.

Here, gathered in our beloved South Dakota, are a few members of our Williamson / Mattson Clan. Charles and Luella are to be blamed (be kind, they didn't know what they were doing). We're generally a happy bunch and somewhat intelligent (notwithstanding our tenuous grasp on reality). I'm also proud to say that most of us still have our teeth.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

New Information on our Great Grandmother Ida Tornberg from Our New Swedish Family Connection

From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove

Hello All!
You will all remember my discovery of the Tornberg Family Association in Sweden and Finland. Well, I found several email addresses of Association members on their web site and wrote to them explaining our problem in researching the family past Ida's parents.

Success! I've been in email contact with a member of the association named Bertie in Sweden. I sent him the information we had and asked if he knew anyone that could help us break through the barrier.

Today I received a response. Using a new online Swedish Genealogy Database, Bertie found our Great Great Grandfather Isak and his wife Maria. We can now trace our Tornberg family back further and he promises more information in the coming days.

This is what he sent today:

Hei,

I've found the connection through Arkiv Digital Online:

Isak Wilhelm, b. 9.12.1844 Pajala
He married 15.4.1883 Maria Brita Johansdotter b. 28.6.1855

His father was
Karl Henrik Tornberg b. 31.10.1819 in Köngänen, Pajala

His father was
Isak Cristian Tornberg b. 4.4.1791 in Köngänen, Pajala

His father was
Isak Tornberg b. 24.8.1755 in Hietaniemi

His father was
Isak Tornberg b. 29.8.1721 in Hietaniemi

His father was
Isac Tornberg b. 1677 in Koutokeino

His father was
Johannes Tornberg b. 1640 in Övertorneå

His father was
Nicolaus Nicolai Ulopolitanus b. 1605, might be in Oulu.

More information in coming days,
Br
Bertie

I'm very grateful to Bertie for his assistance in our search for our Swedish and Finnish family ties.

With the information sent by Bertie and a new email from cousin Angie giving me the correct link: (http://www.familysearch.org/eng/search/frameset_search.asp?PAGE=/eng/search/ancestorsearchresults.asp). to track the family back (Thanks Angie!!) we can now display the full family line of the Tornbergs from Today back to the 1600's. There is also the following link with addtional information: http://www.annelikotisaari.net/N.Ulopolitanus.htm#Taulu%20320

Tornberg Relationship Chart

Nicolaus Nicolaii Ulopolitanus Tornberg b. 1605 d. 1676. married Maria Nilsdotter Falk b. 1610

Children:
Anders Tornberg b. 1625
Israel Tornberg b. 1627 d. 28 Feb. 1657
Nils Tornberg b. 1629 d. 1675
Anna Tornberg b. 1630
Olof Tornberg b. 1632
Johannes Tornberg b. 1640
Brita Tornberg

to

Johannes Nicolai Nilsson Tornberg b. 1640 d. 3 Jan. 1717. married Brita Isaksdotter Curtelia b. 1651. d. 6 April 1740 in Hietaniemi Lappi, Finland.

Children:
Johan Tornberg b. 29 Jan. 1670
Michel Tornberg b. 1670
Helena Tornberg b. 1676
Isac Tornberg b. 1677
Henrik Tornberg b. 1680
Olaus Tornberg b. 1684 d. 9 Mar. 1738
Margeta Tornberg b. 1686

to

Isak Johanneson Tornberg b. 1677 d. 29 Sept. 1743 and Magdalena Hermannindr (?) Kempe b. 1678 d. 24 Sept. 1755.

Children:
Brita Tornberg. b. 1707
Johan Tornberg b. 25 July 1709 d. 18 Feb. 1740
Abraham Tornberg b. 1710
Margareta Tornberg b. 27 Dec. 1711
Magdalena Tornberg b. 16 Feb. 1718
Elisabeth Tornberg b. 17 April 1720
Isac Tornberg b. 29 Aug. 1721
Catharina tornberg b. 8 April 1724

to

Isak Isaacss Tornberg. b. 29 Aug. 1721 Hietaniemi, Norrbotten Sweden. d. 30 June 1786. Married 11 Dec. 1750 to Anna Margareta Henridr (?) Niewardt b. 1727. d. 3 April 1803.

