I wish this photo had been available to me when I inserted the Torsas church into my book.
Thanks to James Carros, a Bristol, Connecticut person whose family, like mine, hails from Torsas. It’s a much better photo of the church than the one I found for
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Mona, I wondered if the name was originally written Torsås? and I found lots of lovely photos here: https://www.google.com/search?q=tors%C3%A5s+kyrka+photo&client=firefox-b-d&sa=X&channel=trow2&biw=1664&bih=1110&sxsrf=ALeKk01LhutDz8lPLvUDDVt_1WHZZZyLZQ:1600118878684&tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx=1&fir=EX84vBUbFoorUM%252C8ErYN8ONsDJawM%252C_&vet=1&usg=AI4_-kQ4Nrvnk9x1ahjv1b8QjraOyb1rdA&ved=2ahUKEwjF0vKqy-nrAhXBpIsKHUSMBMEQ9QF6BAgKECs#imgrc=EX84vBUbFoorUM
You are correct about the spelling, and I spelled it that way in the book, but there is no easy access to those extra marks when I’m writing for the blog.
Thanks for the link though for some reason it’s not responding for me.
Off for my sequestered supper now. I like it that way — relaxing.
Mona
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Ah ha! It opened for me on the second try. What beautiful photos. Yes, I do wish I had found access to them before the book, but what a pleasure to see them now. Especially the inside of the church which I remember from our 1955 visit. (So much water over the dam since then. So much living.)