... information you should
or want to ... or need to .... know
Some graphics are
from other sites without
permission but with a link to
the site
This Genealogy page is a mish-mash of information that
doesn't seem to fit properly within the scope of the other
pages, or is so general, that I have chosen to place the
information and/or links here. You should be able to
learn a lot from this page - regardless of whether you are a
newbie or an experienced genealogist. But no matter
how research is done, the experts warn beginners to make
sure the sources they use are accurate one. It's a lot
of work, reconstructing a family tree out of bits and pieces
from scattered sources. But all it takes is that one
special find to get you hooked.
"If you are going to successfully
pan for gold, you will have to sift a lot of sand!"
Questionnaire Form
(How to write to a possible relative)
People
(Information about Jewish people)

My father's birthplace home in Talnoye, Ukraine ... now
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Natenson whom we met in Talnoye in
August, 1994
Sharing information has a lot to do
with the many successes individual genealogists have enjoyed
over these past years.
Helping you find good information easily on the Internet,
is the main purpose of this site.
Genealogy has become the fastest
growing hobby in the 1980s and 90s ... even more so in the
twenty first century. Genealogy is the collection of
names, dates and progeny and it can be fascinating enough,
but most people study it for family history; the stories and
personalities behind the facts. Our children and
grandchildren should know and remember who the members of
their past extended family were and are. They should
know who is who in our extended family and the data
pertaining to our ancestors should be searched, recorded and
preserved for future generations to come after we are long
forgotten.
Now, through the miracle of computers
and the internet, you can check out the thousands of sources
of information pertaining to your special needs, in order to
search for your ancestors, without going through the many
years of searching the thousands of web sites on your own.
Try, for example this site:
http://www.1800USSEARCH.com
There is a nominal charge to use this
site, but it is a lot cheaper and faster then traveling the
world to find the information or writing many letters and
spending hours on the phone. The internet is there to
help you get closer to the solution you are looking to
achieve.
Another superb source of information
to find a person is:
http://www.whowhere.com
There are at least 10,826 links
available that deal with genealogy at
http://www.bottomlinesecrets.com/veritysearch/v_search_
results.cfm
As interest in our ancestors has increased many times over,
(mainly due to Alex Haley's Roots, and the advent of
JewishGen
http://www.jewishgen.org
and an article in Time Magazine
http://cgi.pathfinder.com/time/magazine/articles/
0,3266,22974,00.html
Various genealogical sources have
emerged on the web. Some of them are especially
directed to those who have Jewish roots, but there are still
many that, unless actually searched, will never be
discovered to contain important Jewish genealogical
information. The breadth of the material available is
enormous, and even the casual researcher can be overwhelmed.
That's where this web site comes in to play. Enjoy!
There are many genealogical lists
currently available to help research a heritage tracing it
back to various European and Mediterranean countries, but
none that is specifically designed to offer to display most
of the important Jewish informational web sites and
databases right from your friendly home computer.
When you think about it, probably one
of the main reasons for the longevity of the Jewish people,
is the fact that it has treasured and preserved the records
of its early history. But what of the history
hereafter? Books have been written and libraries have
been created, but much historical material has been
destroyed in wars, or simply vanished due to indifference
and neglect "History of the Jewish people" authored by
Eli Birnbaum. The sisiographies and major events in
Jewish life
http://www.jewishhistory.org.il/today.htm
In time, and with your cooperation, we
should be able to provide the most comprehensive Jewish
genealogical informational web site ... ever! The
breadth of the material surfacing is enormous, and even the
casual visitor is overwhelmed. Though the Nazis tried
so desperately to annihilate our people, they exercised
traditional
German efficiency in seeking to rescue and preserve the
written records of the very communities they were attempting
to destroy. Remember, there were 9,797,000 Jews living
in continental Europe in 1941!
Give these Genealogical sites a try:
http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/genealogy
http://www.genealogytoolbox.com/
http://www.rootsweb.com/roots-l/
http://www.genserv.com/
http://www.familylink.com
Researchers should look for
rescued/plundered European records at
http://www.research.co.il/moscow.html
You may find something of relevance
to the area you are specifically researching i.e. Berlin,
Vienna, Paris, Poland, Belgium etc. The Moscow Archive
apparently has records which, in many cases has been
recently returned to
Vienna and other cities from where they were
plundered from during WW II.
|
"The Kingdom
of Poland was owned by France at the beginning of
the 19th century, and after Napoleon it was owned by Russia.
Then it was stable for 100 years, roughly. Is 100 years a long
time?
When our ancestors talked about the 'old country' when
they were in the US, of course, they were talking about
the time they knew. My gr-grandmother was from (the duchy of)
Nassau, so you know she came over before 1871 when
Germany was formed - and that is important to know (except
she came in the mid-50's, which I know from other things).
Places also varied by other things than time. Many of our
ancestors were Lithuanian, if you asked them, not because
they came from a nation of Lithuania, but because one
tradition of Judaism is Lithuanian. So don't think all
Lithuanian Jews came between the World Wars from the
nation of Lithuania - or since the fall of the Soviet
Union.
And of course, some people were from Germany because that
was 'better' than being from Poland which was 'better'
than being from Russia - regardless of where they were
from in that area. (You may fill in whatever your family felt
the 'better' and 'worse' origins were). From a posting by
Sally Bruckheimer |
Should
you be curious or have a need to know what a domain address is, you can
learn what and who owns the site
http://www.networksolutions.com/cgi-bin/whois/whois
|
If you are a 'Newbie'
(one who is just
starting your research
of your family tree,
then I haven't forgotten
you. Just scroll down to
the end of this page
and you'll find some
helpful tips. Don't be
afraid. We all had to
start someplace!
There is also a
'Novice'
page that is under
development.
Someone once stated
that 'statistics are
like a bikini: what they
reveal is suggestive,
but what they conceal is
vital.' |
General
Jewish Genealogy
Information
About Judaism
The starting place for exploring Judaism focusing on
Jewish religion and culture
http://www.judaism.about.com
A wealth of information
http://shamash.org/trb/judaism.html
Orthodox
This is a generic term of fairly recent time describing many
different groups that share certain conditional principles
and practices. Chasidics was founded in the 18th century by
Ukrainian born Rabbi Israel ben Eliezer, the Ba'al
Shem Tov (Master of the Good Name). This umbrella
term includes Blaner, Bobov, Bostoner, Breslov, Gerer,
Lubavitch (Chabad), Munkacz, Puppa, Rimnitz, Satmar
and Vizhnitz. Each has a different approach and
attitude toward Zionism. The Breslov Chassidim
web site
http://www.breslov.com/en/index.php?title=Breslov_on_the_Internet
Chassidus Online
http://www.chassidusonline.com/
Conservative
The conservative congregations believes that the Torah
and Talmud are of divine origin, and Halacha must be
followed, however they also believe that revelation
continues to take place as each generation of Jews discover
and responds to God's word. National organizations
represented include: Rabbinical Assembly; Jewish Theological
Seminary; United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism; United
Synagogue Youth.
Reform
Begun in the 19th century in Germany, this group
believes that the written and oral laws are divinely
inspired, but written by humans and therefore observance is
a matter of informed individual choice. National
organizations representing the Reform Movement include:
Union for Reform Judaism; Hebrew Union College; Jewish
Institute of Religion; Central conference of American
Rabbis; National Federation of Temple Youth.
Reconstructionist
This was originally an offshoot of the Conservative
movement. It is based on the thought of Rabbi Mordecai
Kaplan who defined Judaism as "an evolving, religious
civilization. National organizations include: Jewish
Reconstructionist Federation; Reconstructionist Rabbinical
College; Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association.
Traditional
This group is also referred to as Conservadox and is also an
offshoot of Conservatism and shares the Orthodox perspective
on Torah and Halacha, but is somewhat more lenient in
interpretation. National organization: Union for
Traditional Judaism.
Renewal
This is a transdenominational movement based on Judaism'
prophetic and mystical traditions and Judaism's perpetual
process of renewal. National organization: ALEPH:
Alliance for Jewish Renewal.
Secular/Humanistic
Based on Judaism's non-theistic philosophy views Judaism
as the historical experience and culture of the Jewish
people. It was founded in the 1960s. National
organization: Society for Humanistic Judaism.
The information above was obtained from the Cleveland
Jewish News and written by Beth Friedman-Romell
Acronym Finder
A searchable database of 108,300
acronyms/abbreviations and their meanings
http://mtnds.com/af/
Adoption Information
Sites
http://www.faqs.org/faqs/genealogy/
Louise Wise Services
(formerly The Free Synagogue Child Adoption Committee)
established in 1916, is probably the most important Jewish
Adoption Agency in the world. It had a reputation
"fortress" against release of identifying information to
adult adoptee. This agency will help arrange reunions
if all 3 parties agree (Natural Parent; Adoptive Parent;
and Adult Adoptee)
Louise Wise Services
PO Box 999
Tenafly, NJ 07670
Phone: (201) 566 2065
Email:
info@louisewise.org
http://www.louisewise.org
For further adoption information, look
at Marge Spears-Soloff's web page
http://www.HNOH.com
Adoption
http://www.cyndislist.com/myths.htm
Books
"Adoption and the Jewish Family"
Authored by Shelley Kapnek Rosenberg
AdoptionNet
Provides a listing of British resources specializing in
adoption search
http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/adoption-net.co.uk
AFN = Ancestral File
Number
Found while searching LDS microfilms.
This number will help you find the person who submitted the
information your are interested in.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_Ancestral_File
Aleph Institute
Serving the inmate and military
population
http://www.aleph-institute.org
Allen County Public
Library
Fort Wayne, Historical Genealogy
Department has the second largest genealogy collection in
the U.S. Contact Sue Kaufman, the Librarian
Historical Genealogy Department
Allen County Public Library
Box 2270
900 Webster Street
Fort Wayne, IN 46815
http://www.acpl.lib.in.us/
American History &
Genealogy Project
An unincorporated
not-for-profit network of independent sites devoted to
History & Genealogy. Divided up by "States"; "Canada";
"Surnames" and more.
http://www.ahgp.org/
American Jew
The Jewish Week
http://www.thejewishweek.com
American Jewish
Archives
http://www.huc.edu/aja/
American Jewish
Congress
http://www.ajcongress.org
American Jewish Historical Society
15 West 16th Street
New York, NY 10011
Phone: 917 606 8200
Fax: 917 606 8201
Links to their
Library and Archives, Photographs, Historical Organizations,
Genealogical Societies and more
http://www.cjh.org
This site offers
improved searching capabilities, five sets of revolving
photographs, and lots more added features besides a list of
the many Jewish communities around the world, served by a
genealogy society with their addresses.
The AJHS is the world's
leading institution for the preservation of original
materials on Jewish life and culture in the Americas.
They are located at
160 Herrick Road
Newton Centre, Massachusetts 02459
The Society holds
more than 40 million manuscripts, 40,000 books and thousands
of newspapers, magazines, paintings, photographs and other
artifacts that document the growth and accomplishments of
American Jewry. Information about their holdings can be
found
http://jewishgen.org/databases/ajhs.htm
Jewish
Historical Societies archives
http://www.ajhs.org/reference/archives.cfm
AMJ History
offers an on-line Discussion Group. To subscribe,
send an email to
listserv@web03.jh.org
with the following command in the body of the text:
SUBSCRIBE AMJHISTORY (Leave the Subject line blank)
American Jewish History
(Temple University)
The site is user
friendly and offers bibliographic material related to
American Jewish history as well as links to other American
history and Jewish web sites. It is also known as "The
Feinstein Center for American Jewish History". It opened
to the public in October 2000, and is one of the great
public Jewish historical and cultural institutions in the
world.
http://www.temple.edu/feinsteinctr
American Jewish Yearbooks
The American Jewish
Year Books are a tremendous resource for your genealogical
research. The Year Book has death notices or a Necrology of
well-known personalities which are helpful in filling in
personal information on them. For instance, the Year
Book for 5664 (August 26, 1903 - August 12, 1904) is found
at the following link:
http://www.ajcarchives.org/main.php
?GroupingId=40
1918 Edition
A copy is located at the JGS Palm Beach County Judaic
Library and at the Florida Atlantic University in Boca
Raton, Florida; the 1919 Edition is at the Beerman
Library, Dayton Jewish Center, Dayton, Ohio; the
1920 Edition is located at the San Diego JGS, Lawrence
Jewish Center, La Jolla, California.
http://www.richardpressartbooks.com/
shop/press/1003870.html
The
Ancestors of The Eastern European Jews
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashkenazi_Jews
Ancestry.com
Allows you to print out a form letter
requesting a Social Security file. In addition, they
offer over 700 databases including Vital Records,
Immigration Records, Military Records, Census Records, Court
and Probate Records. This commercial site allows you
to search over 900 million names ... not necessarily your
ancestors, however
http://www.ancestry.com
Ancestry Daily News Archive
http://www.ancestry.com/learn/library/article.aspx?article=dailynews
Ancient Faces
Military photos (by war, last name
and branch of service) plus a lot more of interest to a
genealogist
http://index.cfm-13842
Anusim
(anousim)
A list is available for those who
know/think/suspect or are interested in Spanish or
Portuguese Jewish people
that were forced to convert under duress but kept Jewish
practices, in secret, to any extent.
http://www.anusimcenter.org/
Archaeology
Lots of site links to archaeology
information around the world
http://www.123world.com/archaeology/index.html
Archive Information
Links to various types of Archives
including Diplomatic, Literature and Art, Military,
Municipal, Museums, National, Parliaments and Political
Parties, Religious Communities, State and Regional and
Universities and Research Institutions Archives
http://www.unesco.org/webworld/portal_archives/pages
/Archives/
Archives Sites
http://www.123world.com/indexnew.html
The National Archives and Records Administration
A government agency charged with preserving historical
records. You should know that the records they retain
are available to the public.
National Archives
201 Varick Street (corner
of and entrance on W. Houston Street)
Manhattan NYC
Phone: 212-401-1620
This site features 1,200 of the 10 billion records held in
the Archive. Start by clicking on a record. You
will also see related records. The records are
pictures and documents
http://www.archives.gov/nae/visit/
Archivists Round
Table
This site discusses how to research
your family, care for photos and old papers; use libraries
and archives; locate missing relatives; interpret and
translate documents and more
http://www.nycarchivists.org/fhf.htm
Area Code Finder
(Includes International Calling Codes)
http://www.refdesk.com
Arenda
Books

Arrendator or lessee system
"The Lords' Jews, Magnate-Jewish Relations in the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth during the 18th Century"
Authored by J. J. Rosman. The book details the development
of the system and focuses on the Sieniawski-Czartoryski
family latifundum which was the largest and best run of the
estates in Poland. The Jews participated as
both lessees and as administrators, with the administrator
function becoming more prevalent in the 18th century..
