Monday, 25 May 2020

SWEEDISH PASSENGER ALMA PALSSON DROWNED WITH 4 CHILDS IN TITANIC 1912 APRIL 15



SWEEDISH PASSENGER ALMA PALSSON DROWNED WITH 4 CHILDS 
IN TITANIC 1912 APRIL 15



என்னை உருக்கிய சம்பவம் இது 

.டைட்டானிக் மூழ்கிக்கொண்டிருந்தது கடைசி கேன்வாஸ் போட்டில் எற முயற்சி செய்தார் Alma Pålsson முடியவில்லை .ஏற்கனவே இரண்டு பிள்ளைகள் கடலில் மூழ்கி விட்டன சரி ரெண்டு பிள்ளையாவது காப்பாற்றுவோம் என்று Wennerström என்ற பயணியிடம் குழந்தைகளை தூக்கி கொடுத்தார் .ஆனால் நீர் சுழியில் சிக்கி ரெண்டு குழந்தைகளும் போயின
her beloved children
Torburg 8, 
Paul 6, 
Stina 4 and 
Gosta 2.

ஏழையாய் பிறந்த குற்றம்.
பணக்காரர்கள் தப்பித்தார்கள்
ஏழைகள் மாண்டார்கள்
#ஒருகல்லறையின்கதை

Alma Pålsson (Paulson on the grave) was found with the four third class tickets belonging to her beloved children Torburg 8, Paul 6, Stina 4 and Gosta 2. Her husband Nils had previously traveled to America to find work and set up the families new home and their American Dream. I read that upon receiving the news of the disaster Mr. Pålsson collapsed with grief and became very ill. One can only imagine the moment in time for that man losing his entire family. We salute you Mr. Pålsson and ever

Birth: Aug. 3, 1882
Vellinge
Vellinge kommun
Skåne län, Sweden
Death: Apr. 15, 1912

Wife of Nils Paulson. Aged 29 years. Lost on the Titanic with her four children: Torburg Danria, aged 8; Paul Folke, aged 6; Stina Viola, aged 4; and Gosta Leonard, aged 2; Alma and her children were given identification number 206.

Family links:
Spouse:
Nils Leonard Paulson (1880 - 1964)*

Children:
Torburg Danria Paulson (1904 - 1912)*
Paul Folke Paulson (1906 - 1912)*
Stina Viola Paulson (1908 - 1912)*
Gosta Leonard Paulson (1910 - 1912)*

Mrs Nils Pålsson (Alma Cornelia Berglund), 29, was born on August 3, 1882 in Velinge, Sweden the daughter of Maria Berglund (neé Nilsson) and Anders Berglund (1). Alma had four brothers: Oskar Albert, Hilding Waldemar, Axel Ferdinand and Gustav Gabriel Berglund (2).

Alma was married to Nils Pålsson (3) who worked as a miner in Gruvan, Bjuv, Skåne, Sweden. Following a major strike Nils tired of mining and because the only professions available in Bjuv were miner, brickworker and farm hand he decided to emigrate. On 10 June 1910 he received his emigration certificate and travelled to Chicago. Having gained employment as a tram conductor Nils set about saving enough money for his family to join him. He lived at 938 Townsend Street, Chicago. Also living in Chicago were two of Alma's brothers: Olof (?Oskar) Berglund on 2304 North Spring St. and Axel Berglund, 1725 Kimball Ave.

Eventually enough money had been raised and Alma and her four children Torburg, Paul, Stina, and Gösta left Gruvan for Southampton, travelling via Malmö and Copenhagen.

On board the Titanic Alma got to know August Wennerström. When the ship was sinking it took a long time to prepare the four children and Alma came too late for the lifeboats. She met Wennerström on the Boat Deck near collapsible A. Wennerström tried to hold on to two of the children as she had asked him to but when water came up them Wennerström lost his grip and both disappeared.

Mrs Pålsson and the children boarded the Titanic at Southampton. They all perished in the sinking. Nils clung to the hope that stories about a rescued boy might refer to one of his children. He spent much money and time looking in vain for the boy but eventually Mr Pålsson was informed at the Chicago offices of the White Star line that his family was among the missing.


.Left Alma Pålsson
Right Nils, Alma and (probably) Stina Viola Pålsson
Photos © Lars-Inge Glad

Mrs Nils Pålsson (Alma Cornelia Berglund), 29, was born on August 3, 1882 in Velinge, Sweden the daughter of Maria Berglund (neé Nilsson) and Anders Berglund (1). Alma had four brothers: Oskar Albert, Hilding Waldemar, Axel Ferdinand and Gustav Gabriel Berglund (2).

Alma was married to Nils Pålsson (3) who worked as a miner in Gruvan, Bjuv, Skåne, Sweden. Following a major strike Nils tired of mining and because the only professions available in Bjuv were miner, brickworker and farm hand he decided to emigrate. On 10 June 1910 he received his emigration certificate and travelled to Chicago. Having gained employment as a tram conductor Nils set about saving enough money for his family to join him. He lived at 938 Townsend Street, Chicago. Also living in Chicago were two of Alma's brothers: Olof (?Oskar) Berglund on 2304 North Spring St. and Axel Berglund, 1725 Kimball Ave.

