Arbre généalogique de la famille Kramer » Canton Benard Haug (1905-1995)

Données personnelles Canton Benard Haug 

Source 1
  • Il est né le 21 novembre 1905 dans Pennock, Kandiyohi, MN, USA.
  • Il a été baptisé le 26 décembre 1905 dans St. John's Church, Pennock, Kandiyohi, Minnesota, United States.
  • Profession: Automobile and Truck Sales - Owner.
  • Religion: Lutheran.
  • Résidant:
    • en l'an 1910: St John, Kandiyohi, Minnesota, United States, St John, Kandiyohi, Minnesota, United States.
    • en l'an 1920: Saint Johns, Kandiyohi, Minnesota, United States, Saint Johns, Kandiyohi, Minnesota, United States.
    • en l'an 1930: Edwards, Kandiyohi, Minnesota, United States, Edwards, Kandiyohi, Minnesota, United States.
    • en l'an 1935: Raymond, Raymond Village, Kandiyohi, Minnesota, United States, Raymond, Raymond Village, Kandiyohi, Minnesota, United States.
    • en l'an 1940: Raymond, Raymond Village, Kandiyohi, Minnesota, United States, Raymond, Raymond Village, Kandiyohi, Minnesota, United States.
  • (Record Change) le 5 février 1996.
  • Il est décédé le 25 septembre 1995 dans Hennepin, Minnesota, United States, il avait 89 ans.
  • Il est enterré le 29 septembre 1995 dans Vinje Memorial Cemetery, Willmar, Kandiyohi, Minnesota, United States.
  • Un enfant de Gunder C. Haug et Bertina Greenfield

Famille de Canton Benard Haug


Notes par Canton Benard Haug

In sales and repair of motorized vehicles longer than any other person in Kandiyohi County. Sold the Chyrsler/Plymouth dealership in Raymond MN.

The following was written onAugust 20, 1990 by Karen Haug Smith, Canton's daughter:

"It is more than a lifetime ago since Aletta and Christian Haug resided in their small, quiet, neat frame house in Pennock, Minnesota. Just down a rural block from the elderly Haugs, was the home of their son, Gunder. It was contrasting with

the bu tling activity of a family that was to have eleven children in its entirety.

Gunder and Bertha's eldest child, Canton Benard Haug, for perhaps the obvious reason that his own family, needing more living space, and his grandparents needing a helpmate, was elected to live, not in his own home, but in the home of his

grandparents, Christian and Aletta. After all, there was an upstairs bedroom available and the two houses were just ashort distance from one another so that errands could be easily run between the two.

Canton, now almost 85 years old recalls this time as a lad, not yet in his teens, living with his immigrant grandparents. Although Aletta and Christian spoke only in their native Norwegian language, and Canton spoke English, communication

would flow freely through the mutual, receptive understanding of the two different languages of the two generations.

Christian Haug was tall and erect and Aletta short and slight. He was strong and she was gentle and soft spoken. Canton cannot remember his grandmother being anything but light hearted and happy. She was a wonderful cook, often baking home

made bread and Norwegian delicacies like ostkake and rommegrot. Aletta's cooking and baking were done on the big, black woodstove that stood in the corner of her kitchen. The stove was fueled with split railroad ties that Christian would

purchase from Jurn Anderson that he and Canton had cut into usable stove lengths with a bucksaw. There was no refrigeration for any of the food that was prepared in Aletta's kitchen, so the butchered meat would be "canned" and preserved in

glass jars.

Grandpa Christian would butcher pigs, the meat would be canned or smoked, and the pork blood would be savedfor "blood polsa". Canton's job would be to stir the blood in order to keep it from coagulating, as it was poured out onto the winter

snow.

During summer, Christian and Aletta's big garden required their efforts and those of Canton too. Insecticides were not available, so Canton was to hand pick potato bugs off the plants, one by one and drop them into a pailof kerosene. Organic

gardening indeed!

