Wednesday, March 29, 2017

updated bio of Nils Larsson Leijon (the lion)

NILS LARSSON Leijon  (the lion) abt 1699-1772
Persön Nederluleå, Norrbotten, Sweden

Wife : BRITA CNUTSDOTTER  1692-1734
Ängesbyn, Nederluleå

wife : LISBETA ERIKSDOTTER

traditional dress in Norbotten region 

Nils was born about 1699 in Nederlulea, Norbotten, Sweden and is the great great grandfather of Lars Ulrik Oquist. He and his first wife Brita Cnutsdotter were married in 1723. She was about 7 years older than Nils. 

According to one record, Brita’s father, Knut Jönsson  lived a quiet life of 77 years. 

Nils was buried inside the church in front of the pulpit, on the women’s side.

According to military records, in August 1724, (his first child was 9 months old the time)  Nils has been “replaced”  because he is “dumb and awkward in drills; and further attesting to being ill cannot be accepted.” Nils had served 8 years. 

 The muster roll gives us a little more information on poor Nils. “His right toe was chopped off and the teeth are black from scurvy, is dismissed”    No wonder he couldn’t speak or march well! 


Nils and Brita  had 5 children together. Brita died in 1734 when her youngest child Lars (direct line) was only 3.  Six months later Nils married 51 year old Lisbeta Eriksdotter, who was 16 years older than Nils. 

Saturday, February 20, 2016

1956 - letter to Dad (Henry D. Kyle)

Dear Dad:
1956


Ken Kyle
Lorna appreciated very much the dollar you sent for her birthday (4). She will not give it up and carries it around with her.  A few weeks ago she took notice of little children in the branch paying me their tithing and now she wants to pay hers.  Last Sunday she came up to me when I was making out the receipts in church and gave me ten cents, which is one tenth of what she had received from you.  I gave her a receipt and entered her name on the church records as a tithing payer. She has been carrying the receipt around ever since.  Both Ken and Karin have been faithful tithe payers ever since they were baptized and they have never missed a month.

We are pretty well settled in our new house and like it better every day. Ken has a chum up the street (Ken Slater) who moved here from Regina and they are both in the same class at school.  I have not seen a report card yet but he tells me he had the highest mark in his class in two or three exams.
 He will do well.
Lorna in front of our new home 

Lorna will not be starting school for another two years although she may start kindergarten next year. She has a little chum up the street and they play together every day.  Karin goes around with this little girl's older sister so all the children have made new friends.


Saskatoon prairie lands 
On Thanksgiving Day I took Ken out to some friends who live in the country about 20 miles out of Saskatoon.


We took along the Remington 22 and we used up 200 rounds of ammunition. Although this was the first time Ken had used this gun, he really surprised me. We were shooting mostly at targets such as tin cans and he invariably hit the mark every time.  He is really a natural when it comes to shooting.  He must have your eye or else a steady hand.

Saskatchewan is a wonderful hunting ground for all kinds of game.  I sure wish I had that shot gun that you gave to Uncle Bert.


We are all well here.  I was laid up with a sore back for about a week but it is alright again.  I had it strapped up with adhesive.  It is what they formerly called lumbago but
now doctors diagnose it as a disk.  I have to be very careful.  It started when lifting a bag of potatoes.  We bought 300 pounds of Irish Cobbler potatoes from a farmer who lives near us and I tried to lift the bags without any help.  Ken will have to do the heavy lifting from now on. He is as strong as a horse.

As ever,
Lorne


Saturday, September 13, 2014

Finding Joseph

Eva and I standing
side by side 1971
It all began with a conversation. 

My second cousin Eva Öquist Åkebrand and I reconnected by email. She a Swede, living in the United Arab Emirates and I a Canadian, living in the US.  We hadn't seen each other since my visit to Sweden with Mom and Dad in about 1970.

Amongst all of our chitchatting and getting reacquainted, she mentioned that she has been collecting images of her grandfather Simeon's art and placing them in a big album. 

 
Simeon was a portrait painter of some renown. Artistic herself, it's been a labor of love for Eva to collect photos of as many of his paintings as she can locate.  I hope that she does a book of them one day with the digital images so that all the family everywhere can enjoy them as part of the family history. 


