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Trued Abrehamsson

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Trued Abrehamsson

Birth
Kviinge, Östra Göinge kommun, Skåne län, Sweden
Death
5 May 1869 (aged 58)
Norra Sandby, Hässleholms kommun, Skåne län, Sweden
Burial
Hassleholm, Hässleholms kommun, Skåne län, Sweden Add to Map
Plot
Unknown (near N 4 15)
Memorial ID
View Source
Swedish patriarch. He was a farmer and horse trader in the village of North Sandby northeast of Hässleholm, in the southernmost Swedish province of Scania ("Skåne"). He spelled his name Abrahamsson, the usual way, or in his Scanian dialect (above). He and his wife were the founders of the greater Trued Family through their three sons and four daughters. The family has spread out all over Scandinavia and the United States (there mostly through Truhlsen and Hansen) and to many other world locations. An American niece, through his sister Anna Abrahamsdotter, was Karna Holm, and a great-grandnephew, also through Anna, was Carl Pearson. No known photographs or other pictures of Trued or Karna have been found (as of January, 2022). His grave was associated with his farm in North Sandby, but its exact location is no longer known. A monument in memory of him and his wife was erected at a large international family reunion in 1989, next to the grave of Nils Jönsson, also associated with the same address where the farmhouse still stands,
Swedish patriarch. He was a farmer and horse trader in the village of North Sandby northeast of Hässleholm, in the southernmost Swedish province of Scania ("Skåne"). He spelled his name Abrahamsson, the usual way, or in his Scanian dialect (above). He and his wife were the founders of the greater Trued Family through their three sons and four daughters. The family has spread out all over Scandinavia and the United States (there mostly through Truhlsen and Hansen) and to many other world locations. An American niece, through his sister Anna Abrahamsdotter, was Karna Holm, and a great-grandnephew, also through Anna, was Carl Pearson. No known photographs or other pictures of Trued or Karna have been found (as of January, 2022). His grave was associated with his farm in North Sandby, but its exact location is no longer known. A monument in memory of him and his wife was erected at a large international family reunion in 1989, next to the grave of Nils Jönsson, also associated with the same address where the farmhouse still stands,


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