(1) Il est marié avec Anne Marie Andersdatter.
Ils se sont mariés environ 1874 à Lier, Buskerud, Norway.
Enfant(s):
(2) Il est marié avec Johanna Jackobsdr.
Ils se sont mariés en l'an 1882, il avait 26 ans.Source 6
Ils se sont mariés le 6 décembre 1888 à Almena, Alpena, Michigan, Verenigde Staten, il avait 33 ans.Source 9(3) Il est marié avec Annette "Anita" Johansdatter Enger.
Ils se sont mariés le 1 décembre 1910 à Alpena, Alpena, Michigan, Verenigde Staten, il avait 55 ans.Source 9
.The history of Peder Thompson's son Henry S Thompson states that the family came to America in 1861. However, Peder would have been only 4 at that time. Martin would have been only 6. So someone brought them.
Did Forger (Roger/Torger) Langeland (Thompson) - who is listed on Peder's death certificate as "father" come with his sons, only to die and have them adopeted by Thomas Thompson? (Listed on Martin's marriage certificate as "father.") Or did the wife (Bertha) come with her second husband and her sons...?
Here is a note from another researcher:
Judith_BuckGlenn For Martin: His father's name is Torger Nilsen, which differs from another, later marriage record for him, where he gives his father's name as "Thomas Thompson". Maybe he got tired of explaining the patronymic naming system. (The mother's name is the same, so I know it is the same Martin Thompson.) (Though in Norway, it would have been Thomsen. But why not Torgersen? I don't know.) For Johanna's mother's name, I checked on Google for Norwegian women's names, after concluding from a careful study of the recorder's handwriting that the half-missing first character could only be a "T" and found that there is a woman's name, Toline, which would fit for her mother. I could find no plausible surname for her from the Norwegian surname list--that is not how the recorder makes an "F"--look for a "Frank" on the same page. The closest I could get to a possible Norwegian surname for her was Truelsen, though there is clearly a "d" in what the recorder wrote. However, "Truelsen" could have been misheard as "Trudsen" quite easily--try saying it aloud--and what I believe was written here. Her father's surname is probably "Hansen", and I think is actually what the recorder wrote.
Here'a another one:
The history of Henry S Thompson says that the family came over in 1861. But the 1900 cencus says they came in 1879
Martin Torgersen Langeland | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(1) ± 1874 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Anne Marie Andersdatter | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(2) 1882 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Johanna Jackobsdr | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(3) 1910 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Annette "Anita" Johansdatter Enger |