At some point I asked her if she had ever seen the portrait he had painted of Joseph Smith from a copy of his death mask that his son Selfrid had sent him. She said she had heard about it but had never seen it. 

 I had a small black and white photo of the painting that my mom had gotten from somewhere so I scanned it and emailed it to her. She was thrilled. She said it would be her ultimate dream in this project, to locate that painting and get a good color photo of it.  I think I must have taken that as a personal challenge  - I determined to find it.  Eva had invited me to come visit them in Abu Dhabi and I thought it would be so cool to surprise her with a photo of it...if I could locate it!



I had been trying to track it down for years anyway but now I got serious.  Years ago I had seen it in someones office at the Smith  building at BYU. I always thought it was a part of the BYU art collection. At Ed Week one year there was an exhibit of all the "Joseph" art that they had in the De Jong concert hall but it wasn't among the art.


A mission president that we had In Peachtree City, was a big contributor to the art collections at BYU and he gave me the name of the curator awhile ago.  Cousin Nancy  made a call to the curator for me. After checking her records she said they have no art by that painter and that back in the day, pieces of art sometimes disappeared with the professors.

Disappointing.

How could I find it?

I thought about putting out a massive Facebook request or an ad in the alumni magazine. I thought surely someone would recognize it and come forward.  I knew that Selfrid Öquist was the one responsible for having his father paint it and that he had brought it to BYU. All this time I thought he had donated it to BYU. 

I finally spoke with his daughter, Christine, to see if she had any more info. She said she would ask her dad about it but he has memory problems so it didn't seem promising.  On one of his good days she asked him about it and he was able to recall that he had his Dad paint it so that he could sell it to the Y to be able to pay his tuition. He had sold it to a professor but couldn't recall his name.  That was a great clue but how on earth would I be able to find out which one??   I was talking to Ken about it sometime later and told him what Selfrid had said.


"Oh yes, I know who that was - Professor Rich. His daughter had been in my mission."

"What?!? You knew about this all along?"

"Sure, I even had American Thanksgiving at their house one year."

Apparently he didn't know that I'd been hunting for this painting. Sheesh.

The next step was to track down some family members of this professor. Nancy was able to do that because of her old job at the BYU Alumni Association. She found the professor's son, Charles Rich, and sent me his contact info. I was leaving for UAE in a couple of weeks and sure hoped that I could find it before then. The son called me and told me that he didn't recall any such painting but that he would ask his sisters. I wasn't very hopeful. If they had the painting wouldn't everyone in the family be aware of this incredible piece??

I was packing to fly to Utah for a few days to start moving into our new house when I got an email from the son saying,


"I've located the painting. It's in my sisters house in Springville UT." 


 Holy cow, I found it!!! 

As soon as I could I drove over the home where I was thrilled to death to see this fabulous large painting of Joseph Smith to take some photos and find out it's history. 




Joseph Smith painted by Simeon Öquist

Isn't it gorgeous?

Back in the 60's Selfrid tried to sell the painting to BYU. The head of the religion department at that time was Victor Ludlow. He didn't like the painting! He said that it was historically inaccurate; that Joseph wouldn't have worn white pants,  (They aren't white, they are grey) and he would not buy it for BYU. 

Professor Rich had a reputation for helping out students in need. Selfrid approached him and Rich bought it for $800, enough to carry Selfrid through one year of school. (This was quite a lot of money in those days for a BYU professor and his wife wasn't happy.)  

According to his daughter Renee King, "He bought it and had it framed at the Springville Art Department.  After it was framed, Dad brought it home for a week, long enough for me to fall in love with it, then he took it to the religion dept. faculty room and hung it there until he retired.  I started asking him about the painting a year before he retired. One day he asked me what I would be willing to pay for it.  I told him to name his price and he would get it from me...over time. I honestly believe he didn't believe me, so he tested me and said $2000.  I told him it was a deal. It took us awhile to get it paid for, but we did it."   

Joseph hangs proudly in her home at the top of the stairs. It has been restored one time. She won't let it come off the wall even to be photographed :(  





An interesting detail to this story is this painting was painted in 1955, the year that Simeon died. 


