation, King Christian III converted Norway to Lutheranism in 1539 (ie persecuted Catholic priests and took over church lands while burning/plundering churches all along the way). He also established the state sponsored Church of Norway. In light of all this mayhem, the Suldal Church has been rebuilt several times over the centuries, with the most recent version being constructed in 1852. A parish church in Nesflaten was first built at this time as well.

Example of a Norwegian Stave church, a medieval style of architecture using a wooden post and lintel construction technique. This particular church is found in Borgund, Norway, and is believed to have been built about 1200 AD.

The Nesflaten Chapel of Suldal Parish of the Church of Norway. The current Suldal church in Suldal hamlet was designed by the same architect, Hans Linstow, and is of very similar style. The cemetery of the Nesflaten Chapel was not created until about 1848.

Unfortunately, the Suldal Parish churches did not begin record keeping until 1778, and so up until that point we know very little about the family line. We do know than that Østen Jonsen's first born son was named Torkel Østensen (b.1716), and that now that the farm was owned, several generations of this line's first born sons would continue to reside on Gautun for their entire life span. What was life like for these Norwegian peasant living far up in the mountainous terrain of Suldal Parish?

Drawing by Severin Worm-Petersen depicting a pre-industrial Norwegian mountain farm

Unlike most other areas in Europe, Norway never adopted a feudal system for land ownership, due to a lack of rich nobility with which to purchase and administrate it (Ref 1, p.21). When church land was taken over by the king during the Reformation, most of it was simply sold to the peasants who cultivated it, and by the mid-1700s the majority of peasants were land owners (bøndergods) (Ref 9). Under this system, even non-landowning tenant farmers (leilending) were given a great bit of leeway. Their share of the farm's cultivation was taken in the form of rents, but the way in which the tenant farmer's family went about earning the amount needed was up to the tenants themselves. 

Many farmers were also excellent craftsmen, a skill which could be put to use for extra income during the winter months.

Additionally, throughout the 1400-1600s, farm land in Norway was plentiful and cheap. This was due to the black death that had ravaged the country in 1349-1351, killing about  65% of its inhabitants (Ref 3, p.144), including most of its noble class (Note 5). Many farms during this period were abandoned, especially in lower quality and/or more isolated mountainous areas. Despite later strong population growth, pre-plague levels of population were not again attained until the late 1600s, and for a time, population growth was easily absorbed by the reoccupation of previously abandoned farms. Having such relatively easy access to farm land ownership allowed this ideal to become an important part of Norwegian identity

"Mother there comes an old woman" (Mor der kommer en kjerring) by Theordor Kittelsen. In Norway, the black death was often described as arriving in the shape of an old woman named Pesta, who would travel from community to community with a broomstick and a rake. If you came across her path while she held her rake, then at least some of your people would be spared. But if she was sweeping with her broom, all would be dead within 3 days.

Due to their remote location and short growing season, mountain-based Norwegians were unable to rely overly on crops for their subsistence. Instead, farmers survived by growing what grain they could, mainly barley and oat, and then supplementing their crop with the proceeds from fishing, dairy, and livestock (Ref 1, p.20). The goal was to get the store house (stabbur) as full as possible before the cold set in, so that the family and livestock could make it through the long, dark winter. It was not uncommon for cattle to be too weak in the spring to rise up from the barn floor. During years of repeated crop difficulties, whole families could starve.

A Norwegian pillared storehouse built in the 17th century. They were built raised off the ground and with a gap between the steps and walls in order to help prevent mice from entering. Inside they kept bins or grain and flour, salted meats and fish, and cold hardy dairy such as butter and cheese. History mentions their use back to the age of the Vikings, and keeping them in top shape and secure from rats and thieves was of the utmost importance.

Another strategy Norwegian farmers from mountainous regions like Suldal used was that of the summer dairy (seter). Historically, Norwegians recognized only two seasons - summer and winter. Summer started on April 14th and ran though Oct 13th, with Midsummer's Eve falling on July 13th. Once summer arrived, livestock were released from the dark, cramped barns and preparations were made for the journey (buføring) to the mountain summer pasture. Often this pasture was some distance from the main homestead, but at a fixed location near a stream where primitive dwellings were maintained for processing animal milk into food, and storing it safely until it could be transported back to the main farm. The two main tenets of these summer dwellings were the milkmaid (seterbudeie) and the cowherd (gjetergutt). In old Norwegian literature, many romances begin with a young suitor utilizing the long summer nights to make his way up the mountain for a visit with the desire of his heart.