The Jewish Arenda paid a fixed sum for
the Arenda contract and held the contract for a fixed
duration - five years in the example discussed at
http://www.ukar.org/shest01.shtml
http://www.shtetlinks.jewishgen.org/kolomea/arenda.htm
Ashkenazi
Jews
This was originally a biblical term, "Ashkenaz"
and came to refer first to German lands, then was
applied more loosely to refer to European Jews and their
culture.
Yiddish, a blend of Hebrew and German
is the traditional Ashkenazic vernacular.
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/tcga/ashkenazim
Ask A Librarian
Ask a genealogy question and receive
an answer from this library collaborative effort
http://yyz.clc.cc.il.us/library/questions.cfm
Association of
Jewish Genealogical Societies
A non-profit organization dedicated to
the coordination of the activities of some 60 local Jewish
genealogical societies around the world
http://www.Jewishgen.org/ajgs/
Association of
Professional Genealogists (NACA APG)
Promotes the highest standards of
ethics and professionalism in the genealogical field a the
regional level. Nearly all of our members conduct
research in local repositories such as the National Archives
and Library of Congress, but many have geographic and ethnic
specialties outside the Capital area.
http://www.apgen.org/ncac.html
Professional Researchers
The Special Interest Group for Romanian Jewish
Genealogy offers a wonderful informational site about
dealing with professional researchers
http://www.jewishgen.org/romsig/rsdb/prof-sum.html
ProGenealogists™
A Commercial service offers the
services of professional genealogists
http://progenealogists.com/services.htm
Two other organizations
which exists for professional genealogists are the Board for
Certification of Genealogists (BCG) and International
Commission of Accreditation of Professional Genealogists (ICAPGen).
These organizations confer credentials (either
certification or accreditations) with testing procedures
In addition to these groups there are organizations in
England, Ireland, New Zealand, and Australia for
professional genealogists.
Historikerkanzlei Mag.
Nicolas Forster
Genealogical-Historical researches worldwide
Georg Coch-Platz 3/9B
A-1010 Wien/Vienna
Phone: +43/(0)1 513 96 46
Fax: +43/(0)1/513 96 46 - 50
Email:
office@historiker.at
www.historiker.at
Avotaynu
This is a monthly publication and
their offices are located in Bergenfield, NJ.
It has a 400 book library about Jewish Genealogy and the
Holocaust which anyone can browse. Gary Mokotoff is an
author, lecturer and publisher of Avotaynu. He is the
author of a number of books including
"Where Once We Waked"
A gazetteer providing information about 22,000 towns in
central and eastern Europe where Jews lived before the
Holocaust.
http://www.avotaynu.com
You might want to subscribe to "Nu?
What's New" an internet publication offered for free by Avotaynu and
comes to you via the Internet
http://www.avotaynu.com/nuwhatsnew.htm
Baal Shem Tov
Israel Ben Eliezer (BeShT) was
born on Chai (18th) Elul 5458 (1698) in
Okup, a small village in
Western Ukraine on the border between Podolia
and Moldavia. He died on the second day of
Shavuot 5520 (1760), leaving an only son Rabbi Zvi, and an
only daughter, Adil, the mother of Rabbi Moshe Hayim Ephraim
of Zedlikov and of Rabbi Baruch of Medzhibozh.
This site is devoted to spreading the teachings of the Baal
Shem Tov through stories, music and art
http://www.baalshemtov.com/
Balch Institute for
Ethnic Studies
Located at the Historical Society of
Pennsylvania's facility at 13th and Locust Street in
Philadelphia
http://www.balchinstitute.org/index.html
http://www.balchinstitute.org/online_resources_1/html/
intromigration.html
The later site holds information about
emigrant's personal experience, steamship advertisements and
fare schedules. HIAS donated much of their older
material, though not all of it, to the Institute's PJAC
library
Bar/Bat Mitzvah
Jacob Richman's
site helps you plan a successful bar/bat mitzvah
http://shamash.org/trb/judaism.html
BBYO
Founded by B'nai B'rith in 1924.
The boys' arm is known as AZA (Aleph Zadek Aleph); the
girls' is BBG (B'nai B'rith Girls). Today, the
organization has 20,000 members and countless alumni across
North America, Israel, Europe and Australia
http://bbyo.org/
Biographies
A biography resource
http://www.refdesk.com
Birth Certificates
British users of this site should be aware that
correspondents from the USA are wise to ask what
information is contained on British certificates.
Birth, marriage and death registrations in the USA
(depending on State) give more information than
English/Welsh certificates and often provide information
about the place of birth of parents. USA censuses
similarly contain more information than censuses in UK
and may show the place of birth and language spoken by
parents of those listed. From a posting by Evelyn
Wilcock
Birth, Marriage and Death Certificate requests
Available in fifteen languages
http://web.inter.nl.net/users/DJGH/letter/frames.html
Birth Records Search
http://www.archives.com/?_act=birthRecords&location=US&cam=353&utm_source
=SurnameSuperSearch.com&utm_campaign=TextLinks
Vital Check
You can order birth, death and marriage
certificates online from this trusted company for a variety
of states. There is a reasonable charge
http://www.vitalcheck.com
|
Sample Letter in
English
Dear Sir / Madam,
As a descendant of
(name, born / married / deceased on date) (in place) at the time
living on street _______________, I would like to obtain a copy
of his / her birth / marriage / death certificate.
Enclosed please
find a check / money order for the amount of $ ______
Thank you,
(Sig) |
Birth Date
Information
Just put your own birth date in the
window and find out what happens
http://www.frontiernet.net/~dcm/age1.html
8870 Formula
Using the 8870 formula to ascertain a birth date can be
a tremendous helpt to the genealogist when checking
tombstones or death record dates. If a tombstone or
death record dates shows that a person died May 6, 1889 and
was 71 years 7 months and 9 days old, but no date of birth
is listed, this formula may help you ascertain the birth
date.
18890506 A person died
1889 May 6
-710709 If a person was 71 yrs. 7
months 9 days old
_____
18179797
- 8870 Constant
Answer: Born 1817 Sept 27
http://www.bcgcertification.org/skillbuilders/skbld032.html
Books
There are hundreds, perhaps thousands
of books available on the many countries and subjects
discussed here on this site. I have noted some of the
more important books within their subject or country and/or
shtetl, but you will find more on my
Books
page.
"A Student's Guide to Jewish
American "
Authored by Jay Schleifer
"The Black Book" (Chornaya Kniga)
Compiled and edited by Vasily Grossman and Ilya Erenburg and
published in Jerusalem by Tarbut in 1980 and Kiev: M.I.P.
"Oberig", 1991 (Russian) and is available online (English
translation of the table of contents)
http://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/black_book/Black_Book.html
"Carved Memories: Heritage in Stone
from
the Russian Jewish Pale"
Author David Noevich Goberman
"Encyclopedia of Jewish
Communities"
An important resource. It is in three volume set.
"Finding Our Fathers: A Guidebook
to Jewish
Genealogy"
Authored by Dan Rottenberg
"How to Trace Your Jewish Roots:
Discovering
Your Unique History"
Authored by Rabbie Jo David
"Hungering for America: Italian,
Irish, and
Jewish Foodways in the Age of Migration"
Authored by Hasia R. Diner. In this fascinating survey of
the eating habits and influences of Jewish, Italian and
Irish immigrants, Diner, a professor of American Jewish
history at New York University, charts with wit and graceful
prose the similarities and differences between these three
distinct groups.
"Jewish Immigrant Associations and
American
Identity in New York, 1880-1939"
Authored by Daniel Soyer
"Jewish Museums of North America: A
Guide
to collections, Artifacts, and Memorabilia"
Authored by Nancy Frazier
Jewish Museum of Florida in Miami Beach
Telephone: 305 672 5044;
http://www.jewishmuseum.com
"Ketubbah: Jewish Marriage
Contracts of the Hebrew Union College Skirball Museum and
Klau Library"
"My Generations, a Course in Jewish
Family History"
Authored by Arthur Kurzwell
"Scattered Seeds: A Guide to Jewish
Genealogy"
Authored by Mona Freedman Morris
"Silent Places: Landscapes of
Jewish Life and Loss in Eastern Europe"
Authored by Dr. Jeffrey Gusky and published by Overlook,
1800 pages. A black and white photographic essay by the
author of his first trip to Eastern Europe in 1995.
"Sourcebook for Jewish Genealogies
and Family Histories"
Authored by David S. Zubatsky & Irwin M. Berent
"Sources in the United States and
Canada"
(The Encyclopedia of Jewish Genealogy, Vol 1)
Authored by Miriam Weiner
"WOWW Companion: A Guide to the
Communities Surrounding Central & Eastern
European Towns"
(Avotaynu Monograph) Authored by
Gary Mokotoff
"Yiddishland"
Authored by Gerard Silva
Bund
The anti-Zionist Jewish workers' part
that upheld the integration of the Jewish proletariat in the
socialist revolution, and demanded Jewish cultural autonomy
in the framework of the socialist regime that would arise
after the victory of the revolution in every country.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Jewish_Labour_
Bund_in_Lithuania,_Poland_and_Russia
Burial and
Landmanschaften Societies
www.jgsny.org
Calendar
Conversions:
Use this link to
Dates, Time, Calendar
page
Celebrity Death
Information
http://www.dpsinfo.com/dps/index.html
Cemeteries

Old Jewish Cemetery in Worms, Germany
The Jewish
cemetery is regarded as a "Beth Olam" i.e. "House of Eternity".
Within Jewish religious law, the cemetery exists, in perpetuity, until the
appearance of the messiah. The cemetery constitutes an important institution
for the community. When entering a synagogue or a cemetery, one's head
should be covered. On maps, Jewish cemeteries are indicated with a
right-angled bracket, not a cross, depicting the headstone and grave. It is
traditional custom to deposit a small stone when visiting a grave.
Burial usually takes place on the day after the death, but not on a
Sabbath, or any of the other Jewish holy days. Cremation is only permitted
in Reform Judaism. Those present at the burial can throw three shovels of
sand onto the coffin. The Kaddish, which praises the name of God, is the
most important prayer on this occasion.
The first phase of the period of mourning lasts seven days during
which the mourners stay at home and do not work. This is called
Shiva. The second, less intensive period of mourning (Sh(e)
loshim) lasts 30 days. When one of the parents dies this is
followed by a year of mourning. On the first anniversary of the
death (Season), the gravestone is placed in the cemetery.
During each of the following "Season" a candle is lit in
memory of the deceased and a fast is observed.
Books

Most books, CDs, etc. can be ordered through my link to Amazon.com by clicking here >
There are many books on Jewish cemeteries
around the world - some with tombstone transcriptions. Try
searching for "Jews Epitaphs". Many books are available
from the UCLA Library in Los Angeles.
http://www.library.ucla.edu/
"Cemeteries of the U.S: A Guide To"
A guide to contact information for US Cemeteries and their records
and published in the US & UK by Gale Research, Inc. Call #
929,50257,CE
ISBN 0 8103-9245-3 ISSN 1071-8729
"A Practical Guide to Jewish Cemeteries"
Authored by Nolan Menachemson. Published by Avotaynu Magazine
http://avotaynu.com/catalog.htm
You can check out over 350,000 names from 730+ cemeteries around the
world. The JewishGen Online Worldwide Burial Registry (JOWBR) is a
database of more than 1.7 million names and other identifying
information from cemeteries and burial records world wide, from the
earliest to the present.
http://www.jewishgen.org/cemetery
http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/cemetery
http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/cemetery/
Cemeteries and Funeral Homes
http://www.cyndislist.com/cemetery.htm
Cemetery Transcriptions by Region (worldwide)
There is a 'Special collections' section listing Veterans
Cemeteries, Flooded Cemeteries and more
http://www.interment.net/Default.htm
Cemetery Gates
of Kielce, Kuznica, Labun, Ukraine, Michalowo, Ozarow, Pilica,
Sokolka, Wielun and Zabludow were photographed and transcribed by
Steve Lasky and are documented online on the Museum of Family History
cemetery project webpage. Included are the names of officers, as well.
http://www.museumoffamilyhistory.com/lia-sg-03sp.htm
Death and Dying
Through this site you can locate information on the legal, medical
and consumer issues surrounding death or life-threatening illnesses.
http://www.mydeath.net/
Endowed
This means that annual care has been taken care of in
perpetuity.
Heritage Foundation for Preservation
of Jewish Cemeteries (HFPJC)
A volunteer, non-profit organization dedicated to the restoration of
neglected cemeteries throughout Eastern Europe.
Email:
gen@jewishcemeterypreservation.org
http://www.jewishoceancounty.org/IR/community-directory
.aspx?id=8645
InfoFile on NY Cemeteries
A database of cemeteries and burial societies on the NYJGS
website
www.nyjgs.org
Jewish communities they once served
http://icpjms.org/
Workmen's Circle Cemetery Burial Society
212 889 6800
http://www.findagrave.com/
What you can expect to learn by visiting a cemetery
http://www.rigensoc.org/ricemeteriesfaqs.htm
Burial Sites and Records
(not limited to the US)
www.interment.net
Name, Hebrew Name, Father's Hebrew Name, Date of birth, Date of
Death, Surviving
Relatives ("Beloved Husband, Father, Grandfather and Brother)"
When visiting a cemetery, consider:
1. Bringing a stack of index cards to fill in the above fields that
you can
find
2. Bringing a camera and take a photo of the tombstone. Later, if
need be,
you can show the photo to have the Hebrew translated.
3. Pick up a few stones and bring along a prayer book.
4. Bring gardening gloves and pruning shears. Wear old clothes.
5. Check out the other tombstones around the one you are visiting.
Once,
while visiting a cemetery in Minneapolis, my wife and I found the
tombstones of her great grandmother and great grandfather. She never
knew
that they had come to Minneapolis. She only knew that her
grandmother
had been buried there. You never know!
6. If there is an office on the grounds, ask for additional
information if
they have some available.
Cemetery Genealogy Resources
At this site you will find all kinds of information dealing with
obituaries, cemetery locations, history of graveyards, mailing lists and
more; by state, and by many countries of the world. This site is a real find
http://www.rootsweb.com/~jfuller/gen_mail_cemetery.html
Online resource for obituaries
that have occurred within the last ten years or so, available free
through local library systems, including the one in Prince George's County,
Maryland at their website
http://www.prge.lib.md.us/Databases/Databases.html
The database is the second listed, America's Obituaries and Death
Notices, run by Newsbank.
Also look at these sites for Obits
Obituary Collection - text link
Cemetery Claims (Menorah Gardens in Florida)
http://www.cemeteryclaims.com
Cemetery Tombstones with photos on headstones
They are called Sepulchral portraits. The photo is burned onto porcelain or
metal tablets and then glazed. This is a practice I have personally noted in
cemeteries in Europe and in the U.S.
Books
"Sepulchral Portraits"
Authored by John Yang ISBN# 89102423X
Cemetery - Writing to one
If you write a letter to any cemetery, give as much
information as you can, and you probably will receive an answer. Be
sure to include a stamped, self addressed envelope with your
request.