Simeon Öquist self portrait 


The end of the story is - Eva was thrilled to get a photo of the painting for her collection. She was so surprised when I whipped it out the night I arrived in Dubai.  I hadn't even told her that I had found it! I want it to be a surprise. It was....and it was the trip of a lifetime.


Eva's book of her grandfather Simeon's artwork

In case you can read Swedish, the story above is incorrect and will be updated with this current information.  

Lorna Kyle Boot and Eva Öquist Åkebrand in Abu Dhabi UAE, March 2014



Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Öquist family tragedy on the Kalix River


Kalix River, Sweden


“Extra staff sergeant” Nils Petter Larsson Öquist lived with his wife Maria Jacobsdotter and their nine children in Gamla Staden, Nederluleå, which was in Northern Sweden just below the Arctic Circle.


One day Nils went out on his boat with three of his six sons, Carl Jacob (18) Johan Gustaf (12), Nils Petter (13) on the Kalix river near where they lived. They were rowing to some of the skerries (small rocky uninhabited islands) in search of birch bark to bring home. It was a famously cold river that contained areas of dangerous rapids.

The boat overturned and everyone was thrown into the frigid water. Nils and his two sons Johan and Carl drowned but the thirteen year old son, Nils Petter, managed to save himself by swimming to an uninhabited island.


He survived for several days by eating berries sick with grief as the reality of the death of his father and two brothers washed over him.  

He saw some wild goats on the island and tried to catch one for milk or meat but he was unsuccessful.  

He swam out to the first boat that came by, but it was occupied by females only and they rowed right past him because they thought he was Russian, “who could be very dangerous on board”

With the next boat that came by he had better luck.
Hanging onto the side of the boat, he was questioned by those on board who were very suspicious as to why he was in the river. He had to prove that he was who he said he was. When he mentioned the names of all the people in the nearby town of Luleå, he was helped on board and rowed to shore.

In 1819, Nils married Maria Rutstrom and together they had eight children. The youngest was Lars Ulrik, the father of Hedley Ö and grandfather of Lilian Ö Kyle.  


 

Information for this story was taken from records uncovered by Simeon Oquist. 

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Learning from my father - Lorna Kyle Boot

When I was a little girl my biggest desire was to be able to read. This is how I saw my family entertain themselves.  Every night I saw my father sit in his big comfy red chenille reading chair in the living room, put his feet up on the ottoman and read the newspaper.  What he was doing looked so interesting that I would imitate him.  I longed to be able to read.  What else was there to do on a rainy day when you couldn't ride your bike and look for adventure?

 Dad would  be totally engrossed by whatever he read.  I saw him read church books and murder mysteries ( Ellery Queen and Agatha Christie were his favorites - he was proud that he had read them all ).  I saw Dad read on the adirondack chair on the deck in Vancouver, in the big reading chair in the living room in Vancouver and in any comfy outdoor spot when he was finished with his yard work on Saturdays in Winnipeg.

I had a box of my brother Ken's comic books under my bed and I would read the pictures night after night and long for the time when I could read the words. I didn't go to Kindergarten (I don’t know why - maybe it didn't exist then) but I was so excited to go to my first day of first grade because I thought that I would learn how to read - that day!  I came home a disappointed little girl and continued to read my comic book images every night.

Gradually I learned the parts of learning how to read and I would read and read and read.  TV was not a distraction then. We had a small TV that was in the basement in Vancouver with no comfy couch in front of it to lure you to stay. There were only three channels and they were all in black and white. When I read,  images were in beautiful color. The set and the angles that I viewed each scene were from my own vivid imagination (Imagination is so much better than any movie set.)  I could slow the story down or speed it up, reread and savor my favorite parts, and cast the characters to look exactly how I wanted them to look.  

Reading became my other world, my escape and my entertainment. I mostly read at night….and I couldn't stop until my eyes shut on their own. My mother would come in and tell me it was time to turn off the light and go to sleep;  I’d say “ya mum” but I’d go to the end of a chapter and be consumed with curiosity about what was going to happen next that I disobeyed my mother night after night to read what happened next

I read by the light of a little yellow and brown metal light that hung on the wall. I would take that light and put it under the covers and keep reading. The bulb was open on the top. One night, as I hid under the covers reading, the bulb touched my blanket and it began to smoke. A scar was burned onto my favorite blanket (my precious baby blanket - but thats a story for another time). 