On the Banks of the Fjord by Hans Dahl, depicting young milkmaid being taken out for a boat ride by her suitor.

Summer pasturing allowed for much smaller allotments of land to be necessary on the main farm. The result was that multiple households could be maintained on a relatively small piece of farmland. Farm owners utilized this advantage by subdividing the original farm (matrikkelgård) into subfarms (bruk), whose owners were sometimes related to the original family. During census taking, each farm and subfarm would be assigned a number to help make their identity more clear. Although some of the names have changed a bit due to the standardization of spelling that occurred in the early 1900s, most of the 68 Suldal main farms listed on the 1664 census can still be located (or if not the farm itself, then at least the village where it was once stood). Farmers also began to create cottager (husmann) tenancies at the edge of farms (Ref 1, p.21). Instead of paying rent, the cotter was bound to work the main farm for a set number of days per year. Norwegian farmers relied heavily on these work agreements to make certain to have enough labor to complete the work that would get the family through the long winter. In early times, they took these agreements so seriously that farmhands were only allowed to leave their jobs on two specific days of the year, April 14th and Oct 14th (the beginning of the new season, called "faredag"), and even then, only if they had first given at least 8 weeks notice. 

Li farm museum in Suldal Parish, Rogaland, Norway. Here one can view and example of the small, interdependent farm community (bygd) that this region is known for. These characteristic Norwegian communities were created as a function of the farm subdivisions, which allowed farmers to make the most of the limited land available. By the keeping the homes and farm buildings small and tightly packed, they left a greater amount of land free for crops and pasturing.

"Vigdahl" Family Line

Such was the world Torkel Ostenson was born into as he came of age in the mid 1730s. Torkel first married in his mid-20s to a woman named Kari Eriksdatter. She was from Guggedal farm (near Bråtveit, Fig 2), about a 5 mile row down the length of Lake Suldal. They had at least 2 daughters together. Unfortunately, sometime after this second daughter, Torkel's first wife died. He made do for a few years on his own, and then married again in his mid-30s. His second wife was a woman named Ingrid Oddsdatter from Foss farm (Fig 1), which was quite a ways down river from Nesflaten. She was about 10 years younger than him, which was fairly typical for second marriages in these farming communities. Ingrid joined Torkel on Gautun farm, and they added 7 more children to the family. Their second born child, Aad Torkelsen (b.1754), was this line's direct ancestor. Torkel died in 1768 at the age of 52. Despite being only 14 at the time, as his first born son, Aad would have been the child most likely to take ownership of the farm when he came of age, which seems to have been what occurred. All but one of Torkel's 9 children lived to adulthood (this was during a time when the child mortality rate was close to 25% (Ref 4)). The other children all left Gautun farm, but settled at other nearby farms along Suldal Lake and River.

Nesflaten, Suldal, Rogaland, Norway in 1888

Aad (sometimes spelled Odd) married in his mid-20s, to a woman named Kari Tjaerandsdatter from Vetrhus farm (Fig 2). Vethrus farm was in the same river valley as Guggedal, but about a mile inland and farther up the mountain. They raised a family of 9 children together on Gautun farm, though 2 of them died in early childhood. Their second born son, Tjaerand Aadsson (b.1782), was our direct line. His older brother, Torkel (b.1779), inherited the family farm after their father passed in 1818 at the age of 64. Interestingly, Torkel's family line continued to occupy Gauttun farm until at least 1910, after which time the family moved to Urheim farm, directly adjacent to Gauttun. A member of the family was living on the Urheim farm in Nesflaten until at least 2004, and more recent members of the family are buried in the Nesflaten churchyard.

