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Person Details
 
Last NameBARNHARDTSON
First NameCARL B
Maiden 
RelationH/O JOSEPHINE
Cemetery NumberCR023
Cemetery NameBETHANY LUTHERAN SWEDISH CEME
Birth Day 
Birth Month 
Birth Year1866
Death Day 
Death Month 
Death Year1936
War 
Gravestone Details
Section 
Lot 
Map 
Stone Materialgranite
Condition 
Shaperound top
Carving 
Legibility 
Number of Graves on Stone 
Stone Height (inches) 
Stone Width (inches) 
Exists?
Last Seen Date2020
Carver 
Notes/Misc Details
Notes"SURVIVORS OF S.S. NORGE DISASTER" [On 22 June 1904 Norge left Copenhagen under the command of Captain Valdemar Johannes Gundel. After taking on Norwegian emigrants at Oslo and Kristiansand, the ship set course across the Atlantic Ocean, travelling north of Scotland to New York City. She was carrying a crew of 68 and 727 passengers. Among the steerage passengers, there were 296 Norwegians, 236 Russians, 79 Danes, 68 Swedes, and 15 Finns. Half of the steerage passengers had prepaid tickets, paid for by relatives living in the United States.[7] On 28 June, Norge ran aground on Hasselwood Rock, Helen's Reef, close to Rockall, in foggy weather.[4][8] She was reversed off the rock after a few minutes, but the collision had ripped holes in the ship's hull, and water began pouring into the hold.[8][7] The crew of the Norge began lowering the lifeboats, but the first two lowered were destroyed by waves.[7] Of the eight lifeboats on board, only five were successfully launched.[9] Many passengers jumped overboard, only to drown.[9] The Norge sank twelve minutes after the collision. Captain Gundal stayed with the ship as it sank, but managed to swim to one of the lifeboats.[9] According to author Per Kristian Sebak's comprehensive account, more than 635 people died during the sinking, among them 225 Norwegians. The first survivors to be rescued, a group of 26, were found by the Grimsby trawler Sylvia. 32 more were picked up by the British steamship Cervonax, and 70, including Captain Gundal, by the German steamship Energie.[9] Some of the 160 survivors spent up to eight days in open lifeboats before rescue. Several more people lost their lives in the days that followed rescue, as a result of their exposure to the elements and swallowing salt water. Among the survivors was the poet Herman Wildenvey.] [The disaster remains the worst in Danish maritime history.[4] The wreck of Norge was found off Rockall in July 2003 in 213 feet (65 m) of water.]
Transcribed ByJWN