Author |
Topic |
jkmarler
Norway Heritage Veteran
USA
7790 Posts |
Posted - 09/06/2014 : 03:28:05
|
quote: Originally posted by Kåarto
The Bowler/Foss family in Australia by Anthony Bowler link Kåre
Well, if that bit a database is accurate it would really change the structure of the family. But I doubt that it is correct to ascribe all those children to William Davidson and Agnes when the transcripts of the records in Ancestry have already been posted by Anton and show numbers of those children born to John Foss and Agnes.
On the other hand there is a son named John Davidson in the family which if his actual name is John Foss, that might explain a family which appears in the Australia Easy records at familysearch as father of two daughters baptized on the same day 3 June 1894 in Ballan, Victoria, a Hilda b. 1 Jan 1894 and a Gertrude May b. 13 Dec 1889. |
|
|
jkmarler
Norway Heritage Veteran
USA
7790 Posts |
|
Kåarto
Norway Heritage Veteran
Norway
5861 Posts |
Posted - 12/06/2014 : 00:09:59
|
Ole Foss b. ca 1815, shoemaker and widower. He lived in Oslo but died in the hospital in Trondheim of stroke and pneumonia. So he was just on a visit to Trondheim. Most likley the same as shoemaker Ole Foss in the 1865 census from Olso.
Kåre |
|
|
vivi
Senior member
Norway
371 Posts |
|
rickeyherb
Starting member
Australia
13 Posts |
Posted - 13/06/2014 : 09:52:05
|
Thanks everyone - I'm just back from a week away so it will take a while to digest what you have provided. Very interested in the link you provided Kåre and will be contacting the owner of the page.
Rickey |
Rickey Herbertson |
|
|
rickeyherb
Starting member
Australia
13 Posts |
Posted - 14/06/2014 : 01:25:12
|
quote: Originally posted by jkmarler
1.I'm unfamiliar with costs in Australia for such things but it might be worthwhile to get an actual copy of the birth records for each of the children in case there was some issue with the rendering of the name and that there might be some further designation of his birth place and birth date in Norway. There were only two boys named in the family each called James William.
It costs $20 for each certificate so it is a bit prohibitive to get them all. I have just downloaded Louisa's birth certificate. She is my great-grandmother. Father's name is recorded as Johan Fossi aged 41 (in 1865) a shoemaker and born in Norway. Married in Castlemaine in 1857 to Agnes Emma Bowler who was aged 29 in 1865. The father was the informant
It might be just a coincidence but one of the aspects of the traditional naming practices in Europe (and Norway) was to name the either the first child born in the 2nd marriage after the deceased spouse or the first child born in the 2nd marriage after the first same sex child born in the 2nd marriage as the sex of the deceased spouse.
Generally, when the traditional patterns are followed in Norway the first children are named after the grandparents, sometimes following a specific order --husband's parents first, wife's parents second or some other order combination. Following these practices are not universal nor are they required.
2. Regards the marriage, how many Agnes Emma Bowler are there in 1850s in Australia? Are they any censuses taken in Australia which might be helpful to establish the numbers & locations?
Given her name I am confident that the Agnes Emma Bowler that married William Davidson in Adelaide is the one that hooked up with John Foss. There is a record here http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/38460429?searchTerm=Jesse%20Bowler&searchLimits=l-decade=185|||l-state=South+Australia|||l-year=1852 that places her father, Jess Bowler in Adelaide at that time.
So it might be possible that Agnes was married twice (if the record does indeed show him as William Edward Davidson born some other place than Norway) Perhaps there'll be a death of a William Edward Davidson between 1852-1856 recorded some place.
I can find no record of a death of William Edward Davidson As to the no find of the marriage record, if John Foss was a sailor, perhaps they were married by a sea captain rather than a minister or judge? They consistently state that they were married in Castlemaine. This is in inland Victoria at the height of the gold rush.
When I looked in the Trove, there were a number of mentions of John Foss'. One was a sailor who was killed falling off his boat, and several mentions of one involved in legal tussles. You might want to study them and see if any relate to your guy.
There appears to more than one John Foss who were sailors
Did your John ever become a citizen in Australia? I don't know.
