Searching for family members named SPERBER
#names
Hannah Sperber
For:
Philip Sperber Chaim Sperber Halina Horowicz Sperber Henry Sperber Irka Sperber Nathan Sperber Ingeborg Sperber David Sperber Rosa Sperber Searched for by: Hannah Sperber
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ELBOGEN Jeanette and Karl, Vienna to Canada
#austria-czech
#canada
tfanders@...
Jeannette Eugenie Lichtenstein was born in Vienna on 16 Aug 1871. When she was 18, she married Julius Elbogen (born 27 Jul 1858 in Prague CZ) in the Stadttempel Wien on 20 May 1890. Julius was 32 years old. They had either 3 or 4 children: Margarete (b 1891), Elsa (b 1892), Hans (b 1894) and possibly Karl (b 1897).
At some point before he died on 18 Jun 1921, Jeannette and Julius divorced and she re-married Alfred Landon, a Canadian whom, I believe, she met in Vienna. They immigrated to Canada where their only child Kirk Alfred Landon was born in Toronto on 20 Oct 1897.
I cannot find any death information about Jeannette (Jenny) Landon. She and her husband, Alfred, may have moved to the U.S. from Canada. I can find no information about her husband Alfred Landon. Also confusing is the possible presence of a fourth child from the first marriage, Karl Elbogen. In my files, he was born on 20 Oct 1897 the same day as his step brother Kirk Alfred Landon was born so there must be an error here.
My questions: 1) Any information about divorce/re-marriage residence and death information for Jeannette Lichtenstein Elbogen Landon. 2) Any information about her second husband, Alfred Landon, and 3) Any information about the possible 4th child of the Lichtenstein-Elbogen union, Karl.
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Re: New York City 1940's Street a View Old City Tax Photos
#announcements
#general
#photographs
#usa
Sheldon Clare
Please send me the photos. I was born and brought up in NYC. Thank you.
Sheldon Clare clare15905@...
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Re: legal name change in New York.
#general
ewkent@...
Thanks for that quotation and information, Mr. Hershman -- concerning antisemitism in the 1940s (although the fact remains that my grandfather had 2 brothers (1 of whom I met decades later -- after I was born in 1961) who never changed their family name) in he United States.
I didn't mention earlier a quite-interesting book by a researcher named Kirsten Fermaglich (published in 2018) about (mostly) American Jews and name changing in the 20th century (as I seem to recall from the book, there may well have been a peak in the interwar years or in the 1940s; there was a decline in my lifetime) -- largely based on research into court records in New York City entitled A Rosenberg by Any Other Name: A History of Jewish Name Changing in America. (The book does tell of continuing employment and college-admissions discrimination in the 1940s -- before things changed for the better in this country.) Ethan W. Kent New York City.
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Announcing the publication of the Memorial Book of Wierzbnik-Starachowitz, Poland
#poland
Joel Alpert
The Yizkor-Books-In-Print Project of JewishGen is proud to announce
the publication of its102nd title, Wierzbnik-Starachowitz; a Memorial Book Original Yizkor Book in Yiddish and Hebew edited by: Mark Schutzman Wierzbnik-Starachowitz Societies in Israel and the Diaspora, Published in Tel Aviv, 1973 Layout: Jonathan Wind Cover Design: Nina Schwartz Name Indexing: Bena Shklyanoy Hard Cover, 11 inches by 8.5 Inches, 676 pages with illustrations and photographs. List price: $65.95, available from JewishGen for $37 For more information go to: https://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/ybip/YBIP_Wierzbnik.html Alternate names: Wierzbnik [Pol], Vierzhbinik [Yid], Vyerzhbnik [Rus], Wierzbnik-Starachowice [Pol, 1939-1952], Starachowice, Starakhovits, Strachovitza, Verzhbnik, Wierzbnik Starachow, Verzhbnik Starakhov, Vyerzbnik, Vyerzhbanik Wierzbnik, Poland is located at 51°03' N, 21°05' E, 25 miles S of Radom, 24 miles NE of Kielce, 11 miles SW of Ilza. Since 1952, Wierzbnik is part of Starachowice Nearby Jewish Communities: Wachock 3 miles WNW Bodzentyn 9 miles SW Skarzysko-Kamienna 9 miles WNW