Back inside of the little house, the parlor had a stove in its center, and through the isinglass, Canton could see its flame, and through a hole in the top, he would feed it coal from the coal bucket. The parlor stove heated the house as far

as it's warmth would radiate. Next to the stove, Grandpa Christian would rock in his personal rocking chair and smoke his pipe. Aletta's rocker accompanied his close by.

Canton pumped water from the well in the yard and carried it into the house in a pail. The household plumbing included the ubiquitous outdoor toilet.

Kerosene lamps provided the house with light. It was not until several years later that Canton, as a young adult, hired Chapin Electric to come out from Willmar to wire the house with electricity.

A barn that housed a cow or two stood in the backyard, just a short distance from the house. After milking the cow, Canton would bring the milk through the back door to Aletta, who would pour off enough for her household use, then he would

carry the remainderof the milk to his mother, soon to be consumed by the ten other younger Haug children.

Back by the barn stood Christian's grindstone. When his versatile scythe occasionally became dull from use, Canton remembers helping his grandfather sharpen the blade on the large stone. Its shape was big and round, and it took the hands of

two to sharpen that scythe.

Another of Grandpa Christian's contributions to his son Gunder's large family was to make, not only leather shoes for the children, but cross-country snow skis as well. The shoes were made on wooden shoe forms. The long, three inch wide skis,

were shaped and formed by soaking the thin boards in a boiler on the kitchen stove.

"Rat Trapping" was a winter time adventure when Grandfather Christian and young Canton would walk five or six miles through the countryside to "Happy Home" to check Grandpa's trap line for muskrats. If the line yielded "rats", Alfred Bergman,

the local mail carrier, would buy them for a sum of 10 or 15 cents each. Canton remembers the disappointment and frustration of the two "trappers" after havingtrudged that distance in the winter cold, only to find that some unknown thief had

beat them to where their traps were set, taking not only the "rats", but their entire trap line too!!

Meanwhile, it has been said many times, that Gunder Haug, Christian's son, and his wife, Bertha nurtured, supported, and cared for their family with the skill of an efficient corporation.

Trina Johnson was paid to help with some of the household tasks, but idleness was not the standard at the Haugs. The mounds of family laundry were washed in a washing machine powered by a gas engine. The water was soft rain water collected in

the cistern.

Each morning before school, after the customary breakfast of oatmeal,that had been prepared in a double boiler that night before and placed on the back of the stove, everyone in the family would be seated at the large table, each in his or her

own designated place. The two parents assumeed the "heads" of the table, and the baby in the high chair, at Bertha's side. The beds had all been made, the house was to be dusted, and the kitchen floor was to be scrubbed. Rugs, mops, and dust

cloths flew. This was the daily routine; everyone had responsibility, and all before anyone left the house.

Gunder Haug supported hisfamily by running a meat market, shipping cattle for over 30 years, and of course eventually starting the successful John Deere farm implement business that remains in the family to this day.

It was weekly that Gunder Haug had 6 or 7 train car loads of cattle to be shipped to St. Paul from the stock yards in Pennock. Both Canton and Grandpa Christian Haug would help with the process of cattle shipping Canton remembers being told

by his father that he would have to ride on the cattle train to South St. Paul and return the next day; a somewhat frightening experience for a young man travelling that far from the security of little Pennock into a city, whose lights could be

seen stretching out forever across the horizon, as the train arrived late in the evening. Young Canton wondered if he'd ever find his way out of the maze of lights.

It is from these times and these tales that the Haug family finds it's roots. Life was less complex, but the elements that create a strong people were passed on through the generations to those of us who are proud to be decendents of this

exceptional family.

"THERE WERE GIANTS IN THE EARTH IN THOSE DAYS; AND ALSO AFTER THAT, WHEN THE SONS OF GOD CAME IN UNTO THE DAUGHTERS OF MEN, AND THEY BARE CHILDREN TO THEM, THE SAME BECAME MIGHTY MEN WHICH WERE OF OLD, MEN OF RENOWN.:

GENESIS V.4"

OBITUARY (Sep. 28,1995)

WILLMAR - Canton Haug, 89 of Willmar died Monday night at Rice Memorial Hospital.