"In many cases, a telephone call to a cemetery office will elicit
wonderful information and frequently a member of the office staff
will volunteer to take Polaroid of tombstones gratis! I would
recommend however, that one offers to remunerate anyone
volunteering. A pleasant approach and good manners always wins the
day." Posted by Carol Raspler
Cemetery Records On-Line
This is a site dealing with cemetery databases and articles.
The staff of this resource will search the records for you in
thousands of cemeteries including the U. S, Australia, Canada,
Ireland, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and many other
cemeteries and will do a virtual walking for you by actually
visiting cemeteries
http://www.interment.net/
Other sites that also offer similar information include:
www.geneasearch.com/cemeteries.htm
www.censuslinks.com
www.daddezio.com/records/vital/interment.html
The following URLs may need to be copied directly into your
address line
http://home.att.net/~weemonster/deathrecords.html
http://www.rootsweb.com/~nyclinto/cemindex.html
http://www.rootsweb.com/~cemetery/registry.html
http://www.genealogyspot.com/ask/cemeteries.htm
Find A Grave
Find the graves of thousands of famous people from around
the world; search for a cemetery; surname index and more
http://www.findagrave.com/
http://www.dpsinfo.com/dps/index.html
Headstone Photos
Volunteers will help you get a photo of you can volunteer
your services
http://www.headstonehunter.com
Books

Hebrew Acronyms on Tombstones
"Ozar Rashei Tevot Ve-Kizurim Be-Mazevot Batei Ha-Almin"
Authored by H. G. Huettenmeister and written in Hebrew - 349
pages
ISBN: 3 - 922056 - 08 - 3
Hebrew Tombstone Word Meanings
Ahuvah
beloved
Avinu Hayakir
Father beloved
Bachur
unmarried male
Betulah
in most contexts essentially meaning "unmarried woman"
Chashuva (for males chashuv)
special respect, a learned person, someone active in the community
HaBahur HeHashuv
"esteemed young man"
Habetula
When a girl died before she got married, Hebrew tombstone
inscription will always say: "Habetula" - that means "virgin"
in the sense of "before she married" or "still single"
Haga'on
The exalted rabbi (Gaon or any rabbi held in great esteem)
Hagr'a
The Gaon R' Eliahu (of Vilna)
Hahashuva
means "the important" or "esteemed" in the sense of "beloved".
Kehillot Kodesh
Holy community
Moh'r - Moh'r
usually a prefix for a rabbi
Moreynu haRav
Our teacher, the Rabbi
Nifterah
died
Niktaph
"cut off". Some families use the words as an indication of
their feelings towards the Dead, as being "cut off from life"
Poh nikbar/nikberah
Here lies buried ...
Poh Nitman
Here is interred
Rabbeinu, Rav
Our Master, Rabbi ___
Reb
Mr. ben Reb - the son of Mr. ....a Yiddish honorific equivalent to
Mister.
VeBa'ali He'Ahuv
and my beloved husband
Weba'aly Ha'ahuv
and my beloved husband
Yad
Hand and also means memorial or monument.
Zecher Ztadik Livracha
may the memory
of the righteous be blessed, rabbi or righteous person
Tombstone Reading Site
Jewish tombstones with Hebrew inscriptions have an added
value to genealogists, in that they not only show the date of death
and sometimes the age or date of birth, but they also include the
given name of the deceased's father. This permits you to go back one
more generation.
http://www.jewishgen.org/infofiles/tombstones.html
IAJGS (International Jewish Cemetery Project)
The scope of this project is the documentation of every Jewish
burial site in the world. The project does not include individual
burial information
http://www.jewishgen.org/cemetery
Interment. net
Browse cemetery transcriptions by region and by special collections
(Military, etc.) for the US, Australia, England, Ireland,
Canada, New Zealand, Germany and other countries
http://www.interment.net/
Jewish Funerals Burial and Mourning
A comprehensive on-line resource with information on Jewish
text, traditions and practices around death, burial, cemeteries,
mourning and healing, consumer rights, tahara, tachrichim, organ
donation and more
www.jewish-funerals.org
Jewish Funeral Directors
You can search for Funeral Directors by state or city at
http://www.jfda.org/listing_state_city.html
Canada can also be searched here. Note that this site isn't
comprehensive: it lists only funeral directors who are members of
the organization. Another site to track down the Jewish funeral
director (s) and cemeteries in smaller US cities IAJGS
International Cemetery Project
www.jewishgen.org/Cemetery/
and local synagogues using a search engine which you will find at my
Search page.
National Cemetery Administrations
Including links to Nationwide Gravesite Locator, National Cemetery
Web Pages, Cemeteries, Headstones and Markers, Military Funeral
Honors, State Cemetery Grants Program, Locating Veterans, Obtaining
Military Records & Medals and FAQs.
http://www.cem.va.gov/
State Veterans Cemeteries
http://www.cem.va.gov/cem/scg/lsvc.asp
Obitcentral.com
http://www.obitcentral.com
Obituary Web Site
Groups States in the USA according to location-----Northeast,
Southeast, etc. For each State there is a listing for Funeral Homes
and Newspapers for each city in that State
www.Regionalobits.com
There is a facility to search for Obits, but it appears to be
erratic. If looking for the address of a funeral home or a newspaper
for a particular city, you can try to use this website though it is
limited.
Obituary Links Page
Electric Library Newspaper Search Link - search for obituaries from
thousands of publications and Census Records. The links include both
Canada, Foreign and US links
http://www.obitlinkspage.com/obit
Obituary Lookup Volunteers State/Country Index
The Obituary Lookup volunteers for the United States are
grouped by state. On each state's web page, the volunteers are
listed by county. For the rest of the world, the volunteers are
grouped by country or continent, and on each web page the volunteers
are listed by region.
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~obitl/ovlist.html
Obituary Network
This is a network of volunteers from across the world who enter
obituary data from their local newspaper or from on-line papers each
day into a searchable database.
http://www.they-speak.com/obits/
The Obituary Daily Times
A daily index of published obituaries that is distributed freely,
often twice a day by E-mail and usually has over 2,500 entries a
day. This is a searchable site
http://www.rootsweb.com/~obituary/
http://surnamesupersearch.com/obituary/dailytimes.htm
Obituary Collection - text link
Researching Jewish Cemeteries in Europe - an article authored by
Stanley Finkelstein as reported in Volume 16, Number 2 Summer 2001
of the JGS of Michigan's 'Generation' magazine.
http://tracingthetribe.wordpress.com/2009/10/05/michigan
-computer-techniques-workshops-oct-18/
Books
'The Tombstone Tourist: Musicians'
Authored by Scott Stanton and published by 3T Publishing in
1998
"Tomb With A View"
A newsletter authored by Katie Karrick, a
Cleveland cemetery historian. The newsletter spurred Judi
Culbertson to become co-author of guidebooks on the cemeteries of
London, Paris, Italy, California and New York. The
guidebooks are published by Walker & Co.
Photographing in a cemetery
Anne Lapedus Brest, a professional photographer, offers the
following suggestions:
"I use an ordinary 'point and shoot' (auto focus)
camera when I visit cemeteries, as they are quick and easy to use.
If the sun is shining directly onto the stone, then I just stand
directly in front of the stone and take the photograph, and it is
not necessary to use flash.
If the sun is behind, or to the side of the stone (or it is a
cloudy day) then I use the flash but stand slightly to the side
so that the flash DOES NOT bounce directly onto the stone (otherwise
you won't be able to read part of the writing).
If some of the letters of the stone are missing, and there
is just an indentation where the lettering used to be, it is still
not necessary to do anything at all (particularly as this might
damage the stone, as in the case of shaving cream)
If you take the photographs the way I have described above, then you
will be able to read the inscriptions on the tombstones without any
problems.
If you would like any more information on this, please do not
hesitate to contact me privately
angi@icon.co.za
and I will be happy to help as much as
I can. I have used this method both in South Africa, and in
Ireland and it has worked perfectly in both countries."
Another tip: 'when photographing gravestones with
raised or engraved lettering, the way to make the letters stand out
is to create strong side lighting. A well equipped pro would run a
long cord from his camera's flash socket to a flash held or mounted
almost at right angles to the face of the stone.'
You can photograph a document with a manual 35 mm SLR camera. Use
professional film available by mail order. Mail order photo labs are
usually less expensive than local labs. One hour or drop-off
locations cannot provide quality photos.
Laminating a photograph
A lamination will eventually destroy photos and even
photocopies.
Photoshop Tip
The two general tricks that I've learned for all
photographs, not just those of tombstones is: First - use the
Image/Adjust/Auto Levels, then use the individual contrast and
brightness controls. Second, use the Filters/Sharpen/Unsharp Mask (which
name is counter intuitive, but it works) to sharpen things up.
Another thing I learned is that you can select small areas and play
with them without affecting other parts of the picture. For this you
need to learn all the selection tools - marquee, shapes, magic wand.
You can use the magic wand additively to get just certain areas. You
can use all the adjustments you would use on a whole picture to
bring up fuzzy parts of the picture until it is as good as you can
get it. Other tools that are useful are the dodge and burn tools to
lighten and darken selected areas. The previous is attributed to
Rita Margolies in a posting
Tombstone
Rubbings
Gravestones are a wonderful genealogical resource. Check this web
site by Jessie Lie Farber The Association For Gravestone
Studies Gravestone
Rubbing For Beginners
http://www.justcallbob.com/grave.html
The proper way to do a rubbing is with a specialty type of paper,
called 'Carboff' paper, that's made for the monument (tombstone)
industry. It comes in long rolls, not very expensive (around $15
or $20 for a roll that will last for a decade) Available from
Wenzco Supply
Macungie, PA.
Phone: 1 610 966 3555, 1 800 346 7805
It can be purchased at stores selling drafting or art
supplies. There is also a hard triangular crayon that works quite
well. It is a triangular half of a square of about 1.5" on a side,
about 0.4" thick.
A commercial site that might be of interest to those who require
photo preserving supplies is Century Business Solutions
http://www.centurybusinesssolutions.com/
Zemaitis Genealogy and Family History
This site, in addition to offering links to Cemetery Records
Online, also allows posting of Queries, Surname resources, Census
Records, Ships Lists, State Links, Ethnic Links and more
http://www.distantcousin.com/
Turbo Find
This is a site that offers links to general funeral
information with little genealogical value, but you never know
http://turbofind.com/scripts/engine_tl.php?hid=24f0d22b60fd8008ba87&term=funeral
Census &
Demographics
http://www.refdesk.com
Eastern Europe and the Former
Soviet Union Census
http://libguides.lib.msu.edu/eeuropecensus
http://www.genealogylinks.net/europe/
and also my web page 'U.S.
Census'
Center for Jewish
History
15 West 16th Street,
New York 10011 -
Telephone: 212 294 8301;
Fax: 212 294 8302
E-mail:
barbara@cjh.org
Has a web site that provides detailed information about the
wealth of genealogical records and resources house at the Center.
Heralded as the Diaspora's "National Archives of the Jewish
People", the Center houses 100 million archival documents;
500,000 books; and tens of thousands of artifacts and works of art.
www.cjh.org
and click on "Family History"
Central Archives for
the History of the Jewish People
(CAHJP)
This archives was founded in 1938 as
the Jewish Historical General Archives. It offers many links
including Genealogy
http://sites.huji.ac.il/archives/
The Central
Zionist Archives
The official historical archives of
the World Zionist Organization, the Jewish Agency, the
Jewish National Fund, Keren Hayesod and the World Jewish
Congress. It also holds the personal papers of individuals
involved in the Zionist movement or active in
Palestine/Israel.
http://www.wzo.org.il/cza/
Centropa
An international team of historians,
filmmakers, web designers, journalists, educators,
photographers and Jewish community activists. There goal is
to create a window into Jewish history, and current events,
in Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.
By marrying together the newest technologies and serious
research methods, this site will take Jewish history off the
shelf, and bring it into your homes, classrooms, synagogues,
libraries, book clubs and organizations. Whether you are
Jewish or not, from North America, Europe or the Middle
East, you will find this site interesting and stimulating.
http://www.centropa.org/?nID=16
Chabad
Rabbi Schnuer Zalman of Liadi (aka
the Baal Ha Tanya) was the founder of the Chabad Lubavitch
Movement. Born September 4, 1745 in Liadi and died on December 15,
1813.
He was also known as Shneur Zalman Baruchovitch, RaZaSh, Baal Ha
Tanya veha Shulchan Aruch, the Alter Rebbe ("Old
Rebbe" in Yiddish),
Admor HaZaken ("Old
Rebbe" in Hebrew),
Rabbeinu HaZaken, Rabbeinu Hagodol, the GRaZ.
http://www.jpost.com/topic/Shneur_Zalman_of_Liadi
Dates in Chabad history
http://www.expage.com/page/chabad/
Chasidic Genealogy
Research Committee Brandler Institute of Chasidic
Though has formed this research
committee comprised of Genealogical and Historical
Researchers. Further information can be obtained by E-mail
to Abraham Heschel
bict@safeaccess.com
Chesed Net
A comprehensive guide to Chesed
organizations. We improve access to medical and social
service related information. Resources section provides
medical information and social service information.
http://www.chesednet.com/
"Children with Lost
Identity"
http://english.gfh.org.il/children_with_lost_identity.htm
Cindy's List of
Genealogy Sites:
http://www.CyndisList.com/
http://www.cyndislist.com/jewish.htm
Cities of the World
This site offers you links to every city that
has a web site anywhere in the world
http://www.123world.com/cities/index.html
City
Directories
This is a directory published about a city or
town that includes the names and occupations of the residents and
usually includes a directory of all of the businesses in the town.
Some still publish city directories, although it is certainly not as
common as it used to be. A full discloser of what can be expected of
a City Directory can be found
http://www.ancestry.com/columns/george/03-06-98.htm
http://www.uscitydirectories.com/ca.htm
The Mormon Library has a very comprehensive
collection, with very few missing years. I believe that generally
speaking, street directories ceased to be published in 1934 with the
advent of telephone books continuing the chronological sequence.