Children:
Magdalena Tornberg b. 3 Oct. 1751
Anna Margareta Tornberg b. 31 Aug. 1753
Apollonia Tornberg b. 16 Nov. 1753 d. 1829
Isak Tornberg b. 24 Aug. 1755.
Henrik Tornberg b. 3 Oct. 1756
Katarina Tornberg b. 11 Oct. 1757 d. 6 Nov. 1758
Eva Tornberg b. 8 Feb. 1759
Johannes Tornberg b. 27 April 1760 d. 11 May 1760
Elisabet Tornberg b. 22 May 1761 d. 21 June 1761
Abraham Tornberg b. 21 Aug. 1762
Jakob Tornberg b. 5 Sept. 1763
Salomon Tornberg b. 23 Oct. 1765
Ulrika Tornberg b. 30 Nov. 1766 d. 20 March 1767
Kuolleena Syntynyt Tornberg b. 3 Jan. 1768 d. Same Day

to

Isak Isakss Tornberg b. 24 Aug. 1755. d. 24 Oct. 1824. married Eva (Elsi) Olofsdr. Pietila Vitsaniemi b. 4 March 1765. d. 3 Dec. 1832

Children:
Anna Greta Isaksdr Tornberg b. 20 Oct. 1786. d. 1786
Anna Breta Isaksdr. Tornberg b. 1788 d. 24 May 1790
Isak Christian Isakss Tornberg b. 4 April 1791. d. 14 June 1879
Eva Lovisa Isaksdr Tornberg b. 27 Nov. 1793 d. 19 July 1794
Stina Frederika Isaksdr Tornberg b. 15 Dec. 1795. d. 1798
Johan Henrik Isakss Tornberg b. 20 Nov. 1797 d. 29 Sept 1798
Wilhelmina Isaksdr. Tornberg b. 2 August 1799 d. 8 Oct. 1799
Erik August Isakss Tornberg b. 20 Aug. 1800
Eva Maria Isaksdr. Tornberg b. 24 Jan 1803
Hedvika Johanna Isaksdr Tornberg b. 7 April 1804 d. 22 Oct. 1806
Sofia Wilhelmina Isaksdr Tornberg b. 29 Oct 1805 d. 17 July 1809
Alexander Isakss Tornberg b. 5 Dec. 1807. d. 24 Nov. 1809

to

Isak Christian Isakss Tornberg b. 4 April 1791, Pajala Konkanen, Norrbotten Sweden.
14 June 1879. married Anna Karolina Karlintytar Humble b. 5 May 1795. Married in 1815, Pajala Norrbotten Sweden

Children:
Isaac Wilhelm Tornberg b. 15 Feb 1817. Pajala.
Carl Henric Tornberg b. 30 Oct 1819. Pajala
Johan Fredric Tornberg. b. 4 July 1822 Pajala.
Gustaf Tornberg b. 23 April 1825
Anna Maria Tornberg b. 29 May 1828
Kuolleena Syntynyt Tornberg b. 11 May 1830

to

Carl Henrick Isakss Tornberg b. 30 Oct. 1819. d. 5 April 1892. and Sofia Johanna Olofintytar b. 1820. d. 7 Sept. 1885 Karl Gustav Parish, Norrbotten Sweden. (marriage 1844. Pajala, Norrbotten, Sweden)

Children: All Born in Karl Gustav Parish, Norrbotten, Sweden.
Isak Wilhelm Carlss. Tornberg b. 9 Dec. 1844
Johan Frederik Carlss, Tornberg b. 18 Sept. 1846
Carl Gustaf Carlss. Tornberg b. 19 Sept 1848
Henrik Carlss. Tornberg. b. 6 Sept 1850
Ida Johanna Carlsdr. Tornberg b. 19 Dec. 1852. d. 24 Dec. 1884
Maria Josefina Carlsdr. Tornberg b. 16 Aug 1854
Frans Oskar Carlss. Tornberg b. 22 Oct. 1856 d. 31 Jan. 1857
Matilda Carolina Carlsdr. Tornberg b. 31 Jan. 1858 d. 31 Dec. 1863
Hjalmar Carlss, Tornberg b. 4 Feb. 1859. d. 18 Dec 1862
Frans Levi Carlss, Tornberg b. 4 Feb 1859 d. 3 Dec. 1889
August Alfried Carlss. Tornberg b. 12 Aug 1864.

to

Isak Wilhelm Tornberg b. 9 Dec. 1844 Pajala , Norrbotten, Sweden married Maria Brita Johansdotter b. 1855.

