Birth PlaceMöreby, Mjällby, Blekinge, Sweden
MemoMöreby is a small settlement in the parish of Mjällby.
Bapt Date24 Jun 1866 [12] Age: <1
Bapt PlaceMjällby, Blekinge, Sweden
Census Date31 Dec 1880 [4618] Age: 14
Census PlaceMöreby, Mjällby, Blekinge, Sweden
Emig PlaceMjällby, Blekinge, Sweden
Immi PlaceCastle Garden, New York, New York, United States
Memoon the ship “Thingvalla” which departed from Copenhagen, Denmark, making stops at Christiania [Oslo], Norway, and Christiansand, Norway. Declaration of Intent gives 11-MAY-1885.
Citizen Date18 Oct 1888 [1395] Age: 22
Citizen PlaceMinneapolis, Hennepin Co., Minnesota, United States
MemoDeclaration of Intent
Natu Date1 Oct 1897 [1396] Age: 31
Natu PlaceMinneapolis, Hennepin Co., Minnesota, United States
Census Date18 Jun 1895 [1389] Age: 28
Census PlaceMinneapolis, Hennepin Co., Minnesota, United States
Memo1207 Girard Ave. N., 13th Precinct, 3rd Ward
Citizen Date1 Oct 1897 Age: 31
Citizen PlaceMinneapolis, Hennepin Co., Minnesota, United States
Memo As “Eli Christopher”
Census Date5 Jun 1900 [802] Age: 33
Census PlaceMinneapolis, Hennepin Co., Minnesota, United States
Memo1207 Girard, 3rd ward
Census Date25 Apr 1910 [1062] Age: 43
Census PlaceMinneapolis, Hennepin Co., Minnesota, United States
Memo2211 5th Ave., 4th Ward
Reside Date1912
Reside PlaceMinneapolis, Hennepin Co., Minnesota, United States
Memo2211 5th Ave. N.
Death PlaceMinneapolis, Hennepin Co., Minnesota, United States
Burial PlaceMinneapolis, Hennepin Co., Minnesota, United States
MemoCrystal Lake Cemetery: Section 9, Lot 192, Grave 3. Verified in person.
Alias/AKAEli CHRISTOPHER
Alt.SpellingElias JONSON [134]
Misc. Notes
At sometime in his youth, Elias lost his lower right arm in a farm accident in Sweden and later wore a hook prosthesis. This was a story I first heard from Grandpa (Clinton James) Christopher
[2497], but which was confirmed in the original Swedish records
[71] ("Lost the right arm through accident occurrence"). The record also labeled him a “cripple” and incredibly, the same record also revealed that his sister, Bengta, lost her left arm in an accident (she remained in Sweden as far as I know).
Elias Jönsson, at the age of 18, obtained a work certificate (Arbetsbetyg) and left Mjällby, Blekinge, Sweden, on May 6, 1885. He first traveled to the Swedish port of Malmö and boarded a ship bound for Copenhagen (it is not known whether he traveled to Malmö by land or sea). There he boarded the ship
Thingvalla, under Captain Laub, which made additional stops in Norway before heading to New York. It is not clear what date the ship left Copenhagen, but it left Christiania (Oslo), Norway, May 19, 1885. He arrived at Castle Garden immigration center on June 2, 1885
[134] (this was before Ellis Island opened); today it is known as Castle Clinton and is the place where you buy tickets to visit the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island). He almost got sent back to Sweden because of the prosthetic on his right arm. But somehow Elias was able to demonstrate to the immigration officials his ability to work. Grandpa's story was that his father grabbed a horse-drawn cart and showed that he could drive it. Elias made his way from New York to Minneapolis, where he changed his name to Eli Christopher. Eli's oldest brother, Christoffer Jönsson, had been the first of that family to arrive in Minneapolis (1873) and it is believed he was responsible for setting the precedent of using "Christopher" as the family name and thereby he became John Christopher. "Christopher" first appeared in our family as the first name of my GGG-Grandfather, Christopher Jönsson (b.1806). In addition to John and Eli, their brother, Knut, and sister, Pella, also emigrated to the U.S. and adopted the surname, Christopher. Eli worked in Minneapolis for three years to earn passage for his fiancée, Annette Lång. She was from the village of Näsum, Kristianstad, Sweden. On August 17, 1888, she left home and made her way to the port of Malmö and traveled by an unknown ship to England, where she transferred to the
S.S. Arizona. One common route in those days was from Sweden to the British port of Kingston upon Hull and from there by train to Liverpool, which is in fact the port from which the
S.S. Arizona departed. She arrived at Castle Garden on September 18, 1888, having just turned 21 three days before. Eli & Annette were married in Minneapolis on December 15, 1888. Although Annette did not change her name the way Eli had, she had a habit of spelling her name as "Anneth" ("Annath" on the marriage certificate), though since it appears that way in the passenger list of the
S.S. Arizona, it may be that was a tradition she brought with her. Annette's brother, Carl Wilhem Lång also left Sweden, becoming Charles Lang in California (I first met the descendants of Charles in 1976 in Turlock, California).
An interesting (and illustrated) story about the immigrant experience at Castle Garden, transcribed from an original 1890 periodical, can be found at this website:
http://www.norwayheritage.com/castle-garden.htmSee also this illustration of Castle Garden and Manhattan in 1880:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Castle_Garden_aerial_view_ca1880.jpgAnd an illustrated history of Castle Garden at:
http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/before-ellis-...ini-and-typhoid-maryHis application for citizenship dated 18-OCT-1888
[1395], gives the arrival date as 11-MAY-1885 which obviously conflicts with the arrival date of the
Thingvalla. Perhaps it was the date he boarded the ship.
An interesting footnote to the story of Eli’s emigration is the discovery that his departure from Mjällby, in 1885, had not been officially recorded in the parish’s “moving out” register. The details of his departure on a work certificate are only mentioned as a comment in the Household Examination records. Those same records though do include a cross-reference to the moving-out register for the year 1893, eight years after he actually emigrated. However on closer inspection, it turns out that this was actually a clerical procedure for dealing with persons who left the parish without announcing their destination, and therefore were declared “absent.” That moving out register listed a total of nine persons who were “moved” to the “Absent List” on the same day, November 9, 1893. There apparently was a provision for amending that register if they ever found out the destination of anyone declared absent. In this case they only learned the destination of one of the nine (not Elias), which was scribbled in later.
[2977], [2979]Eli worked for Glenwood Water and Fuel Co. in Minneapolis
[3453], as a teamster, driving horse-drawn vehicles. He was killed when his horse kicked him in the head.
[30]The 1900 census
[802], shows a “Malinda JOHNSON” (born Jan. 1886, Minnesota), living with the Christopher family, but with no relationship recorded. She was in fact a foster child. She later married Alexander “Aleck” SNELLMAN. The Minnesota marriage index
[1468], lists a Hennepin County marriage, 10-JUN-1914, between Alexander SNELLMAN and Victoria JOHNSON (certificate # 01740144). She died in 1973, and her gravestone bears the name “Melinda V. Snellman”
[1498, MEMORIAL# 151443862] and the Minnesota Death Index gives her middle name as “Victoria.” A 1934 photo of the couple also has her name spelled “Melinda.” In 1910, she was no longer in the Christopher household, but the 1920 census shows Aleck & Melinda living in Minneapolis, and Clinton Christopher was a boarder in their household.
[7968] Melinda may have also had a sister named Sigred or Sigrid Hanson, but that part of the story has yet to be worked out.