My paternal grandmother, Hortense Kesner was the first daughter of Harry George Kesner and Estelle Byk. She was born in New York on February 22, 1907.<!–[if supportFields]>xe “New York:Brooklyn ” \f B<![endif]–><!–[if supportFields]><![endif]–> Her sister, Constance, was born in 1911. The date on the back of this photo says ” Feb. 22, 1907″ which was […]
<!–[if supportFields]>xe “SPIEGEL:Josef (b. 1803) ” \f A<![endif]–><!–[if supportFields]><![endif]–><!–[if supportFields]>xe “Poland:Galetia ” \f B<![endif]–><!–[if supportFields]><![endif]–>Josef Spiegel was born on February 2, 1803 in what was then Galacia.<!–[if supportFields]>xe “Jassy-Moldova- Romania ” \f B<![endif]–><!–[if supportFields]><![endif]–> His generation is as far back as I have gotten on my mother’s maternal line. I need to study history and geography […]
My second great-grandmother, on my father’s side, Francis (Fannie) Woolfwas born on January 14, 1862 in New York to Barnett Woolf and the former Kate Cohen. Both her parents came to the United States from England. In 1870, Fannie was living in Brooklyn with her parents and 6 siblings. 1870 US Cenus I know nothing about […]
In May of 1938, my family changed forever. I realize that we were blessed that no one in my mother’s immediate family was murdered. We fared so much better than millions of others. I get that. While ours is not a story of horrifying proportions, it still is worthy of being told. It should never […]
Here is my 5th post for 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks, a challenge posed by Amy Johnson Crow. I love this undated picture! I don’t know a lot about my Aunt Claire. I remember her as glamorous and funny. Her accent was thicker than her sister’s (my grandmother) and she always appeared so fashionable to me – […]
Here is my 4th post for 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks, a challenge posed by Amy Johnson Crow. Last week, I got one of those phone calls. The kind where you look at the caller ID and know your family has just gotten a little bit smaller. John as a young child John Sved was my mother’s […]
Here is my third post for 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks, a challenge posed by Amy Johnson Crow. Ralph would be my first cousin – twice removed. Our common ancestors are EmanuelWeiss and Theresia Passauer, my second-great-grandparents. Ralph Oppenheim was born on 13 Jan 1896 in New York. Portion of Ralph’s Birth Certificate When Ralph was born, his […]
Here is my second post for 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks, a challenge posed by Amy Johnson Crow.Rosa would be my first cousin – twice removed. Our common ancestor is Joseph Spiegel, Rosa’s grandfather and my second great-grandfather.<!–[if supportFields]>xe “MARCOVICI:Rosa (b. 1900) ” \f A<![endif]–><!–[if supportFields]><![endif]–><!–[if supportFields]>xe “Jassy-Moldova- Romania ” \f B<![endif]–><!–[if supportFields]><![endif]–>Rosa Marcovici was […]
Thanks to Amy Johnson Crow and her challenge to blog about 52 ancestors in 52 weeks, I have spent the last few hours reading blogs of some of the participants. (I did finish the laundry and the ironing, but my students might not be happy tomorrow- didn’t review any of their projects!)I’ve now subscribed to/followed […]
I have amended this post to reflect the new challenge presented by Amy Johnson Crow on her blog: http://www.nostorytoosmall.com/posts/challenge-52-ancestors-in-52-weeks/ Her challenge is to blog about one ancestor each week for the entire year. The challenge fits in quite well with my Birthday Blog posts and will encourage me to “fill-in” missing weeks each month. BTW […]