Our Family History
Notes
Matches 201 to 250 of 910
# | Notes | Linked to |
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201 | AKA Meier, AKA Rose Mayer | Rosenmayer, Jacob (I4381)
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202 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Peirce, Bill (I3757)
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203 | AKA Melnkov? | Miller, Benjamin “Ben” (I2708)
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204 | AKA Milevsky | Milevsky, Ruth (I1485)
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205 | AKA Molevesky | Milevsky, Dorothy (I1482)
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206 | AKA Molevsky AKA Peshe Leah | Milevsky, Pauline (I1480)
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207 | AKA Morris | Cramer, Moses (I5389)
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208 | AKA Nettchen | Rothschild, Johanette (I1599)
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209 | AKA Oliver Hale Wrote (with Esther) about the history of children’s games in New York City, under the pen names Ethel and Oliver Hale: “From Sidewalk, Gutter and Stoop”, 1938 “ I worked with Oscar for about three years in the late 1960s at The Tamament Library of NYU(where I was a grad student) The library was devoted to the history of American social protest and socialism and Oscar was a sort of unpaid (at his insistence) archivist. He actually personally knew some of the leading lights in the Socialist movement in NYC so he was really adept at helping us catalog, index and display our materials. However he was quite a raconteur ...especially about bohemian New York in the twenties and thirties -a state of mind where he lived at the margins... He told me he had a odd gift of making good money as an analyst at Dun and Bradstreet even though he had little interest in business or finance. He was quite a success there and was able to not only retire early but help out his sister (whom I once met briefly) and other family members (whom I cant recall). Of his Greenwich village period the thing I was most struck by was his unrequited love for Edna St Vincent Millay. I gather she was a real beauty as well as being a lauded poetess and Oscar told me he was "desperately" in love with her for a long time..He was a romantic man, even when I knew him in his older years and he spoke of her with real feeling and longing.. He also tried to finance and produce a sort of early documentary film about life in the tenements that lined the then elevated subway lines in NYC.. He wanted to film the lives of the people one saw from the subway cars-sort of half fiction and half documentary. I think he actually wrote a script of this and he was inspired by the fictional technique of John Dos Passos who wrote a book about Manhattan similar in feeling to what Oscar was trying to achieve. Hew as very proud too of a series of poems he wrote about each of the signers of the constitution-he used to go to the 42nd street library every Saturday and do research on the more obscure signers.. I read most of these poems and really liked them-I think some if not many of them were published but I cant recall where.. No one else ever did anything like this and he used his pseudonym for them..he had what my own father had-an acute awareness of possible anti-semitism in getting things accepted for publication-especially Americana. He loved that piece in This I Believe and gave me my own copy. He even wanted to revive the series-they had been very successfully published by Simon and Schuster and he knew someone who knew Dick Simon and tried to make this happen. Oscar walked every day to library form his home-a good 2/3 mile walk each way. He never tired and never took a nap.. he also ate his lunch every day at one of the very few health food restaurants in NYC then-a place called Brownies .. he kept in great condition and I was not at all surprised he lived as long a he did. He was a modest, sweet, generous, smart and good man.. When I went on a brief vacation with my then wife to Italy he asked why we returned after only 8 days.. I told him we ran out of money and he was sincerely surprised that I didn't just wire him to send some to me...something I wouldn't dream of asking my parents for! He helped everyone who had any sort of question at the library and was a real font of information on many types of questions. He had a sweet disposition... its too bad he didn't have kids as I am sure he would have made a great parent. I never met his wife unfortunately... “ -Laurence Prusak | Hirschmann, Oscar (I17)
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210 | AKA Oscar Feinstein | Fenton, Sid (I3343)
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211 | AKA Pressman, Presma Worked with his son-in-law Solomon 5’ 5” in height, dark blond hair, gray eyes, dark blond beard | Prezman, Hirsch (I4853)
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212 | AKA Priya? | Linda (I4823)
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213 | AKA Ray, died of Diptheria | Bloom, Rachel (I152)
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214 | AKA Rebecca, AKA Riwke Milewski (Ellis Island document) ?Birth year 1878 | Ponimonsky, Rivka (I1477)
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215 | AKA Reichle bas Israel (Dovid) | Schenle Miriam bas Isaac (I5188)
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216 | AKA Ricky | Miller, Eric John (I798)
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217 | AKA Rocha, Rokhne | Rocha (I4854)
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218 | AKA Roelof Diamant From the New York Times, 4/17/1927 Leaps 8 Stories to Death. Insurance man went to Mother-in-Law’s home for Passover Service Rudolph Diamant, 42 years old, an insurance adjuster, living at 59 West 76th Street, went with his wife last night to the home of his mother-in-law, Mrs. Dora Bloom, on the eighth floor of the apartment house at 174 Lenox Avenue, to take part in the Jewish Passover services. A few minutes after his arrival, Diamant walked into the front room, and according to the police jumped from a balcony into the street. His body narrowly missed several passersby as it hit the sidewalk. Patrolman Harry Highstrant of West 123rd street station notified the Harlem Hospital and Dr. I. Cohen pronounced Diamant dead. The police were told that Diamant had had a nervous breakdown recently. Rudolph had earlier contracted viral encephalits, leading to chronic and wasting neurological condition, that seems to have culminated in his suicide. | Diamant, Rudolph Israel (I153)