Children:
Levi Lorens Isakss Tornberg b. 1884
Ida Josefina Isaksdr Tornberg b. 1886
Anna Alexandra Isaksdr Tornberg b. 1890

to

Ida Josefina Tornberg b. 1886 married Johan Albert Mattson b. 6 Aug. 1873, Fjaras, Halland, Sweden

Children:
Walter Albert Mattson b. 31 Jan. 1912
Lead, South Dakota, USA
d. 3 Feb 1973

to

Walter Albert Mattson b. 31 Jan. 1912 d. 3 Feb 1973 married Violet Mae Pierce b. 12 June 1918 d. 11 Sept. 1987.

Children:
Luella Mattson Living
Linda Mattson Living
John Mattson Living
Marvin Mattson Living

to

Luella Mattson married Charles Williamson in 1956

to

Kim, Victor, Kevin, Janice, Jon, Jilane, Lisa, and Annette.




Simply,
Victor

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

The Hunt is Afoot! The Search for Missing Ancestors. The Thrill of Victory and the Agony of Defeat

From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove

Hello Family,
We are on the hunt. The horn is sounded and cousin Angie, astride her mount, has quickly moved ahead. The dogs pick up a scent and lead her toward the forest. I follow.
______________________________________

Angie sent an email with a possible lead to a missing ancestral line today. Of course, being the every curious, I had no choice but to join in the search and decided to let you all see the joy and agony that comes from searching for ancestors.

This is a step by step accounting then of my afternoon.

12:05 P.M. Email from Angie stating a possible clue to the identity of Grandma Violet's Grandparents on her father's side. We start with the Relationship Chart

The family line continues for Eldora Elizabeth Fiddler. The family line ends on the Pierce side with Edwin.

Angie finds a Edwin Pierce in the 1880 Census and sends the link to me. (Click to Enlarge)


I look at this entry in the Census for Coles County Illinois and see Edwin is listed as 15 years old at the time and living with a (Male) Pierce aged 24 and his wife, Emma Pierce age 20. In addition there is a 7 month old baby named Maude Pierce. According to this entry, Edwin was born in Illinois around the correct year of his birth. Our Great Great Grandfather was also born in Illinois. One source records his birth as 1862. This census would make his birth year 1865 (if this is truly the correct Edwin Pierce). I had trouble reading the name of the male head of household. After a bit more searching I found another source for the Census.

This is the same 1880 Census information but typed out by Ancestry.Com. Now we see the name of the head of household. If this is our Edwin, then I assume from this information that Gregory must be Edwin's older brother. He is living away from his parents.

My next step was to try to find the parents of Gregory Pierce. I found them all listed again in the 1870 Census (click to enlarge)


I was correct but we see an error in the record. The Census taker records him as Edward not Edwin. The good news is that we have the parents listed. If this is our G G Grandfather then his parents were Harrison and Lavina Pierce.


In this entry we learn the birth place and date of Harrison's birth.


And in this entry we see the listed information for Lavina Pierce. Of course, is this Edwin (Edward) really our Great Great Grandfather? Well, the birth year is off by a couple years but the Census records Edwin's birth as "about" 1865. This Edwin was born in Illinois as was our GG Grandfather.

The jury is out. What we have is a possible lead that must be investigated further.

Then hunt is on!

Simply,
Victor

The Culture of Our Great Great Grandmother's Finland





Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Our Great Great Aunt Josephina and the Mattson's of Sweden

Carl Lidman and our Great Great Aunt Josefina (Walter Mattson's Aunt)

From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove

Hello Mattsons,
A short post today with additional information on the family of our Great Grandfather, John Albert Mattson (or Albert John Mattson. He changed it to Albert John when he immigrated, saying there were too many Johns in this country). I thought it might be prudent to discuss our other Swedish family (the Mattsons), considering the recent posts on the Tornbergs.

Let's begin with the Relationship Chart (Click to Enlarge)

As you can see, our Great Grandfather Mattson had nine brothers and sisters. You'll also notice two Carl's. The second born Carl died in San Fransico in 1883. The youngest Carl was born in Sweden in 1884 and named for his brother who died the year before.

The eldest child was Josefina. She came to America first and worked to help her siblings immigrate. According to Luella, all the brothers and sisters came to the United States except for Walfrid. He died in Sweden in 1945.

Our Great Great Aunt Josefina married Carl Lidman in Lead South Dakota. They had one child, Carl Jr. Carl Jr. married a woman named Rose. Together they had seven children. Luella knows the two youngest, they are both alive, one living in Montana and the other in Colorado.