Eventually enough money had been raised and Alma and her four children Torburg, Paul, Stina, and Gösta left Gruvan for Southampton, travelling via Malmö and Copenhagen.

On board the Titanic Alma got to know August Wennerström. When the ship was sinking it took a long time to prepare the four children and Alma came too late for the lifeboats. She met Wennerström on the Boat Deck near collapsible A. Wennerström tried to hold on to two of the children as she had asked him to but when water came up them Wennerström lost his grip and both disappeared.

Mrs Pålsson and the children boarded the Titanic at Southampton. They all perished in the sinking. Nils clung to the hope that stories about a rescued boy might refer to one of his children. He spent much money and time looking in vain for the boy but eventually Mr Pålsson was informed at the Chicago offices of the White Star line that his family was among the missing.



Image


Nils Pålsson (Photo © Lars-Inge Glad)






Paulson looked pale and ill when he leaned hungry eyed over the desk and asked in broken English if his wife or children had been accounted for. Chief Clerk Ivar Holmstrom scanned his list of third class passengers saved. He failed to find there any of the names enumerated by Paulson. "Perhaps they did not sail," he suggested hopefully. Then he looked over the list of those who sailed third class on the Titanic...The process of elimination was now complete. "Your family was on the boat, but none of them are accounted for," said Clerk Holmstrom.

The man on the other side of the counter was assisted to a seat. His face and hands were bathed in cold water before he became fully conscious. He was finally assisted to the street by Gust Johnson, a friend who arrived with him. Paulson's grief was the most acute of any who visited the offices of the White Star, but his loss was the greatest. His whole family had been wiped out.

Alma's body was recovered by the Mackay-Bennett:



NO. 206 - FEMALE - ESTIMATED AGE, 30 - FAIR HAIR

CLOTHING - Brown Coat; green cardigan; dark shirt; brown skirt under; boots; no stockings.

EFFECTS - Wedding ring; brass keeper; mouth organ; purse and two coins; a letter; 65 kroner; had four children with her; letter from husband, Neil Paulsson, 94 Townsend St, Chicago.

THIRD CLASS TICKET No. 349909 (5 TICKETS) - NAME - ALMA PAULSON

She was buried in Fairview cemetary in Halifax on 8 May 1912.

Image
Left: Alma Pålsson's grave)
Photo © Fredric Nilsson, Sweden
The Mansion House Fund paid 875.52 Kr (£48) to Alma's mother. Damages of 1366:50 Kr (£75) were paid to mother on 26 May 1914.

Nils remained in the USA. In the late 1920s he was joined in USA by Axell Tollof Kvist (a relative of Alma's, born: April 14 1896) from Gruvan, Bjuv. Kvist was to send for his wife to join him in America but he never made contact again. Nils died in 1962.

Notes
1. Maria Berglund (neé Nilsson), born on 22 December 1859 in Fleninge, Sweden.
Anders Berglund (born 7 August 1852 also in Fleninge).
2. Oskar (?Olof) Albert Berglund (18 January 1881 in Velinge, Sweden)
Hilding Waldemar Berglund (born 2 March 1884 in Velinge, Sweden)
Axel Ferdinand Berglund (born 15 March 1886 in Velinge, Sweden)
Gustav Gabriel Berglund (born 8 February 1898 in Bjuv, Sweden).
3. In America Nils changed his name to Nels Paulsson.

References
Chicago Daily Tribune (Illinois), 20 April 1912
Claes-Göran Wetterholm (1988, 1996) Titanic
White Star Line (1912.) Record of Bodies and Effects (Passengers and Crew S.S. "Titanic") Recovered by Cable Steamer "MacKay Bennett" Including Bodies Buried at Sea and Bodies Delivered at Morgue in Halifax, N.S. Public Archives of Nova Scotia, Halifax, N.S., Manuscript Group 100, Vol. 229, No. 3d, Accession 1976-191, 76 pp., unpaged. (#206)

Acknowledgements
Homer Thiel, USA
Fredric Nilsson, Sweden
Lars-Inge Glad, Sweden (grandson of Axell Kvist)







.Titanic centenary: Swedish dreams of a new life lost at sea
By Eleanor Williams
BBC News
9 April 2012
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Image caption
Alma Pålsson was going to join her husband who had already emigrated
In the days after the Titanic sank with the loss of 1,517 lives, the Chicago Daily Tribune published an account of how Swedish immigrant and city tram conductor Nils Pålsson discovered his wife Alma and four children had perished in the waters of the Atlantic.

"Paulson looked pale and ill when he leaned hungry-eyed over the desk and asked in broken English if his wife or children had been accounted for.

"Chief clerk Ivar Holmstrom scanned his list of third-class passengers saved.

"He failed to find there any of the names enumerated by Paulson. 'Perhaps they did not sail,' he suggested hopefully.

"Then he looked over the list of those who sailed third class on the Titanic...The process of elimination was now complete.