Funeral Services are 11 a.m. Friday at Vinje Lutheran Church in Willmar with the Rev. Steven Knudson Officiating. Burial is in the church cemetery

Visitation is 5 to 8 p.m. today at Harvey Anderson Funeral Home in Willmar and one hour prior to services at the church Friday.

He was born Nov. 21, 1905, in Pennock to Gunder and Bertha (Greenfield) Haug. He attended school in Pennock.

He liven in Raymond until 1964 when he moved to Willmar. He co-owned and operated Carlson & Haug, a Chrysler-Plymouth automobile dealership, until it was liquidated in 1968. He later worked for Town & Country Motors in Willmar and Nelson

International Trucking Corp.

On Aug. 10, 1933, he married Harriet Kiland. He was a member of Raymond Lions, Raymond Fire Department, served as Raymond city clerk, school board member, Masons, Shriners, Willmar Golden K.

In 1992 he moved to Bethesda Pleasant View.

He is survived by one son, James (and Bonnie), of Bloomington; one daughter, Karen (and Lance) Smith, of Brainerd; two grandchildren; one great-grandchild; four sisters and two brothers, Rosella Burmaster of Minnetonka, Myrtle Thielen, of

Brooklyn Center, G. Beth Peterson, of Edina, Violet Dunning, of Spicer, Luverne Haug, of Tonka Bay and Francis Hill of St. Paul.

He was preceded in death by his parents, wife, one sister, and three brothers.

In sales and repair of motorized vehicles longer than any other person in Kandiyohi County. Sold the Chyrsler/Plymouth dealership in Raymond MN.

The following was written on August 20, 1990 by Karen Haug Smith, Canton's daughter:

"It is more than a lifetime ago since Aletta and Christian Haug resided in their small, quiet, neat frame house in Pennock, Minnesota. Just down a rural block from the elderly Haugs, was the home of their son, Gunder. It was contrasting with

the bu tling activity of a family that was to haveeleven children in its entirety.

Gunder and Bertha's eldest child, Canton Benard Haug, for perhaps the obvious reason that his own family, needing more living space, and his grandparents needing a helpmate, was elected to live, not in his own home, but in the home of his

grandparents, Christian and Aletta. After all, there was an upstairs bedroom available andthe two houses were just a short distance from one another so that errands could be easily run between the two.

Canton, now almost 85 years old recalls this time as a lad, not yet in his teens, living with his immigrant grandparents. Although Aletta and Christian spoke only in their native Norwegian language, and Canton spoke English, communication

would flow freely through the mutual, receptive understanding of the two different languages of the two generations.

Christian Haug was tall and erect and Aletta short and slight. He was strong and she was gentle and soft spoken. Canton cannot remember his grandmother being anything but light hearted and happy. She was a wonderful cook, often baking home

made bread and Norwegian delicacies like ostkake and rommegrot. Aletta's cooking and baking were done on the big, black woodstove that stood in the corner of her kitchen. The stove was fueled with split railroad ties that Christian would

purchase from Jurn Anderson that he and Canton had cut into usable stove lengths with a bucksaw. There was no refrigeration for any of the food that was prepared in Aletta's kitchen, so the butchered meat would be "canned" and preserved in

glass jars.

Grandpa Christian would butcher pigs, the meat would be canned or smoked, and the pork blood would be saved for "blood polsa". Canton's job would be to stir the blood in order to keep it from coagulating, as it was poured out onto the winter

snow.

During summer, Christian and Aletta's big garden required their efforts and those of Canton too. Insecticides were not available, so Canton was to hand pick potato bugs off the plants, one by one and drop them into a pail of kerosene. Organic

gardening indeed!

Back inside of the little house, the parlor had a stove in its center, and through the isinglass, Canton could see its flame, and through a hole in the top, he would feed it coal from the coal bucket. The parlor stove heated the house as far

as it's warmth would radiate. Next to the stove, Grandpa Christian would rock in his personal rocking chair and smoke his pipe. Aletta's rocker accompanied his close by.

