Eli Torkelsdatter, 18161896 (aged 79 years)

Name
Eli /Torkelsdatter/
Given names
Eli
Surname
Torkelsdatter
Birth
Type: Birth of Torkelsdatter, Eli
15 February 1816
Country: Norway
Birth of a son
Country: Norway
Birth of a daughter
City: Oslo
Country: Norway
Birth of a daughter
Death of a daughter
Birth of a son
Birth of a son
4 March 1853 (aged 37 years)
Birth of a daughter
Birth of a daughter
Birth of a son
Birth of a son
Country: Norway
Marriage of a son
Death of a daughter
14 May 1871 (aged 55 years)
Marriage of a daughter
Country: Norway
Death of a son
Marriage of a son
Country: New Zealand
Death
Type: Death of Torkelsdatter, Eli
21 January 1896 (aged 79 years)
Country: New Zealand
Family with Lars Hansen
partner
herself
son
18391918
Birth: 4 August 1839 26 23 Store-Ullern, Sør-Odal, Hedmark, Norway
Death: 6 October 1918Eketahuna, New Zealand
3 years
daughter
18421933
Birth: 20 November 1842 29 26 Ullern, Oslo, Oslo, Norway
Death: 6 May 1933Mangamutu, New Zealand
4 years
daughter
4 years
son
3 years
son
2 years
daughter
20 months
daughter
23 months
son
2 years
son
18611933
Birth: 2 April 1861 48 45 Sør-Odal, Hedmark, Norway
Death: 5 July 1933Dannevirke, New Zealand
Shared note

from http://www.disigen.net/

The remainder of the family, Eli (now aged 58) along with children; Lars (20), Elisabet (16), Halvor (14) and Carl (12) sailed from the port of Kristiania, Oslo on the 912 ton White Wing’s ship “Invererne” departing 21 November 1873 under the command of Captain Foreman. Sailing via Gravesend, Kent, England the voyage was to last another 107 days. The ship carried 240 passengers, 16 children of whom mostly died from scarlatina. They also landed in Napier on 8 March 1874.

It is hoped that the now “well settled” families of Hans and Karen greeted Eli and her children and that they all travelled back together to their new home in the "Forty Mile Bush", to join so many other Scandinavian families that braved that long and often painful voyage, hopeful of this new world and a better life.

Shared note

from http://www.disigen.net/

On 30 November 1871 Hans (the eldest son aged 32) and his wife Karen (31) and their now four children; Elisabet (8), Lauritz (5), Hans (4) and Carl (1) left the port of Kristiania for Hull, England aboard the steamship S/S Oder. After a short but uncomfortable wait in Hull, they boarded the 853 ton sailing ship “England”, commanded by Captain George Henry Harrington which set sail for Wellington, New Zealand on 8 December 1781. A very severe outbreak of measles and diarrhoea caused 16 deaths during the 90 day voyage and sadly we now know, baby Carl then aged 9 mths, passed away onboard 31 January 1872 (died and was buried at sea southeast of Tristan da Cunhaand & Gough Island.) Lauritz aged 5 years later too passed away on 7 March 1872 - he died and was buried at sea in Cook Strait while the ship was becalmed. They were so close to their destination. What a tremendously sad time it would have been.

The ship finally arrived in the Port of Wellington on 9 March 1872, but not before the crew and passengers were all detained in specially built barracks, for quarantine purposes, on a small island in Wellington Harbour called “Somes Island”, after a suspected outbreak of smallpox occurred. It is not known how long the quarantine lasted but two cases of smallpox were confirmed during that time. (The quarantine expired on 30 March 1872.) The family disembarked at Wellington and made the weary trip to their new home on foot. They already knew of the Scandinavian settlements where many of their Norwegian friends had already colonised, through the ‘Vogel's Assisted Immigration Scheme’ started in New Zealand in 1870.

Shared note

Notes from Mac Larsen, est. 1982:

SS Hero departed Christiania (now Olso) 14 November 1873, arrived Gravesend, Kent c. 19 November 1873.

Sailing ship Invererne departed Gravesend 22 November 1873, arrived Napier 8 March 1874.

Passengers included Eli Torkildsdatter (58) (known in New Zealand as Eli Larsen), Lars Larsen (20 1/4), Elizabeth Larsdatter (16 3/4), Halvord Larsen (14 3/4) and Carl Larsen (12 1/2).