Norwegian Christmas on the farm, 1846 painting by Adolph Tidemand

Not being the first born son, upon adulthood Tjaerand Aadsson set off to find a future of his own. In 1809, at the age of 27, he married a woman named Ingrid Ostensdatter from Jordebrekk farm in the even more remote Suldal hamlet of Bleskestad (Fig 2). Together they moved to the farm hamlet of Veka, about a mile from the heart of the Sudal parish- Suldalsosen. There Ingrid gave birth to 8 children, though sadly 3 of them died in early childhood. This was during the very difficult final years of the Napoleonic Wars. Since 1536, Norway had been considered a Danish province, and Denmark chose to align itself with Napoleon against Britain during the wars. In 1807, the British bombed the Danish capital of Copenhagen in order to capture and destroy the Dano-Norwegian Navy. Britain was successful, and after this battle the Royal Navy was able to effectively block all Norwegian ports from trade for the remainder of the war, which ended in 1814. By 1812, the Kingdom of Norway was suffering under mass starvation and economic hardshipand it was not until the 1840s that financial stability finally improved. Though Tjaerand and Ingrid's first three children born during the war did survive to adulthood (Note 2), all 3 children born shortly after the war, from 1816-1819, died before the age of 8. Thankfully, the family seems to have been doing better by 1822, because that is when Tjaerand Tjaerenden, the line we descend from, was born.

The bombing of Copenhagen, Denmark in Sept 1807

After the war ended in 1814, Denmark was forced to give up control of Norway, and instead it passed to the hands of Sweden as a democratic constitutional monarchy. Though not without Norwegians first attempting to fight for their independence. Frustrated by their thwarted efforts to become an independent nation, while at the same time wary of their new Swedish political ties, it became important to Norwegians to develop their own sense of Norwegian nationalism (Ref 5, p.3). In addition to formally documenting Norwegian spelling, art, and folklore, the writings of philosophers sought to create an ideal of who a "true Norwegian" was. This ideal was meant to be in opposition to someone who was "intellectually Danish" or "politically Swedish" at heart, as many in the ruling class were judged to be (Ref . 5, pp.9-13). Given these constraints, the ideal, genuine Norwegianer began to look a lot like a traditional, rural Norwegian farmer. In order to preserve their "Norwegianness", many felt it was vitally important to begin educating this working class of farmers so that they could begin to take on a larger role in the democratic process (Ref 5, p.16).


Beginning in the 1830s, the development of a modern education system began to take shape for the purpose of strengthening and modernizing the nation (Ref 6, p.9). Unfortunately, this coincided with the early industrial revolution in Norway, which by the the 1860s was shifting farmers away from traditional agriculture, and into the mechanized labor of the cities instead. As trade and agricultural methods modernized, nutrition improved and the population of the nation skyrocketed. Between 1800 and 1900, Norway's number of inhabitants almost tripled, and during the 1850's, experienced a higher rate of growth than any other European nation. The amount of farm land available for carrying out the newly defined Norwegian dream did not change overly much, however, and thus more and more Norwegians began to feel that their ideal pursuit of happiness could be better obtained in the land rich New World (Ref 7, p.52).

Photo of immigrants waiting for a boat to travel from Bergen, Norway to America in the 1860s. Beginning in 1849, steam ships dramatically reduced the amount of time it took to cross the Atlantic- from about 3 months to about 3 weeks, making the difficulty of traveling abroad much less burdensome than it had been previously. 
 
Tjaerand Tjaerandsen survived the difficult post-war years of his childhood and went on to marry Marta Sveinungsdatter, also from Veka farm, in 1848 at the age of 25. Together they had 7 children, 5 of whom survived to adulthood. Sometime between their second and third child, they left Veka farm for the nearby Vikene farm, about a half mile down the road. Sadly, Tjaerand did not live long into adulthood. He died in 1861 at the young age of 38, when his youngest child was just 1 year old. Financially, this seems to have been very disruptive to the family. In 1865, Marta was still living on Vikene farm with her young family and managing to get by somehow. But as soon as the children were old enough to work, they were sent away from farm to make their own way elsewhere. By 1875, the youngest, Kari, age 15, was working as a maid servant back on Veka farm. Brita, the next youngest, had gone up the lake a ways to work as a maid servant on Guggedal farm. Marta's oldest son, Tjaerand, had gone with her back to Nesflaten, where they were working at Kilen farm. But her second oldest son, Sveinung Tjerandsen (b.1851), along with her daughter Ingrid, decided to take their lives in a new direction. In the early 1870's, they became the first of the direct line to leave Suldal parish behind, and travel 100 miles eastward to Bjørg, Telemark, Norway.

