Career
In 1901-1903 he was in Congo Free State as a missionary for Congo-Balolo Mission with base in Bonginda. He was primarily an engineer on the missionary boat that sailed up and down the Congo River to and from the missionary station. Casement had been anointed to write a report on the atrocities that were being made against the natives by Belgian soldiers.
Congo was at that time a personal property of King Leopold II of Belgium and he exploited the local population fiercely to profit from increased rubber demand.
Methods of coercion included whipping, hostage-taking, rape and murder, and burning of gardens and villages. (The most famous atrocity, the severing of a hand or foot, was undertaken by native soldiers to prove to their white officers that they had not wasted ammunition, and was not a punishment for rubber shortfalls) Casement was in a desperat need for an engineer to steer his boat up the Congo River as his initial engineer couldn"t continue.
Danielsen joined Casement and they travelled together for a couple of months. What Danielsen did next to being an engineer was being a photographer and he took several atrocity photographs of people who had been mutilated and later he showed them in meetings back in England and later in the Faroe Islands.
Sigrid went to Copenhagen as a young girl.
In 1871 she gave birth to a boy, she was not married at the time. The boy was named Ludvig Daniel Jacob. The name Ludvig was after his father, whom he never knew, and he did not use the name.
Dollin is a common transcript for Daniel Jacob in the Faroe Islands.
At the age of 18 Danielsen went to Scotland to be trained as an engineer He worked as an engineer around the world, among other countries he came to South Africa and to America.
Even though he came from a Christian family, it was not until 1897 he became religious, it happened at an open-air service in Glasgow, after which he was radically converted.