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219 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Veltman, Rob (I3394)
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220 | AKA Roosien Izsaks Levie (van der Veen). | Leviet, Roosje Isaaks (I4880)
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221 | AKA Roossien Stoppelman | Stoppelman, Roosje (I4435)
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222 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Levine, Rose (I2120)
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223 | AKA Rosina, Roeschen | Sondheimer, Rosa (I707)
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224 | AKA Salomon | Diamant, Solomon (I2445)
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225 | AKA Sarah | Black, Althea (I5392)
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226 | AKA Schefa | Adler, Schefa (Sophia) (I334)
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227 | AKA Seal | Kaufman, Cecelia (I5603)
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228 | AKA Shlioma Abramovich 1897 census: Lived in Rezhitza, Pale of Settlement, owned his home, built of sone with an iron roof, household included a cook and a boy who worked for Solomon. | Meisakhovich, Solomon (Shlioma) (I4846)
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229 | AKA Simon On 5 Jun 1900, he was living with his parents Myer & Sara Miller, his sister Ida, & his brothers Benjamin, Max, & Jacob on Harding St., Worcester, MA; & he was a student. On 18 Apr 1910, he was living with his parents Myer B. & Sarah Miller & his brothers Benjamin, Jacob, & Max at 37 1/2 Providence St., Worcester, MA, next door to Benjamin & Ethel Sapiro & their children Rose D., Anna, & Maxwell E. Sapiro; & he was a cutter in the cloth industry. In 1911, he is noted to have removed from Worcester, MA, to New York City. On 5 June 1917, he was of medium build, gray eyes, and black hair; he was living with his parents at 135 W. 10th St., New York, NY; and he was employed in the clothing trade at 882 Lafayette St., New York, NY. In 1922-1923, he was working with Benjamin and Max MIlller at M.B. Miller Sons, a pants business at 376 Lafayette St., New York, NY. In 1925, he was still working with Benjamin Miller for M.B. Miller Sons, clothing manufacturer, at 376 Lafayette St., New York, NY, and is listed as living at both 1057 Faile St., Bronx, NY, where Benjamin Miller used to live, and at 303(?J) W. 10th(?) St., New York, NY. In Apr 1930, he was living with his wife Beatrice and his daughter Annette at 557 W. 150th St., New York, NY. The 1930 and 1933-34 New York City Directories list a Saml Miller at 557 W. 150th St., Apt. 5, but his wife’s name is stated to be Claire. When he registered for the draft in 1942, he was still living at 557 W. 150th St. and was employed by Louis Rosenblatt & Co. at 162 Fifth Ave., New York, NY. When he died on 1 Oct 1968, his last residence had been in New York, NY. He was buried in the same cemetery as Harry Houdini [but Houdini was buried in the Machpelah Cemetery, Glendale, NY, & Sam does not appear in their list of burials]. His Social Security Number was 092-07-5833. | Miller, Simon “Sam” (I2707)
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230 | AKA Simon, Lannie (Sammie?)? | Miller, Samuel (I124)
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231 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Hodo, Harvey Floyd (I2017)
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232 | AKA Snit | Sneet, Israel (Yechezhel) (I3649)
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233 | AKA Soroh Gittel | Ogrodnitzki, Sarah (I549)
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234 | AKA Sugar | Fink, Charlotte Rose (I797)
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235 | AKA Talic Wolf Engel | Engel, Zeleg Wolf (I3354)
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236 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Brauman, Patricia Joan (I2094)
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237 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Zwartverwer, Truda (I3623)
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238 | AKA Tsvi? As per Yad Vashem testimony page by Michael Surkis regarding his daughter Fruma | Spruch, Hersh (I2677)
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239 | AKA Victor Meier Sew-Lobo from the archives in Marburg, Canton List ca 1826 Adopted the name Wolf in 1811 | Wolf, Victor Meier (I3798)
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240 | AKA Volkersleier | Ring, Abraham (I2157)
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241 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Vescio, John August Jr. (I2300)
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242 | all children born in Hanover, Germany (1870) NY, NY 5D 12 Ward Julia reported in the 1920 census, NY that she came to the US in 1856 Name of mother is Sarah Levy in marriage record for Moses Boehm | Boehm, Hirsch (I3010)
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243 | Also spelled Zilig? | Dunsky, Zelig (I5804)
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244 | alt spelling- Udeh ? birth 1835 | Treszczanski, Yudeh (I807)
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245 | Alternate birthdate 15 Nov 1841 | Meyer, Pauline (I2536)
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246 | Alternate dates 8/13/1870 - 11/12/1937 | Bornheim, Leon (I2534)
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247 | Alternative dates: 7/18/1873 - 1/6/1912 | Cahen, Estella (I2554)
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248 | Alternative dates: 12/9/1879 - 12/19/1974 | Weiler, Edith (I2528)
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249 | American Men & Women of Science. A biographical directory of today's leaders in physical, biological, and related sciences. 12th edition, Social & Behavioral Sciences. Two volumes. New York: R.R. Bowker, 1973. (AmMWSc 12S) 1920: Wilkinsburg, Allegheny, PA Alfred 58 Edith W 41 Alfred 11 | Cahen, Alfred (I2530)
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250 | Amyloidosis, renal failure, pericardial effusion | Rothschild, Carl Eliot (I6)
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