Ole Simonson and Martha Toresdotter
Husband Ole Simonson
Born: 1708 - , Stavanger, Rogaland, Norway Christened: 18. nov 1708 - Stavanger domkyrkje, Stavanger, Rogaland, Norway 44112 Died: - , Stavanger, Rogaland, Norway Buried:
Father: Simon Olson Nordbø 5882 Mother: Kirsti Mikalsdotter
Marriage: 1735 - Revheim (Madla) kyrkje, Madla, Rogaland, Norway 44112
Wife Martha Toresdotter 30955
Born: 1708 - Madla, Madla, Rogaland, Norway Christened: Died: - , Stavanger, Rogaland, Norway Buried:
Father: Tore Pederson Madla 12521 Mother: Karen Olsdotter 5882
Marriage Events
• Marriage Notice: Kongebrev.
Children
1 F Kirsti Olsdotter 29869
Born: 1742 - Madla, Madla, Rogaland, Norway Christened: 1. apr 1742 - Revheim (Madla) kyrkje, Madla, Rogaland, Norway 13264 Died: 1742 - Madla, Madla, Rogaland, Norway Buried: 22. apr 1742 - Revheim (Madla) kyrkje, Madla, Rogaland, Norway 13264
2 F Karen Kirstina Olsdotter 29869
Born: 1743 - Madla, Madla, Rogaland, Norway Christened: 17. mar 1743 - Revheim (Madla) kyrkje, Madla, Rogaland, Norway 13264 Died: Buried:
3 F Marta Olsdotter 29869
AKA: Mareta Born: 1750 - Madla, Madla, Rogaland, Norway Christened: 1. nov 1750 - Revheim (Madla) kyrkje, Madla, Rogaland, Norway 13264 Died: 1751 - Madla, Madla, Rogaland, Norway Buried: 18. apr 1751 - Revheim (Madla) kyrkje, Madla, Rogaland, Norway 13264
4 M Peder Olson 29869
Born: 1752 - Madla, Madla, Rogaland, Norway Christened: 16. apr 1752 - Revheim (Madla) kyrkje, Madla, Rogaland, Norway 13264 Died: Buried:
Roald Simonson and Borgela Tørresdotter
Husband Roald Simonson 227
AKA: Rolv Born: Cir 1641 - Steinsland, Ølen, Hordaland, Norway Christened: Died: - Steinsland, Ølen, Hordaland, Norway Buried:
Father: Simon Roaldson Mother:
Marriage: Cir 1680 - Ølen kyrkje, Ølen, Hordaland, Norway 226Events
• Censuses: 1701, Steinsland, Ølen, Hordaland, Norway.
Wife Borgela Tørresdotter 53
Born: Cir 1655 - Viland øvre, Ølen, Hordaland, Norway Christened: Died: 1714 - Steinsland, Ølen, Hordaland, Norway 226 Buried:
Father: Tørres Nilsson Viland 53 Mother: Brita
Children
1 M Tørres Roaldson Bjordal 227
AKA: Tørris Born: 1681 - Steinsland, Ølen, Hordaland, Norway Christened: Died: - Bjordal indre, Vikebygd, Hordaland, Norway Buried:
2 M Simon Roaldson
Born: 1693 - Steinsland, Ølen, Hordaland, Norway 27664 Christened: Died: Buried:
3 F Anna Roaldsdotter 227
Born: 1694 - Steinsland, Ølen, Hordaland, Norway 226 Christened: Died: Buried:
4 F Britta Roaldsdotter
Born: 1696 - Steinsland, Ølen, Hordaland, Norway 226 Christened: Died: - Dale, Fjelberg, Hordaland, Norway Buried:Spouse: Peder Ellingson Dale 8768 Marr: Cir 1725 - Fjelberg kyrkje, Fjelberg, Hordaland, Norway
Salomon Simonson and Inga Skjeveland
Husband Salomon Simonson
Born: 2. apr 1878 - Revheim, Madla, Rogaland, Norway 51299 Christened: 22. apr 1878 - Revheim (Madla) kyrkje, Madla, Rogaland, Norway 51299 Died: 19. jan 1935 - Shealy, Ward, North Dakota, USA Buried:Marriage: Cir 1907 - , Ward, North Dakota, USA
Wife Inga Skjeveland
Born: 9. jun 1885 - Skjæveland, Høyland, Rogaland, Norway 50771 Christened: 14. jun 1885 - Høyland kyrkje, Høyland, Rogaland, Norway 50771 Died: 29. mar 1926 - Berthold, Ward, North Dakota, USA Buried:
Father: Sven Tønnesson Skjæveland 37654 Mother: Edvardine Pedersdotter 37657
Children
1 F Rosie Marie Simonson
Born: 7. aug 1917 - , Ward, North Dakota, USA Christened: Died: 10. jan 1995 - Minot, Ward, North Dakota, USA Buried:Spouse: Russel Fyllesvold Marr: Cir 1940 - , Ward, North Dakota, USA
John Thompson and Agnes Singleton
Husband John Thompson
AKA: John Albert, Snowhoe Thompson Born: 30. apr 1827 - Rui (Lurås), Tinn, Telemark, Norway 3132 Christened: 24. may 1827 - Atrå kyrkje, Tinn, Telemark, Norway 3132 Died: 15. may 1876 - Genoa, Douglas, Nevada, USA Buried: 18. may 1876 - Genoa Cemetery, Douglas, Nevada, USA
Father: Tosten Olson Rui Mother: Gro Jonsdotter
Marriage: may 1866 - Sherridon, , Manitoba, CanadaEvents
• Emigration: til Nord America, 8. apr 1837, Rui (Lurås), Tinn, Telemark, Norway.