Who was the informant on John's death certificate? The informant was the policeman that attended the inquest
Does the cemetery where he and Agnes lay maintain records about the interments? I'm not sure what records they would have. I can't see them having details that aren't on the death certificate
Thanks for your help with this. Slowly getting there I reckon |
Rickey Herbertson |
|
|
rickeyherb
Starting member
Australia
13 Posts |
Posted - 14/06/2014 : 01:44:52
|
quote: Originally posted by lyndal40
Poster mentioned this marriage of a Agnes Emma Bowler. Maybe her first marriage?
Australia Marriage Index, 1788-1950 Name: Agnes Emma Bowler Spouse Name: William Edward Davidson Marriage Date: 19 Jan 1852 Marriage Place: Adelaide Registration Place: Adelaide, South Australia Page Number: 219 Volume Number: 9
Yep, I believe this is her first (and possibly only marriage). |
Rickey Herbertson |
|
|
rickeyherb
Starting member
Australia
13 Posts |
Posted - 14/06/2014 : 01:54:45
|
quote: Originally posted by jkmarler
quote: Originally posted by Kåarto
The Bowler/Foss family in Australia by Anthony Bowler link Kåre
Well, if that bit a database is accurate it would really change the structure of the family. But I doubt that it is correct to ascribe all those children to William Davidson and Agnes when the transcripts of the records in Ancestry have already been posted by Anton and show numbers of those children born to John Foss and Agnes.
On the other hand there is a son named John Davidson in the family which if his actual name is John Foss, that might explain a family which appears in the Australia Easy records at familysearch as father of two daughters baptized on the same day 3 June 1894 in Ballan, Victoria, a Hilda b. 1 Jan 1894 and a Gertrude May b. 13 Dec 1889.
I tried contacting the owner of the page but the email bounced back. Details on the page are obviously incorrect but I will continue to see if I can find a contact. |
Rickey Herbertson |
|
|
jkmarler
Norway Heritage Veteran
USA
7790 Posts |
|
jkmarler
Norway Heritage Veteran
USA
7790 Posts |
Posted - 14/06/2014 : 07:22:28
|
The elder of the two Ole Foss, shoemaker b. Aker in the 1865 census so I looked for Johan Olsen with a Foss connection and found 2 both sort of outside the birth year range of 1824-1826:
#25 Johan Christian Olsen nedre Foss b. 1817: Source information: Oslo county, Aker, Parish register (official) nr. 13 (1828-1837), Confirmation records 1832, page 333. Permanent pagelink: http://www.arkivverket.no/URN:kb_read?idx_kildeid=7720&idx_id=7720&uid=ny&idx_side=-337
#34 Johan Olsen n Foss b. 28 Dec 1829: Source information: Oslo county, Aker, Parish register (official) nr. 17 (1829-1852), Confirmation records 1843, page 266. Permanent pagelink: http://www.arkivverket.no/URN:kb_read?idx_kildeid=7721&idx_id=7721&uid=ny&idx_side=-234
Then there were Johan Olsen who appeared without any obvious Foss connection but born within 1824-1827: #7 Johan Theodor Olsen (no visible Foss)b 14 Sept 1824: Source information: Oslo county, Aker, Parish register (official) nr. 17 (1829-1852), Confirmation records 1839, page 239. Permanent pagelink: http://www.arkivverket.no/URN:kb_read?idx_kildeid=7721&idx_id=7721&uid=ny&idx_side=-207
3 on this page, none with apparent Foss connection #12 Johannes Olsen b. 30 May 1825; #14 Carl Johan Olsen b. 19 Oct 1823; #19 Knut Johan Olsen, Lille(?) b. 19 May 1824 Source information: Oslo county, Aker, Parish register (official) nr. 17 (1829-1852), Confirmation records 1840, page 245. Permanent pagelink: http://www.arkivverket.no/URN:kb_read?idx_kildeid=7721&idx_id=7721&uid=ny&idx_side=-213
#25 Johan Olson b. 16 Dec 1823 (no visible Foss connection: Source information: Oslo county, Aker, Parish register (official) nr. 17 (1829-1852), Confirmation records 1841, page 254. Permanent pagelink: http://www.arkivverket.no/URN:kb_read?idx_kildeid=7721&idx_id=7721&uid=ny&idx_side=-222
2 on this page, no visible Foss #8 Bernt Jacob Johan Olsen b. 19 mar 1828; # 28 Jens Christian Olsen b. 12 Aug 1826: Source information: Oslo county, Aker, Parish register (official) nr. 17 (1829-1852), Confirmation records 1842, page 258. Permanent pagelink: http://www.arkivverket.no/URN:kb_read?idx_kildeid=7721&idx_id=7721&uid=ny&idx_side=-226
No visible Foss; #38 Johan Olsen b. 14 July 1827: Source information: Oslo county, Aker, Parish register (official) nr. 17 (1829-1852), Confirmation records 1842, page 260. Permanent pagelink: http://www.arkivverket.no/URN:kb_read?idx_kildeid=7721&idx_id=7721&uid=ny&idx_side=-228
No visible Foss #31 Johannes Olsen b. 17 Oct 1827: Source information: Oslo county, Aker, Parish register (official) nr. 17 (1829-1852), Confirmation records 1843, page 264. Permanent pagelink: http://www.arkivverket.no/URN:kb_read?idx_kildeid=7721&idx_id=7721&uid=ny&idx_side=-232
|
|
|
rickeyherb
Starting member
Australia
13 Posts |
Posted - 14/06/2014 : 09:20:37
|
Thank you for this jkmarler. I appreciate the effort you are going to. I wonder whether we are placing too much emphasis on the second name of Olsen given that it only appears on his death certificate and they are notoriously unreliable. I know there is not much more to go on.
