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Visa fullständig version : Gothenburg - Edward Johnson DOE



Katie Jane
2015-09-03, 20:10
Can anyone help me find out why an Englishman and his family were in Gothenburg in 1859 - 1861? John Hall DOE and his wife, Eliza, nee PEARSON together with their baby son, Edward, seem to have been in Gothenberg at this time and it is likely that Edward was born there as I can find no record of his birth in England. I do have evidence that connects them to the city from The Times of London newspaper for 24 May 1860 in which the death of Edward is recorded "On the 17th May at Gothenburg, Edward Johnson, aged 8 months, only child of John Hall Doe" Edward may have been named 'Edward Johnson' in the Swedish tradition so perhaps his birth in August/September 1859 or death in May 1860 may be under the name Johanesson rather than DOE, his English surname. I am mainly interested in finding out why the family was in Gothenburg so I am hoping any records may include father's occupation or other details. The family is not part of my own family; I am doing research for a history project. Many thanks in anticipation.

Phryxe
2015-09-04, 13:39
Source: Göteborgs engelska F:1 (1845-1897) sid 21 (AID: v69377.b16.s21, NAD: SE/GLA/19105)

Phryxe
2015-09-04, 13:46
Source: Göteborgs engelska C:7 (1845-1897) sid 27 (AID: v69375.b21.s27, NAD: SE/GLA/19105)

Katie Jane
2015-09-04, 15:15
Many thanks for both the records - that's fantastic and I appreciate your help. Can you point me towards any other resources that might give further information about the British community in Goteborg at that time? In particular I am wondering why he was there.

Phryxe
2015-09-04, 18:45
I used the digitized sources that are avaiable from Arkiv Digital (http://www.arkivdigital.se/). I checked the church records where I though I might find the family, but didn't find anything other than the above from the english parish in Gothenburg. Unfortunately this parish lacks household examination rolls. There are also tax records (mantalslängder), but I didn't find the persons in the index. I might have missed them. The son was buried in Örgryte. Maybe that is a clue ...

Katie Jane
2015-09-05, 00:46
Much appreciated - many thanks!