Simply,
Victor

The Williamson Family Picnic, 2010

Williamson First Cousins

Del Williamson and Kids

Second Cousins

The Gathering,

I think we had a good turnout considering it was well over 90 degrees. I don't have the actual count with me, but I think were were between 35 and 40 there. It was a good day for the youngsters to play in the creek.
For me, the best part of the day was seeing Kriss Williamson Seidel and Kathy Mauch Kinsall, both healthy after their cancer treatments. They were both blessed with a lot of prayers.
Another highlight for the day was the "guest book" from the old family reunions. My Mom and Dad had a guest book she started in 1958, everyone signed the book every year. Before my Mom passed away, she turned the book over to our cousin Teresa. When Teresa died, I thought the book was probably gone, but Teresa' son, Lee Madison had the book and made sure it got to the picnic. Everyone had fun looking through the old names.
It was a great day catching up and enjoying our family. Hope to do it again next year.

Corlis

Saturday, July 31, 2010

A Post on the Williamson Family Reunion 2010?

A Real Time snapshot from the deck of the Fortress. A Storm is Looming.
I Must Type Fast.

From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove

Hello Williamsons,
My parents and sister tell me the Williamson family reunion was delightful. Sadly I wasn't able to attend. As I keep reminding my family "Some of us have to work for a living" (Said with tongue in cheek). I was neck deep in Space Campers between the ages of 10 and 14, not to mention a staff of teens and young adults - all needing attention and direction.

That is all done. The Center is closed until August 20th. I have three blessed weeks of vacation. I don't want to hear space, talk space, think space, eat space, or breath space during this time (yes, even if it were discovered a large asteroid was hurtling toward Earth capable of wiping out all mankind and we had two weeks to live. Even then, I DON'T WANT TO KNOW).

I'm hoping someone out there took pictures at the reunion and is willing to share them with us. I asked my parents, but trusting either of them to master the art of click and shoot would be too much to ask. You must understand that they both suffer from technophobia and find anything with a blinking light terrifying. You should see the way Luella controls her digital TV and Dish Network Satellite Receiver. She understands "On" and "Off". She comprehends "Volume" and the "Up and Down Channel Arrows". She is clueless about everything else and relies on multiple phone calls and visits to fix her reception when she accidentally pushes one of the other 100 buttons on the remote and suddenly finds herself watching the Chinese Broadcasting Network instead of her beloved CSPAN.

In addition to the pictures I'm hoping someone would be willing to write something postable about the gathering for the rest of the family to enjoy. Remember this blog is rated PG so leave out the pictures of Charles flipping the bird in two photo shoots. God bless him - he is in his 70's you know and has trouble remembering the difference between flipping someone off and giving someone the Thumbs Up!

Wow, close lightening strike. Wait for it......... YES, the thunder rattled the windows. I'd better seek shelter indoors. Standby.......

OK safe and secure inside the Fortress.

Also, it was mentioned at the reunion that many are enjoying the blog. I'm grateful for your kind words and encouragement. It was also mentioned that many Williamson's (me included) have an interest in the family's current events. Granted what happened 1000 years ago may be interesting but learning how our little cousin saved the life of his Grandma was awesome. I'm wanting to post current family news. That's where YOU COME IN. I need at least one person from each branch of the family to send me your current family news: Weddings, funerals, bar mitzvahs, arrests, trials, graduations, honor rolls, and other items of general interest. I've asked for family trivia in the past and got nothing but an empty email box.

So, I'm asking once again. Please send current family news. Let's keep in touch with each other so when we have our next gathering we won't all be such strangers to each other.

I'll sleep tonight knowing that you'll have something waiting for me in my email IN box in the morning :)

Simply,
Victor

The Tornberg Family and the Sami, the People of the North

The Sami, People of the North
(Lapland. Great Grandmother Ida's Home)


From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove

Hello All,
Today we spend more time with our Great Grandmother, Ida Tornberg. You remember that Ida was the wife of John Albert Mattson. Walter Mattson was their only child. In the previous post a few days ago we found her hometown in Sweden. Today have more information on her family thanks to cousin Angie Mattson Berntsen.

After several hours of research, Angie located the Swedish Census of 1900. I have the translated pages below:

This entry is for Ida's father Isak. (Click to Enlarge)

This entry is for Ida's Mother Maria (Click to Enlarge)

This Entry is for Ida's Brother Levi (Click to Enlarge)

This Entry is for Ida

This Entry is for Ida's Sister Anna


The picture above (Click to Enlarge) is the application Ida made for life insurance in 1926. In it we learn more about her family.
  • She was a store clerk in Sweden before coming to America.
  • She lists delivering Grandpa Walter Mattson as her only disease :) and that it occurred 16 years ago. She goes on to say that it took 10 days to recover.
  • Her health was perfect. She said she hadn't been to a doctor in the previous 5 years.
  • She says she has not used any form of wine or spirits. In other words, according to this document Ida never used liquor.
  • She lists her father deceased due to an accident.
  • She lists her brother Levi deceased due to accidental drowning when he was 18 years old.
  • She lists her mother alive and 70 years old and in good health.
  • She lists her sister in good health and 30 years old.