Map showing the town of Bjørg, within the parish of Seljord, within the county of Telemark, Norway.

It is unknown for certain what was behind Ingrid and Sveinung's decision to move to Telemark upon reaching adulthood. Probably not the stories of Selma, the sea monster, said to live in the waters of Lake Seljord at that time, but who knows? More likely might be the Dyrsku'n, an annual agricultural show that the Seljord area became known for, which attracts many thousands of visitors each year. It began in 1866, and at that time specialized primarily in cattle, which would have been an area Sveinung and Ingrid were quite familiar with given their mountain farm upbringing. The 1870s were also a major period of restructuring in Norway's agricultural section. Adoption of more modern mechanized farming techniques reached wide spread levels of adoption this decade, forcing many farm laborers out of work. With their father's early passing leaving the family scattered, Ingrid and Sveinung probably felt less tied to the small farming communities around them than previous generations of the family line. And like many Norwegian's of that time, they were probably searching for an area where they could carry on the farming tradition they had been born into, though perhaps with some modern additions, as young folk are more apt to do.

Lake Seljord (Seljordsvatnet), home of Selma, the infamous sea serpent

Fig 3: Seljord Municipality, containing Seljord Church and the nearby town of Bjørge

By 1874, Sveinung had married a woman named Gunlaug Haraldsdatter, who was born on the mountain farm of Dalen (Fig 3), just a mile north of Bjørge. In 1875, Sveinung, his sister Ingrid, and his new wife were all living on the farm of Leif Ellefsen in Bjørge, along with another young couple as well. A year later, Sveinung and Gunlaug welcomed their first child Tjerand Sveinungson (b.1876, direct line) into the world. Unfortunately, this Tjerand was born just as Norway was entering a long period of economic depression. Previously, Norway had overcome the economic instability at the launch of the Industrial Revolution, and had entered a period of strong economic growth from 1843-1875 as it joined the world market in trade. But this worldwide period of expansion hit a major snag in 1873 when the US government passed the Coinage Act; a law which had the ultimate effect of basically forcing the world to adopt the gold standard monetary system. Initially, this caused a sudden contraction of the world's money supply, prompting a run on the banks. In Norway, this led to a long period of deflation that strangled the economy. By 1880, Norwegians began fleeing this economic hardship with large-scale emigration to America.

Seljord Church, first built in 1180 AD, where Sveinung and Gunlaug baptized their first child, Tjerand Sveinungson, in 1876.


In 1880 (Note 3), Sveinung Tjerandson and his wife Gunlaug Haraldsdatter, decided to join this wave of Norwegian emigrants looking for better opportunities overseas. Gunlaug's sister Margit and her family joined with them on the voyage. Sveinung's sister Ingrid did not accompany them though. Instead, like many others in the failing agricultural sector, she finally abandoned the farming lifestyle and instead made her way to Oslo, Norway; the country's economic, industrial, and governmental hub. For those that did choose the immigration pathway, however, the Midwest of America was the place to go at the time. Many of the pre-Civil War immigrants from Norway had settled in western Wisconsin and along the Red River Valley of Minnesota (Ref 8). After the Civil War, the passage of the 1862 Homestead Act saw continued Norwegian settlement in southern Minnesota and Northern Iowa. By 1880, many of these farmers were pulling up stakes again to try out homesteading on the relatively untouched lands of North and South Dakota.

Late 1800s advertisement for land in Minnesota in South Dakota

Sveinung and Gunlaug started out in Albert Lea, Freeborn Co., MN, where they lived for a time with the family of one of Margit's brother-in law's siblings. This sibling, Andres Knudtson, had been born on Overland farm (Fig 3) less than a mile from the Dalen farm where Gunlaug and Margit had been raised. When Andres and his wife Anlaug first came to America in 1867, relatives had provided them with similar hospitality to help smooth the way. By 1900, they had purchased a 40 acre farm in nearby Hayward, MN. 

