In company with her son, Hans, Mrs. Lucken came here from the Red River valley in the fall of 1895, when he took up a claim in Grant Valley township, where they have lived ever since.
Mrs. Lucken was 69 years of age and leaves no relatives besides her son Hans to mourn her loss.
The remains were interred in the Grant Valley cemetery Tuesday, the funeral sermon being conducted by Rev. Opsata of the Norwegian Lutheran Church. Bemidji Pioneer newspaper, May 15, 1902
Anne married Lars Hansen Vingelen about 1857 in Bardu, Norway. They were the parents of three children: Marie, Hans and Olea. Olea died at 3 months of age in 1873. Lars died a few months later. About 1888, Anne and her two surviving children, Marie and Hans, immigrated to Polk County, Minnesota and stayed initially with her brother-in-law, Hans H. Bangen.
In company with her son, Hans, Mrs. Lucken came here from the Red River valley in the fall of 1895, when he took up a claim in Grant Valley township, where they have lived ever since.
Mrs. Lucken was 69 years of age and leaves no relatives besides her son Hans to mourn her loss.
The remains were interred in the Grant Valley cemetery Tuesday, the funeral sermon being conducted by Rev. Opsata of the Norwegian Lutheran Church. Bemidji Pioneer newspaper, May 15, 1902
Anne married Lars Hansen Vingelen about 1857 in Bardu, Norway. They were the parents of three children: Marie, Hans and Olea. Olea died at 3 months of age in 1873. Lars died a few months later. About 1888, Anne and her two surviving children, Marie and Hans, immigrated to Polk County, Minnesota and stayed initially with her brother-in-law, Hans H. Bangen.
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