Ilza 11 miles NE Suchedniow 11 miles W Kunow 11 miles SE Wasniow 12 miles SSE Nowa Slupia 13 miles S Wierzbica 14 miles N Jastrzab 15 miles NNW Krajno 15 miles SW Ostrowiec Swietokrzyski 16 miles ESE Szydlowiec 16 miles NW Sienno 17 miles E Denkow 17 miles ESE Lagow 18 miles S Skaryszew 20 miles NNE Daleszyce 20 miles SW Researchers and descendants of the town will want to have this book. The Yizkor-Books-In-Print Project now has more than 100 titles available. To see all the books, go to: http://www.jewishgen.org/Yizkor/ybip.html We hope you find this of interest for you and your family in discovering the history of your ancestors. This would make a birthday gift for a loved one. Joel Alpert, Coordinator of the Yizkor-Books-In-Print Project-
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Tammy
Hello Genners, Welcome to the Ellis Island Passenger and Ship Search database. Our 65 million records cover passengers arriving to the Port of New York from 1820 to 1957. This service will soon migrate to the Foundation’s new website. In the meanwhile, the database will remain active and free for all to use. If you have questions please email ContactUs@...."
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Re: Indexing URLs
#general
Sherri Bobish
"By any chance has someone been compiling such a list, and if so, where can people find it?"
One such page for genealogy resources is Cyndi's List.Yale, https://www.cyndislist.com/us/ Regards, Sherri Bobish
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Re: U.S. Appeals Court Rules Spanish Museum May Keep Nazi Looted Art
#announcements
#holocaust
Kate Haas
I find this decision to be incorrect. We had a family member, Lea Bondi Jaray, who owned an art gallery in Vienna in 1938. She and her husband decided to leave for London and bought tickets to take a train to Calais, then London. A Nazi collaborator came to her gallery and looked over her paintings. He said, “You do want to be able to get on your train tomorrow, right? I really like this piece by Egon Schiele - a portrait called “Wally”. I’m sure you would like to give it to me.” He offered her a couple of Marks for it and walked out with it under his arm. Long story short, after the war, the picture ended up in the Belvedere Art Museum in Vienna. Mrs. Jaray came from England numerous times to try and reclaim her painting to no avail. She died and eventually the painting came with an exhibit to MOMA. At the urging of the Issac-Bondi family, Senator Domenico of NY had the painting seized by the US Customs agency as looted art, and the family began a law suit. Eventually, at the family’s request the painting was returned to the Belvedere Museum upon the payment of $19 million to the family. There is a plaque beneath the painting indicating this. As I recall, the legal argument was the threat of being unable to emigrate unless the painting was sold to the Nazi for a few sou. The issue around the Spanish Museum painting sounds very similar. This family’s lawyers should look into the Bondi-Jaray case, decided in New York State.
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Re: Marienthal...what is it?
#general
Sherri Bobish
Cheri, There is a town in Slovakia that was called Marienthal in German. Known today as Marianka. However, this town is a 5 hour drive away from Bardejov. Regards, Sherri Bobish
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Re: How to correct information in Jewishgen Databases
#records
Selma Sheridan
The JewishGen database indexes do not match / reflect two of my original family documents. How can I contact the database department about this?
Selma Sheridan Oswego NY
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Re: U.S. Appeals Court Rules Spanish Museum May Keep Nazi Looted Art
#announcements
#holocaust
pweston@...
A question please? Is there any validity is suggesting that the original thief, the Nazi government and their official who extorted the painting from the owner, can be held responsible for the value of the painting and reimburse the current owner having the painting revert to the original owner?
pweston@...
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Re: Searching Hans Herbert REICH, Montevideo
#general
tedepand@...