1906 plat map for Hayward, Freeborn Co., MN showing the property of Sveinung Tjerandson. Located at "the South Half of the North West Quarter of Section 31, Twp. 102, Range 20, containing roughly 40 acres."

Upon arriving in the US, many Norwegians chose to Americanize their last names in order to better fit in with their new neighbors. This usually involved either changing all of the household last names to match the father's surname, or taking the name of the farm the family had worked on as a surname. By the 1880 census, the family was using Tjerandson as their surname, and thus their son, Tjerand Sveinungson, had become Tjerand Tjerandson. By 1900, they had Americanized their last name further, going now by the more pronounceable surname of Vigdahl (though this does not seem to have been a formal name change, given the continued use of Tjerandson on later legal documents). The word "dal" in Norwegian means valley. Given that "g" and "k", as well as "i", "a", and "e", were often interchanged in spelling at that time, it is possible that the "Vig" in Vigdahl was meant to call back to the Veka farm (sometimes spelled Vegge) that Sveinung had come from before leaving Suldal for Seljord. Additionally, Tjerand was now going by the first name of Charles, while his younger sister Ingeborg began using the first name of Emma. 

1880 and 1900 census for Sveinung Tjerandson's family

In 1899, Charles Vigdahl (formerly Tjerand Sveinungson) married Susan Gullickson from Logan Twp, Winnebago Co., Iowa, which was right across the county/state line from Freeborn Co., Minnesota. Susan was born in Iowa in 1879, but most of her 8 siblings had been born in Voss, Hordaland, Norway before coming to America in 1873. In the first year or so after their marriage, they lived in Hayward, Freeborn, MN with Charles' parents and siblings. This may have been a bit of a rushed wedding given that their first born, Elsie, was born less than 4 months after tying the knot! By 1905, they had welcomed two more children into the world, David and Ansil Vigdahl (b.1904, direct line) and were living in the warehouse district of West Minneapolis while Charles worked as a mechanical laborer. Then, in 1909, they relocated once again to Mason City, Cerro Gordo, IA, (just SE of Winnebago Co.) where they chose to remain. It was here that they completed their family with their youngest child, Margaret, born in 1911.


In Mason City, Charles worked for the railroad industry doing car repair. By 1920, he and Susan had purchased a home at 630 S Monroe Ave, where the Monroe Plaza South strip mall now stands. Most of their 4 children stayed in Iowa, with the exception of their son David who moved to Alaska. When their son Ansil was 30, he married his first wife, Leona Sandschulte, who grandparents had immigrated from Germany in the mid-1800s. They were married Mar 4, 1935, in a Catholic ceremony at St. John's Catholic Church in Mason City, IA. A little over 6 months later, Leona gave birth to their son Roger Vigdahl (b.1935). Sadly, the labor was complicated, and Leona went into shock following a forceps delivery and passed away. Ansil remarried to Irene Carpenter from Minnesota two and a half years later, but Roger remained their only child. Leona was buried with her parents at the Saint John's Cemetery in Bancroft, Kossuth, IA.


Although many descendants of this line are still found in IA and MN (as well as a few in TX, CO, and MO), those of the line carrying the Vigdahl surname are only still present in Minnesota (our line) and Alaska (Ansil's brother David's line).

Notes

1) A word about spelling as well. Norway did not standardize spelling until the early 1900s, and lots of names have mutated a bit over time. People back then just wrote down what things sounded like when spoken, which could change with the dialect. Often e's and a's were interchanged, for example. Also, American's tended to change k's to c's and v's to g's. Additionally, Norway has a few letters in its alphabet that we don't have. Namely æ, ø, and å, which sometimes get translated as ae, o, and a, but other times can be just "a" or just "e" or oe or aa... Generally speaking, if the name sounds roughly the same, it probably is the same, even if it is spelled quite differently. For instance, in Nesflaten, the farm Avinskei became Overskeid with time.

