Erick Gillen served as a local missionary before coming to America. On June 8, 1882, Erick Gillen and his fiancée Amanda Westin and our Grandmother Annie along with many other saints from that area traveled to Stockholm, and then they sailed around Sweden to the city of Malmo arriving on June 10, 1882. They went by ferry to Copenhagen on June 16, 1882, where they boarded the steamship “Albano”. , arriving in England on June 19, 1882. They crossed England by rail to Liverpool. They boarded the steamship “Nevada”. It left Liverpool, England on June 21, 1882, and arrived in New York, July 2, 1882, eleven days later. They then crossed the Hudson River to Jersey City, New Jersey where they caught a train west. Annie stopped off in Plain City near Ogden for a few days to visit with her sister Hilda. The next day Erick traveled on to Salt Lake City and stayed with his half sister Aunt Margaret in Murray until he married and had a home built in Murray. We don’t know if Annie lived with Aunt Margaret or not. She had very small living quarters in her home. Annie may have lived at the home of the Lovendahl family where she worked as a domestic or maid. In those two years before she met John Malmstrom, she paid back the money she borrowed from Erick Gillen’s future father in law who lived in Öregrund a sea port city about ten or twelve miles from Väddika, Hökhuvud, Sweden. Annie met John Malmstrom, a widower, walking along the road; she and John were married December 31, 1884, in the Logan Temple. They had six children, Silvea, Wallace, Clara, Mamie, (Lillie who died as an infant) and Laura. They lived in the two room adobe home John built for his first wife Betsy Poulson. Later in the early 1900’s more rooms were added. The home was located at 732 Center Street in Midvale, Utah.