Thursday, June 18, 2026

Don's Reading of the Land Records

 

John A. Johnson and Ida M. Johnson - Land Purchases
written in 2002 by Donald J Johnson

 

When the house and other belongings of our parents, Arthur and Ida Johnson, was being readied for sale, we ran across some interesting papers that had belonged to John A. and Ida M. Johnson.  The papers included deeds to the property that they had purchased in Delmore Township, McPherson County, Kansas.

 

SE ¼ 30-18-2 This ¼ section was originally homesteaded by Samantha Rusk, a widow, in 1874. John A. Johnson purchased the land from S.M. Hustad on October 28, 1876 for $600.

SW ¼ 20-18-2  Home Place - bought our homestead from James Muspratt, March 1, 1878, for the sum of $300.  Pre-emption filing June 24, 1888.  The homestead certificate has the signature of Benjamin Harrison (President of the United States) dated January 5, 1892.  According to the deed, this quarter was purchased after the quarter in section 30.

SE ¼ 20-18-2  This ¼ section was purchased from George and Elizabeth Holcomb in 1885 for $1400.  The Holcombs received their homestead rights in May 1862.

S ½ of NE ¼ 30-18-2  This eighty acre farm was purchased from the Maria Sophia Lundberg Estate on June 1, 1908, for $5,000.  Richard Lundberg purchased the north eighty for $5,000 at the same time.

80 acres northeast of Alamo, Texas, purchased in 1917.

 

John A. Johnson had a loan separate from the land purchases:
Chattel Mortgage on personal property April 25, 1892 (loan of $3200) from a company in Vermont. The document contained a list of properties. This must have been only a partial list of his personal property, as he surely had more than one horse.  Maybe the other property was already mortgaged.
One Gray Horse 7 years old,
Nine Cows of different ages, all now on our farm in Delmore Township, McPherson, Kansas.
One Self Binding Machine, One Mowing Machine,
One Hay Rake, One Sulky Plow, One Double Row,
Two Stirring Plows, Two Lumber Wagons,
Twenty Three Hogs, 
68 acres of growing wheat - about 53 acres of which are on the SE ¼ of Section 30 - the balance on SW ¼ Section 20 Range, 2 West,
35 acres of growing oats - about 20 acres are on the SE ¼ of Section 30. Tp. 18 Range 2
*Said mortgagors are to keep said animals in good condition at their own expense.

Maybe our grandparents wouldn’t have appreciated me recording all of this personal information, but it is sure interesting to me.  I was amazed as to how they had the nerve to purchase all that property, even with the low cost of land at the time.  They also constructed a nice house, as well as other buildings on the homestead.  The dollar would buy a lot more at that time, but just think how hard they must have worked to make that dollar.  I doubt that anyone could do that today.

Göteborg, Sweden

 

Here are some pictures I took while in Göteborg, Sweden. I wrote the chapter about John's emigration after visiting the city in 2015. The first two pictures show the building with the copper roof in the courtyard, surrounded by small booths/shops.

 


 


 The streets leading to the harbor most likely look close to the way they would have in 1869, except for some modernization.


 

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

By-Gosh Johnson and the Long Walk


 

Ida C and Arthur Johnson and Family

Ida Carolina Nelson and Arthur Theodore Johnson - Wedding


 

 


 

 

Bernadine and Harry  Johnson (Alfred's daughter and son), Arthur Johnson, 
Helen Nelson (Ida's sister), and Ida C Johnson


 

 

 

 

 

Gunnel with Her iPad in front of her house in Jönköping, Sweden

For Gunnel Ottoson,

…who, at the age of eighty-five, found me on the internet and sent me an email on her new iPad while sitting in her home in Jönköping, Sweden. Here she is in front of her home with that iPad in 2015.

 

I answered Gunnel's email, almost afraid to believe it could be true. After some deliberation and information sharing, the decades-long break in communication between the Swedish and American sides of the family was restored.

My sister, Kris, and I had the privilege of being guests in her home during my first visit to Sweden in 2015, and Gunnel arranged a couple of days to meet her family and more cousins, participate in Midsummer activities, and explore the farm where John, and his brother, Anders (Gunnel’s grandpa), and their siblings were born and raised. I visited her once more in 2017, and she answered many of my questions about John’s early years and the part of the family who remained in Sweden. What an unforgettable part of my family history journey that was! She didn’t get to see the book published, but she read drafts of some of the stories before she died in 2024. Our emails and conversations, assisted by her children because of the language barrier, are much of the reason I’m able to finish this book today.

 


Don's Reading of the Land Records

  John A. Johnson and Ida M. Johnson - Land Purchases written in 2002 by Donald J Johnson   When the house and other belongings of our pa...