2) The second born child, Odd Tjerandsen, who was born during the worst of the war food shortage in 1812, does not seem to have ever married or had children. It is possible there were physical/mental deficits caused by lack of nutrition for this child as well. Additionally, of the 5 children who did survive, all but one died in their late 30's to early 50's, unlike previous generations that had usually lived to their late 50's to early 70's.

3) It is possible it was as early as 1877. Census records disagree on the exact timing.

4) The birth year of Gjertrud is not well established, although her father's birth year of 1643 and her husband's birth year of 1691 are more certain. Given these dates, I think it is unlikely that she was born in 1663 as one source suggests though she does seem likely to be a bit older than her husband. For these reasons, I have put my best guess at about 1680 for her birth.

5) The high death toll of the Black Death in Norway compared to other Scandinavian countries was the main reason Norway lost it independence to Denmark in 1397 when it was forced to join the Kalmar Union. Basically, the political structure of both the church and state became so fractured that it was no longer able to defend itself, and nearby neighbors took advantage. It did not fully regain its independence until 1905, at which point, having no legitimate claims to the throne remaining, it offered the throne Prince Carl of Denmark, who was a distant relative of Norway's medieval kings. He accepted, and took on the title of Haakon VII, King of Norway.

References

0) Hoftun, Hallvard M. "Gamie Suldal: gards - og aettesoge" Suldal, Norway: Utgjevar Suldal Kommune, 1972, p. 388, 392-393. FamilySearch.org. https://www.familysearch.org/search/genealogies/submission/8/MMD5-72Z : 2023.

1) Holmsen. Andreas. "The old Norwegian peasant community: Investigations undertaken by the institute for comparative research in human culture, Oslo". Scandinavian Economic History Review,  (1956) 4:1, p.17-32. https://doi.org/10.1080/03585522.1956.10411481 : 2023.

2) Onsager, Lawrence W., "The Norwegian Ancestry of Johannes (John) Larson (1886-1957); From the Bakken Subfarm, Guggedal Main Farm in Rogaland County, Norway to the Suldal Norwegian Settlement in Juneau County, Wisconsin". (2018) The Lemonweir Valley Press : Mauston, WI. https://digitalcommons.andrews.edu/books/55 : 2023.

3) Brothen, James A. "Population Decline and Plague in late medieval Norway". Annales de Démographie Historique Année. (1996) pp. 137-149. https://www.persee.fr/doc/adh_0066-2062_1996_num_1996_1_1915 : 2023.

4) Bengtsson, T., & Lundh, C. (1999). "Child and infant mortality in the Nordic countries prior to 1900". (Lund Papers in Economic History; No. 66). Department of Economic History, Lund University. https://lucris.lub.lu.se/ws/files/22925644/LUP_66.pdf : 2023.

5) Bø, Gudleiv. "The History of a Norwegian National Identity". (2020) University of Oslo. https://www.tsu.ge/data/file_db/scandinavian-studies/Nation-building-the-Norwegian-way.pdf : 2023.

6) Stugu, Ola Svein. "Educational Ideals and Nation Building in Norway 1840-1900". Nordic Lights. Education for Nation and Civic Society in the Nordic Countries, 1850-2000. https://www.academia.edu/1388791/Educational_Ideals_and_Nation_Building_in_Norway_1840_1900 : 2023.

7) Mureșan, Ioana-Andreea. "Norwegian emigration and the emergence of modernity in Norway: America letters and the cases of Knut Hamsun and Sigbjørn Obstfelder". (2020) The Romanian Journal for Baltic and Nordic Studies. https://www.academia.edu/44833005/Norwegian_emigration_and_the_emergence_of_modernity_in_Norway_America_letters_and_the_cases_of_Knut_Hamsun_and_Sigbj%C3%B8rn_Obstfelder : 2023.

8) Qualey, Carlton C. “Pioneer Norwegian Settlement in Minnesota.” Minnesota History, vol. 12, no. 3, 1931, pp. 247–80. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/20160922. Accessed 24 Dec. 2023.

9) Mykland, Knut [Ed.] Norges Historie, Bind 7, Gjennom Nødsår og krig, p. 221 (Oslo: J.W. Cappelens Forlag, A/S, 1979).