Our Family History
Notes
Matches 501 to 550 of 910
# | Notes | Linked to |
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501 | Home, Cerebral hemorrhage | Bloom, Fannie (I252)
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502 | Honeymoon at Niagra Falls, 6/20/1917 - 7/2/1917 | Family: David Bloom / Kate Rosen (F4)
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503 | House Fire | Bloom, Robert David (I163)
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504 | Hoy Cross and St. Joseph Cemetary, Indianapolis, Indiana | Lanahan, Rosemary (I5)
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505 | http://www.max-ehrlich.org/genealogy/ | Ehrlich, Alan James (I1655)
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506 | I can not be sure but Hershel may be the same as David Hirsch. All I can remember was a very slight elderly gentleman with white hair who was always smoking very little cigars. | Ponemone, Dovid Hirsch (I156)
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507 | Ida came to America with the children after Jacob had already arrived two years earlier. She arrived on 2/13/1894 on the Rugia, which sailed for Ellis Island from Hamburg via Havre. | Hudelmann, Chaje Sure (Ida) (I3724)
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508 | Immigrant to USA, served in the Navy during WW2 | Chernoble, William David (I5937)
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509 | Immigrated to US in 1890, became US citizen in 1896 | Family: Moses Joseph Bloom / Dora Ponemonsky (F17)
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510 | Immigrated to US in 1920, Became US citizen in 1926, Lived in Brooklyn, leather cutter | Bloom, Harry (I435)
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511 | Immigrated to US in 1921 on the Gedantzk, became US citizen in 1929 | Renetzky, Zelda (I480)
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512 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Rothstein, Ruth (I496)
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513 | Immigrated to US in 1935, became US citizen in 1940 Sewing machine operator | Bloom, Saul (I436)
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514 | Immigrated to Wooster, Massachussets 1896- sold lampshades AKA Nachum Yitzchak (on headstone) 1895 15 Harding Street Miller & Arenson Underwear 1897 moved to Philadelphia 1900 Miller and Arenson 14 Providence | Miller, Nathan Isaac “Ike” (I111)
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515 | In 1884, his wife Mary Mallnikoff, was stated to be the widow of Jacob. | Melnkov, Abraham Jacob (I1113)
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516 | In 1895, he was living working at 149 Green St. and living at 25 Lafayette St., Worcester, MA. In 1896, he was working at 22 Cypress St. and living at 9 Gold St., Worcester, MA, together with Isaac Miller. In 1897 and 1898, he was still working at 22 Cypress St., but was living at 29 Thorn St., Worcester, MA. In 1899, he was working at 130 Gold St. and in 1900 and 1901 at 65 Green St., Worcester, MA. In 1899 to 1901, he lived at 43 Orient St., Worcester, MA In 1908, he was living at 133 Green St., Worcester, MA, along with Meyer B. Miller. In 1911, he and Myer B. Miller are noted to have removed from Worcester, MA, to New York City. | Melnkov, Jacob (I2699)
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517 | In 1900, she was a student and was living at 8 Burt St., Worcester, MA, with her parents Benjamin and Ethel, her brothers Abraham W., Jacob, and Max, and her sister Annie Sapiro. On 18 Apr 1910, she was living with her parents Benjamin & Ethel Sapiro, her sister Anna, and her brother Maxwell E. Sapiro at 37 Providence St. (next door to Mayer Miller & his family). | Sapiro, Rose D. (I5097)
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518 | In 1908, he was a salesman at 88 Winter St., Worcester, MA, and living at 127 Washington St. In 1918, he was living with his father-in-law Benjamin Sapiro at 37 Providence St., Worcester, MA. In 1930, he was living with his wife Rose D. and his sons Samuel L. & Bernard Arnold, as well as his mother-in-law Alice E. Sapiro, at 148 Elm St., Worcester, MA. | Arnold, Jacob “Jack” (I5098)
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519 | In 1930, William was 35 years old and lived with his wife Laura (who was 19 years older than him), her two sons from a previous marriage (George and Arthur Denny, who were also in their thirties), and Laura’s two sisters (Mabel and Genevieve Dwyer). | Bonnett, William (I4782)
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520 | In 1941 lived at 1902 E 18th St Brooklyn NY, tailor shop at 2079 E 16th St Brooklyn 1920 census lived in Bronx with Harry & Rose Katz (his sister and brother in law) gravestone says 1891but WW2 draft, printing revised on 4-1-42, card says 1890 and age 51 (he would not have had his birthday upon completing the card. WW1 draft card hard to read but maybe signed in June 1916. 1920 and 1930 census deduction results in 1890. Gravestone says 1891. ?Birth date on gravestone is 12/8/1891 | Dickstein, Harry (I4888)
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521 | In childbirth | Heilbrun, Rebecca (I3956)
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522 | In concentration camp at Transnistria | Surkis, Michael (I172)
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523 | In concentration camp at Transnistria | Surkis, Sarah (I2667)
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524 | In concentration camp at Transnistria | Surkis, Ruchel (I2668)
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525 | In concentration camp at Transnistria | Surkis, Pearl (Pepi) (I2669)
