Compiled and written by David R. Schleper, 2021
Ellen Marie Oleson, an immigrant from Vadsø in Finnmark County in northern Norway, arrived in America in 1865. In Shakopee on June 6, 1868, Axel Jorgenson took out a marriage license and married Ellen.
Axel Jorgenson was born Aksel Jørgensen on Dec. 1, 1818, in Gjerstad in Aust-Agder County in southeast Norway and was baptized in the Gjerstad parish church five days later. Axel was the eldest of four sons and a daughter born to Jørgen Akselsen (1783-1864) and Karen Margrete Nilsdatter (1794-1866).
According to Mark W. Olson, the Gjerstad area of Axel’s youth was known for iron works and for cutting logs and floating them to destinations via streams and lakes, occupations he picked up. In 1846 Axel, by then a blacksmith by trade, moved to nearby Tistedalen (today called Halden) in nearby Østfold County, on Norway’s southernmost border crossing with Sweden. In Oslo, Norway on April 28, 1850, Axel married his first wife, Ingeborg Marie, age about 31, and five days later on May 3, 1850, the newlyweds boarded the brig Incognito in Christiania (Oslo), Norway bound for New York. No information exists about Ingeborg Marie. Her fate unknown, most likely she died in the first year or two after arriving in America.
Jorgenson probably traveled America’s water routes, eventually making his way to the frontier territory of Minnesota sometime in 1850-1851. By December 1863 Axel Jorgenson moved to Shakopee to take up business doing clock and watchmaker repair.
In the Minnesota Gazetteer and Business Directory for 1865 Axel was advertised as a watchmaker and jeweler on Holmes Street in Shakopee.
In Shakopee on June 6, 1868, Axel took out a marriage license and married his second wife, Ellen Marie Oleson.
The 1870 United States Census for Shakopee mentions that Axel Jorgenson was a watchmaker and legal citizen of the United States with $2730 in real estate worth and $600 in personal property value, a tidy sum for the period.
Axel is listed in 1870 as being married to Ellen M. Jorgenson, age 30, who is described as a housekeeper and not yet a legal citizen. Both are listed as born in Norway and having no children or others listed as living in household.
In 1874, Alex and Ellen were involved in a domestic dispute. In the Weekly Valley Herald newspaper on Nov. 4, 1874, Axel put in an item reading, “Notice is hereby given that my wife Ellen M. Jorgenson has left my bed and board without cause or provocation and that I will pay no debts of her contracting after this date. Dated August 26, 1874, Axel Jorgenson.”
By 1875 Minnesota Census shows Axel living in Waconia, without Ellen. But eventually, the two of them got back together.
By 1877, the couple moved to Stockholm Township in Wright County, where they lived for the rest of their lives, according to the Carver Historic District, Civil War Onset Sesquicentennial Update 1861-2011.
Axel and Ellen adopted a son in late 1879. The child was Oscar Lind. Axel and Ellen called their adopted son Axel Peter Jorgenson. Axel Peter’s birth mother, who was only 29, died 24 days after his birth. The widowed husband had two other children to care for, so he gave Axel Peter up for adoption.
Aksel Alex Jørgensen died in Stockholm Township on June 8, 1898, and was buried at the Stockholm Town Cemetery.
Ellen lived with Axel Peter, his wife, Anna Kristine Betson Jørgensen, and child in Stockholm Township.
She was also a postmaster, and owned a farm, which was quite an accomplishment in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
Ellen died Feb. 10, 1910, and was buried in the family plot in the Stockholm Town Cemetery.