According to my own list of LDS microfilm numbers, no directory was
published in 1919-20, 1928, 1929-30, 1932. Additionally, there is a
note that the 1924 issue was not available. Sutro Library in San
Francisco used to have 'on open access' all the directories for the
five boroughs from 1935 to the 1970s. But as these were the original
phone books, they were literally disintegrating on the shelf, and
were withdrawn from use a couple of years ago." From a posting by
Jeremy Frankel
Primary Source Media Old City
Directories online
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-53716662.html
Public Libraries
sometimes offer free access to City Directories On-line or
you can try
http://www.distantcousin.com/Directories/
Classmates
More than 14 million registered High
School alumni and College/University alumni are registered -
a commercial site
http://www.classmates.com/
|
As every genealogist knows, you can't be too careful when
it comes to throwing things away. No piece of paper,
book, periodical, pamphlet, program, syllabus, clipping,
letter, postcard — whatever — should be thoughtlessly
discarded. You never know when you might need it.
http://petuniapress.com/pence_
springclean.html#if
|
COA (Certificate
of Arrival)
The person's certificate of arrival
number. During a certain time period, the COA was issued
when the person applied for naturalization, and the ship
manifest was annotated with the COA number.
http://www.theshipslist.com/Forms/faq.html
Cohain, Levites
(Jewish Genealogy also
for
'People'
page)
"The Cohains are the members of the tribe of Levi that are
specifically descended from Aaron, Moses' brother. This
happened 3,000 years ago. There are men who claim descent
through their fathers from either the tribe of Levi or Aaron
(Cohanim) When Israel was conquered, each of the 12
tribes of Israel got its own portion of land, except for the
Levites (Cohains included). They were given the job
of priests in the Temple (Cohain) or assistants (Levites)
it is more than that, but this is for simplicity).
According to tradition, if your father is a Cohain or a
Levite, you are one. There is obviously no telling after all
these years if one is correct, although DNA studies have
shown remarkable similarities in certain chromosomes in
those that claim this.
The other 'tribes' were supposedly dispersed after
the fall of the First Temple 2,500 years ago. I know of no
oral tradition of anyone claiming descent from a particular
tribe.
As for linking back, obviously it would be one 'clue'
if you thought you had found a direct male ancestor and he
was designated a Cohen or Levite like others in your line,
but it probably would be similar to finding someone named
Jacob Joseph when others in the family were named the same.
I think the only hope for going 'beyond the records'
would be when DNA testing is developed to the point when we
can biologically test 'purported relatives'. In
Iceland, a closed population for 500, there is a study
trying to make a complete genetic picture of the population.
Perhaps something like this would be possible, although with
assimilation, I am not sure." From a posting by Debra Kay
debjkay@email.msn.com
"The conservative way of dealing with the bible, states that
there is no knowledge with regard to the "ten lost tribes",
and the Jewish people of today are mainly from the tribes of
Judea and Benjamin, plus Levi and remains of other tribes."
From a posting by Udi Cain
Michael Bernet wrote: "...whether a Jew was a Kohen or a
Levi is, for genealogist, about as important as knowing
whether he was tall or short."
I must disagree wholeheartedly with Michael. Such knowledge
can often prove essential in tying up links between male
lines sharing a common last name. Furthermore, if two such
common-surname lines came from the same small shtetl, it is
highly likely that the two lines share a common ancestor.
Thus two apparently un-related RIBINSKI'S who are both
Cohanim, and who both had ancestors from the same Shtetl,
are far more likely to be related than unrelated. Certainly,
the researcher would have to do some more homework, but such
knowledge is often essential in trying to track down
relationships. As genealogists, we are all familiar with
seemingly impossible-to-connect branches that were solved by
some seemingly small bit of info."
Michael also wrote that: "..It would be dangerous and
misleading for our research if we tried to formalize this in
a database."
"Based on my comments above, I must also disagree with these
sentiments. In fact, such a database does exist and enables
researchers to record the tribal status of his ancestors...
*together with* the town of origin and source
material. The database can be seen at - (click on
TribeFinder)"
www.shoreshim.org
"It seems absurd, but if we were to disregard male-linked
tribal status data, then we might as well disregard
hemophilia and a whole range of other male-linked genetic
diseases. I think that any knowledge or technique that helps
one to trace a line backwards is an essential genealogical
tool that should not be overlooked."
From a posting by J Schamroth
jscham@zahav.net.il
""According to demographic studies done in Israel, the
largest lump of Jews that are under a single database in the
world, about ten percent of the Israelis are Cohanim. The
reasons for this supposedly high percentage are simple:"
1. "At the time of the Jews expulsion from Israel,
after the destruction of the first temple, the ten lost
tribes had already disappeared. Alas. The Kingdom of Judah
had an un-proportionally high number of Levites and Cohanim,
simply because the temple was part of Judah. The rest were
mainly from the tribes of Judah and Binyamin, with a
spattering of the rest thrown in. We stated the Diaspora
being about 25% of the Jews."
2. "Cohanim, being the temple priests, are the only group of
Jews that have Halachic (Jewish law) restrictions as
to who they could marry. A Cohain who violated these rules
was still considered a Cohain, but his children were not!
These rules were sufficient reason for a father to make sure
his sons knew they were Cohanim. I would guess that being
put thus apart, would also "protect" them some-what from
assimilating."
3. "Because of the Honor of being a Cohain (little that
it means with-out our beloved temple), there are and
were many cases of people claiming to be Cohanim, which
would further up there numbers." From a posting by Shmuel
A. Kahn on 12-12-95
Cantors
Virtual Cantor
Has mp3 recordings of over 700 tracks of the entire year's
davening in the Ashkenazi Nusach (prayer melodies in the Eastern
European tradition)
http://www.virtualcantor.com/
Commission For The
Preservation of Pioneer Jewish Cemeteries and Landmarks
http://fcis.oise.utoronto.ca/~acjs
Computer Software

Brothers Keeper (shareware)
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Brothers_Keeper/
Family Tree Builder
Free software download
http://www.myheritage.com/download-family-tree-builder
Family Treemaker
One of several commercial computer software companies that
offers courses on How To of genealogy. Check:
http://www.familytreemaker.com
for help, classes, sample forms,
etc. The Genealogy Home Page is
http://www.genhomepage.com
www.familytreemaker.com/university.html
provides basic beginning
information.
"An Associated press article by Anick Jesdanum appeared in
the San
Francisco Chronicle, among others, discussing the fact that
archivists can't rely on digital storage because technology
is changing so quickly that older formats can't be read by
newer programs. This includes digital photography,
which can lose details as it's converted from one format to
another.
A serious consideration for those of us who are storing all
our genealogical information in various computer programs
such as FTM, which may not be readable by our children's
computers! The full article can be found at: Thanks to
Babette Bloch who supplied this link.
http://www.presstelegram.com/Stories/0%2C1413%2
C204%257E21470%257E%2C00.html
What is the best software program for Jewish
Genealogy? Arjeh van der Sluis at
vandersluiscdn@ica.net
announced on Monday, April 24, 2000 that he "has a substantial
amount information and has done a lot of research on which program
is best for my needs" including Haza Data; Pro Gen; Ancestral Quest;
Family Ties Deluxe; Family Origins; Family Tree Make Generations
Grande Suite Legacy Family Tree; The Master Genealogist; Personal
Ancestral File and Ultimate Family Tree. I'd say he qualifies an
expert, wouldn't you?
DOROT Tree
Recommended by The Jewish Genealogy Software site DoroTree:
The Jewish Genealogy Software
http://www.dorotree.com/support.html
Computer Center for Jewish Genealogy
This HaMagid CD-Rom compilation represents a follow-up to
the Center's earlier computerized book. It is an essential research
tool for biographers, genealogists, historians, librarians,
researchers and scholars. For more information about any of the
Center's activities, contact Dr. Rosenstein at
The Computer Center for Jewish Genealogy
654 Westfield Avenue, Elizabeth, NJ 07208
Telephone: 1 908 353 5575
Fax: 1 908 353 6080
E-mail
ccjgen@aol.com
Consolidated List of
Genealogical Bulletin Boards
http://www.genealogy.org/!gbbs/
Convert Anything to
Anything
http://www.refdesk.com
Council of Jewish
Historical Associations
http://www.ajhs.org/
Countries of the
World
The ultimate source of authentic and
reliable information about 'Countries' of the world on the
net. The links in this directory will guide you to the
official sites of the countries that you are looking for.
http://www.123world.com/countries/index.html
Country Information
http://www.refdesk.com
Cousin Relationships
Children of siblings are to each other first
cousins. Children of first cousins are to each other second cousins.
Children of second cousins are to each other third cousins, etc. On
the other hand, a person is, to its parent's first cousin, a first
cousin once removed. If this person has a child, the child is, to
its grandparent's first cousin, a first cousin twice removed. Not a
second cousin.
Another reference site is at
http://www.cyndislist.com/cousins.htm
http://www.distantcousin.com/
http://www.ziemiecki.com/cousins.html
http://www.interfaithfamily.com/site/apps/nl/content2.asp?c=ekLSK5MLIrG&b=297385&ct=406317
First cousin marriages were very common -- even uncle and niece is
legal under Jewish law.
Cross Index of
Jewish Genealogy Pages
http://feefhs.org/indexjew.html
Daily Forward
A Yiddish newspaper founded in 1906
and had a circulation of over 250,000. It is also known as
The Jewish Daily Forward
http://www.forward.com/archives/
Database - Middle
East & Jewish World Databank
The Canadian Institute for Jewish
Research has prepared this User’s Guide to the Index to
facilitate the accessing of research materials.
http://www.isranet.org/DataBank/u.htm
Date and Time
(and
Date and Time
page)
http://www.refdesk.com
Date of Birth
Searches
Type in a name and state and you
should receive information about the person, including their
birth date, address, city, state and zip code
http://anybirthday.com/
It doesn't always work, but the
few minutes of effort may be worth it.
Dead Sea Scrolls
The Dead Sea Scrolls are some of the most
valuable religious texts known to man. Discovered between
1947 and 1956 at Khirbet Qumran, they form the oldest known
versions of Biblical documents and take the form of 972
texts. Their age dates them at somewhere between 150 BCE and
70CE when they were hidden in caves to prevent the Roman
armies from discovering them. That they survived so long is
incredible.
Gaining access to the
original texts has now become a lot easier due
to a new project launched by
Google
called the
Dead Sea Scrolls online.
Five of the scrolls have been digitized using
high resolution 1,200 megapixel photographs
captured by renowned photographer Ardon
Bar-Hama.
As well as being able to
view the texts in great detail, there’s also a
translation feature on the site presenting the
original Hebrew in English. There’s also a
search feature based on keywords and passages
from the text, and you can leave comments for
others to read.
Google is taking care of
hosting all the data for this project in its
ongoing bid to make the world’s information
accessible to all. Behind the website and high
resolution images you will find Google Storage
and Google App Engine hard at work serving up
the data for what must already be a very popular
destination.
The Great
Isaiah Scroll is available online and is one of
the most well known of the Dead Sea Scrolls and
four others, with more on their way.
http://dss.collections.imj.org.il/
Death Certificates
If the funeral home that handle a death is
still in business, their records would indicate who made the
arrangements and would be a possible source for family information.
On-line Searchable Death Indexes & Records - This website gathers
together links to online death indexes by state and county. Included
are death indexes, obituaries, probate indexes and cemetery & burial
indexes. There are also links to Social Security Death Index,
Obituary Daily Times, RootsWeb's Cemetery Database and veterans
Affairs burial Search
http://www.deathindexes.com/
http://www.cemeteryscribes.com/
A death certificate of sorts or a document certifying the death of
an American citizen in another country can be requested by
contacting the U. S. State Dept. The details can be
found at:
http://travel.state.gov/family/issues_death.html
Diaspora
The term Diaspora (Greek διασπορα, a
scattering or sowing of seeds) is used (without capitalization)
to refer to any people or ethnic population forced or induced to
leave their traditional ethnic homelands, being dispersed throughout
other parts of the world, and the ensuing developments in their
dispersal and culture.
Originally, the term Diaspora (capitalized) was used to refer
specifically to the populations of Jews exiled from Judea in 586 BC
by the Babylonians, and AD 135 by the Romans. This term is used
interchangeably to refer to the historical movements of the
dispersed ethnic population, the cultural development of that
population, or the population itself. The probable origin of the
word is the Septuagint version of Deuteronomy 28:25, "thou shalt be
a Diaspora (Greek for dispersion) in all kingdoms of the
earth". The term has been used in its modern sense since the late
twentieth century.
http://diaspora.wikiverse.org/
Dictionary Search
Search dictionary web sites for words
and phrases 6,000,478 words in 954 dictionaries indexed
http://www.onelook.com
Digital Genizah
A Jewish Internet directory
http://uscj.org/metny/middletown/genizah.htm
Document and
Newspaper Clippings
(see, on this page, Newspaper
clippings for tips) Also, under my
Books
page, is information about
newspapers, books, films, etc.
Dress Style in
Eastern Europe
Shtreimel
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Shtreimel
Traditional dress in Russia, for
instance, was virtually identical among both Chasidim and
Misnagdim. In Lithuania, the dress was somewhat
different from in Russia, but again, Chassidim and
traditional Misnagdim dressed nearly alike as in Poland,
and in Galicia, Hungary, etc. One possible exception
might be Vizhnitz Chassidim as they were the only ones to
wear their hat backwards; with bow on the band tied on the
right side instead of the left.
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/eudr/hd_eudr.htm
Eastern Europe FAQ
Frequently asked questions about
Jewish genealogical research in Eastern Europe offers a
'how-to' that should be read by anyone who is interested in
researching his or her roots
http://www.jewishgen.org/infofiles/eefaq.html
Eastern European and
Jewish Genealogy
For the person tracing both eastern
European and Jewish family history, there is a wonderfully
collection of sources available for obtaining both specific
family data and sound genealogical research strategies. Many
sources are also available to assist one in finding
particular types of records and identifying record
repositories Eastern European and Jewish Genealogy
http://www.seflin.org/sefpub/sum98.html
East European
Military Archives
A synopsis of a Military Microfilm
Project can be found in these archives
www.infoukes.com
http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg
East European
Genealogical Society
Tons of information on all of the many
East European countries, including Galicia, Ukraine, Poland,
Austro-Hungarian Empire, German Empire, Russian Empire,
Czech Republic, Slovakia and more at
http://www.eegsociety.org/
East European
Information
(Russia/Slovakia/Germany/Ukraine,
etc) and many more links
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/13501674.asp
E-mail Locater Sites
When you need a person's E-mail
address, you'll find it here using any one of these
specialized sights
www.people.yahoo.com
www.mesa.rrzn.unihannover.de
Embassies located in
Washington, D.C.
Here you will find a list of all of
the embassies in the city
The Electronic Embassy Help and Resource Center provides
reference materials, answers to frequently asked questions,
search tools and other means to get assistance
List of World Embassies
http://www.findembassy.com/
http://www.jewishgen.org/ShtetLinks/lviv/links.htm
E-mail Service that
are Free
Gmail
http://google.com
Hotmail
http://www.hotmail.com
Yahoo
http://yahoo.com
Encyclopedia Judaica
Information and details how to purchase the
newest CD that has huge of amounts of relative information for the
Jewish genealogist
http://www.bjeindy.org/encyclopedia_judaica_online
Enumeration District
Census geography maps, available on film, will
locate the Enumeration Districts of various cities. Once you have
found the proper ED, you can then search for street and addresses.
"Re the 1920 US Census Enumeration District numbers knowing an
address. Specifically Brooklyn. There is a backdoor way of finding
that number for practically any address on the 1920 census made
possible by the new 1930 Census. The 1930 census enumeration
district definitions (EDs), on the National Archives film
series T1224, not only show the 1930 ED # (obviously), but
for the first time also the 1920 ED #s they covered.