Canton pumped water from the well in the yardand carried it into the house in a pail. The household plumbing included the ubiquitous outdoor toilet.

Kerosene lamps provided the house with light. It was not until several years later that Canton, as a young adult, hired Chapin Electric to come out from Willmar to wire the house with electricity.

A barn that housed a cow or two stood in the backyard, just a short distance from the house. After milking the cow, Canton would bring the milk through the back door to Aletta, who would pour off enough for her household use, then he would

carry the remainder of the milk to his mother, soon to be consumed by the ten other younger Haug children.

Back by the barn stood Christian's grindstone. When his versatile scythe occasionally became dull from use, Canton remembers helping his grandfather sharpen the blade on the large stone. Its shape was big and round, and it took the hands of

two tosharpen that scythe.

Another of Grandpa Christian's contributions to his son Gunder's large family was to make, not only leather shoes for the children, but cross-country snow skis as well. The shoes were made on wooden shoe forms. The long, three inch wide skis,

were shaped and formed by soaking the thin boards in a boiler on the kitchen stove.

"Rat Trapping" was a winter time adventure when Grandfather Christian and young Canton would walk five or six miles through the countryside to "Happy Home" to check Grandpa's trap line for muskrats. If the line yielded "rats", Alfred Bergman,

the local mail carrier, would buy them for a sum of 10 or 15 cents each. Canton remembers the disappointment and frustration of the two "trappers" after having trudged that distance in the winter cold, only to find that some unknown thief had

beat them to where their traps were set, taking not only the "rats", but their entire trap line too!!

Meanwhile, it has been said many times, that Gunder Haug, Christian's son, and his wife, Bertha nurtured, supported, and cared for their family with the skill of an efficient corporation.

Trina Johnson was paid to help with some of the household tasks, but idleness was not the standard at the Haugs. The mounds of family laundry were washed in a washing machine powered by a gas engine. The water was soft rain water collected in

the cistern.

Each morning before school, after the customary breakfast of oatmeal, that had been prepared in a double boiler that night before and placed on the back of the stove, everyone in the family would be seated at the large table, each in his or her

own designated place. The two parents assumeed the "heads" of the table, and the baby in the high chair, at Bertha's side. The beds had all been made, the house was to be dusted, and thekitchen floor was to be scrubbed. Rugs, mops, and dust

cloths flew. This was the daily routine; everyone had responsibility, and all before anyone left the house.

Gunder Haug supported his family by running a meat market, shipping cattle for over 30 years, and of course eventually starting the successful John Deere farm implement business that remains in the family to this day.

It was weekly that Gunder Haug had 6 or 7 train car loads of cattle to be shipped to St. Paul from the stock yards in Pennock. Both Canton and Grandpa Christian Haug would help with the process of cattle shipping Canton remembers being told

by his father that he would have to ride on the cattle train to South St. Paul and return the next day; asomewhat frightening experience for a young man travelling that far from the security of little Pennock into a city, whose lights could be

seen stretching out forever across the horizon, as the train arrived late in the evening. Young Canton wondered if he'd ever find his way out of the maze of lights.

It is from these times and these tales that the Haug family finds it's roots. Life was less complex, but the elements that create a strong people were passed on through the generations to those of us who are proud to be decendents of this

exceptional family.

"THERE WERE GIANTS IN THE EARTH IN THOSE DAYS; AND ALSO AFTER THAT, WHEN THE SONS OF GOD CAME IN UNTO THE DAUGHTERS OF MEN, AND THEY BARE CHILDREN TO THEM, THE SAME BECAME MIGHTY MEN WHICH WERE OF OLD, MEN OF RENOWN.:

GENESIS V.4"

OBITUARY (Sep. 28,1995)

WILLMAR - Canton Haug, 89 of Willmar died Monday night at Rice Memorial Hospital.

