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Fredriksen1882
Starting member
USA
25 Posts |
Posted - 14/10/2016 : 23:38:39
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My great grandfather sailed on the SS Kong Sigurd on September 24, 1881, destined for Boston, Massachusetts. The wheel icon links to a list of corresponding ships here:
http://www.norwayheritage.com/t_corresp.asp?id=1083
How do I interpret the meaning of these corresponding feeder ships and their destinations? Would my great grandfather have transferred to or from one of these ships?
Thank you for your help! |
Michael Fredriksen Stewart |
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Hopkins
Norway Heritage Veteran
USA
3351 Posts |
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Fredriksen1882
Starting member
USA
25 Posts |
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Borge
Veteran Moderator
Norway
1297 Posts |
Posted - 15/10/2016 : 14:40:32
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The transcribed information you found at the Digitalarkivet is not complete. In the original source the name of the agent is also noted. For Frederik's entry in the police emigration records the name of the agent was given as "Kopperud". Kopperud represented the North German Lloyd in 1881 (Norddeutscher Lloyd). From the corresponding ships you can se a confirmed match for the S/S Elbe of that line, which makes it likely to believe that Frederik traveled on that ship from Bremen to New York. I would start by checking the passenger list for the S/S Elbe. The S/S Kong Sigurd was not a transatlantic ship. See also: http://www.norwayheritage.com/articles/templates/voyages.asp?articleid=151&zoneid=6 |
Børge Solem |
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Fredriksen1882
Starting member
USA
25 Posts |
Posted - 15/10/2016 : 15:33:45
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Ah, that's very helpful -- thank you so much for clarifying and helping me to understand better!
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Michael Fredriksen Stewart |
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Fredriksen1882
Starting member
USA
25 Posts |
Posted - 15/10/2016 : 17:01:35
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I think Fredrik probably took the Atlas to Boston, arriving on October 11. We know through family knowledge that Boston was his port of entry, and the Atlas is noted as one of the corresponding ships that align with his departure from Norway on September 24.
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Michael Fredriksen Stewart |
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Borge
Veteran Moderator
Norway
1297 Posts |
Posted - 15/10/2016 : 22:26:15
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I am quite sure he did not, as the Atlsa did belong to the Cunard line and Frederik purchased a ticket from the North German Lloyd line. We also know that the S/S Kong Sigurd sailed between Norwegian and German ports. If he had traveled on the Atlas he would have traveled to Liverpool in England to embark. |
Børge Solem |
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AntonH
Norway Heritage Veteran
USA
9301 Posts |
Posted - 15/10/2016 : 22:49:18
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Here is the arrival of the Frederik referred to by Borge above.
Fred Frederiksen in the New York, Passenger Lists, 1820-1957 Name: Fred Frederiksen Arrival Date: 8 Oct 1881 Birth Date: abt 1852 Age: 29 Gender: Male Ethnicity/ Nationality: Norwegian Place of Origin: Norway Port of Departure: Bremen, Germany and Southampton, England Destination: United States of America Port of Arrival: New York, New York Ship Name: Elbe |
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AntonH
Norway Heritage Veteran
USA
9301 Posts |
Posted - 15/10/2016 : 22:57:23
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I have not found a record for the Atlas arrival in 1881 into Boston on Ancestry.com. Other years yes but not 1881.I found records for 1873 and 1883 but nothing inbetween. |
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AntonH
Norway Heritage Veteran
USA
9301 Posts |
Posted - 15/10/2016 : 23:06:00
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Here is the arrival of a Thomas Fredricksen age 4 in June of 1882. The original manifest is nearly unreadable. However this could be Jensine and family arriving.
Thomas Frederickson in the New York, Passenger Lists, 1820-1957 Name: Thomas Frederickson Arrival Date: 27 Jun 1882 Birth Date: abt 1878 Age: 4 Gender: Male Ethnicity/ Nationality: German Place of Origin: Germany Port of Departure: Bremen, Germany Destination: United States of America Port of Arrival: New York, New York Ship Name: Rhein |
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AntonH
Norway Heritage Veteran
USA
9301 Posts |
Posted - 15/10/2016 : 23:11:07
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Because of the poor readability of the original manuscript the transcriber rendered the name of Jensine as Louise. The age of Martha is a little off but it is still a fairly good match overall.
Louise Frederickson in the New York, Passenger Lists, 1820-1957 Name: Louise Frederickson Arrival Date: 27 Jun 1882 Birth Date: abt 1857 Age: 25 Gender: Female Ethnicity/ Nationality: German Place of Origin: Germany Port of Departure: Bremen, Germany Destination: United States of America Port of Arrival: New York, New York Ship Name: Rhein
Martha Frederickson in the New York, Passenger Lists, 1820-1957 Name: Martha Frederickson Arrival Date: 27 Jun 1882 Birth Date: abt 1881 Age: 11/12 Gender: Female Ethnicity/ Nationality: German Place of Origin: Germany Port of Departure: Bremen, Germany Destination: United States of America Port of Arrival: New York, New York Ship Name: Rhein |
Edited by - AntonH on 16/10/2016 00:57:37 |
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Fredriksen1882
Starting member
USA
25 Posts |
Posted - 15/10/2016 : 23:14:38
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This is them! Thank you so very much; you have been immensely helpful! I have made another donation to this site as a token of my gratitude (not to mention my respect for the research skills that are so evident!)
All this time we heard they arrived in Boston, but it was obviously New York. My office window looks right out at Ellis Island.... I presume that is where they may have "been processed". |
Michael Fredriksen Stewart |
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JaneC
Norway Heritage Veteran
USA
3020 Posts |
Posted - 15/10/2016 : 23:38:45
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Impressive thread.
Ellis island opened 1892.
Perhaps they were processed at Castle Garden. http://www.castlegarden.org/
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Fredriksen1882
Starting member
USA
25 Posts |
Posted - 15/10/2016 : 23:40:01
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No sooner did I post that, then I thought about Castle Garden. Thank you for mentioning it.
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Michael Fredriksen Stewart |
Edited by - Fredriksen1882 on 16/10/2016 00:17:35 |
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Fredriksen1882
Starting member
USA
25 Posts |
Posted - 15/10/2016 : 23:58:34
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By the way, the family settled in Newburyport, Massachusetts. Fredrik was an apprentice goldsmith in Norway, so he put those skills to work as a silver smelter at the Towle Silver Company in Newburyport, Massachusetts. I wonder... would he (and his wife and children a year later) have taken yet another ship to Boston, or ridden by train?
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Michael Fredriksen Stewart |
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Fredriksen1882
Starting member
USA
25 Posts |
Posted - 16/10/2016 : 00:09:33
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There are some interesting coincidences. I have only been to Germany one time, and it was to spend three weeks in Bremen. On New Year's Eve of 1988, I stood right on the water front at Bremensports, looking out to sea. Now, 28 years later, my office is about four blocks from Castle Gardens in downtown New York City, and I have spent time on the shoreline looking past the harbor out to sea. So I have been at two of the ports of their journey!
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Michael Fredriksen Stewart |
Edited by - Fredriksen1882 on 16/10/2016 00:16:31 |
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