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Hilma Swedahl, née ''Wounsch'' (2 October 1870 on Syd-Hälsö, Strömstads kommun – 2 July 1965), was a Swedish-American gold prospector and the founder of the tourist target Alaska (Strömstad). Hilma Wounsch was the daughter of a fisher in Bohuslän. The spring of 1896, she travelled to New York, where she worked as a domestic. After four years, she left for Alaska and the Klondike Gold Rush. She joined a group of young people in Dawson with whom she reached the gold camp Ruby. From there, she continued alone to the foundings along the Ice sea cost. She lived alone in the wilderness for fifteen years until she married the gold prospector John Swedahl from Trondheim. The couple visited Sweden in 1912 and in 1928. After the last visit, Hilma Swedahl remained in Sweden, while her husband returned to USA. In the 1930s, she founded the Alaska (Strömstad), a tourist village on an island inspired by Alaska. Hilma Swedahl died on 2 July 1965 and on her grave stone at Skee kyrkogård is carved her saying: ''"Don´t worry!"''. ==References== * Dave, Göran (2010). I Hilmas fotspår: en resa till Alaska i Strömstad och i USA. Visby: Nomen. Libris 12040635. ISBN 978-91-7465-133-1 * Jägerbrand, Mikael (2011). Hilmas Alaska: en guidebok. Lysekil: Virvelvind. Libris 12242455. ISBN 978-91-975331-8-8 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Hilma Swedahl」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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