I doubt this will help you, but my father in law was Herbert Robert Reich and was born in Chicago. His father who immigrated from Vienna was Max Reibschied, and changed his name to Reich after arriving in the US. When we went looking for relatives in Europe, we found that almost all the Reibschieds died at Auschwitz.
Ted Epand
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Re: I Want My Trees To Outlive Me
#general
mab@...
Information on Genealogies on Family Search is available at:
https://www.familysearch.org/search/family-trees - Miriam Baker
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Re: New York City 1940's Street a View Old City Tax Photos
#announcements
#general
#photographs
#usa
Jx. Gx.
Subj: New York City 1940's Street a View Old City Tax Photos
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Re: Searching Hamburg lists for family groups
#records
Sherri Bobish
Alan, Have you found any naturalization papers for this family? What are the names (as you know them) of the original immigrants? Regards, Sherri Bobish
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Re: Kudos Re: Searching Hamburg lists for family groups
#records
Barbara Mannlein <bsmannlein@...>
Google “hamburg lists”.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Barbara Stern Mannlein Tucson, AZ
On Aug 28, 2020, at 7:01 AM, eej787@... wrote:
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Indexing URLs
#general
YaleZuss@...
I have noticed over the months I've read this blog that contributors have mentioned a great many sites that offer particular kinds of data. It seems to me that it would be really helpful to collect these sites and index them for what they contain and the country/region/locale they cover so researchers could consult the list for their needs.
By any chance has someone been compiling such a list, and if so, where can people find it?
Yale Zussman
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Re: Ancestry Promises Holocaust Records Will Be Free
#announcements
#holocaust
Paul Silverstone
The Arolsen records as found at the US Holocaust Museum contain some surprising information unrelated to Germany.
I found passenger lists of Jews traveling from Shanghai to Israel after the war. Paul Silverstone
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I first would like to thank Miriam Bulwar David-Hay for her detailed commentary
on the problems relating to errata in databases.
I also want to use this opportunity to clarify the original subject line on this thread.
There are some databases that can be searched via JewishGen that are made
available by independent organizations among. This includes, Jewish Records
Indexing - Poland (JRI-Poland.org).
Therefore the original subject line on this thread might have been more accurately
titled as it now appears above. That is, "How to correct information in databases
displayed on JewishGen."
Miriam has shared some very important observations from her experience. That is:
"indexers are SUPPOSED to transcribe them exactly as they are written.
If there is an obvious error or discrepancy in a record" and that "many
indexers will add a note about it."
Over the years, JRI-Poland has discovered a multitude of errors/conflicts that can
creep into records such as - but certainly not limited to:
1. Names data entered from index pages vary from the actual record.
These are corrected as JRI-Poland supplements the original index as part of
the Phase 3 initiative to fully extract vital records. This article, in part, describes
both the Phase 3 initiative and other aspects of JRI-Poland activity).
2. Records (Akt numbers and associated names) missing from index pages.
3. Surnames spelled differently in some records and are not sound alike matches.
Example: FRYMAN and FRYDMAN. This may be an error but in other cases,
an indication that a family used both names or simply the responsible registrar
varied the name for unknown reasons. We do not change the name but we
make an appropriate notation in the record entry.
4. Typographical errors (Information incorrectly data entered by volunteers or
professionals).
While making individual corrections to our online data currently requires removing
and replacing the entire file from our database, this will be changing under the
Next Generation website and data management system. ("NextGen" was the
subject of the JRI-Poland presentation at the IAJGS International Conference on
Jewish Genealogy held virtually earlier this month.) At that time, single corrections
Stanley Diamond, M.S.M.
Executive Director, Jewish Records Indexing - Poland, Inc.
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Re: I Want My Trees To Outlive Me
#general
RichardWerbin
Rebba Solomon,
At this time, Ancestry.com does not require a subscription to have a family tree. To access the tree, a person need to have a login. Their guest login option is free. I set up a tree in this fashion for a friend who does not have any ancestry subscription. She can login and edit the tree. They also have good privacy settings. But, if you use those, people will need an explicit invitation from you to access the tree. They do require a subscription for data search. Richard Werbin
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