Great Grandma Ida holding Luella (Summer 1940)
Great Grandma Vesta (Violet's mother) is on the right. Ida loved the name Christina
and called Luella "Stina" for a nickname.


Roxie Jacobson, Luella, and Great Grandmother Ida. Roxie was once a neighbor of the Mattsons in Montana. She moved to Belle Fourche and ran a boarding house. The Mattson family were regular visitors.

I asked Luella for one story about Great Grandma Ida to accompany this post.
Grandma Ida was the one that always called us in for supper and bed when we were children on the ranch. Our fist stop was the wash basin that sat on top of the buffet (a piece of furniture that held the fine dishes, linens and silverware) . I remember a picture of the gleaners hanging over the buffet the whole time we lived on the ranch.

Grandma Ida had us wash our hands and faces before we ate or went to bed. I remember that while we washed Grandma would lean on the buffet, resting her head on her right hand. She always had her eyes closed. I thought she closed her eyes because she was so tired. She worked from the moment she was up until she went to bed.

After she died I remember telling Grandpa about her leaning on the buffet with her eyes closed while we washed. He told me that she wasn't resting when she had her eyes closed. She used that moment every day to pray for each of her grandchildren individually.
And, to finish this post:
  • Two pieces of traditional music from Lapland - Ida's home in Sweden, taken from the film "Pathfinder", a story told by the people of the north for over 1000 years.
  • And the Flag of the Sami (Lapland).




From the film's opening credits. The Music of the North

This is the Sami Flag (Flag of the Association of the Sami People). The Sami (also called Lapps, although they consider this word derogatory) inhabit Sápmi, which today encompasses parts of northern Sweden, Norway, Finland and the Kola Peninsula of Russia but also the border area between south and middle Sweden and Norway.



And again, from the film's closing credits. The hauntingly beautiful music of the Sami.

Simply,
Victor

General Henry Dearborn, Our 6th Great Uncle and United States Secretary of War

General Henry Dearborn. Painted When He Served as
United States Secretary of War (Today's Defense Secretary)

From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove

Dear Clan,
This evening I’m delighted to introduce you to our 6th Great Uncle, Henry Dearborn (February 23, 1751 – June 6, 1829), a prominent man in American history. First, the Relationship Chart (Click to enlarge).

Trying to encapsulate the life of this great American in prose would take volumns. Instead, I’ve decided to list the main points of his life in a way easy to read. Here we go:
  • Henry Dearborn was a doctor.
  • He was a veteran of the Revolutionary War
  • He was a veteran of the War of 1812.
  • He organized a local militia troop of 60 men and fought at the Battle of Bunker Hill as a Captain.
  • He volunteered to serve under the traitor Benedict Arnold during the American Expedition to Quebec.
  • He was captured on Dec. 31, 1775 during the Battle of Quebec
  • He joined George Washington at Valley Forge as a Lt. Colonel.
  • He fought at the battles of Monmouth.
  • He was on the Sullivan Expedition against the Iroquois.
  • He joined Gen. George Washington’s Staff in 1781 as Deputy Quartermaster General with the rank of colonel.
  • He was present when the British Gen. Cornwallis surrendered after the Battle of Yorktown and the Revolutionary War ended.
  • He worked as a U.S. Marshal for Maine.
  • He was elected to Congress (1793-97)
  • In 1801 President Thomas Jefferson appointed him to his Cabinet as Secretary of War. He held this job for eight years. During this time he helped plan the removal of Indians beyond the Mississippi River.
  • He was appointed collector of the port of Boston by Pres. James Madison.
  • He was appointed senior Major General in the U.S. Army in command of the Northeast Sector from the Niagara River to the New England Coast.
  • During the war of 1812 he prepared plans for the attacks on Montreal, Kingston and Detroit.
  • President James Madison nominated Dearborn for reappointment as Secretary of War but the Senate rejected the nomination.
  • He was later appointed Ambassador to Portugal by Pres. James Monroe
Lewis and Clark named the Dearborn River in west central Montana after our uncle. Dearborn County Indiana, Dearborn Michigan and Dearborn Missouri were also named for him as was Fort Dearborn in Chicago. His son was a congressman in 1831-33.

