Otto Bergman (Johansson) and Bertha Amalia Alexandra Dahlberg.
Otto Wilhelm Bergman (Johansson) was born on the 7th November 1847 in Klara, Stockholm, and died in an accident at Partille Railway Station, Göteborg on the 11th November 1884.
Otto’s parents were Johan Bergman and Lovisa Jansdr (Jansdotter). No information has been found about the lives of Otto’s parents, other than they had four sons.
Carl August b. 16 February 1835
Johan Oscar b. 10 April 1837
Axel Theodor b. 24 July 1839
Otto Vilhelm b. 7 November 1847.
Bertha Amalia Alexandra Dahlberg
Bertha Amelia Alexandra Dahlberg was born on the 25 September 1851 and died on the 1 June 1934, in Göteborg. Bertha’s parents were:
Carl Johan Dahlberg and Helena Bengtsdotter.
More information about Bertha’s family will be added progressively.
Siblings
Otto Bergman and Bertha Dahlberg had three children during their short married life:
Adolf Bergman b. 3 April 1877; d. 14 November 1959
Axel Bergman b. 13 December 1878; d. March 1968
Signe Bergman b. 13 March 1881;
Each of Grandfather Berg’s immediate Swedish family members will have a separate page dedicated to them throughout this site (see Menu Bar for updates).
On the 13 December, 1878, Axel Mauritz Engelbert Bergman was born in Göteborg (Gothenburg). He was the second son of Otto Vilhelm Bergman (Johansson) and Bertha Amalia Alexandra Dahlberg, and the younger brother of Adolf Wilhelm Bergman.
While there seems to be a little more information available about Axel, his life story is still filled with significant gaps.
The Census records of 1890, 1900 and 1910 indicate that Axel was living at home with his mother, Bertha, and his sister, Signe, in Göteborg. Adolf only appears at the family residence on the Census of 1900.
Axel married Valfrida (Walfrida) Eleonora Hammerberg (b. 5 February 1876) on the 2 August 1914. This is verified through Swedish documents that I will post a reference to in the Documents section of this site.
Valfrida’s father was Johan Wilhelm Hammarberg and her mother was Kristina Larsdotter.
Axel and Valfrida had a son, Axel Gunnar Bergman, born on the 9 December 1919. I have verified this through various Swedish sites and will add documentation to the Documents list.
The most outstanding information came to light this morning as I was searching for confirmation of Axel’s date of death. On the website Swedish Graves, I found six people listed in the ‘grave’ information under the name of Axel Gunnar Bergman. The names are (in descending order of death):
Margit Hildergard Sofia Bergman (Bergholtz) – buried 4 October 2013 (Axel Gunnar Bergman’s wife)
Axel Gunnar Bergman – buried 6 March 2000 (Axel Bergman’s son)
Emy Elvira Johansson – buried 5 December 1991 (Emy’s name appears on a census form with Axel Gunnar Bergman, with no indication of relationship)
Axel Mauritz Englebert Bergman – buried 19 March 1968
Eleonora Valfrida Bergman (Hammarberg) – buried 21 October 1949
Berta Amalia Alexandra Bergman (Dahlberg) – buried 6 June 1934
I wish I had met my great-grandmother, Bertha Amalia Alexandra Dahlberg, but she was gone before I was born. Even if I had been born sooner or she had passed later, our paths would undoubtedly not have crossed.
Bertha’s firstborn son, my grandfather, left his home in Sweden and moved to Australia. He left behind his widowed mother and two young siblings. Grandfather was only seven years old when his father, Otto, Bertha’s husband, was tragically killed in a railway accident. Grandfather’s younger brother, Axel, was almost six, and his sister Signe was three years old. Bertha was left to raise a young family on her own. Otto’s accident happened at 9pm on the 11th November, 1884, at the end of his shift as a railway conductor. The harsh Swedish winter was in full force that night as Otto jumped down from the carriage of the train as it came to a rolling stop at the station. As his feet connected with the snowy tracks, Otto slipped, and according to the news reports at the time, he died instantly.
Not only did Bertha lose her husband that night, but eventually, she seemingly lost her son. A notice was placed in the Evening News of a Sydney newspaper on Wednesday, 9th May 1923, under the heading of:
Adolf Wilhelm Bergman, 46, a native of Gothenburg, Sweden.