My love of reading was set. I started out reading the Bobbsey twins series , then advanced to Nancy Drew, Trixie Belden, the Anne of Green Gables series and then to Ellery Queen and Agatha Christie as I grew older.

I love to read and study the scriptures - two very different things.  The stories come alive in my imagination and again I can slow the story down and think about what I read, speed it up or even put myself into the scene. 

Just as I did as a five year old, I still love to curl up with a good book. The best places that I have read are :  in a hammock under the blossoming orange trees in Escondido, in front of a fire on a wintry night in many places we have lived, in the BYUI bookstore in a leather armchair with a pile of interesting books beside me to look through, on the sun porch in GA looking out onto the dogwoods blooming in spring, in bed with a cozy feather comforter in the Citizen M hotel near the airport in Amsterdam, and of course in my own comfy bed any night anywhere. 

I heart reading!





Here are a few of my favorites quotes about reading. 


“home is where my books are.”

“A library is infinity under a roof.”

“ I do not want to just read books; I want to climb inside them and live there.”
 (except for the hunger games) 

“A room without books is like a body without a soul” Cicero

“Whoever said money can’t buy happiness has obviously never been inside a bookstore.”

“Its strange because sometimes, I read a book, and I think I am the people in the book.”

“There is no such thing as too many books.”

Book hangover: 
Inability to start a new book because you’re living in the last book’s world.”  
(I just read Edenbrooke. Totally fits this)

“When I finish a book, I mope around for awhile because I feel a hole in my heart.
 When I finish a series, it’s even worse.”

“I’m a couple books away from being on an episode of hoarders.”

“To acquire the habit of reading is to construct for yourself a refuge from
 almost all the miseries of life.” W Somerset Maugham 

“I am not difficult to buy for. 
Go to a bookstore.” 
Buy a book.”

“Magic begins when you open a book.”
 (me)

“Children are made readers on the laps of their parents.”

“I like big books and I cannot lie. “ 





Tuesday, April 22, 2014

By Small and Simple Things...

From Lorne Kyle's Journal

"During a fast and testimony meeting while I was branch president in Saskatoon, one of the sisters bore a very moving testimony in which she expressed her gratitude for her children but made no mention of her husband who was not a member of the church.

Following the meeting I asked her if she, at the next fast meeting, thank the Lord for her husband and mention what a good father and husband he was. The sister was quite startled by my request but she readily agreed to do as I asked her. I cannot recall if her husband was at the next meeting but I think he was.

It was not long after that this young man started attending church on a fairly regular basis. After the railway transferred me to Vancouver I lost touch with they family. However, One Sunday when I was visiting a branch in Ottawa, I met the sister who told me her husband had joined the church and was an active elder. Later I met this elder and immediately I noticed what a change had come over him. It was evident to me from his greeting that he was happy in his new calling. This experience left a deep impression on me. One never knows what little things will influence a person to join the church."


Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Thomas RATTRAY and Agnes BURNETT - part 3

... continued from Marion Shaw in a letter to her cousin Lorne Kyle 


“The cottage was built because the doctor thought the country air was essential to the health of your father, you, and to a lesser degree, Clarence. (note: Henry contracted tuberculosis several times in his life and it was the cause of his death in 1958.)  

Because my parents and Uncle Al were not able to do more toward the care of Grandma and Grandpa, both contributed toward the building – not as a mortgage of course.

You can’t write an account of life at Otterburn without including first and foremost, your mother’s hospitality. I remember the garden with it’s formal flower beds, the raspberry canes, apple trees, and black and red currants. Grandpa planted mignonette, balsams, pansies, portulaca and others. The flowers were “touché pas” (don’t touch). Your father’s pride and joy were his roses. (note from Lorna - my father gardened his whole life and now I do also. I guess a love of gardening was passed down in the genetic code.) 

