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Annie Dorothea Erickson

Annie Dorothea Erickson

6 February 1857 - 25 November 1941

Vitals

Birth

6 February 1857

Hemsjö, Sweden

Death

25 November 1941

Salt Lake City

Burial

1941

Grantsville

Alternate Names

Given Name

Annie Dorothea

Given Name Alternate Spellings

Annie, Dorothy, Anna, Dorotea

Last Name

Erickson

Maiden Name Alternate Spellings

Erikson, Ericksson

Married Names

Stromberg

Family

Marriage

No Known Records

Children

Anna Matilda Stromberg

21 October 1876 - 1886

Grantsville

Charles Sidney Stromberg

2 December 1878 - 1886

Grantsville

Mary Alice Stromberg

1 April 1881 - 1881

Grantsville

John Henry Stromberg

3 August 1882 - 1886

Grantsville

Ettie Stromberg

10 August 1884 - 1884

Grantsville

George Albert Stromberg

12 July 1885 - 1886

Grantsville

Murray Frederick Stromberg

18 June 1887 - 1967

Grantsville

Stanley William Stromberg

12 March 1890 - 1975

Grantsville

Seymour Benjamin Stromberg

9 January 1893 - 1957

Grantsville

Emma Amelia Stromberg

24 September 1895 - 1969

Grantsville

Golden Alvin Stromberg

23 October 1897 - 1977

Grantsville

Rulon Swen Stromberg

11 July 1900 - 1981

Grantsville

Noel Lester Stromberg

14 April 1904 - 1995

Grantsville

Parents

Mother: Maria Kristina Bengtsdotter ( 1826 - 1913)

Father: Sven Eriksson ( 1825 - 1914)

Biography

Born to Lutheran Sven Erikson and Maria Kristina Bengtson, the family converted to Mormonism and was baptized in the summer of 1863. The family boarded Monarch of the Sea and moved to Grantsville, Utah. The family had one pair of shoes, but education was important, so her and her older sister would take turns wearing them to school. She worked for the Eastman family as a child before meeting Charles John Stromberg from Sweden. They married 10 January 1876. Charles was called on a mission to Sweden leaving Annie to care for their four living children. That winter they all contracted diphtheria and the four children died. After this Annie sank into a deep depression and Charles returned home early to care for her. Joseph F Smith was called from Salt Lake to give her a blessing where she was promised “I say unto thee be of good faith and of good cheer… for the Lord has heard thy petition. [ ] thou shalt have joy in thine offspring who shalt grow up around thee and bless thee in thine old age.” Their following seven children all outlived her. 

She was a very generous woman with a door always open “for I never know when one of the Three Nephites may come to my door.” Annie would converse with her mother in Swedish since she never learned English. 

Events

No Events

Profession

Housewife

Researchers

Becca Driggs