Bio: Nelson, Albert & Irene / Henry & Anna
Surnames: NELSON HANSON THOMPSON
----Source: ABBOTSFORD, WIS. CENTENNIAL BOOK - 1973
Nelson, Henry & Anna / Albert & Irene
The Albert Nelson family consisted of three-forty acres section running north
and south and located across the road from the west village limits of
Abbotsford, Wis. It was railroad grant land purchased by Nels Nelson during the
year 1877.
Remembered as the stone mason who rode to and from his work on a bicycle and who
laid the cornerstone at the armory, Nels later traded the land to his brother,
Henry, for a wagon and a team of horses.
Henry Nelson spent a year in Minnesota, where he met and married Anna Hanson.
They came back to their land in the area and started clearing off the solid,
heavy timer and built a house of logs.
He made railroad ties and cut wood into four foot lengths and piled it along the
railroad track, for using in firing the wood burning engines. Later the north
forty, known as the Chris Bremer farm, was sold.
Besides twins, who died shortly after birth, they had six children.
One son, Albert, who married Irene Thompson, purchased the farm from his father
in 1920. He lost his right hand while hunting when he was 16 years old, but
still operated the farm for 33 years. He played violin in an orchestra and he
played several brass instruments with the city band. He was town treasurer for
ten years.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Nelson had two children, Dorothy and Clarence (Bud), who
married Mary Thompson. On March 24, 1953, Bud purchased the Nelson farm from his
father. The farm is still in the Nelson family.
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