Henry Kyle and Martha Rattray Kyle
I remember the rainy afternoons on the porch playing 500 or some other game with your father’s rinky dinks, as my mother called them.  (something of little worth)  I remember Saturday picnics, the regattas and the church bazaar to which your Aunt Mary and Aunt Aggie (Kyle) contributed so much of their time and needlework. Before the church (Baptist) was built, the Sunday service was held at Aunt Annie’s old cottage on the lawn. Her pump organ was taken to the porch for the music. In bad weather, a tent was put up. Aunt Aggie Rattray gave the bell to the church.

I don’t remember much about that place (Aunt Annie’s) except that we were there the summer your cottage was being built and my mother, Jessie, was busy negotiating the sale of the cottage and its contents after Uncle Joe’s death (Annie’s husband, Joseph Copping) I had gone up to your place, allowed to run barefoot, and forthwith got a nail in my foot.  All “H” broke loose and my mother chased me for a day with a bottle of castor oil.   I saw no logic in castor oil for a nail in the foot.  Finally some neighbor suggested a paste of brown soap and sugar. That was to my liking and did the trick.

left to right - seated Martha, Agnes Burnett (seated) blind Aunt Annie (leaning on her), Thomas Rattray, Jessie. Back row left - Agnes  (Aunt Aggie) , Alexander Burnett, William Small, Thomas. 


When Uncle Joe died, Lillian and Dorothy (Rattray) as well as other members were weeping and wailing. I’m not sure my mother was amongst the weepers for she had to run things.  There were great expeditions to acquire black hats, veils and black rimmed handkerchiefs. Black crepe was hanging on the front door.  I know I didn’t dare express my joy that Uncle Joe had gone to heaven. Frankly, after his long illness, I thought it great! I couldn’t understand their grief; now I regard (reacting this way ) to personal loss as a normal vent for personal selfishness. 

Family Squabbles:

left to right - Martha, Marion Shaw (daughter of Jessie) 
is seated in the back next to Martha
 The others are yet to be identified 
Mother (Jessie) would come and the clothes swapping would begin, that was relatively harmless; but then the swapping squabbles, (often originated by your mother trading something your father had given her – probably at some personal sacrifice) with Aunt Annie. Of course they didn’t intend to keep it permanently, the clothes or whatever, but trouble broke when your dad, especially in later years, discovered what he recognized as his and which he was unaware your mother had traded, even with financial dealings. Things weren’t always above board.  I need not elaborate on the sugar and creamer which were a bona fide deal in exchange for sheets and pillowcases long since worn out through your mother’s illness (stroke) in 1937 (Martha died in 1948).  Then Clarence would come along and other treasures would mysteriously disappear to “fill” the trunk he was taking home.

(note from Lorna: One winter I was visiting mom and dad at their trailer in Desert Hot Springs. I had admired some flatware that mom had as it matched plates of mine. She tried to give them to me…until Dad found out…He was angry and really lit into mom for “always giving things away”. I was really shocked by his anger. I left  and waited outside for the tirade to subside. I thought, “What’s the big deal, it’s just a few knives and forks”. Mom told me later that the reason Dad was so angry with her was because his mother was always giving things away. Now I know he learned that attitude and behavior from his father. P.S. I did not get the flatwear.

You and I had our ups and downs too. I went to N.D.G. Ave with you in 1934 – autumn. With the depression and uncertainty of unemployment for both your father and Clarence, it seemed right that I should board with the family (to help out) I paid the nominal rate of $40.00 a month, slightly higher than I had been paying downtown – imagine that! You were very fussy about how your egg was cooked and once I came down furious with you when I heard you call to your mother, “Ma I’m ready for my egg!”  You learned, poor Lorne.  How you suffered after you married Lilian!! You had never had to wait on yourself. Well you’re much the richer because of Lilian’s good care, in a different way – or is it age? – that mellows us?”
seated - Agnes Burnett - left circle ?  Martha, Annie, Lorne, Henry Kyle. others are not identified yet.