Although the numbers are not the same,
and several 1920 ED #s may be partially covered by a single
1930 ED, it can narrow your research choices for 1920 EDs.
For example, if you were to look for a particular street
address for Brooklyn in 1930 (assuming it wasn't renumbered
since 1920), you should first use the new NARA website, NARA
film series M1931, or for Brooklyn, the One Step Website,
and when you find the ED# record it. Then go to the
appropriate state/city/place roll in series T1224 for 1930
and locate that 1930 ED # description page, and then look on
the left side of that page, where you should see the 1920 ED
#s that your 1930 ED # covered. Next you would go to the
roll that describes that state/city's/place's 1920 census
description on the same series (T1224) and look up
those ED #s you just got (rarely up to a maximum of 7 or
8).
By drawing on a map the boundaries of
those 1920 EDs, you should find the ED number you are
searching for."
From a posting by Joel Weintraub
http://stevemorse.org/census/
http://genealogy.about.com/cs/census_ed/
http://1930census.archives.gov/EDmaps.html
http://www.us-census.org/research/ed-maps.htm
Ephemera
Anything short-lived or with a short-term
usefulness, and includes newspapers, almanacs, bookplates, greeting
cards, invitations, matchbooks, pamphlets, posters, sheet music and
tickets.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ephemera
Eugenics

The Second International Exhibition of Eugenics was held
September 22 to October 22, 1921, in connection with the
Second International Congress of Eugenics in the American
Museum of Natural History, New York (Baltimore: William &
Wilkins Co., 1923).This is a faithful photographic
reproduction of an original two-dimensional work of art. The
work of art itself is in the public domain.
http://hnn.us/articles/1796.html
Europe Aerial
Reconnaissance Photographs
Five million photos shot by the
British RAF over Western Europe during WW II is on-line
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerial_reconnaissance
http://www.heritagedaily.com/2011/05/ww2-aerial-reconnaissance-photos-now-on-line/uring-the-battle-for-europe-during-ww2-one-of-the-most-deadly-weapons-was-not-the-bombs-and-bullets-but-the-humble-camera-the-use-of-the-camera-during-aerial-reconnaissance-provided-the-generals-and/
Euro-Asian Jewish
Congress
www.eajc.org
http://www.eajc.org/program_result_e.php?id=4
European Regional
Lists
A site that offers links to the many
web sites specifically dealing with East European countries.
Browse and/or join
http://www.rootsweb.com/~maillist/europe/index.html
Events That Changed
the World
A course with the
subject "The World Was Never the Same: Events that
Changed History" is offered. The Great Courses
brings to you the most engaging professors from America's
top universities into your home through courses on DVD,
audio CD and audio download.
www.thegreatcourses.com/
Everton's
Genealogical Helper
In addition to many resources, there
is a free on-line edition of their journal (and also a
more detailed paid edition) that offers a lot of
information that can be downloaded.
http://www.everton.com
Exchange Rates
http://www.refdesk.com
and my 'Date,
Time' page
Facing East During
Prayers
The suggestion, in which the custom of
facing the Temple during prayer has biblical origins. The
rule laid down in the Mishna and amplified in the Talmud, is
that if one prays in the Diaspora, he shall direct himself
toward Eretz Israel. And so, the Jewish people of
Morocco were called Westerns and those of East of
Eretz Israel became Easterners. From a posting by Udi
Cain
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mizrah
Family Chronicle
Family Chronicle is a how-to magazine for
genealogists who are trying to discover their family roots. You know
that there is no "master plan" that tells you how to conduct your
research but there is offers of help here. Click on image to go to
their home page
http://www.familychronicle.com/
Family Discovery
A commercial site that offers records
covering all 50 US States and most countries including:
Immigration records: Census Records; Land records; Church
records; Court House Records; Cemetery Records; Birth
Records; Death & Mortality Records; Marriage Records; Wills
of Testament: Pedigrees; Vital records and Statistics
www.FamilyDiscovery.com
Family History
An online genealogy community
http://www.familyhistory.com
Family History and
Ethnic Genealogy
Learning Center offers much
information
www.genealogy.com
Family History
Center (FHC, Mormon Church, LDS)
The Family History Department has more than 2.4
million microfilm rolls in its collection, but the open
stacks of the Family History Library can only accommodate
1.4 million films. If your file is not available, no
problem, as a duplicate set of films is located in the
nuclear-bomb proof vault at Iron Mountain. Just go to the
attendant area on any floor. They will check the computer
system to determine if a duplicate is at the Distribution
Center. If it is there, and invariably it is, they will
order the film and it will be at the Library within three
hours (they make deliveries every three hours every day).
The Church of the Latter Day Saints has microfilmed
many of the church registers in Europe. These films are
available for a nominal fee for use at their Family History
Centers (FHC). You can find the nearest center to you
by using this site
http://www.genhomepage.com/FHC/
http://www.genealogypointers.com/category/research-
resources/
Copies of pages
A charge of 10 cents for a page if you provide the film and
page number. It's 25 cents a page for microfilms with a
minimum of $2.00. Requests are submitted on Form 31768 (Requests
for Photocopies) which you get from your local FHC.
Responses take about a month. Prices are probably more as
this information was obtained in 1997.
If you wish to search their library to get the film number,
if they have a film (s) for a town, try
http://www.familysearch.org/
and follow the links to Library
and then to FHLC
Visiting the Family History Library
If you are planning a trip to the FHL in Salt Lake City,
the following information might prove to be of value:
1. The FHL has a scanner and computer connected to a
microfilm reader. You can use the microfilm viewer in the
same manner as most such viewers. When you find the page
that you want to save, you swivel around in your seat to
face the adjacent computer and click its mouse on an
appropriate icon. A digital copy of the displayed image is
saved in a temporary file on the computer's hard drive.
You can save hundreds of pages, one at a time. At the end of
the session, you place a blank re-writable CD-ROM disk into
the computer's CD drive and follow the on-screen
instructions to write the files to the CD. You then pop the
CD out of the computer, slip it into your briefcase and take
it home with you. The images are stored in your choice of
TIFF or JPEG format. The image resolution is also
user-selectable up to a maximum of 400 dots per inch.
The biggest difficulty is in determining whether the records
at the LDS FHC you want, are available, on microfilm/fiche.
The most up-to-date index is on-line, but it is the most
difficult to use. The easiest to use is the fiche index, but
it is woefully outdated. Go to the LDS site, enter the place
name in various spelling permutations, and hope for a hit;
try to query against a neighboring town and you may find
your shtetl - some of the records aggregate villages, but it
is not certain if those are the original records segregated
by village, or transcripts inscribed that way. The LDS has a
number of villages on film, the index for which, is also on
film, but in Cyrillic script. There may be a transliterated
version available somewhere on the web. For further
information regarding the microfilms and records, contact
Family History Support, 50 East north Temple Street, Sal
Lake City, Utah 94150-3400 - Telephone 1 800 346 6044 or 1
801 240 2584. Remember that some or all of their records may
not be sold, or duplicated, except under limited
circumstances.
The LDS has an 800 telephone number for those who would
rather call than Email
FamHistLib@aol.com
1 800 452 3860
Family History Center
Their inventory of records of birth records by state are
organized by year.
www.familyhistorycenter.org/
This site is useful in locating
the existence of microfilms of records for ancestral towns
but is very slow loading.
Family History Library (FHL)
Telephone 1 800 346 6044
E-mail
fhl@ldschurch.org
Speak to a reference librarian in European resources. An
index to all known Jewish items at the LDS Family Library in
Salt Lake City is available
http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/fhlc/
Family History Center Locations
Find a center near you at
http://www.familysearch.org/eng/Library/FHC/frameset
_fhc.asp
At the FHL computer, load the Family History Library
Catalogue, click on Locality Search, select town/parish
records and type in city, state, when the title of that
record comes up and ask for a full display of the topics
that they have for that city/state combination. You'll see a
list beginning with Almanacs; scroll down to census;
highlight the year in which you are interested; hit F8 key
for a full listing of what they have relating to that census
and keep hitting the Pg Dn (page down) key until you
get to the group of films that have the Soundex Code you
need.
"Jewish Records in the Family History Library Catalog",
An inventory of the microfilms, microfiche and books in the
LDS Family History Library Catalog™ (FHLC) which are
specifically Jewish genealogical sources. It is a valuable
finding aid for persons researching their Jewish ancestry,
but is not intended to be a replacement for the FHLC. The
complete FHLC can be consulted at
http://www.familysearch.org
http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/FHLC/
If you search on a place name, such as a shtetl in (Galicia),
remember to try different spellings since there is no
Daitch/Mokotoff Soundex search capability.
The FHL index is organized in a hierarchical manner
geographically, what is known as the locality index. So an
entry for L'viv is found under "Austria,
Gallitzin, Lwów." The JewishGen on-line database
can be searched by any of the words in the location or title
of the entry. Searching in a larger geographical area is the
way to be sure that you've found all the entries for the
towns your are interested in. Gallitzin only results
in 73 hits and Austria only results in 251 hits so
scanning through all the results won't take that long.
Family History Data Sheet Estimator
Mike Smith has developed an interesting and very
workable site which is an interactive web page
http://www.sanpitch.net/tools/famator.htm
'You are left with a single name and a solitary date. Where
in time do you begin to look for the other family members?
This site is here to help. It uses mathematical models from
1400 to the present day. It comes from over 100,000
computerized genealogical records from Western Europe and
North America. It will estimate an entire family make-up for
a given event for a given spouse. The data is a statistical
estimate and should only be taken as such, but it should be
accurate enough to begin your search.' Warning: You may find
calculating dates on living people to be distressing as this
site will estimate death dates, according to Mike.
Family History Library Catalog
Search the catalog
https://www.familysearch.org/eng/library/fhlc/
Family History Library - LDS
Jewish convert to the
Mormon faith, Nancy Goldberg Goodstein spent more than a
year isolating the Jewish records at the LDS (Mormon)
Family History Library. She published them in loose-leaf
form at the Library and donated it on CD to the
International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies.
JewishGen placed it on the Internet with a search engine at
http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/FHLC.
New Jewish acquisitions at the Library are wide ranging and
include such items as Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS)
card files for 1882–1929 for the state of Massachusetts
and the Zamosc, Poland, Yizkor book. There are 635
entries in all. The layout of the website parallels the
format of the original CD and is far superior to the
JewishGen website because it allows browsing.
http://iajgs.org/fhlindexcd.html.
Check out the layout of each floor of the FHL
Library at
http://www.avotaynu.com/fhl.htm
Family History Library Search for Passport Information
http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/
supermainframeset.asp?display=titledetails&titleno=96036&disp=PaBregister_1792-1918&columns=*,180,0
Family History Search
Lists Canada, U.S., Iceland and parts of Europe
http://www.familysearch.org/Search/searchigi.asp
There are websites that are must see sites.
http://www.familysearch.org/eng/library/fhlc/frameset_fhlc.asp
Family Search Internet Genealogy Service
available from the Mormon Genealogy Library and the
JewishGen website
http://www.jewishgen.com
Dave Wilks' Free Gedcom Server
An extremely fast database server especially crafted for
genealogy research on the Internet. If you would like to
share your Family Tree with others, then this is the place
to do so.
www.my-ged.com
Home Page of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints
http://www.lds.org/
To get LDS microfilm numbers, you need to use the FHL
Catalog at
http://www.familysearch.org
In recent years, the LDS (Mormons) have made many
updates to their catalogue. As a result, when Jewish records
are included in Catholic Civil transcripts or other
non-Jewish records, the catalogue typically so indicates.
For areas covered by the former Kingdom of Poland (Congress
Poland), this almost always applies only to pre-1826
records. After 1825, in the Kingdom of Poland,
separate civil registers begin for each religious community
i.e. Roman Catholic, Jewish, Protestant, Russian Orthodox,
etc. The FHL has microfilmed through 1965 and the names
should be in alphabetical order.
The LDS Family History Library
The largest genealogical library in the world with more than
2.2 million rolls of microfilm, 750,000 microfiche and
200,000 books available for research. The library has dozens
of notebook finding aids to frequently used resources.
Specialist at Reference Desks assist you in finding the
resources you require. Here are some examples as sited by
Eileen Polakoff as a Supplement to Avotaynu Vol. XX, No. 1
Eastern Europe
Various records, primarily Revision lists or lists of Jewish
residents from over 200 towns in Latvia; Birth, Marriage,
Divorce and Death Records from Krementz from 1870 to 1907;
Revision lists and vital records from fifteen towns in
Belarus; Rabbinate records of Beltsy and Moldova;
Crimean Birth, Marriage, Divorce and Death records from
6 towns for various years; Vital records for Lithuanian
towns that were in Russian Poland in the 19th century
and Metrical records of the Crown Rabbinate of
Lithuania:
Kovno from 1822 to 1940 and Vilna from 1837 to 1923
Western Europe
English Census Records from 1841/51/61/71/81; Indexes to
English vital records from 1837 to 1980; Alsace-Lorraine
Vital Records from the 19th century; and Emigration
Lists from Alsace from 1817 to 1866.
Germany
Over 2000 microfilms of vital records of Jewish Communities
from 1700 to 1930s - not all years and not for all towns,
plus Port of Hamburg Departure Indexes and Manifests
and
German Minority Census of 1939 compiled by the Nazis.
Hungary
Over 750 microfilms of vital records of Jewish Communities
from 1770 to 1895 - not all years for all towns and the 1848
Census of the Jews for 23 counties
Poland
More than 2000 microfilms of vital records of Jewish
Communities (ca. 1800-1930s - not all years for all town)
United States
Federal and State Census Records with finding aids (All
US census records from 1790 to 1930; State Census Records
vary); Federal and State Naturalization Indexes and/or
Records; Vital records Indexes and Records for many States;
Passenger Arrival Indexes and Manifests for all US ports (1820
to 1940s), (not complete for all ports); Thousands of
City directories for all States and World War 1 Draft
registrations
LDS' site allows *keyword searches*
What you may not know is that there is a go-around for
speeding up your searches for films in any specific country
of interest.
Try this: go to
http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/FHLC/frameset_fhlc.asp
click on "keyword search" or go directly to keyword
search clicking on this link:
http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/
supermainframeset.asp?display=keywordsearch&columns=*,0,0
In the search block type two words (e.g.): Slovakia
Jewish
Surprise... besides listings of books, census and many other
information in LDS's rich repository, you will get the links
to entries of Jewish vital record films in many Slovakian
towns (not all, see note below).
Note: For obvious reasons, in the case of Slovakia,
try searching several countries Slovakia, Hungary,
Czechoslovakia, Romania, Ukraine, etc.
