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Peder
Helgeson
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Tintype taken circa February 1862, at Madison, Wisconsin
Used with permission of Peder's
Great Great Granddaughter Connie Julien
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enhanced by Deep Vee Productions
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Born April, 1815, Skjold
Parish, Haugesund, Rogaland, Kingdom of Norway
Parents were Helge Helgeson and Alberta
"Betsey" Nilsen
Immigrated to America before 1850
Married November 7, 1854, to Olive Thomasdter
(Olena Thompson), Town of Decorah, Winneshiek County, State of
Iowa
Died June 5 or 7, 1871, Riceland Township, Freeborn County, State of
Minnesota
Buried unmarked grave East Freeborn Lutheran Cemetery, Freeborn
County, Minnesota
Peder Helgeson Harestad was enlisted under the name Peder Helgeson by Captain Mons Grinager for a 3 year term of service in what became Company K of the 15th Wisconsin on December 18, 1861, at the Town of Bancroft, Freeborn County, Minnesota. The men of Company K called themselves "Clausen's Guards" in honor of the regiment's first Chaplain, Claus L. Clausen. Peder was mustered into Federal service at the rank of Private on February 11, 1862, at Camp Randall, near Madison, Wisconsin. At the time he was 44 years old and married. His residence was listed as Freeborn County, Minnesota.
After less than a month at Camp Randall learning to be a soldier, Private Helgeson left there on March 2, 1862, with his company and regiment to join the war. He was recorded as being "present" with the 15th in March and April when it was involved in the siege of Island No. 10, on the Mississippi River in the State of Tennessee, and the raid on Union City, Tennessee. About this time he wrote a letter home to his wife that contained the following description of the accidental death of a fellow soldier at Island No. 10.
| "...somebody had come into the fortification. [The sentry] ...called to him 2 times but got no answer -- as was his duty, shot him and the bullet hit him good. It went through the left side of the chest close to the heart and out again below the shoulder. The wound was fatal. He died after 5 hours. The same evening was buried with military honor. The unfortunate man was Hendrik Eriksen -- from Avrdals Parish in Valdres. He had enlisted of his own free will." |
That summer Private Helgeson was listed as "absent sick in hospital at Island No. 10 since June 3, '62." For July and August, 1862, he is recorded as "absent sick since June 12, '62." He is next listed as entering a Union Army hospital at the Town of Columbus, State of Kentucky, on August 5, 1862, and being present there on October 1, 1862.
Private Peder Helgeson was honorably discharged from the Army due to disability on October 16, 1862, at Columbus, Kentucky. His discharge certificate states that he had blue eyes, sandy colored hair, a light complexion, stood 5 feet 4 inches tall, and was a Farmer. Apparently the 15th did not receive official notice of Helgeson's discharge, because it listed him as a deserter starting March 31, 1863. The mistake was finally corrected in November, 1864.
After being discharged, Peder returned to Freeborn County where his wife was living with their 3 children: Helga Pederson (later Mrs. A. Christopherson), Thomas Pederson, and Charles (Carl) Pederson. Peder passed away at age 56. According to pension documents filed by his widow, Peder Helgeson had contracted "Chronic Rheumatism at Island No. 10" and "consumption...by reason of being exposed and taking cold from such exposure" and had never fully regained his health. His death is officially attributed to consumption. His widow later married Jacob Olson, a widower who had served together with Peder in Company K.
Sources: Genealogical information provided by Peder's Great Great Granddaughter Connie Julien; Det Femtende Regiment, Wisconsin Frivillage [The Fifteenth Regiment, Wisconsin Volunteers] by Ole A. Buslett (Decorah, Iowa, 1895); Civil War Compiled Military Service Records by Office of Adjutant General of the United States (Washington, DC); Regimental Descriptive Rolls, Volume 20 Office of the Adjutant General State of Wisconsin (Madison, Wisconsin, 1885); and, Roster of Wisconsin Volunteers, War of the Rebellion, 1861-1865, Volume 1 Office of the Adjutant General State of Wisconsin (Madison, Wisconsin, 1886).
This page Copyright by Scott Cantwell Meeker
of Deep
Vee Productions.
All Rights Reserved. Created April 18, 1999. Last updated May 31,
2001.