Funeral Services are 11 a.m. Friday at Vinje Lutheran Church in Willmar with the Rev. Steven Knudson Officiating. Burial is in the church cemetery

Visitation is 5 to 8 p.m. today at Harvey Anderson Funeral Home in Willmar and one hour prior to services at the church Friday.

He was born Nov. 21, 1905, in Pennock to Gunder and Bertha (Greenfield) Haug. He attended school in Pennock.

He liven in Raymond until 1964 when he moved to Willmar. He co-owned and operated Carlson & Haug, a Chrysler-Plymouth automobile dealership, until it was liquidated in 1968. He later worked for Town & Country Motors in Willmar and Nelson

International Trucking Corp.

On Aug. 10, 1933, he married Harriet Kiland. He was a member of Raymond Lions, Raymond Fire Department, served as Raymond city clerk, school board member, Masons, Shriners, Willmar Golden K.

In 1992 he moved to Bethesda Pleasant View.

He is survived by one son, James (and Bonnie), of Bloomington; one daughter, Karen (and Lance) Smith, of Brainerd; two grandchildren; one great-grandchild; four sisters and two brothers, Rosella Burmaster of Minnetonka, Myrtle Thielen, of

Brooklyn Center, G. Beth Peterson, of Edina, Violet Dunning, of Spicer, Luverne Haug, of Tonka Bay and Francis Hill of St. Paul.

He was preceded in death by his parents, wife, one sister, and three brothers.

Avez-vous des renseignements supplémentaires, des corrections ou des questions concernant Canton Benard Haug?
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Ancêtres (et descendants) de Canton Benard Haug