A final touch of beauty: click on the "order results by
title" button. It makes the search returns much easier
to use since they will appear in alphabetical order of the
links titles e.g. "Anyakonyvek, 1760-1895 Izraelita
Hitkozseg, Nagyteteny" will be listed before "Anyakonyvek,
1764-1895 Izraelita Hitkozseg, Lovasbereny", because
1760 precedes 1764 even if the town
Lovasbereny precedes Nagyteteny.
Of course the above works with any combination of words. For
example, try: Hungary census Jewish or Poland books
Jewish.
CAVEAT: the search engine **will not find**
combinations when the **exact keywords** can not be
matched in its database. Also, so far I haven't discovered a
wildcard method of searching.
Sounds confusing? Try it and in two minutes your will
discover that the searches above are a piece of cake and
this method will save you a lot of time. Submitted by Tom
Venetianer
Personal Ancestral File (PAF)
A free genealogical software program distributed by the
Family History Center. You can download a full working copy
of PAF from the FamilySearch site. This database system
offers just about everything a beginner researcher needs,
though it is not geared specifically towards Jewish
Genealogy, although it has source-citation features,
multimedia scrap booking capabilities to handle photos,
video and sound, and you can select the language in which
you want your information displayed
http://www.familysearch.com/Eng/default.asp
then click on 'Search for your
ancestors in our vast record collections'
Search for Ancestors - All Resources
http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/search_all1.asp
FBI
(Request for information from the
FBI files)
The FBI Headquarters Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) Electronic Reading Room has made selected FBI documents
available for downloading. You will need Adobe's acrobat viewer to
review these files, but the Bureau has provided a link so that you
can download the free viewer software.
Some of the categories available include Famous People and Unusual
Phenomena.
http://www.familychronicle.com/FreedomOfInformationAct.html
The Fall, 1996, Vol XII, No. 3, page 60, had a brief mention of an
FBI article appearing in the JGS of Rochester, NY "News",
dated Summer 1996 (vol 3, No. 4) with a phone reference
number of 202 324 3477. By calling this number you should reach the
FOIA in
Washington, DC. They will verify that a form letter is not
required. Once a request is made, you receive a control number in
about 2 weeks.
Your request for information require
that it be notarized Some form of proof of death must be enclosed
i.e. a death certificate or a newspaper obituary or Who Was Who in
America or a magazine article or other biographical reference.
Further, proof of death itself is not required when the person was
born more than 110 years ago. The assumption is that the person is
most likely deceased after 110 years.
The only FBI file request for which you need to notarize the letter
is for your OWN file, or for the files of LIVING relatives. In this
case, you need to ask for the file under BOTH the Freedom of
Information Act AND the Privacy Act. For the file oaf a living
relative, you need to have a signed, notarized letter of permission
from them.
The FBI does not always disseminate correct information on their
procedures to the public. Disseminated from a posting by Michael
Ravnitzky
http://www.fbi.gov/foia/
Find-a-grave
If someone you are researching was a
personality of sorts, you will have a good opportunity to
learn much about that person by searching
http://www.findagrave.com
Find People with a
similar surname
This site has International E-mail
Address Directory available
http://www.infospace.com
I would also suggest searching at:
http://springoard.telstra.com/au/directories/global.htm
http://www.eu-info.com/inter/World.asp?Country=
(add name of country after the
equal sign)
Find People anywhere in the US
America Find
http://www.aamericafind.com
If you really want to find out about a person, and are
willing to pay $6.95 for a complete report, try -- the
initial search results are free. You only pay to review the
results.
http://kf.knoxw.com
Find Relatives Form and Questionnaire
I found a form letter (you fill in the blanks) along
with a Questionnaire Form offered by Moshe Scheaffer that
looks good to me. It has been slightly modified and I would
welcome further suggestions. If you are interested just
click on the word form below and you will find the
questionnaire form
Questionnaire
Find Classmates and Friends
www.Classmates.com
Find A Town in Central / Eastern Europe
http://www.jewishgen.org/ShtetlSeeker/loctown.htm
A non-Web way to locate your town is to go to your local
library and ask to see the United States Board on
geographic names (1970) gazetteer. Look in the
several volumes of USBGN that cover eastern Europe and the
Russian Empire.
Be flexible with respect to spelling;
v can be 'be 'b', ch can be kh, r can be l, sh can be zh, s
can be sh or z, f can be v, g can be h, ei can be ay, and
all vice versa, vowels are interchangeable, etc., etc. Your
known town names may be the historical name which is no
longer in use. USBGN will likely give under "see also" the
modern name. It is common for many different towns in the
Russian Empire to have the same name so it can be important
to have a general idea of the location of your town.
Books
Another good gazetteer is
"Where Once We Walked" (WOWW).. WOWW will give
only the modern name of your town. The town name expressed
in Yiddish by Jews may or may not be the same the town name
used by the indigenous Russian, Ukrainian, Polish or
Lithuanian people of the region. Note that WOWW will
give the modern town name expressed in the indigenous
language, not English.
http://www.avotaynu.com/books
/WOWWUpdate.htm
The web version search engine for USBGN
http://encyclopedia.thefree
dictionary.com/United%20
States%20Board%20on%20
Geographic%20Names
Library of Congress
Geography and Map Division (LCGMD)
Washington, DC 20540-4761
Telephone: 202 707 6277 or 202 707 8555
Fax: 202 707 8531
Maps are free. LCGMD replies take about 4-8 weeks
http://www.loc.gov/
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem
/index.html
Fond and opis
These are archival designations of the record storage system
that enable an archivist to retrieve records. A "Fond"
is a record group, and an "opis" is an inventory of a
subset of records within a specific fond.
http://archives.gov.by/eng/
index.php?id=194729
Foreign Characters
in Windows 95/98
(see also 'Language
page')
1. Windows 95/98 has Multilanguage support
that you have to install via Add/Remove Programs on the Control
Panel window. Read the Help file carefully about the various ways to
switch between languages. Characters with diacritical marks are
mainly tied to punctuation keys, in some languages they're on the
number keys. Some of the other letter and punctuation keys will
change position.
2. In Word, and some other programs, under the Insert menu, select
Symbols and hunt
around the various characters sets. Select the letter from the
chart.
3. Alt key plus three number codes. In German - Alt. 132 = a/umlaut,
148 -= o/umlaut,
129 = u/umlaut. Windows 3x used a four digit code that still works
with Windows 98 - e.g.. Alt. 0163 = English pound sign. If you want
a copy of a list of French, German and Spanish special characters,
contact Gary Luke
feraltek@zeta.org.au
4. Somewhere in the Windows 98 Help screens is a set of complex key
codes under the tile "Type International Characters" e.g. -
CTL+SHIFT+COLON+ 'a' -> a/umlaut. Similar for o and u/umlaut.
The Hebrew word processing program called Dagesh, has a collection
of characters from all European countries. From a posting by Gary
Luke
Forced-Migration-History
A list devoted to the exchange of
ideas and information on historical aspects of forced
migration, population displacements, resettlement and
related themes (refugee welfare, Diaspora politics, the
construction of identity, urbanization, nationalism,
state-building, etc. Primarily centered around twentieth
century Europe, including the Russian Empire and the Soviet
Unit. To subscribe send an E-mail to mailbase@mailbase.ac.uk
with this text in the body of the message: The web site
below has just been established to discuss the subject of
forced-migration-history forced migration. The also have a
discussion group that looks into various aspects of
migration. The site is mainly intended for academic
discussion, but will be of interest to many.
http://www.mailbase.ac.uk/lists/
forced-migration-history/
Fraternal Order and
Service Clubs
Most of the on-line sites related to fraternal
orders provide historical information about the clubs and current
membership rules. These sites can prove to be valuable resources for
your on-line genealogy researching. Look for the names and addresses
of local chapters so that you can contact them to see if they have
original resources available, of if they can send you copies of
anything pertaining to your ancestor.
Fraternal Order of Eagles
http://www.foe.com/
Benevolent Protective Order of the Elks
http://www.elks.org
Freemasonry
http://www.dcgrandlodge.org/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Freemasonry
Kiwanis International
http://www.kiwanis.org
Knights of Columbus
http://www.kofc.org/
The Knights of Pythias
The Knights of Pythias are an American Jewish Fraternal
group. The group is still in existence and may have records on
former members.
http://www.pythias.org/
"The Order of Knights of Pythias
An international non-sectarian fraternal order, founded in
1864,and was the first to be chartered by an act of Congress" The
Grand Lodge of NY - apparently, the Knights of Pythias Temple of New
York has been turned into condominiums Located at 135 West 70th
Street Upper West Side
http://www.nypythian.com/
Do not be misled by organizations who call their meeting places a
temple. This does not necessarily mean they are a Jewish
organization.
http://www.phoenixmasonry.org
/masonicmuseum/
fraternalism/knights_of_pythias.htm
Lions Clubs
http://www.lionsclubs.org/
Moose International
http://www.mooseintl.org
Optimist International
http://www.optimist.org
Rotary International
http://www.rotary.org
Shriners
http://www.shriners.com
Freedom of
Information Form
(FOIA requests)
FOIA means "Freedom Of Information Act" which is the
law that allows us to get records from various agencies.
These requests go to different offices depending on the
agency involved. Perhaps all INS requests made under FOIA
probably go to Missouri Referring to a FOIA request is
meaningless. Requests made under FOIA could be to SSA, INS,
FBI or any other government agency required under FOIA to
release information. For someone born more than 100 years
ago, no proof is needed. For more recent births they'll
accept anything, even a photo of the stone. You can request
a form G639 by calling the INS at 1 800 870 3676. If you
need further help, call the INS help line at 1 800 375 5283.
Press 1 for the English option, then wait through the first
set of six options and press 9 to talk to an agent. The
below cited OIAs are made on form G-639, available at
http://uscis.gov/graphics/formsfee
/forms/files/g-639.pdf
in files. I hope some of the above information is of help."
From a posting by Chuck Printz,
cfphrai@verizon.net
Freedom of Information Letter
Template
Dear Freedom of Information Officer:
I am writing under the Freedom of Information Act to obtain
copies of INS records to aid in my genealogy research.
Please provide me with a copy of the complete INS file for
the following member (s) of my family (including, but not
limited to, all naturalization and alien registration
documents).
I've included as much information as I have to assist the
NRC in identifying the correct records.
Full Name: Morris FRIEDMAN
Original Surname: KMIOTEK
Birth Date, Place: Approx. 1872, Warsaw (maybe Lomza or
Pultusk), Poland
Death Date, Place: 15-Jul-1928, NYC
Spouse's Name: Jennie, maiden name unknown
Marriage Date, Place: Approx. 1900-1901, NYC
Children's Names: <just list them, can include birthdates if
you wish
Parents' Names: Samuel & Sarah FRIEDMAN (formerly KMIOTEK)
Immigration Date: Approx 1890, according to federal census
records Naturalization Date: Approx 1910, according to
federal census records Known U.S. Residences: 53 Willet
Street, New York, NY (April 1910); 51 Bristol Street,
Brooklyn, NY (January 1920)
If you have any questions about my request, please contact
me at [phone number]
Thank you,
(Format, and the following from a posting by Elise
Friedman)
The INS office in DC used to handle FOIA requests, but now
they are handled now by the National Records Center in
Lee's Summit, Missouri. Mail your requests to:
US Department of Homeland Security
PO Box 648010
Lee's Summit, MO 64064-8010
Fax: 816-350-5785
Phone: 816-350-5570
Within 2-3 weeks of mailing your request, you should receive
an acknowledgement letter that includes a tracking number.
The letter will also state that your request has been placed
on either the simple track or the complex track. In most
cases, naturalization file requests are placed on the simple
track. Still, expect that it will take about 3 months to
receive the results of your request, sometimes even longer.
All genealogy requests are now being handled at this office.
Sending requests there initially could save some time. They
will also accept requests by fax. Verification of death is
required when the birth date is less than 100 years ago, but
they'll accept a picture of the stone as proof. if you fax a
request, don't mail it as well.
http://www.epa.gov/region09/
foia/
http://www.usdoj.gov/oip/
basicreferences.htm
For more information than you will ever want to know
including "Your Right To Know"
www.pueblo.gsa.gov
Free Family Search
Posting Service
http://www.saga.co.uk/publishing
/reunions.html
Family Search - also at
http://www.familysearch.org/
Funeral Directors
A Valuable resource
http://www.jfda.org/
http://www.nfdma.com/resources
.htm
Books
"A Garment Worker's Legacy, The
Joe Fishstein Collection of Yiddish Poetry"
A collection of 2,300 works brought together under the auspices of
Canada's McGill University Library - wonderful!
http://digital.library.mcgill.ca/
fishstein/index.htm
Gazetteer
A geographical dictionary in which political
and physical features of the earth, such as countries, cities,
rivers, and mountains are listed alphabetically, and some
information,
usually descriptive and statistical, is given about them.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Gazetteer
http://shop.delorme.com/OA_
HTML/DELibeCCtpSctDspRte.
jsp?section=10096
http://www.columbiagazetteer.
org/main/Home.page
GEDCOM
(GEnealogical Data
COMmunication)
The standard for exporting and importing information to and
from genealogical databases. GEDCOM enables you to share
your information with others who may be interested in some,
or all of your ancestors. It also enables you to import
GEDCOM files from other researchers who have information
about family of interest, regardless of whether you use the
same software as the other researcher.
http://www.myheritage.com/
family-tree-builder?trn=ppc_google&trp=USA_EN_
FTB_Search_New&trl=
software&gclid=CJHJ_JG08Ko
CFUQbQgodJWzVOQ
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
GEDCOM
GenConnect
Located at RootsWeb's site offer Internet
access to just about every country in the World at
http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs
/qindex.html
GenDirectory.com
http://www.gennetwork.org/
index.html
Genealogy
The USCIS Genealogy Program is a
fee-for-Service providing family historians and other researches
with timely access to historical immigration and naturalization
records.
http://www.uscis.gov/
Genealogy 101
"It's All Relative: In the
Beginning"
An article in the Jerusalem Post written by Schelly Talalay
Dardashti in her City Lights column, is for the beginner.
