AUNT HANNA
Eugene
Halverson
Peter Boel Aunt Hanna |
Niels
and Pierre where to young and sickly to go so Little Grandma, Mary, my
grandmother had to stay in Denmark a couple of years longer. Even so Niels died a week or so after
arriving.
Little Grandma Peter Boel |
A
picture in the Springville Book Little Grandma is listed as the second wife.
Well
Aunt Hanna did have her man but still everything began to fall apart. She lived with a family that did not like
her. Her first baby died at birth. Then she had a little girl named Ane Melvina. (I have
a large picture of her in my house).
She a pretty little thing with blond hair and frilly white dress. She looks at me with such a sad expression. A story is told of a group of children who
started to talk about what they were going to be when they grew up. After each child told what they were going to
be they asked Ane Melvina, what she was going to be? She stated, “I am going to
die tomorrow." and that’s what she did.
Ane Melvina Boel |
Aunt
Hanna was a very good cook and housekeeper and managed to "rule the
roost" as well as cater to Christian's every whim. Christian and Hanna did get along quite well
and they did love each other. Hanna
spoke English very well, something that Grandpa and Little Grandma never could
accomplish. They did learn the language
but had a strong accent and some words were very hard for them to
pronounce. Aunt Mary said, “What a
rascal he was, between the English and the Danish mixed, he was a
scream." Aunt Mary also said, “Grandpa
Boel would shear sheep in the spring. He
said Hanner could shear as many sheep as he could."
Aunt
Hanna resented the way she was shunned and humiliated. They were also afraid of her they had seen
some of the spells that Aunt Hanna cast.
In America Andrea’s was no longer a servant. He had to be paid wages so he bought a fancy
brass bed with a real mattress. Well, he
bragged once too often about how wonderful it was. Hanna took her book out and cast a spell on
it, he could never sleep on it again. If
he tried he always fell out of it, so he slept on the floor next to it. Even the neighbors were afraid of her. A spell on the neighbor’s cow made it go dry
and it never gave milk again.
My
Aunt Mary Halverson Bowen didn't like her at all. Aunt Hanna died in 1915. Shortly after that, the “four Mary’s searched
the house to find and burn her witchcraft book, "Cyprianus", her
Devils book. Mary said, "In those
days many believed in the supernatural and we were all afraid of her.
back Peter Boel Aunt Hanna Little Grandma at Church |
My
Father, Harvey said, "I liked Aunt Hannea and got along with
her". Peter Boel bought a fancy
horseless carriage and my dad was their chauffeur. He took them where ever they went. Christian's sister, Christiana Twede, her
children and grandchildren said she was a nice person, active in church and
community affairs. Aunt Doris Halverson
said, "One day I was talking to Irene Freeman, she said that when she was
just a little girl, she loved to visit Aunt Hanna. Hanna was just the sweetest little old
lady".
Aunt
Mary said, “Grandpa was a rascal, mean and stingy." While living in Denmark he learned to live
with poverty. His miserly ways made him
rich while many of his neighbors were poor.
But
my father said, "He worked and played hard, I couldn't keep up with him
during the prime-time of my life and he was old". He was always making and selling things. He repaired clocks, I have the vice he held the
little gears and teeth. There were
clocks hanging on every wall.
One
dark cold night my Grandmother Halverson woke up by a knock on the door. It was
Grandpa Boel he may have been two sheets to the wind. On 800 west he was close to his friends and booze. He had a grand old time but when he got home
Hanna took one look at him and locked the door.
By the time he walked 10 big city blocks in the black night he had
sobered up and he was angry. Oh
Why! Oh Why! Did I ever marry that woman
when I had a better one right here?
Grandpa
Boil’s first home was at 980 W 1600 S in Mapleton on 20 acres of ground. Over the years it became better and more
productive. Grandpa Boel was getting in
his 60’s and was semi-retired. Pierre ran
the farm and was doing the blacksmithing.
Grandpa had had more free-time to visit and play and life was good. Pierre had worked for his father for 34 years
without pay and was promised the house and farm for this service. Pierre had been sick a lot and had lost all his
toes on one foot, caused by tuberculosis.
One
day Pierre fell in love with a pretty little girl from Georgia who came to Utah
to marry a nice Mormon boy. But when
Pierre brought Molly McClain home to live things fell apart. The Irish in Molly would not allow her to be
bossed by an “Old Country Dane”. She
just packed up and went back to the family who brought her to Utah.
To
get Molly back Pierre had to get ownership of the farm and eventually he
did. Well Grandpa Boel drug his feet in
transferring ownership. He hadn’t been
working and had to sell a few acres of the farm to build him a new house.
Houses
1st
20 acre farm given to Pierre.
house for grandma |
3rd
Then there was the Arron Johnson home that he bought and deeded to his Daughter
Mary Halverson in 1911 to care for his first wife, Little Grandma.
He
built this new house next to his son, Jens and Mary Halvorsen Peterson on the
300 block on 8th west in Mapleton.
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