Rickey |
Rickey Herbertson |
|
|
jkmarler
Norway Heritage Veteran
USA
7790 Posts |
Posted - 15/06/2014 : 20:07:17
|
quote: Originally posted by rickeyherb
Thank you for this jkmarler. I appreciate the effort you are going to. I wonder whether we are placing too much emphasis on the second name of Olsen given that it only appears on his death certificate and they are notoriously unreliable. I know there is not much more to go on. Rickey
When to go wider and when to go narrower in your research is always an important question to consider.
Personally, I feel if you go to searching every John, Johan, etc. born 1824-1826 in Norway without considering any other of the clues, subtle and slight though they might be, it will create a huge & an exhausting file of people to be searched which will likely quickly overwhelm you and any volunteer search staff you have. But it's your prerogative if that's what you choose to do.
It's clear from the rendering of his middle name that it is of some importance but the significance is not yet in focus. Holer-ola-olsen may be statements of the same fact filtered through the prism of the Australian ear hearing the spoken word and writing it into record and with the gradual process that any non English speaker undergoes as they assimilate in the English speaking world gathering confidence and clarity to finally make what they are saying understandable.
If John Olsen Foss was the name of a Norwegian immigrant in America, I would deconstruct his name in several ways to see what makes sense. Most often, if the person came to US as an adult carrying the name, I would first assume that his father's name was Ole and he was therefore an Ole's son--Olsen. But if he came as a child, it is much more likely (but not always true) that Olsen was his father's patronymic name-- at least I'd have to consider the possibility with more weight.
Some naming practices in Norway such as patronymics created fresh in each generation based on your father's first name were not reflected in the English-speaking world. It had been centuries since England had followed that practice so a Norwegian used to doing it the Norwegian way had to adapt to their new environment where in a permanent surname is adopted and inherited by future generations.
In many families in US you will find that all the children have the same middle initial. That doesn't usually happen in real life but it at least points to the possibility that a conscious decision was made to adapt what would have been their "real" surname in Norway that is the patronymic name formed from their father's given name and tamed it into a "middle" name which would follow more accepted practice in the new home. |
|
|
Kåarto
Norway Heritage Veteran
Norway
5861 Posts |
Posted - 15/06/2014 : 20:53:35
|
quote: Originally posted by rickeyherb
I tried contacting the owner of the page but the email bounced back. Details on the page are obviously incorrect but I will continue to see if I can find a contact.
The page was from 2005. Perhaps the same Anthony Bowler in June 2012 link
Kåre |
|
|
rickeyherb
Starting member
Australia
13 Posts |
Posted - 16/06/2014 : 00:37:41
|
Thanks Kåre - not sure if it is the same person. Context is fairly different. I have found a tree of his on Ancestry but he hasn't been online for 8 months. I have sent him an email and I will see how I go.
Rickey |
Rickey Herbertson |
|
|
lisa deliu
New on board
Australia
1 Posts |
Posted - 20/09/2014 : 07:19:46
|
Hi Rickey,
My grandmother Margaret McCarthy is searching for relatives for John Olsen Foss. My grandmothers Grandfather was a son of John Olsen Foss making John Foss the son a brother to Louise Foss who is apparently your Grandmother.
If you could kindly get back to us as we have more information regarding the Foss family that maybe helpful to you.
Thankyou
Lisa Deliu |
|
|
Topic |
|