I can only assume the notice was placed by a Swedish family member, seeking contact with Grandfather. Hopefully, Grandfather saw the notice in the paper and let his family know he was safe.
Bertha passed away on the 1st June, 1934. According to Swedish records, the cause of Bertha’s death was “Cardio arteriosclerosis”, but I wonder if the real cause was more to do with a tragic life and a broken heart. Her life can only be pieced together now through documents found on official Swedish websites and genealogy sites.
My DNA matches, through Ancestry, have only unearthed a few distant Swedish connections to Bertha, but I’ll keep on searching.
Bertha’s Early Years
Bertha was born in Gothenburg on the 25 September, 1851. Her father was Carl Johan Dahlberg, but identifying her mother was more difficult. In the patronymic system used in Sweden, a child’s surname incorporated the Christian name of their father. Some, like Bertha’s husband, were given a more traditional surname. My great-grandfather was Otto Bergman, but he was also known as Otto Johansson (son of Johan). Bertha’s mother was Helena Bengtsdotter (daughter of Bengt). I have not found any reference to a traditional alternative to Helena’s surname, which makes it difficult to find information. With Otto, I have two options for surnames,Bergman and Johansson, and I have found information under both names.
Bertha’s father, Carl Johan Dahlberg, married Helena Bengtsdotter in 1841, and they had eight children. Bertha, born in 1851, was one of the youngest. Carl then married Helena Christoffersdotter in 1868, and they had three children. Not all of the children from each marriage survived infancy or childhood; Bertha was one of the lucky ones.
Research
Facebook gets a bad rap at times, but it was through Facebook that I found Bertha’s family.
I joined a Facebook page called ‘I am of Swedish Descent’, and posted a question about Bertha. Almost immediately, I had an answer that clarified the mystery of the two Helena’s, and which one was Bertha’s mother. A Swedish member of the group highlighted the two marriages of Carl John Dahlberg, both to women named Helena.
Carl Johan Dahlberg, Bertha’s father, was a bricklayer (murare) and was born 22 October 1818.
Carl Johan Dahlberg’s parents were Christoffer Dahlberg, a bricklayer, and Elisabeth Lethin (or Ledin). They had:
Carl Fredric Dahlberg b. 15 July 1814 (d. 22 October 1814)
Berndt Edvard Dahlberg b. 28 April 1816
Carl Johan Dahlberg b. 22 October 1818
Carolina Elisabeth b. 20 May 1821
Gustaf Reinhold b. 24 September 1824
Carl Johan Dahlberg and Helena Bengtsdotter had the following children:
Emma Charlotta Dahlberg b. 29 July 1842
Franz Oscar Dahlberg b. 4 March 1845 – d. 3 April 1845
Karl Fredrik Dahlberg b. 26 May 1846 – d. 26 October 1846
Maria Josefina Bernhardina Dahlberg b. 22 January 1848 – d. 11 February 1848
Berta Amalia Dahlberg b. 13 March 1849 – d. 18 July 1850
Bertha Amalia Alexandra Dahlberg b. 25 September 1851
Gustaf Bernhard Leonhard Dahlberg b. 15 March 1853
Karl Edvard Lexington Dahlberg b. 5 August 1857 – d. 9 December 1858
Carl married Helena Christoffersdotter in 1868, and they had three children:
John Hugo Dahlberg b. 1868
Charles Hugo Dahlberg b. 1869 d. 1872
Engela Matilda Dahlberg b. 1872
Document found through Ancestry search of Swedish Archives
My research into Grandfather’s family has highlighted a number of coincidences, or parallels, that cross nations and decades.
Otto, my great-grandfather, died in Sweden on 11 November 1884.
My grandfather, Otto’s son, died in Bankstown, Australia, on 14 November 1959.
My father, Otto’s grandson, was born on the 13th November 1922 in Bankstown, Australia.
My grandson, Otto’s great-great-great-grandson, was born on the 7th of November in Gladstone, Australia, and shares the same birth date as Otto, albeit more than one hundred and fifty years later.
And so, my humble tribute to Bertha Amalia Alexandra Dahlberg, my great-grandmother, comes to a temporary end. I am always searching for more information that will describe Bertha’s life as a single parent. And I continually scan DNA matches in the hope that a distant cousin will have a family tree that has missing links to her family.
It is through knowing where we have come from that we know who we are.