Sunday, November 4, 2012

Tjora Bruk 14


One of the most important books for anyone searching for their Norwegian roots are the  "bygdeboker”, the farm books that have been or are being written about all the areas of Norway. The following information about who was running the farm through the years has been translated from such a book. It is GARD OG ÆTT I SOLA by Sigurd Refheim, published by Utgjevar Sola Kommune in 1974. With these books we can trace our family history and then using the information, search the digitized records at the website, digitalarkivet.no. 
During the 1600’s there were six bruk (farms) in Tjora: numbers 1, 8, 14, 19, 22 and 24. The first our family came to 14 was about 1698, when Einer Einarson came from Sola and married Guri Ommundsdatter. When Guri died he married Kirsten Knudsdatter in 1721. Einer died in 1733. Einer and Kirsten had one daughter, Guri in 1722. After Einer’s death, Kirsten married Helge Tjerandson in 1934 and he ran the farm until Guri Einarsdatter married Kristoffer Svenson in 1755 and they took over the running of the farm that same year. They had one daughter named Kristi.

In 1783, Gabriel Gabrielson married Kristi Kristoffersdatter, the daughter of the farm and took over the running of it in 1786. They had five children. Their son Kristoffer Gabrielson was born in 1787 and took over the farm in 1811. He married Ingeborg Olsdatter and they also had five children and their oldest son Gabriel Kristofferson was the one who took over the farm in 1851.

Gabriel Kristofferson married Maren Margreta Svensdatter in 1844, they had three children and she died in 1850. Gabriel was married in 1851 to Ingeborg Torsdatter and they had three children. The sisters father was their first child, Ole Gabriel Gabrielson. Ole was born in 1851 and took over the farm in 1881, when he was thirty years old. He married Guri Kristiansdatter in 1876 and they had eleven children, our grandmothers among them.

At the time Ole took over the farm, there were two farms divided off, numbers 15 and 17, with 17 being run at that time by Ole’s half-brother Kristian. 

There were owners and renters of land and I do not know which they were over the years. But, the lease holders kept the farms within families over the generations.  Nothing is mentioned on what the farmers raised on this particular farm but from what I have read it may have been grain and sheep. Maybe some of our cousins in Norway would know. Also, these farms were smaller than what we here in the states are familiar with. Most were no more than about 15 to 25 acres. Yet they were enough to provide a living for the family.