Wife Agnes Singleton
Born: 4. nov 1831 - Preston, Lancashire, England, Great Britain Christened: Died: 21. feb 1915 - Genoa, Douglas, Nevada, USA Buried: 23. feb 1915 - Genoa Cemetery, Douglas, Nevada, USA
Children
1 M Arthur Thomas Thompson
Born: 11. feb 1867 - Woodfords, Alpine, California, USA Christened: Died: 22. jun 1878 - Genoa, Douglas, Nevada, USA Buried: 22. jun 1878 - Genoa Cemetery, Douglas, Nevada, USA
General Notes: Husband - John Thompson
A Touch of the Old West: Snowshoe Thompson, the Unstoppable Mailman on Skis
By Will Hart
Nothing could stop Snowshoe Thompson. No blizzard was severe enough, no amount of cold frigid enough to make him call it quits. He was the only man to regularly carry the mail between the eastern flank of the Sierra Nevada and the foothill mining communities of California between 1856 and 1876, the year of his death.
Until he applied for the job, the mining towns had been cut off from the rest of the world during the winter. This was hard on men who had been separated from their families for many months, even years. Urgent messages, important business correspondence and news, could not reach them until the snow-clogged mountain passes thawed in late spring. By then it was often too late.
John Thompson was born in the town of Tinn, in Telemark County, Norway in 1827. He immigrated to the United States in 1837, and by 1852, at the age of 25, found himself seeking his fortune in the gold fields of California. This way of life, however, did not suit his temperament.
John "Snowshoe" Thompson. Photo is a simulation of a statue of Snowshoe Thompson to be created and placed in Mormon Station State Park, Genoa, Nevada. Photo furnished by Mormon Station State Park.
He quickly abandoned the miner's life and bought a ranch in the Sacramento Valley. But he couldn't stop gazing up at the mountains from his homestead in the flatlands. Sierra magic had him under its spell. He had to find a way to live up in the mountains for which he yearned.
In January of 1856, Thompson noticed an ad in the Sacramento Union, which read: "People lost to the world. Uncle Sam needs mail carrier."
Struck by a bolt of inspiration, Thompson quickly grabbed an ax and chopped down an oak. Before long, he had carved a pair of skis, each weighing over 12 pounds. These primitive skis were cumbersome, but he was strong and used to heavy physical exertion. Next, he set out to prove to himself and the doubting Thomases that they would work.
His first test took place in Placerville, witnessed by a group of puzzled, disbelieving miners. One warned, "You'll wind up knocking your brains out against a tree." Unfazed, he glided through the forest and slid down the hill, becoming California's pioneer skier.
Impressing the miners was one thing; overcoming the postmaster's skepticism would be something else. He mapped out a proposed route from Genoa to Placerville. Thompson knew it presented him with every imaginable challenge. But he was tough and had experience guiding in the mountains. He had hiked to many of the mining camps. He knew his way over the passes, and he knew of miner's cabins and caves for shelter.
He was confident he could make it, so he wasted no time applying for the job.
His enthusiasm and confidence were lost on his prospective employer, who took one look at Thompson's equipment and hook his head.
"Even men with mule teams fail to make the trip over the Sierra in the dead of winter." He paused to drive in his final point. "We found some frozen to death." But the postmaster had a problem. No one else wanted the job. He had little choice but to hire the grinning Thompson.