Research for Genealogy 101
http://www.highbeam.com/Jerusalem
+Post/publications.aspx?date=
200308&pageNumber=2
http://genealogy.about.com/
library/onestop/bl_beginner.htm
Genealogy Archives
Search Page
A list and links to 62 genealogy discussion
groups including soc.genealogy.jewish available at
http://www.kuijsten.net/usenet_
search/genealogy.html
Genealogy and
Eastern Europe
East Europe Gen Web
www.rootsweb.com/~easeurgw/
Genealogy.com
A commercial site that offers an easy search
to a wide variety of records from the US and abroad. To check it out
http://genealogy.com
Genealogy Forum News
An e-zine of informative articles, readers'
and staff members' experiences and helpful tips and techniques to
help further your family research at
http://www.genealogyforum.
rootsweb.com/gfnews/index.html
Genealogy Help List
Volunteers who are willing to help others by
looking up specific items at institutions near
them, or help supply other information easily accessible to them,
not only in the United
States, but many other countries.
http://www.posom.com/hl/
http://helplist.org/
http://surnamesupersearch.com/
cemetery/index.html
http://www.familytreeclub.com/
http://www.familytreesearcher
.com/
http://surnamesupersearch.com
/passenger/index.html
http://surnamesupersearch.com/
surname/index.html
http://surnamesupersearch.com/
country/usa/index.html
http://surnamesupersearch.com/
country/index.html
http://surnamesupersearch.com/
Mormon-igi-database/
index.html
http://surnamesupersearch.com/
ethnic/index.html
(Jewish)
http://surnamesupersearch.com/
rootsweb/index.html
Genealogy and
History
Scholarly Family History Mega Site of World
Wide Genealogy and History
http://www.academic-genealogy.
com/
Genealogy
Information for Beginners
An excellent primer, though specifically
geared towards Ukrainian information, this primer is very well done
and much of the content is of value to any researcher
http://www.infoukes.com/genealogy
Genealogy Databases
422 Genealogy databases are listed for
research at this site. This site was created by five experienced and
devoted genealogists dedicated to helping all genealogists, from
novice to advanced, improve their research skill. Offering free
articles and Genealogy Courses to assist you.
http://www.genhelp.org
Genealogy.net
A German genealogy site - a project of
the Verein for Computergenealogie. The site offers a lot of links
including links to Sample Letters to Churches, offices, Archives,
Organizations, Genealogical charts; Place Lookups in Germany; Unit
conversions; GEDCOM HTML Converter; GEDBAS - the German
language GEDCOM data database; Emigration links; old disease
terminology and a lot more
http://www.genealogienetz.de/
genealogy.html
Genealogy Newsletter
Books
Start your own in print or on-line with the
help of the handy
"Absolutely Family: A Guide to Editing
and Publishing a Family Newsletter"
Authored by Jean Rundquist Nelson and published by Family
Times Publishing in 2000. The author's web site Great Family
Newsletters is at
http://www.greatfamilynewsletters.
homestead.com
Genealogy Today
Genealogy news plus surname queries,
family research tips, articles and genealogy search info
www.genealogytoday.com
Genealogy Toolbox
(Helm's)
Bills itself as the largest
categorized list of genealogical links. It has genealogical
software profiles, search engines, digitized images, how-to
articles, queries and genealogical news stories.
http://www.onlinegenealogy.com/
Genealogy Research
Course for 65+
seniors online
There is a nominal charge.
http://www.uregina.ca/extnsion/
genealogy/index.html
Genealogical
Resources From or About
Churches, Societies, Ethnic Groups,
Adoptees, etc.
Some genealogical resources are
defined geographically, i.e. birth certificates of all of
the people born in Indiana, or the census of all of the
people who were residing in the
English county of Sussex at the time of the 1851
census. Other definitions are more subtle, such as those
resources which deal with members of a certain religious
group, or those belonging to an association, or those who
were adopted. Here, at this site, are some very interesting
web sites including Jewish Genealogy
http://www.everton.com/special.htm
Genealogical Resources
An on-line database available on the Internet at
http://www.russellphotography.com
/genealogist/
The Digital Album
A site that offers information on using a scanner,
preservation issues, tips and reference information along
with building your digital albums
http://www.city-gallery.com/
digital/index.html
Genealogy Pages
Links to other sites including links to Jewish pages.
Requires a bit of searching
http://www.genealogypages.com/
Genealogy Resources on the Internet
http://www.kclibrary.org/?q=
kchistory/genealogy-
resources-internet
http://expertgenealogy.com/free/
Jewish Resources
Lots of great links
http://www-personal.umich.edu/
~cgaunt/jewish.html
http://www.rootsweb.com/
~jfuller/internet.html
Genealogy Newsletter
Resources
Dick Eastman offers a newsletter for genealogy
consumers, packed with straight talk. There is also a paid
subscription version.
http://www.eogn.com/home/
Genealogy Searching
Center
Free genealogy Surname Search and a great deal
more
http://www.genealogysearch.org/
Genealogy Sleuth
from ProGenealogists
http://www.progenealogists.com
/genealogysleuthi.htm
Genealogy Software
Comparison Chart
Compares various genealogical software
packages
http://www.whollygenes.com/
Genealogy Software
Demo Programs
A wide variety listings relating to
genealogical programs are available from links at Louis
Kessler's Genealogical Program
http://www.lkessler.com/
jglinks.shtml
Geography and Maps
Maps
1895 US Atlas Map
http://sydaby.eget.net/swe/
emi_ref.htm
1924 Map of Europe
http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/
WW2Timeline/Maps.html
1939 Maps of Poland with Danzig Corridor
http://bigthink.com/ideas/21091
http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/
WW2Timeline/Maps.html
1941 Maps of Russia
http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/
WW2Timeline/Maps.html
1942 Maps showing the "Eastern Front map of German gains on
http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/
WW2Timeline/Maps.html
1944 Map of Balkans, Carpathian Mountains Terrain Map
http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/
WW2Timeline/Maps.html
Ancestral Villages in Europe
The U.S. Defense Department National Imagery and Mapping
Agency (NIMA) provides on-line imagery from the French SPOT
imaging satellite (circa 1997- 98?) which covers all of
Europe. The data is at 10 meter resolution which means that
objects smaller than about 10 meters in diameter can not be
clearly discerned. But what you will discover is an
excellent view of the terrain, roads, buildings and other
landmarks. Also, it is only in black & white; but it's much
better than a map.
To use this data, go to the site and
select the Tabs: NIMA Coverage = Check DO1-10M View + (Select
one of the three, you can change this later) You then
zoom in by continually clicking on the map. Keep going until
you get to the photos (wait for each image to load!);
however the end game -- finding the right place on the photo
mosaic - can be trick.
http://geoengine.nima.mil/
Ancient Map Site
http://sydaby.eget.net/swe/
emi_ref.htm
Animaps
extends the My Maps feature of
Google Maps by letting you create maps with markers that
move, images and text that pop up on cure, and lines and
shapes that change over time. When you send your
Animaps to friends it appears like a video - they can play,
pause, slow and speed up the action. And it is free!
www.animaps.com/
Antique Maps and Prints
This site offers over 20,000 original antique maps and
prints in stock and a history of over 20 years in the
business - Art Source International also offers turn-of-the
century reproduction posters - Art Source International
http://www.rare-maps.com/
Atlapedia Online Maps
Full color physical and political maps, as well as key facts
and statistics on countries of the world.
http://www.atlapedia.com
Cadastral Maps
These are land maps showing property lines and the names of
owners of houses, often created for tax purposes. see the
Central State Historical Archives in L'viv (Tsentralnyi
Derzhavnyyi Istorychnyi Arkhiv m. L'viv, a.k.a. TsDIAL web
site)
http://www.eegsociety.org
Cartographic Images
From the world of ancient, early medieval, late medieval and
Renaissance --- check out this powerful resource
http://www.iag.net/~jsiebold/
carto.html
Centennia Historical Atlas
http://www.clockwk.com/
centennia.html
Cities and Towns
from the Geography and Map Division, Library of Congress.
Search by Keywords. This site includes maps that depict
individual buildings to panoramic views of large urban
areas.
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/
Digibel
Click-able map pages of most countries in the World
http://www.ace.unsw.edu.au/
fotw/flags/geoindex.html
Eastern Europe
http://sydaby.eget.net/swe/
emi_ref.htm
European Maps
A downloadable web site that offers a Map Collection as well
as Bibliographic Information
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/
http://www.euratlas.com/
summary.htm
Expedia.com
http://www.expedia.com/
FEEFHS
Federation of East European Family History Societies.
This is an international genealogical federation comprised
of societies representing central and east European
ethnicities.
http://www.feefhs.org/
FEEFHS Map Room
Here is a huge collection of large
East European maps
http://www.dcn.davis.ca.us/
~feefhs/maps/indexmap.html
http://dcn.davis.ca.us/~feefhs/
http://feefhs.org/maps/
indexmap.html
http://www.feefhs.org/
maplibrary.html
Geo Atlas
2000 royalty free digital maps available on CDs at
http://www.GEOATLAS.com/
Green Map System
Promotes and links eco and social resources - a must see.
http://www.greenmap.com/
home/home.html
Geographicus
An online gallery of antique maps (17th, 18th & 19th
Century) and prints
http://www.geographicus.com
/blog/
UC Santa Barbara
Large map collection
http://www.library.ucsb.edu/
collections/map-imagery-lab
/map-imagery-laboratory-collections
UCLA (University of California Los Angeles)
The UCLA Map Library merged with the Government
Publications Library to create the Henry J. Bruman Library
of Maps and Government Information (MGI). Maps are
both contemporary and older, and show a high level of detail
and include Eastern European maps printed by the Army
Map service of the Corps of Engineers, compiled in 1953 from
a series of German maps (1931-1942) and U.S.
maps from 1948. There is also a reprinted series of
1:300.000 German maps from 1893.
http://www.library.ucla.edu/
libraries/index.cfm
Geographic Names
United States Board is authorized to establish
and maintain uniform geographic name usage throughout the Federal
government
http://encyclopedia.thefree
dictionary.com/United%
20States%20Board%20on%
Geographic%20Names
Get
A Jewish divorce. In Israel, there is
no civil divorce - you have to go through the procedure practiced in
your own religious community. The Get is a 12-line Aramaic
document. Many of the original certificates of gittin from the
United States are now stored in the American Jewish Historical
Society Archives on the campus of Brandeis U.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Jewish_views_on_marriage
Ghetto Life
A very detailed and graphic story
about life in the ghetto in WW II as described by Lili (Cukier)
Susser is available at Lili's web site
http://www.geocities.com/Paris
/Rue/4017/testimon/
susser5.htm
Glossary of
Genealogy Terms
Genealogy has its own language, similar to other disciplines
such as law, medicine or real estate. When tracing your
family tree it is common to encounter records filled with
archaic, obsolete or legal terms, acronyms and abbreviations
that you aren't familiar with. This can make genealogy seem
a lot like learning a foreign language to an overwhelmed "newbie."
Misinterpreting these terms or applying present-day
definitions to documents created in an earlier century can
lead your research in the wrong direction. Taking the time
to look up the appropriate meaning of a word or
interpretation of an abbreviation is an important part of
your family history search.
http://genealogy.about.com/library
/glossary/blglossary.htm
Google
"You can search for places by simply
typing in an address. Go ahead, go to that site and type in
your own address. Now click on the “Satellite” link in the
upper right corner of the page. Google will change the view
from the “drawn” map to a satellite image of that map. You
will see an aerial view of your home which you can zoom in
or out of. But here is the cool tip. Instead of entering an
address, enter the following in the Google maps search box.
7.771008, -122.41175
Do those numbers look familiar? If so, you may own a GPS
receiver and recognize them as latitude and longitude values
(in this case for a spot in San Francisco). When you do that
search, Google Maps will bring up a map for whatever is at
that latitude and longitude. And if you switch to satellite
mode you will see an actual aerial image of whatever is at
that latitude and longitude. Now if someone gives you a
latitude / longitude for a cemetery, you can now verify that
information online without having to travel there yourself."
From a posting by Ron D Doctor
http://www.google.com/
Google Earth
Zoom in on most areas of the world with this
feature.
http://earth.google.com/
Guberniya
(Gubernya)
It is not appropriate to apply this term to
political or administrative divisions of Austro-Hungary, as this
term was the Russian word for 'province' and would have been
used in Russian controlled territory.
http://www.facebook.com/pages/
Guberniya/119319524781552
Hadassah Jewish
Women
Established at Brandeis University in 1997,
the Hadassah-Brandeis Institute is the world's first
university-based research institute devoted to the study of Jewish
women. The Hadassah-Brandeis Institute supports interdisciplinary
research on Jewish women's historical and contemporary experiences.
The Institute works to increase knowledge about Jewish women around
the world, carrying out activities in partnership with other
universities and organizations.
http://www.hadassah.org/site/
pp.aspx?c=keJNIWOvElH&b=5571065
I found that using the archives of this fine magazine has been of
great help
http://www.hadassah.org
The archives of Hadassah, located in the offices of the AJHS,
document the birth, developments and achievements of the
organization since its founding in 1912 by Henrietta Szold. Its
earliest documents include the original employment agreement between
Szold and the nurses sent to Palestine in 1918 as part of the
American Zionist Medical Unit, the beginning for establishing
Hadassah Hospital.
Reading some of the 98+ years of the original
Hadassah Bulletins and Newsletters which eventually evolved into the
Hadassah Magazine (from 1914 to 1933) have been digitized and
available online.
http://access.cjh.org/
Harvard University
Center for Jewish
Studies
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~cjs/
There is a database that can be
helpful in a select group of these cases, where the lost
person attended Harvard College. It seems likely that
similar databases are available for other schools.
The database is called "Dorm History Search". It
lists the occupants of Harvard freshman
dorms by room and year. It's been maintained by a series of
undergraduates for several years, and can be searched by
name and room number. If you look up your relative, you'll
find their freshman room number. You can then search for all
occupants of that room and neighboring rooms. It's likely
that a freshman roommate will have more recent information
about your relative, and will be easier to find, especially
if they have a more unusual name.
This database is of particular interest because Harvard
College's student population in the postwar years has been
about 20-25% Jewish, although the percentage may have
decreased a bit in recent years due to competition from
Asians. From a posting by Dick Plotz
Dick@Plotz.com
http://www.hcs.harvard.edu/~dorms
/index.cgi?
Hebrew Actors Union
31 E. 7th street
New York, NY 10093-8093
Phone: 212 674 1923
http://www.123exp-orgs.com/t/
00514462860/
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/
1P1-79275752.html
http://www.jewish-theatre.com/
Hebrew Free Burial
Association
224 West 35th Street, Room 300
New York, NY 10001
Fax: 212 239 1981
Rabbi Shmuel Plafker is responsible for burials. Many of the victims
of the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire were buried here.
http://www.hebrewfreeburial.org/
Hebrew Free Burial
Association
363 Seventh Avenue
New York, NY 10001
Phone: 212 239 1662 - Fax: 212 239 1981
Contact: Sandra Wiesel, Administrator
http://www.hebrewfreeburial.org/
Hebrew Genealogy
Forum
Family Roots' is a genealogy forum (in
Hebrew) that is not related to any association/organization and
deals with all aspects of Jewish Genealogy. The Forum is free-to-use
and the subjects discussed in it are not moderated The Forum
includes a: Table with all the surnames researched by its members; a
Gallery for translation and recognizing requests; Links to sites
mentioned and Articles originally written and translated. This is a
place to talk about genealogy research, ask questions, help others,
share your success or failures and meet other people of like
interest. The Forum's manager is Arnon Hershkovitz
arnonh@tx.technion.ac.il
http://www.tapuz.co.il/tapuzforum
/main/forumpage.asp?id=325
Hebrew Union College
Jewish Institute
of Religion
The Hebrew Union College Annual is
published by the Reform Rabbinical
Seminary, Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion.
