Webb Genealogy - Person Sheet
Webb Genealogy - Person Sheet
NameMalcolm Ludwig Cavallin 900,1948,1966
Birth4 May 1851, Skeda Parish, Sweden, Scandinavia1948,1967,1968
Death5 Jan 1933, Olivia, Calhoun County, TX, USA1948,1967,1968
MemoDied from Influenza
Burial6 Jan 1933, Olivia Cemetery, Port Alto, Calhoun County, TX, USA1968,1967
Census1880, Grant, Republic County, KS, USA559
MemoMalcom L. Cavallin, age 29.
OccupationCounty Commissioner of Calhoun County, TX for 22 years1969
Immigration8 Aug 1869, Saint Joseph, Berrien County, MI, USA1948
FlagsDeceased, Immigrant
FatherCarl Johan Cavallin (1805-)
MotherKarin
Spouses
Birth12 Jan 1852, Kyrkefalla Parish, Skaraborgs County, Sweden, Scandinavia1960,1961,1962,1963
Death1897, Olivia, Calhoun County, TX, USA900,1948,1964
MemoAn apparent heart attack
BurialOlivia Cemetery, Port Alto, Calhoun County, TX, USA1948,1964
MemoSH 172 at CR 317 intersection. Hers is the oldest grave in the cemetery.
FatherCarl Johan Larson (1820-1895)
MotherJohanna Gustava Jonsson (1827-1908)
Marriage27 Apr 1876, The Larson residence in Lucas County, IA, USA1970,1948
Marr MemoMarried by Rev. Frokman, a Lutheran Minister
ChildrenEllen Catherina (1877-1948)
 Gustav Adolph (1879-1942)
 Carl John (1881-1934)
 Oscar Frederick (1882-1948)
 Mabel Magnolia (1884-1958)
 Malcolm Magnus (Died as Infant) (1889-1889)
 Guy Lincoln (1890-1955)
 Malcolm Owen (1892-1977)
Notes for Malcolm Ludwig Cavallin
One of the founding settlers of Olivia, TX.1948,3595

Note who is living near M L Cavallin in 1884 - perhaps some is Christina's family??
Index to Land Plats /user site under construction
1884 Atlas of Republic County, Kansas
Grant Township - Pg. 43
Name; Acres Owned; Section #; Occupation; Village/Town Received Mail
Cavallin, M L; 80; 12
Cavallin, M L; 160; 13
Cavallin, M L; 160; 14
Larson, J W; 60; 8; Farmer; Wayne
Larson, Jonas; 160; 17; Farmer; Wayne
Larson, Louis; 160; 19
The information is found on Microfilm 495 at the Kansas Historical Society in Topeka, Kansas. http://www.kshs.org. The page the plat is found on is listed beside the Township Name. For a slight fee,you can obtain a photocopy of the land plat by writing to the Republic County Courthouse (Address: Route 1, Belleville, Kansas, 66935-9801; Phone: 913-527-5691) and giving them the township name, section number, and owner name. http://skyways.lib.ks.us/genweb/republic/Swedish/RCA1884.html1948

Also from Jackie Cavallin, a brief history of Olivia Texas.

OLIVIA, TEXAS. Olivia is near the junction of State highways 172 and 159, fourteen miles east of Port Lavaca in eastern Calhoun County. It is on a peninsula that is bound on the west by Kellers Bay, on the south by Matagorda Bay, and on the east by Carancahua Bay. William Arnold was the original grantee of the land on which Olivia is now situated. During the later 1800s the Clements and Mitchell families grazed cattle on the peninsula. Olivia was established in 1892 by a Swedish Lutheran colony led by C. J. E. Haterious of Galesburg, Illinois; he bought 13,565 acres from J. D. Mitchell. Haterious named the settlement after Olivia, his wife. Among the first settlers were the families of A. G. Bergstrom, M. L. Cavallin, John Lind, Nels Larson, Charles Johnson, Pete Swenson, Gust Swenson, Olaf Martinson, Eben Williams, Bengt Fyher, and J. F. Skogberg. The new residents brought in a small cotton crop in 1893, but they had to travel to Edna in Jackson County to have it ginned. The next year local farmers purchased a small plantation gin, which they set up on Carancahua Bay, just east of Olivia. In 1896 Olivia had a general store and semiweekly mail. Charles Erickson established a mail and freight service to Olivia in 1903. In 1904 a community school had one teacher and forty-four students. The town had 200 residents in 1914. By 1927, however, its population had dropped to fifty. In 1932 the completion of the Hug-the-Coast Highway linked Olivia with towns in Jackson County. Electricity was available to Olivia residents by 1934, and that year local planters formed the Olivia Cotton Growers Cooperative Marketing Association to gin cotton for its members. In 1939 four teachers instructed seventy-five students through the ninth grade, but by 1955 the school had been absorbed into the county school district. The town grew throughout the 1960s and reported a population of 200 in 1972. In 1990 its population was listed at 215.

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Calhoun County Historical Commission, Shifting Sands of Calhoun County, Texas (Port Lavaca, Texas, ca. 1980).
Last Modified 20 Jul 2019Created 12 Mar 2023 using Reunion for Macintosh
All sources of data are documented on the “Person Sheet” for each individual. My early data often came from less-than-reliable sources (e.g., “Sarah’s genealogy pages”). If the only sources for a person is something like that or worse there is no listed source for data, please take the information as only a suggestion and not a fact.

(C) Richard Webb, 2023. All rights reserved.