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526 | In concentration camp at Transnistria | Surkis, Leah (I2670)
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527 | In concentration camp at Transnistria | Surkis, Menachem (I2671)
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528 | In New York (with brother Sigmund and parents) on the 1860 census. Occupation listed there as “segar maker” (cigar maker?). | Hexter, Isaac (I306)
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529 | Information from a letter from Sara Kaplan (Haya’s daughter), in which she states that her grandmother was “Gotke”. Not sure if Haya Treszczanski was her maiden name or (more likely) her married name. Not sure if the Gotke referred to in the letter was the Gotke in our family tree. | Treszczanski, Haya (I781)
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530 | Institutionalized, children brought up by her sister Eva | Bloom, Anna (I3167)
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531 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Luwisch, Helene (I4928)
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532 | Introduced Morris Rosen and Sarah Meretsky “When we left our home in Olinka, Russia, my uncle Hershel Rogozinsky, his wife and some eight or ten children moved in with furniture and smithy equipment in our home, with our grandfather Yonkel Dovid Rogozinsky”. | Rogozinsky, Hersch (I822)
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533 | Invented shatterproof glass which led to the development of bulletproof glass. Had glass factory (Bartelstone Glass) on Long Island and the Bronx, used to put glass on railroad tracks. Had no patent, invited Pittsburgh Glass to see it and they took the invention and copied it. | Bartelstone, Louis (I3688)
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534 | Israelite Hospital of the Orthodox Jewish Synagogue Adass Jisroel in Berlin-Mitte, Elsasser Str. 85 | Hoxter, Levi (I5927)
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535 | Jacob departed from Hamburg, Germany on 1/26/1892 on the ship “Weimar” under the English flag and the command of Captain Parker. Although this ship apparently sailed to America, Jacob changed ships in Glasgow, Scotland and continued on to New York on the “Ethiopia”, arriving on 2/11/1892. | Friesner, Jankel (Jacob) (I3723)
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536 | Jesibath Rabbi Jacob Joseph 165 Henry Street, Lower East Side, Manhattan, New York 1914 Posted by Andrew Seth Yeshiva where Rabbi Mordechai Max Milevski taught First cousins with wife Max lived in West Hoboken, NJ in July, 1910 when Rivke arrived on the ship Cincinnati. | Milevsky, Mordechai Max (I1478)
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537 | Jesuit | Furmanik, Ludwik (I6022)
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538 | Jewish cemetery in Berlin-Weißensee (Field A, Dept. VI, Series 16, Grave No. 70192) | Hoxter, Levi (I5927)
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539 | Jewish Exponent obit, 1911 | Eslinger, Esther (I1074)
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540 | Jewish Gen entry has “deported to Poland” as a note, but she is not in the Yad Vashem database. | Braunschweiger, Regina (I1973)
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541 | Jewish name Simeon, ?AKA Sigmund, AKA Seaman In New York at 1860 Census with parents and brother Isaac, occupation listed there as “apprentice segar maker” (cigar maker?) Musician (Private) in 46th Virginia infantry,Company A, Confederate army “Wise’s brigade”, enlisted 2/5/1862, 2/21/1862, 3/12/1862 - recruiter Lt. Sanxay (Brother Joseph in Union Army) 1850: St. Mary’s county, MD, Age 5 1860: Clerk for Levi Hexter (?relation) in Richmond VA, boarded, East Holzinger Street 11/14/64: Camp Dismal, SC 111/14/63: Camp Bismark 12/5/63: Charleston, SC 4/15/1865- transport of paroled POWs from Richmond to Baltimore (Ft. McHenry 1867-1868: 380 Pennsylvania Ave (corner 3rd), Washington, DC, Clothing Business | Hexter, Simon (Simeon) (I307)
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542 | Joan from Joseph feinstein “My mom, who went to Erasmus Hall HS and Brooklyn College had wanted to be a doctor since she was like 8, so in the early 1960s she took premed courses while a teacher at PS110 in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. She was accepted to Meharry in Nashville and wait listed in Louisville. When I was 1.5 in 1966, we left Brooklyn and drove to Nashville. Within a few days of arriving, a spot opened in Louisville, in which the class schedule would enable her to spend more time with me. (She was 32). So, we moved to Louisville.” “Dr. Leah Joan Dickstein, 85, former president of the American Medical Women’s Association (AMWA), Vice President of the American Psychiatric Association, and Founder and President of the Association of Women Psychiatrists (AWP) passed away after a short illness on December 16, 2019 in Cambridge, MA. Born on August 17, 1934, in Brooklyn, NY, to William David Chernoble, an immigrant from Russia and printing press operator, and Sadie Rebecca Engelman, a teacher, she developed an early interest in mental health as she helped care for her own mother who struggled with depression, and her younger sister Renee, during her father’s service in the Navy during World War II, which included almost three years without any communication. Leah graduated at 16 from Erasmus Hall High School. At Brooklyn College, she was told she had no scientific ability and should not consider attending medical school. Instead, Leah earned MA in teaching. She married Herbert Dickstein, another Brooklyn native, in 1955, and