Simply,
Victor

Friday, July 30, 2010

A Video Tour of Great Grandmother Ida's Home of Haparanda, Sweden (On the Border with Finland)

Hello All,
A short video showing the village of Haparanda, Sweden - the hometown of our Great Grandmother Ida Tornberg (mother of Grandpa Walter Mattson).

Simply,
Victor

The Life of our 3rd Great Grandmother, Almira McCrillis (Grandma Violet's Line)

From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove

Hello Everyone,
The long arduous march of summer space camps is behind me. The season started the first week of June and ended on July 29th. I’ve averaged 100 hours per week and today find myself enjoying nearly three restful, peaceful weeks of vacation before the start of the 2010-2011 school year.

Perhaps with extra time on my hands I’ll be able to write a bit more and continue sleuthing our family history.

Today I’d like to share the obituary of our Great Great Great Grandmother, Almira McCrillis taken from The Hot Springs Star on April 3, 1903. She was born Almira Swift on January 6, 1809 in Corinth, Vermont, the daughter of Phinas Swift and Deborah Dearborn.
Peacefully on the morning of March 16, 1903, Grandma McCrillis sank into her last sleep - asleep in Jesus with the bright hope of a part in the first resurrection. Words of comfort were spoken at the home by Mr. Fassett from Psalms 91.

Ninety-five long years had she lived and weary with age she welcomed the rest that awaits us all.

The British Uniforms during the War of 1812

The Vermont Militia's Uniforms of 1812

Grandma was born in Corrinth, Vermont, January 6, 1809. Her father, Captain Phineas Swift, fought in the War of 1812. Grandma remembered quite distinctly seeing the British soldiers as they endeavoured to drive cattle across the line and our soldiers standing ready to turn them back.



Grandma was one of the passengers on board the first railroad train making its first trip between Boston and Providence RI. The train consisted of an engine and three crude coaches made after the fashion of our stage coaches of today.

I have listened many times to the interesting remembrances of those days which Grandma could remember and relate so well.

In 1837 she was married in Providence, R.I. to Joseph E. McCrillis. To them were born two sons and three daughters. When the youngest child was three years of age, the father decided to try the west, and they moved from old New England to the wilds of Wisconsin. One by one the children grew to manhood and womanhood and were scattered to homes of their own.

In 1888 the two daughters, Mrs. J.M. Dennis and Mrs. H.E. Whaley of Hot Springs, S.D. were rejoiced to have the dear father and mother with them again to feel the old home ties renewed.

In 1890 the dear old father died, leaving Grandma to silently mourn his going and long for the time when the Master would permit her to join the companion with whom she had spent over fifty happy years.

For the last several years, Grandma has resided in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Whaley, of Cascade Springs, where she received loving care and gave in return only smiles and cheery words leavened with manifest acts of kindness.

She leaves two sons and two daughters to mourn her departure, also many grand children, great grandchildren and a host of friends.
Relationship Chart

Phinas Swift and Deborah Dearborn
to
3rd Great Grandparents, Almira Swift and Joseph E. McCrillis
to
Isabel Deanora Helgerson McCrilles and John Mayberry Dennis
to
Vesta Althea Dennis and Walter Edwin Pierce
to
Violet Mae Pierce and Walter Albert Mattson
to
Luella, Linda, John and Marvin
to
Us.

Additional Information.
Phineas Swift, our 4th Great Grandfather and father of Almira, was a captain in the Vermont Militia in the war of 1812. His wife, Deborah Dearborn, was a niece of the Secretary of War, Henry Dearborn.

Vermonters reluctantly supported the War of 1812. The federal trade embargoes stopped all legal trade with Canada, stunting Vermont’s commerce. War with Great Britain made Vermont a battle zone, with the Champlain Valley a familiar battlefield. Political parties again were split, with Jeffersonian Republicans in favor of war, and Federalists in opposition.
Vermont’s governor, Federalist Martin Chittenden, Thomas’s son, caused a stir when he recalled the Vermont militia from New York in 1813, where it was supporting federal troops. He believed the militia was needed in Vermont. The militia officers refused Chittenden’s order to return immediately, stating that they were needed to defend the Union, and criticized Chittenden for playing politics. The Vermont militia returned to New York in 1814 and played a key role in America’s victory at the Battle of Plattsburgh. Chittenden lost his bid for reelection.

Simply,
Victor