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Fredrick William Christensen

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Fredrick William Christensen

Birth
Mount Pleasant, Sanpete County, Utah, USA
Death
5 May 1912 (aged 48)
Ephraim, Sanpete County, Utah, USA
Burial
Ephraim, Sanpete County, Utah, USA GPS-Latitude: 39.3718605, Longitude: -111.5879135
Plot
F / 39 / 2
Memorial ID
View Source
Frederick William CHRISTENSEN was a farmer in the valley. He served a mission for the LDS Church in Norway and Sweden. They had seven children.

Children:
1) Gladys Marie (Christensen) HANSEN.
2) Amelia Fredonia (Christensen) MORTENSEN.
3) Frederick Rodney CHRISTENSEN.
4) Joseph William CHRISTENSEN.
5) Hannah Rosezella CHRISTENSEN.
6) Eva Andrea CHRISTENSEN.
7) Carl LaRell CHRISTENSEN.

Frederick's father, Carl Christian Anthon "C.C.A." CHRISTENSEN, was an artist and Frederick helped him. From The History of Sanpete County, pg. 216. "His (C.C.A. Christensen) most famous work, The "Mormon Panorama," was painted to use in an illustrated lecture on LDS Church History. All twenty-three canvases were sewed together into a scroll, wound on aspen poles, and rolled with a crank by an assistant, usually Frederick Christensen, who in 1880 had become principal of the district school in Fairview. The entire scroll of twenty-three paintings was about 175 feet long..."
Frederick William CHRISTENSEN was a farmer in the valley. He served a mission for the LDS Church in Norway and Sweden. They had seven children.

Children:
1) Gladys Marie (Christensen) HANSEN.
2) Amelia Fredonia (Christensen) MORTENSEN.
3) Frederick Rodney CHRISTENSEN.
4) Joseph William CHRISTENSEN.
5) Hannah Rosezella CHRISTENSEN.
6) Eva Andrea CHRISTENSEN.
7) Carl LaRell CHRISTENSEN.

Frederick's father, Carl Christian Anthon "C.C.A." CHRISTENSEN, was an artist and Frederick helped him. From The History of Sanpete County, pg. 216. "His (C.C.A. Christensen) most famous work, The "Mormon Panorama," was painted to use in an illustrated lecture on LDS Church History. All twenty-three canvases were sewed together into a scroll, wound on aspen poles, and rolled with a crank by an assistant, usually Frederick Christensen, who in 1880 had become principal of the district school in Fairview. The entire scroll of twenty-three paintings was about 175 feet long..."


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