helped him complete medical school in Ghent, Belgium, which he attended due to restrictive quotas on Jews in U.S. medical schools. When they returned to the U.S., Leah spent seven years as a sixth-grade teacher at PS 110 in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, NY and had her first son, Stuart. It was then Herbert’s turn to help realize Leah’s dream of becoming a physician, as Leah completed premedical courses at Queens College, NY. The family moved to Louisville because Leah was accepted at the University of Louisville School of Medicine. Leah graduated in 1970 as one of only six women in a class of over 120. “Dr. D” as she became known to her patients and students then spent the next 37 years in Louisville as a Psychiatrist, Professor, and Administrator at the medical school, where she treated, mentored, and befriended thousands of medical students, medical residents, faculty, staff, and others. She served as Associate Dean of Faculty and Student Advocacy, Associate Dean for Student Affairs, and Director of the Division of Attitudinal and Behavioral Medicine and Arts in Medicine Program. Decades of medical school graduates will remember her as the Co-founder and Director of the Health Awareness Workshop, an innovative weeklong orientation event that sought to develop physician physical and mental health before it was en vogue. She had two more sons, Daniel and Steven, and the entire family helped in Dr. D’s nationally recognized program that taught generations of future physicians how to maintain their humanity during their careers. As a clinician, Dr. D was available day or night, giving out the family’s home number to all patients in an era when there were no cell phones. Leah was a regional and national leader, including the above roles. She loved attending professional meetings nationally and worldwide, developing a large cadre of physician women leaders whom she helped break the “Lexan ceiling”—a term coined by her husband, Herbert, to describe the barriers that women faced which were even harder than glass. She also helped mentor men, too, as she felt that “men of good conscience”—were essential to stand up for what was right, regardless of if it was to advocate for women or for men. A highlight of her travels was when she decided during the First International Conference on Women’s Health in Shanghai that those who were interested should be able to participate in a Passover Seder – which she led in a government office that she was told by her Chinese hosts was, at one time, a synagogue. For several decades beginning in the 1980s, she became a researcher of The Holocaust, which lead her to lecture, write, and conduct video interviews of survivors, both Jewish and Catholic, in the US, Europe, and Israel. In all of these professional adventures, her family was by her side, serving as cameramen or schleppers. She served on many local boards, including Adath Jeshurun, JFVS, the JCRC Yom HaShoah Commemoration, U of L Hillel, U of L Medical School Alumni Association, St. Francis School, and Planned Parenthood. She was a member of the American, and Kentucky Medical Associations, Greater Louisville Medical Society, and Friends of the Kornhauser Library. Survivors include her husband of 64 years, sons Stuart (Dr. Nancy Shapiro) of Cambridge, MA, Dr. Daniel (Dr. Elizabeth Jacobs) of Barrington, RI, and Dr. Steven (Dr. Elissa Nelson) of White Plains, NY, and adored grandchildren Zev, Gefen, Jacob, Yona, Maddie, and Hannah. Funeral: Friday, 10am, at Cedar Park and Beth El Cemeteries, 735 Forest Ave, Paramus, NJ. In lieu of flowers, expressions of sympathy may be made in Leah’s memory to the Association of Women Psychiatrists, associationofwomenpsychiatrists.com , PO Box 570218, Dallas, TX 75357-0218.” | Chernoble, Leah Joan (I4890)
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543 | Joint ceremony with Bertha’s sister Lillian | Family: Morris Meyers / Bertha Ephriam (F782)
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544 | Joint ceremony with Lillian’s sister Bertha | Family: Sigmund Silverberg / Lillian Ephriam (F262)
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545 | Joyce was a nickname for Martha. | Martha (I997)
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546 | Jumped out of window at his in-laws home | Diamant, Rudolph Israel (I153)
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547 | Karl moved to Gunzenhausen in 1920, purchasing the house at Bahnhofstrasse 35 for 32,500 RM from Siegfried Wertheimer (who dealt in building material business, and had purchased the 1893 house from its original owner, Johann Huber in 1906). Forced to leave Gunzenhausen for Munich due to rise of Nazism and anti-semitism in 1935. New practice opened at Tierschstrasse 19. The house in Gunzenhausen was empty until purchased by veterinarian Georg Wagner on 8/4/1936 for 17,000 RM. Karl was taken to the concentration camp at Dachau on 11/9/1938 but was released and made it to England, and then to the USA. In 1948, he documented that the sale of the house had been free of duress, and that he had no claim on it from its then owner, Dr. Wagner. | Rothschild, Karl (I1692)
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548 | Kate had postpartum hemorrhage, saved by direct blood transfusion. Dr. Charles Richardson, Closter, NJ | Bloom, Ruth Miriam (I146)
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549 | Killed as a young child (struck by a trolley?) | Bloom, Charles (I164)
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550 | Killed by German SS during WWII (civilian, merchant, had been involved in uprisings) | Plocienniczak, Wincenty (I2682)
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