The new mail carrier was quickly nicknamed Snowshoe. He reckoned he had to cover 25 to 40 miles a day to keep his delivery on schedule.
This meant skiing through any weather and all conditions, day and night, when the bitter cold kept the snow firmer and easier to negotiate.
Because his mail sack was so burdensome, he traveled with only a few crackers, some bread and dried meat. For water, he ate snow and drank from icy streams. His timetable was so tight, he ate while skiing.
The only concession he made to the winter was a heavy Mackinaw.
Blankets and coats were simply too bulky. He depended, instead, on his exertion to keep him warm.
When exhaustion overcame him in the night, he would hastily pitch camp, using a pine stump for a stove. He would make a bed out of fir boughs, plant his feet toward the fire, prop his head against the mailbag and go to sleep with the stars overhead and the lullaby of the wind in the trees.
How did Snowshoe find his way across a constantly changing, snowy landscape? That's something of a minor miracle. Landmarks were often obliterated by the heavy winter weather, and he carried no maps or compass. Nevertheless, at the end of his long career, Thompson claimed, "I wass never lost. I can't be lost."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Legend of Snowshoe Thompson
By Richard Hughey
He was known as "Snowshoe Thompson," though he used only a pair of homemade skis.
His American name was John A. Thompson, and he came to the United States from Norway in 1827 as Jon Torstein Rui. As an adult he was the picture of a Norse Viking: 6 feet tall with a heavy, muscular build, blue eyes, and with blond hair and beard.
In 1851 Thompson migrated to California and settled in Hangtown (Placerville), mining in Coon Hollow and at Kelsey's Diggings. As a miner he was unsuccessful, so he took up
farming on a ranch on Putah Creek in the Sacramento Valley. His real vocation, however, seemed to be to carry the mail.
Thompson got the idea for mail delivery in 1855 from a notice in the Sacramento Union that a mail carrier was needed to pick up and deliver at Placerville and Genoa (Mormon Station)
during the winter months. Genoa was in Nevada about 90 miles east of Placerville. The carrier would be required to cross the Sierra Nevada mountains in winter. The stage road between the two towns had not yet been built, and the path of the wagon road across Johnson's Cutoff was annually obliterated by the winter snow. Delivery would be on foot and navigation by instinct.
Not surprisingly, no one applied for the job at first. The original contract had been let to Maj. George Chopenning in 1851, but he had given up the route as too difficult and unprofitable. It had taken him five weeks to run the mail over Johnson's Cutoff to Salt Lake City -- in June and July -- and it had taken him 16 days to get across the mountains.
Nevertheless, Thompson was interested. With skis, the route in winter would be far less daunting.
As a boy in Norway, Thompson had been virtually raised on skis, and he had adjusted to the polar climate. As there were no skis in California at the time, Thompson made his own from two 10-foot valley oak staves cut 4 inches wide with bootstraps in the center. He called them "snow shoes." He also cut a 10-foot pole to use for balance, direction, and braking.
After practicing on the hills outside of Placerville and putting on an awesome exhibition of winter skiing for the townsfolk, Thompson got the job as winter mail carrier. In January 1856 Snowshoe Thompson set off on his first winter mail run across the Sierra Nevada.
Thompson would generally follow the route laid out by Col. John C. "Cockeye" Johnson -- when he could find it. He would travel up the canyon of the South Fork to its head, traverse Johnson's Pass across the Sierra peaks, and ski down into the Tahoe Lake Basin. He would ford the Upper Truckee River, cross Luther Pass, traverse Hope Valley and plow through the West Carson River canyon to Genoa.
Thompson carried a mail sack on his back that weighed between 60 and 80 pounds. He carried no weapon because it would add to the weight he had to carry. He wore a jacket for warmth, and the little food he would eat on the run was crammed into the jacket's pockets.
He had neither map nor compass, and he carried no blanket. He would sleep in caves or tree-root caverns on pine-needle beds and build a fire for his feet. If a deserted cabin was found along the way he would use it. He expected to be confronted by bears and menaced by wolves. He would encounter snow drifts of 30 to 50 feet, and if there was a blizzard, he could be blinded by the snow. Trees and cliffs posed particular dangers for travelers on skis.
Placerville gamblers gave odds that Thompson would not make it back alive, but five days after he left he returned from Genoa carrying the mail from "the states." It was an awesome accomplishment, and "Snowshoe" would do it again and again during the winter months.
Snowshoe also made private deliveries. He worked for little, and sometimes nothing at all.
His handshake was a contract. Even after the Placerville-Genoa road was open for all-year traffic, Thompson carried the mail when the road was blocked by snow drifts.
