Hans Jessen Sommer Ulich
- Født den 9. mars 1799 (lørdag) - Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norge
- Døpt den 21. april 1799 (søndag) - Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norge
- Død den 30. april 1856 (onsdag) - Oslo, Norge,alder 57 år
Foreldre
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Giftermål og barn
- Gift den 13. april 1825 (onsdag), Vor Frue Kirke, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norge, med Gjerrud Serine Pedersdatter Jenssen 1799-1874 (Foreldre :Peder Jenssen ca 1764- & Johanne Margrethe Larsdatter Stabel 1764-1839)barn
- Mimilie Ulich 1825-1892
- Anna Hansdatter Ulich 1827-1900
- Peder Ulich 1829-1875
- Anne Marie Thonning Ulich, emigrant fra Norge til USA 1831-1912
- Fredrikke Christiane Ulich, emigrant fra Norge til USA 1833-1911
Søsken
- Maren Margrethe Ulich 1790-1851
- Friderich Christian Ulich 1790-1812
- Kierstina Bruun Ulich 1792-1832
- George Henrich Wasmuth Ulich 1793-1821
- Peter Andreas Kaasbøl Ulich, lensmann i Kistrand og Kjelvik 1795-1860
- Christian Wilhelm Ulich 1796-1833
- Anna Holck Ulich 1797-1798
- Hans Jessen Sommer Ulich 1799-1856
Notater
Notater om personen
I received this information from several newspaper articles written in the "Finnmark Dagbad" newspaper, written by "Ole Johan Valle" of Hammerfest, Norway. The articles were printed in 1981 over a period of many weeks. While on the inter-net, a related Ulich wrote me and gave me Ole's e-mail address. Ole wrote to me and said that he just wanted to do these articles on the Ulich family, as the Ulich family had been very prominent in Norway years ago, and he wanted to follow the family. I received these articles from a uncle of mine while I was visiting Norway, however they were in Norwegian. I was able to extract out the names of my close family and record them, but the other names and information I was not able to translate. I tried to get these articles translated many times over a period of many years. Then one day Susan Ulich Jaeger wrote to me on the inter-net and said that she had these newspaper clippings translated and printed out in a book report form. She graciously sent me a copy of the translated articles.
Hans Ulich took over Havøysund in Finnmark in 1824. He was running a big business and he was called the king of Finnmark. His house in Havøysund was the first in Måsøy nad this was where the French King, Ludvig Filip had stayed while he was visiting. Later on the house was taken down and moved to Havøysund. While Hans Ulich was a shopkeeper in Havøysund, the ship "Recherche" came to give King Ludvig a sculpture which they later kept in the house in Havøysund until it burned down in 1944. Hans Ulich's granddaughter Malene henriksen Miller, who was living in Chicago, wrote this in 1927: "The people aboard the Recherche were surprised to find that many intellectual and snobby people with such comfortable homes came from such an uncivilized place. Hans Ulich and his wife used to travel a lot to Holland and to the Hanseatic towns in Baltic cities where they did most of their shopping for clothes. After Hans Ulich died, his wife stored most of the furniture and their belongings in Hammerfest. Unfortunately, everything was lost in a fire. All that was left were a couple of cups and dresser made of mahogany." Hans Ulich also had property in Hammerfest, Finnmark, which was deeded from shopkeeper N. V. Nelsen. The property was number 73 Raadhusgaden Fjordagaden, block 2, dated 11 July 1846. On 22 Sep 1853, the property was sold at auction from Hans Ulich to Schanning. Ulich received the auctioned property number 38, Raadhusgaden, block X from A.C. Krog, an old pharmacist in 1850, but he gave it away the same day to shopkeeper L. C. Larsen. Hans Jessen Sommer Ulich gave his property to the government on 1 April 1852 for them to share between his creditors and he then moved from Hammerfest. He was removed from the census in Hammerfest in December , 1852. It looks like Hans Ulich went to Christiania in 1852 together with his wife and son Peter, but he died alone in his apartment at shopkeeper J. P. Larsen's house in Tollbodsgaden in Christiania on 20 April 1856. His wife and son had left to go north earlier that month. From the register in his apartment, it was mentioned that he didn't leave anything behind except clothes and personal items. From what he left, we can drew these conclusions about him. He must have been very interested in nature as we found a hunting gun, hunting bag and fishing pole. We also found a compass and a pocket map. We also think he must have been very interested in music since we found a flute and violin strings. He was probably handling correspondence since we found two boxes with steel pens, a pencil, an ink box and notebook. He also had a psalm book and fine other books. Ulich used glasses and he smoked; he had three pipes and a snuff box made of silver. After they found him dead, his body was moved to a mortuary in the poor mans graveyard and he was buried in the poor mans plot. Hans Ulich was later burine at "alderdomkarl Shivil" (?) on 24 March 1857. From the papers of his death, we can read that his widow said that Karl Oxholm had provided the money for her deceased husband's casket.
Kilder
- Person, fødsel, familie, død: http://www.finnmark-slekt.com//kgenealogydec2003/f_16c.html#0
- Dåp, Ektefelle: http://www.finnmark-slekt.com//kgenealogydec2003/n_4e.html#0
Foto og arkiv data
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Oversikt over anetavlen
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