Notes on the Rattray family:

Our genealogy on this branch can get confusing because there are two Thomas Rattrays both married to an Agnes. Lorne Kyle’s maternal grandfather was Thomas Rattray, his wife was Agnes Burnett. This Thomas’s father and mother were also Thomas and Agnes. Her maiden name was Milne. For purposes of clarification I’ll refer to them as Thomas junior and senior.

Agnes Milne was described as a “good looking and good living woman”, according to John Allen (an uncle of Alexander Burnett, Henry Kyle’s brother He died in 1936) who visited the widow in her home in 1871 along with his future wife, Matilda. John writes, “I have no doubt that Thomas (senior) was of the same good type. A kind welcome always awaited us. I have happy memories of these visits.” Agnes died a few years later in 1874. Agnes and her husband Thomas must have been a religious family to have instilled in their son Thomas jr., the importance of the Bible and in reading it often.

Thomas sr., Lorne’s great grandfather, was a master mason. His father, John Rattray
b. 1767, was a weaver.  John Allen describes a little background on this trade.

“In John Rattray’s time the weaving of woolen and linen cloth was done by a hand loom, an art of great antiquity. In 1800 when your grandfather was born, little or no machinery was used in this spinning and weaving of cloth in Dundee, thus many weavers had their own weaving shop attached to their own house, living happy peaceful lives. John Rattray and Elspath Edward must have been in good circumstances when they were able to send your grandfather to learn the mason trade and giving him a start in life fitting him to be a master builder in his day.”

Lorne took a trip to the British Isles in 1948 to settle some claims for Air Canada. This trip was a very enjoyable one for him. He writes,

“Although I had completed my business in Scotland I decided not to leave the country until I visited the city where my maternal grandparents were born. Dundee is not a pretty city due to smoke from the many foundries located throughout the city. Dundee is noted for marmalade and jams which are exported all over the world. While walking along the main street I came across a jewelry store with the name of Rattray on the window. As this was my grandfather’s name I stepped inside to learn that the owner had been dead for years. Evidently the present owner had decided to retain the old name of the original owner. I tried to get in touch with some of my grandfather’s relatives but was not successful.”


A Short History of the Rattray Clan 





The Rattrays took their surname from the Rath-toir, a hill fort built on a serpent shaped mound to the east of the present village of Rattray. This mound was probably of druidic origin and had legendary associations with prehistoric snake worship. 

 The name Thomas Rattray goes back a long way. Sir Thomas Rattray was knighted by Alexander the third and married the heiress, Christian of Aberbothric in 1253. Their son was Sir John Rattray. There were some dirty deeds and land snatches  by a man who married Thomas’s  granddaughter, John Stewart, the Earl of Atholl. Stewart raided Rattray Castle, kidnapped Sir John’s two infant daughters and carried off all the family possessions.  He later arranged for the eldest to marry his son claiming half the Rattray lands as his dowry. He forced the other daughter to hand over the other half of the lands. The rightful heir, his brother in law, was murdered by Stewart’s men in 1533 in the chapel on his grounds at the Castle of Craighill while seeking refuge. The castle was  later renamed Craighill-Rattray in a charter from Charles II

from clanrattray.com  "The Rattrays of Rattray are of royal descent. Patrick Rattray (1400-1461) married a daughter of James Stewart son of Alexander Stewart (wolf of Badenoch) who was Robert II of Rattrays natural son. Patricks children were therefore 2nd cousins of James IV. This was an important connection. Patrick's son Sir Silvester Rattray (1426 - 1491) was the 6th Great Grandson of Alanus (1st Rattray on record) and also gt. grandson of Robert III of Scotland. Usong the Clan database we can quickly calculate that Sir Silvester was the 4th gt grandson of the famous Robert the Bruce, King of Scots." 


The Rattrays fall under the Murray clan. The chief of the Murray clan is the duke of Athole. Lord Lieutenant of the county of Perth, Scotland. His seat is Blair Castle. The family motto is…
TRUTH, FORTUNE and FILL the FETTERS

which loosely means,   "Go forth against your enemies, return with hostages and booty!  Fetters are shackles for the feet".  Tough bunch!


according to a fourth cousin, Charlie Monk, this is an artists rendition of John Rattray
our direct ancestor.  So when you feel like golfing, just know that that is in your genes also!