"Your family was on the boat, but none of them are accounted for," said Clerk Holmstrom.

"The man on the other side of the counter was assisted to a seat. His face and hands were bathed in cold water before he became fully conscious.

"He was finally assisted to the street by Gust Johnson, a friend who arrived with him.

"Paulson's grief was the most acute of any who visited the offices of the White Star, but his loss was the greatest.

"His whole family had been wiped out."

A million emigrants
During the 19th Century failing crops and rising poverty levels made many Swedes sell up to start a new life across the Atlantic.

The 231 Nordic passengers
123 Swedes - 89 died
63 Fins - 43 died
31 Norwegians - 21 died
14 Danes - 12 died
Image caption

The passenger list with the 'Paulson' family names and their ages on it
Between the early 1800s and 1930 more than one million Swedes left for America.

Most sailed from Southampton or Liverpool to New York.

On the Titanic, the Swedes were the largest group after British and American passengers, making Swedish the second most spoken language on board, according to Titanic expert and author Claes-Göran Wetterholm.

"There were more than 200 Nordic passengers and they made up almost a third of all third-class passengers," he explained.

Of the estimated 1,300 passengers on board the Titanic, there were 123 Swedes, 112 in third class. There were 327 British and 306 American passengers on board.

Nils Pålsson, a miner, left his home in Bjuv, Skåne, south Sweden, in June 1910 for Chicago where he got a job as a tram conductor.

Unknown child's grave

By April 1912 he had enough money to pay for Alma Pålsson, 29, and their children Gösta Leonard, two, Stina Viola, three, Paul Folke, five, and Torborg Danira, eight, to join him.

They travelled via Copenhagen to England and Southampton where they boarded Titanic.

As the ship began to sink late on 14 April Alma dressed her children in their cabin.

But they arrived on deck too late for the lifeboats and all of them died that night.

Alma's body was recovered but none of her children was found.

Image caption
Gösta Pålsson was long thought to be the unknown child buried at Fairview
In the days after the disaster the body of a fair-haired little boy was found floating in the water near the site of the sinking.

He was never identified and was buried at Fairview Cemetery in Halifax, Canada. His gravestone read: "Erected to the memory of an unknown child".

Lars-Inge Glad, a descendant of Nils Pålsson, said: "For many years it was believed that the 'unknown child's grave' belonged to one of Alma's children but it turned out to be an English child from third class."

The grave, which is near Alma's grave at Fairview Cemetery, was identified in 2007 as that of Sidney Leslie Goodwin, a 19-month-old boy from Wiltshire.

Mr Glad said: "Nils never recovered from losing his family, but he remarried another Swedish woman called Christina.

"They moved from Chicago to a place not that far away where they bought a house where Nils planted four trees in the garden in memory of his wife and children.

Nils later changed his surname to Paulson to make it sound more American.

"He died in 1964. The names of their children have been kept alive in our family. My mother's second name was Viola and my grandmother was called Torborg."

The lost ring
The story of another Swedish victim will live on through her wedding ring.

Gerda Lindell, 30, was also emigrating to America with her husband Edvard, 36, on the Titanic.

The couple, from Helsingborg, Skåne, managed to stay together as the Titanic went down and reached collapsible lifeboat A together.

Image caption
Gerda Lindell's ring ended up drifting around in a lifeboat for a month before it was found
August Wennerström, one of only 34 surviving Swedes, later described the events to many newspapers.

He said he and Edvard managed to get into the lifeboat but Gerda had no strength left to climb in and clung on to the side.

Eventually she could hold on no longer and drowned.

Wennerström described how Edvard's hair "turned all grey in lesser time than 30 minutes" before he died, still holding his wife's ring in his hand.

The survivors were later transferred to another lifeboat and taken to Carpathia while the collapsible was left to drift away.

Gerda's body was never found, nor was her husband's.

But a month later a crew from another ship, Oceanic, found the drifting lifeboat about 300 miles from where the Titanic sank.

Last Swedish survivor
As they began recovering three dead bodies from the raft, they saw something glistening at the bottom. They had found Gerda Lindell's ring.

The ring was reunited with her father in Sweden after her brother saw a note about it in a local newspaper.

For many years the ring, which was a combined wedding and engagement ring, remained in the family and Gerda's niece wore it.

Image caption

Lillian Asplund became the last survivor to die in America in 2006
Mr Wetterholm had heard the story about the ring but until he managed to trace it in 1991 he thought it was a myth.

The ring is now stored in a safety deposit box in Sweden, but is taken out for exhibitions around the world.

Another well known Swede on board was Lillian Asplund.

She is better known as the last American survivor, although she was actually from Sweden.

Having been born in the US in 1906 to immigrant parents, the family returned to Småland in Sweden in 1907 to sort out the family farm after her grandfather's death.

By 1912 they decided to move back to the US and Mr Asplund booked them on the Titanic.

Lillian survived along with her mother Selma and younger brother Felix and were rescued by Carpathia. Her father and three older brothers died.


Lillian Asplund never wanted to to talk about the events of that fateful night. She died in 2006 at the age of 99.


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