During the summers, Thompson drove stages and delivered mail and supplies to remote mining camps. He also worked as a millwright. In 1869 the completion of the transcontinental railroad put him out of the mail delivery business, but he continued to carry packages and express for private parties.
Thompson's arduous life took its toll. He died in 1876 of liver disease. Two years before he had traveled to Washington, D.C., to petition Congress for a pension of $6,000 to compensate for all the unpaid services he had delivered for the government's benefit.
Representatives listened graciously to his lobbying and made promises. It is not clear that the promises were kept, however, although local historian Paolo Sioli wrote that a pension to Thompson was awarded by Congress at the 1872-1873 congressional session.
Snowshoe Thompson was buried in Genoa where a pioneer museum is kept for him and Hank Monk. In his biography of Thompson, Dan de Quills wrote: "He was the father of all the race of snow-shoers in the Sierra Nevada Mountains; and in those mountains he was the pioneer of the pack train, the stage coach, and the locomotive. On the Pacific Coast his equal in his peculiar line will probably never be seen again -- it would be hard to find another man combining his courage, physique and powers of endurance -- a man with such thaws and sinews, controlled by such a will."
SNOWSHOE THOMPSON: Tahoe's
First Mailman
By Don Lane
Of all the people that have lived in our mountains, the one person that truly became a legend during his lifetime was a man who only lived to be 49, but a man that was adventurous, fearless and the best mountaineer to ever ski through the Tahoe Basin.
His name was John A. Thompson. It was during the winter of 1856, when he was 29-years old, when Thompson heard that the mail wasn't getting through the Sierras during the winter because of the snowstorms, and he recalled that during his childhood days in Norway, they used these long, heavy skis, they called "snowshoes," to get around the mountains.
So he fashioned a pair out of green oak, and although they were over 10 feet long, and weighed about twenty-five pounds, he knew they'd get him over the snow. So he declared himself ready to carry the mail across the mountains, and headed off from Placerville to Carson Valley and back again the rest of that winter ... and for the next 20 winters. Through blizzards, frigid winds, and through whiteout conditions, Thompson carried the mail.
The weight of the bags usually ranged between sixty to eighty pounds, but one winter his load often averaged over 100 pounds. He never carried blankets, nor did he even wear an overcoat, depending on exercise to keep him warm. For water, he grabbed a handful of snow, and his food consisted of only some dried sausage, and a few crackers or biscuits.
By the day, he was guided by the trees and the rocks, for Thompson was a student of the mountains. He had a sixth sense about where he was, and never got lost, never. During the night, he looked up to the stars, like a mariner and sailed through the Sierras, sliding over the drifts with his long wood snowshoes, and pushing himself along with a single wood pole.
Once near Hope Valley, he ran into a pack of six hungry wolves who were ripping at the carcass of some animal. They started after him, but when he simply stared them down and kept on skiing, they stopped cold in their tracks and let him go his way.
On another day, Thompson ran into fresh tracks of grizzly bears, but he was never harmed in twenty years.
But although Thompson braved the meanest winters Tahoe ever saw, and faced down occasional wolves never missing a trip, he couldn't overcome the inertia of government, when he sought to obtain a small pension for his 20-years of services, services that he had provided for free to the residents of Tahoe and Carson Valley, the sum of $6000. Although everyone seemed to support his request, he never received one red cent.
But when John A. Thompson died of a liver ailment in Genoa in 1876, he was loved and respected by every resident in the Sierras, and would be known forever as "Snowshoe Thompson," a Sierra legend.