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Les sources

  1. Page Web Site, Charles Page, Canton Benard Haug, 29 août 2022
    Toegevoegd via een Smart Match

    Stambomen op MyHeritage

    Familiesite: Page Web Site

    Familiestamboom: 174818091-2

Événements historiques

  • La température au 21 novembre 1905 était entre -5,5 et 0,7 °C et était d'une moyenne de -1,5 °C. La force moyenne du vent était de 2 Bft (vent faible) et venait principalement du nord-nordest. Source: KNMI
  • Du 1 août 1901 au 16 août 1905 il y avait aux Pays-Bas le cabinet Kuijper avec comme premier ministre Dr. A. Kuijper (AR).
  • Du 17 août 1905 au 11 février 1908 il y avait aux Pays-Bas le cabinet De Meester avec comme premier ministre Mr. Th. de Meester (unie-liberaal).
  • En l'an 1905: Source: Wikipedia
    • La population des Pays-Bas était d'environ 5,5 millions d'habitants.
    • 9 janvier » «dimanche rouge» à Saint-Pétersbourg.
    • 25 avril » naissance de la Section française de l'Internationale ouvrière (SFIO), lors du congrès du Globe à Paris.
    • 1 septembre » la Saskatchewan et l’Alberta deviennent les huitième et neuvième provinces canadiennes.
    • 5 septembre » traité de Portsmouth, mettant fin à la guerre russo-japonaise.
    • 23 septembre » la Norvège et la Suède signent le «traité de Karlstad», rendant la dissolution de l'union entre les deux pays officielle.
    • 9 décembre » adoption de la Loi de séparation des Églises et de l'État en France.
  • La température au 26 décembre 1905 était entre -2,3 et 4,9 °C et était d'une moyenne de 0,8 °C. Il y avait 3,8 heures de soleil (49%). La force moyenne du vent était de 2 Bft (vent faible) et venait principalement du sud-sud-ouest. Source: KNMI
  • Du 1 août 1901 au 16 août 1905 il y avait aux Pays-Bas le cabinet Kuijper avec comme premier ministre Dr. A. Kuijper (AR).
  • Du 17 août 1905 au 11 février 1908 il y avait aux Pays-Bas le cabinet De Meester avec comme premier ministre Mr. Th. de Meester (unie-liberaal).
  • En l'an 1905: Source: Wikipedia
    • La population des Pays-Bas était d'environ 5,5 millions d'habitants.
    • 2 janvier » capitulation de Port-Arthur (guerre russo-japonaise).
    • 9 janvier » «dimanche rouge» à Saint-Pétersbourg.
    • 31 mars » début de la crise de Tanger.
    • 5 juillet » Alfred Deakin devient Premier ministre d'Australie pour la seconde fois.
    • 5 septembre » traité de Portsmouth, mettant fin à la guerre russo-japonaise.
    • 18 septembre » signature du Home Rule, projet d’autonomie de l’Irlande vis-à-vis du Royaume-Uni.
  • La température au 25 septembre 1995 était entre 10,3 et 17,9 °C et était d'une moyenne de 13,5 °C. Il y avait -0,1 mm de précipitation. Il y avait 7,0 heures de soleil (58%). Il faisait partiellement nuageux ou couvert. La force moyenne du vent était de 3 Bft (vent modéré) et venait principalement du ouest. Source: KNMI
  • Du lundi, août 22, 1994 au lundi, août 3, 1998 il y avait aux Pays-Bas le cabinet a href="https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabinet-Kok_I" class="extern">Kok I avec comme premier ministre W. Kok (PvdA).
  • En l'an 1995: Source: Wikipedia
    • La population des Pays-Bas était d'environ 15,4 millions d'habitants.
    • 31 janvier » entrée de la Lettonie au Conseil de l'Europe.
    • 21 février » Ibrahim Ali est tué d’une balle dans le dos par trois militants colleurs d'affiches du Front national à Marseille.
    • 20 mars » |Valeri Poliakov revient du plus long séjour passé dans l'espace.
    • 19 avril » attentat d'Oklahoma City.
    • 11 mai » à New York, prorogation du traité sur la non-prolifération des armes nucléaires (TNP), dont 190 pays sont actuellement signataires.
    • 25 juillet » |Attentat de Khaled Kelkal et Boualem Bensaïd dans la ligne B du RER.
  • La température au 29 septembre 1995 était entre 6,4 et 14,1 °C et était d'une moyenne de 9,8 °C. Il y avait une précipitation de 6,1 mm pendant 3,7 heure(s). Il y avait 5,9 heures de soleil (50%). Il faisait nuageux. La force moyenne du vent était de 3 Bft (vent modéré) et venait principalement du ouest. Source: KNMI
  • Du lundi, août 22, 1994 au lundi, août 3, 1998 il y avait aux Pays-Bas le cabinet a href="https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabinet-Kok_I" class="extern">Kok I avec comme premier ministre W. Kok (PvdA).
  • En l'an 1995: Source: Wikipedia
    • La population des Pays-Bas était d'environ 15,4 millions d'habitants.
    • 1 janvier » |naissance de l'Organisation mondiale du commerce qui remplace le GATT.
    • 15 février » Kevin Mitnick, dit «El Condor», le plus célèbre pirate informatique de la planète, est arrêté par le FBI.
    • 11 mars » Yolanda Chen porte le record du monde féminin indoor du triple saut à 15,03m.
    • 27 juin » Hamad ben Khalifa Al Thani devient émir du Qatar, après avoir mené un coup d'Etat contre son père.
    • 5 juillet » adoption de la constitution de la République d'Arménie.
    • 14 décembre » signature des accords de paix de Dayton sur l'ex-Yougoslavie.


Même jour de naissance/décès

Source: Wikipedia

Source: Wikipedia


Sur le nom de famille Haug

  • Afficher les informations que Genealogie Online a concernant le patronyme Haug.
  • Afficher des informations sur Haug sur le site Archives Ouvertes.
  • Trouvez dans le registre Wie (onder)zoekt wie? qui recherche le nom de famille Haug.

Lors de la copie des données de cet arbre généalogique, veuillez inclure une référence à l'origine:
Louis Kramer, "Arbre généalogique de la famille Kramer", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/kramer_stamboom/I568945.php : consultée 6 janvier 2026), "Canton Benard Haug (1905-1995)".