Bjørn Sinnes
Husband Bjørn Sinnes
Born: Christened: Died: After 1642 - Sinnes, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway Buried:Marriage:
Wife
Born: Christened: Died: Buried:
Children
1 M Johannes Bjørnson Sinnes 45146
Born: 1604 - Sinnes, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway 51300 Christened: Died: Cir 1670 - Sinnes, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway 51300 Buried:
Johannes Bjørnson Sinnes
Husband Johannes Bjørnson Sinnes 45146
Born: 1604 - Sinnes, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway 51300 Christened: Died: Cir 1670 - Sinnes, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway 51300 Buried:
Father: Bjørn Sinnes Mother:
Marriage:
Wife
Born: Christened: Died: Buried:
Children
1 F Ingeborg Johannesdotter 21887
Born: Cir 1620 - Skreå, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway Christened: Died: - Skreå, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway Buried:Spouse: Ole Olson Skreå Marr: Cir 1645 - Tonstad kyrkje, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway 29040
2 F Jorid Johannesdotter 21887
Born: Cir 1630 - Skreå, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway Christened: Died: Cir 1709 - Tveiten, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway Buried:Spouse: Tosten Kjetilson Sinnes 6460 Marr: Cir 1655 - Tonstad kyrkje, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway 33597Spouse: Ivar Tormodson Tveiten Marr: Cir 1684 - Tonstad kyrkje, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway 21886
3 F Todne Johannesdotter 21887
Born: Cir 1640 - Skreå, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway Christened: Died: - Sinnes, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway Buried:Spouse: Torkel Eilivson Sinnes 21350 Marr: Cir 1657 - Tonstad kyrkje, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway 21885
Johannes Torkelson Sinnes and Berit Trondsdotter
Husband Johannes Torkelson Sinnes 21884
Born: 1657 - Sinnes, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway 21885 Christened: Died: After 1718 - Sinnes, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway Buried:
Father: Torkel Eilivson Sinnes 21350 Mother: Todne Johannesdotter 21887
Marriage: - Tonstad kyrkje, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway 21885,33611
Wife Berit Trondsdotter 6466
Born: Cir 1667 - Espetveit, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway Christened: Died: After 1718 - Sinnes, Sirdal, Vest-Agder, Norway Buried:
Father: Trond Kjetilson Feed 6460 Mother: Helga Torgersdotter 6464
Children
Osmund Larsson Sira and Margrete Torgrimsdotter
Husband Osmund Larsson Sira
Born: - Sira øvre, Bakke, Vest-Agder, Norway Christened: Died: Bef 1801 - Sira øvre, Bakke, Vest-Agder, Norway Buried:Marriage: 14. jun 1750 - Helleland kyrkje, Helleland, Rogaland, Norway
Wife Margrete Torgrimsdotter 13653
AKA: Margrethe Born: 1710 - Hestad, Helleland, Rogaland, Norway Christened: Died: - Aarrestad, Helleland, Rogaland, Norway Buried:
Father: Torgrim Gunnarson Hestad Mother: Martha Pedersdotter
Events
• Censuses: 1801, Aarrestad, Helleland, Rogaland, Norway.
Children
Anders Jakobson Sirevåg and Berthe Sirevåg
Husband Anders Jakobson Sirevåg 43193
Born: 1715 - Næsheim, Nærbø, Rogaland, Norway Christened: Died: 1792 - Sirevåg, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway Buried: 30. dec 1792 - Ogna kyrkje, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway 5766
Father: Jacob Jensson Sirevåg 25454 Mother: Sidsel Pedersdotter
Marriage: Cir 1757 - Nærbø kyrkje, Hå, Rogaland, Norway 38465Events
• Censuses: 1758, Sirevåg, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway.
Wife Berthe Sirevåg
Born: 1726 38465 Christened: Died: - Sirevåg, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway Buried:Events
• Censuses: 1758, Sirevåg, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway.
Children
1 F Sissel Andersdotter 38686
Born: 1758 - Sirevåg, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway 38465 Christened: 1. nov 1758 - Ogna kyrkje, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway Died: Buried:
2 M Jacob Andersson Tjemsland 38686
Born: 1760 - Sirevåg, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway 38465 Christened: 5. jun 1760 - Ogna kyrkje, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway Died: 24. apr 1836 - Tjemsland søndre, Varhaug, Rogaland, Norway 1571 Buried: 1. may 1836 - Varhaug kyrkje, Varhaug, Rogaland, Norway 1571Spouse: Marthe Stigsdotter 15180 Marr: Cir 1784 - Varhaug kyrkje, Varhaug, Rogaland, Norway 14637
3 F Ranveig Andersdotter 38686
Born: 1762 - Sirevåg, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway 38465 Christened: Died: Buried:
Antonius Torsteinson Sirevåg
Husband Antonius Torsteinson Sirevåg 9178
Born: 1689 - Sirevåg, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway 9177 Christened: Died: - Sirevåg, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway Buried:
Father: Tosten Antoniusson Sirevåg 6863 Mother:
Marriage:Events
• Censuses: 1701, Sirevåg, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway.
Wife
Born: Christened: Died: Buried:
Children
1 M Hans Antoniusson Halleland
Born: 1730 - Sirevåg, Ogna, Rogaland, Norway Christened: Died: 5. nov 1796 - Halleland nordre, Varhaug, Rogaland, Norway 1565 Buried:Spouse: Magnil Rasmusdotter 12286 Marr: Cir 1755 - Varhaug kyrkje, Varhaug, Rogaland, Norway 10426,12374
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