The Annual is a collection of scholarly articles on Judaic
topics. I believe it is of limited use in genealogical
research unless one believes an ancestor or relative is an
author of one of the articles. Probably of more interest are
the publications and website of the Jacob Rader Marcus
Archives of the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of
Religion. The Archives is the repository of materials on the
American Jewish experience. I believe this Archive will come
to be an important source for us. Finally, the Central
Conference of American Rabbis (Reform) publishes an
annual yearbook which contains the proceedings of its annual
convention and other scholarly addresses and papers. If you
believe an ancestor or relative is/was a rabbi in America
this could be a valuable resource for locating some
information like congregations served, papers written ,
committees and offices served, etc. From a posting
by Rabbi Len Troupp
Located in New York and
Cincinnati. The Klau Library- and the American
Jewish Archives - Community, Temple and Rabbinic Records of
the American Jewish Reform Community and much more
1 West 4th Street
NY 10012
Phone: 212-824-2205
email: HUC.org
http://huc.edu/
Heirlooms
The goal of this web site is to reunite family
mementos of the past with the present generation. Though I didn't
find any using the surnames in my list - who knows? Give it a try
www.heirloomslost.com
Heritage Quest
Magazine
Books
The largest genealogical data provider in the
United States and a leading purveyor of data, products, supplies
and equipment to consumers and institutions. Heritage Quest is
usually available at many libraries and has the census from 1790
thru 1920, easily queried and easily printed. Many libraries allow
access to library card holders over the internet and usually there
is no charge.
www.heritagequest.com
Heraldry - Jewish
In Germany, some few, very wealthy
Jewish families were given minor royal titles and thus had a family
crest. One example is the Rothschild family.
In 18th century Poland, Jewish people were "rewarded"
for converting to the Catholic religion with a minor royal title and
the use of a crest. However, most of our ancestors did not even know
what a crest was.
http://www.heraldica.org/topics
/jewish.htm
HIAS (Hebrew
Immigrant Aid Society)
The oldest international migration and refugee
resettlement agency in the U.S. It was formed in 1881.
http://www.hias.org/
There are microfilm records for the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society's
Philadelphia immigrant records, from 1884 to 1952, LDS films
1,550649 - 1,550655. The records are alphabetical by first letter of
the surname only. Then it is chronological. It is quite a job to
search! They also have films for New York, Philadelphia and
there may be some for Boston, as well
http://www.hias.org/Find_Family/
listings.html
Finding aids are in place for the following
collections: Records of the HIAS Board of Directors, HICEM Main
Office in Europe, HICEM and HIAS Office in Lisbon as well as
most of the series in the Records of the HIAS and HICEM Main Offices
in New York. There is also a folder list for HICEM
Office in Prague.
Documents in these collections reflect the
full range of HIAS activities as an American Jewish immigration
relief society in the first half of this century, as well as its
worldwide efforts to assist refugees attempting to leave Europe
during the period of Nazi persecution.
http://www.baruch.cuny.edu/dml/
engine.php
http://www.hias.org/search/node/
Immigration
http://www.familysearch.org
HICEM (Hebrew
Intergovernmental Committee
for European Migration)
HICEM is an acronym for the Hebrew
Intergovernmental Committee for European Migration. Some relief
agency records from the Holocaust period are archived at YIVO.
http://www.cjh.org
Hillel: The
Foundation for Jewish Campus
Life
www.hillel.org
Historical Societies
(of the world)
on the
Internet
A directory of state and local historical
societies on the world wide web provided by the Local History
Services Department of the Indiana Historical Society. Use your
browser's 'FIND' or 'SEARCH' button to locate the state or country
of your choice.
History of European
Jews
A Time Bonus Section selection in the June
2004 Time On-Line Edition dealing with the
"Books of Life"
http://www.time.com/time/
generations/article/
0,9171,1101040531-641131,
00.html
Holocaust Museum -
(USHMM)
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum
100 Raoul Wallenberg Place, S. W.
Washington, D.C. 20024
http://www.ushmm.org/
This "tailored" link searches the holdings of the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum's research archives. This link is the
equivalent of typing
"YOURSHTETL or Alternate Name" in the Museum's search
form. Make sure to test whether there is any information available
on your shtetl before adding this link.
http://www.jewishgen.org/
cgi-bin/ushmm.pl?shtetl
=YourShtetl">United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum
archives on YOURSHTETL ---
If this database has information on your
shtetl, replace the word "YOURSHTETL" with your shtetl name
and any alternate names preceded by "plus" signs.
From a posting by Fred Apel
"Hot Chocolate"
Books
An on-line magazine is published only twice a
year (May and November by Legends &
Legacies, a Canadian genealogy Web site). Topics are
broad-ranging at
http://www.legends.ca/newsletter
/newsletter.html
How-to-Genealogy
site
Now in its sixth year of publication, you can
subscribe to Treasure Map's popular FREE Genealogy monthly E-mail
Newsletter.
http://www.amberskyline.com/
treasuremaps/
"Huppa Stone"
A large rock where a groom, instead of
stomping on a glass, throws the glass against the stone. One such "huppa
stone" is displayed in the Jewish Museum in Vienna.
According to the inscription, such stones were placed along a
synagogue's north wall, believed to be the abode of demons. The
glass-breaking was supposed to terrify the spirits and distract
their attention from the wedding.
http://www.myjewishlearning.com
/life/Life_Events/
Weddings/Liturgy_Ritual_
and_Custom/Huppah.shtml
Hyam Salomon

http://www.wikitree.com/wiki
/Salomon-1
General Washington's financial advisor and
assistant was a Jewish man by the name of Hyam Salomon. During the
cold winter months at
Valley Forge when American soldiers were freezing and running
out of food, it was Hyam who marshaled all the Jews in America and
Europe to provide money in relief aid to these stranded American
troops and turned the course of history.
Without this help, Washington's Continental Army and the fate of the
American Colonies would have perished before they could have
defeated the British.
If you take a one dollar bill out of your pocket and look at the
back at the Eagle, the stars above the Eagle's head are in the six
point Star of David to honor Jews. And, if you turn the Eagle upside
down, you will see a configuration in the likeness of a Menorah --
both at the insistence of George Washington who said we should never
forget the Jewish people and what they have done in the interest of
America.
Illegitimate
Children
Re illegitimacy, it is possible that a member
of your family did not bother to register as being married in a
civil registry. According to Jewish Law, only a child born to a
married woman whose father is not the woman's legitimate husband, is
a "mamzer" (bastard). All other cases are Kosher.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com
/bastard
Immigration and
Naturalization Service
(INS)
Located in Washington, D.C. has email
capability
INS.History@usdoj.gov
They will respond to requests for securing historical data on the
functions and statistical findings of the INS at a given point in
time. Please do not abuse their good intentions.
Independent Order of
Brith Abraham
(IOBA)
Organized in 1859 and reorganized in 1887.
Last known address is 136 E. 39th St., NYC 10016. Phone: 212 725
1211. Last known Grand Master was Robert Freeman (1990) Post #230
IOBA has not been active for a great number of years and they have
no records as of this date (Sept. 1990) of any living members who
might be available. The purposes of the organization were to protect
Jewish rights and to combat anti-Semitism; that they support Soviet
and Ethiopian emigration and the safety and dignity of Jews
worldwide.
http://www.bklyn-genealogy-info.com
/Ethnic/Jewish/
JewishPre1934.html
http://digifindingaids.cjh.org/?pID
=360448
Index and
Directories
A Directory is a listing like an encyclopedia
or a library's card catalog. It has named categories with entries
assigned to categories partly or entirely by human catalogers. You
look things up by finding a category you want seeing what it
contains.
An Index simply collects all the items, extracts keywords from them,
and makes a big list. You search the index by specifying some
words that seem likely, and it finds all the entries that contain
that word.
Each has its advantages and disadvantages. Directories are organized
better, but indexes are larger. Directories use consistent
terminology, while indexes use whatever terms the underlying Web
pages used. Directories contain fewer useless pages, but indexes are
updated more frequently. This information was obtained from 'Today's
eTIP™' offered by
www.dummiesdaily.com
Index of Obituaries
An interesting and possibly an informative
site
http://www.rootsweb.com/
Infoukes Mailing
List
Instructions on how to subscribe to this
valuable information site. Much can be learned from the genealogy
section, especially for Polish, Belarus and Ukrainian researching
http://www.infoukes.com/lists
INS (US
Immigration and Naturalization
Service)
The INS has established an E-mail capability.
They do not have the capability or to do genealogical research, or
field questions specific to genealogy, the office email capability
does offer an important resource for securing historical data on the
functions and statistical findings of the INS at a given point in
time. The office will respond to E-mail questions regarding agency
history and research in INS public records. They will also entertain
specific requests for copies from documents in their Historical
Reference Library.
INS.History@usdoj.gov
http://www.uscis.gov/portal/site/
uscis
International
Association of Jewish
Genealogical Societies
Cemetery Project link
http://www.iajgsjewishcemetery
project.org/tunisia/index.html
International
Institute for Jewish Genealogy
The Mission Statement was published in the
Winter 2003 issue of Avotaynu magazine.
Jewish genealogists from around the world have created an academic
research institute affiliated with the Jewish National and
University of Jerusalem
http://www.iijg.org/Documents/
Bruell.pdf
International Ladies
Garment Worker's
Union
If your relative was an officer in either an
ILGWU local, or at the national level, or was a delegate to a union
School of Industrial & Labor Relations, Labor-Management Document
Center, contact:
Cornel University
Ithaca, N.Y. 14853
Attn: Richard Strassberg - Director
There are no records for rank-in-file members.
http://www.nps.gov/archive/elro/
glossary/ilgwu.htm
http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/ead/
htmldocs/KCL05780-020.html
International Phone
Directory
A site that offers both International white
and yellow pages for many countries, including Europe
http://www.eurocall.net/world/
world.htm
International Red
Cross
International Tracing Service of the
Red Cross
Located in Arolsen
http://www.its-arolsen.org
Has a tracing service
http://www.ifrc.org/
Additional Red Cross sites include:
http://www.redcross-cmd.org/Chapter
/Services/holocaust.html
http://www.com-de.pair.com/
WASt/arolfren.htm
Application Form
http://www.redcross.org/intl/
holotrace
which has links discussing the tracing process and other
links.
Read my 'Margulis
Saga' story and
you will note that I used their free service and was
able to locate a living nephew I never knew until they found
him.
www.ushmm.org/its
International Reply
Coupons (IRC)
IRC's provide foreign addressees with a
prepaid means of responding to inquiries,
solicitations or other types of communications that are initiated by
U.S. senders. IRC's are exchangeable for postage stamps at post
offices in all foreign countries that are members of the Universal
Postal Union. Each IRC is equivalent in value to the destination
country's minimum postage rate for an unregistered airmail letter.
The purchase price is $1.75 per coupon (6/1/01). The U.S. Postal
Service Web site is at
http://www.usps.com
The
International Survey of Jewish
Monuments
Can be searched by country and also has a
separate U.S. database which can be searched by location or
architect or several other criteria
http://www.isjm.org/
Internet Family
Finder
Helps find your ancestors in web sites, on CDs
and on-line data. Give this site your
attention:
http://www.familytreemaker.com/
allsearch.html
Internet FAQ
Archives
Collects frequently asked questions from many
Internet newsgroups and lets you search by a keyword.
http://www.faqs.org/faqs/
Internet Jewish
History Sourcebook
A fascinating site detailing the people,
beliefs and history of the Jewish people
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/
jewish/jewishsbook.html
JCCs of North
America
http://www.jcca.org/
JDC
They have a microfilm made from registration
cards of people seeking help during World War II through Joint
offices in Munich, Vienna and
Barcelona. This comprises some 80,000 names with
family details. After the war, the Joint had a location office in
Istanbul which tried to locate refugees and lost families. These
records are also available. And finally, there is a list of
survivors, which, alas, does not have a search engine. This list is
arranged according to location, and then by family names arranged
alphabetically. The JDC lists include additional information that is
not available at Yad Vashem.
archives@jdc.org.il
Jewish
The subject of - once you get on this
site, I hope you will come back to mine. There is so much to
learn from the good rabbi. This is a guide from everything
from tort law and Kashrut to astrology and more.
http://www.aishdas.org/webshas/
Jewish-American
History
http://www.jewish-history.com
http://www.jewish-history.com/links.html
Jewish-American
History On The Web
Includes documentation on Jews in the Civil
War; Jews in the Wild West; Book Reviews and Web rings dealing with
history, poetry and fiction, politics and philosophy
http://www.jewish-history.com
Jewish Auction Sites
Who knows. Maybe you will find a valuable
piece of information - a book - a family treasure!
www.tovbid.com
www.oyveyauctions.com
www.judaica.hu
Jewish.Com
www.jewish.com
Jewish Communities
Congress of Secular Jewish Organizations
http://www.csjo.org/
The European Council of
Jewish
Communities
http://www.ecjc.org/
World Council of Jewish Communal Services
New York, NY 10017, USA
http://www.haruth.com/Jewsofthe
World.html
http://www.worldjewishcongress.
org/en/communities
Jewish Communities of the World
http://www.virtual.co.il/communities/
wjcbook/lithuan/
JewishGen Communities Database
An online gazetteer that provides
a compilation of information found on JewishGen about a particular
shtetl.
www.jewishgen.org/Communities
Search.asp
Law and Legal Information Sites
http://www.findlaw.com/
"Jewish Customs and
Practices, their Origins,
History, Development and the reasons for
each of them"
Books
An illustrated reference book. This site lists
the historical origins of customs, how they have developed and
changed over the ages and, wherever possible, it give at least one
explanation for them. On this website Jewish practices are described
from the point of view of Reform and Liberal Movements in Britain.
http://jewish-customs.co.uk/
Jewish Data
The following indexed images have been added
to this commercial online database - name searches are free and full
access requires membership, with special rates for Societies and
Libraries
www.jewishdata.com
Images of every tombstone in the following Jewish Cemeteries:
Saratoga Springs, NY:
Sharei Tephilah on Weibel St.
Springfield, MA: Bnei Israel Anshei Sfard, Kesser Israel, and City
of Homes Assn. They are all located on Wilbraham Ave.
Utica, NY:
Jonathan's lodge, House of Jacob, House of Israel, Tzvi Jacob, Beth
El, all located on Woods Rd.
Montreal, Canada:
Baron De Hirsch on Savane St.
20,000 records and images, about a quarter of the entire Cemetery.
Declaration of Intention Documents
Contain detailed information about immigrants who
applied for US Citizenship, have been added to the database.
High-resolution images of each document can be viewed online. The
following 11,000 records have been added:
Jewish documents from:
Circuit Court District of MA (Boston area) 1906-1910
Kings County (Brooklyn) NY 1906-1910
Oneida County (Utica area) NY 1906-1949
Onondaga County (Syracuse area) NY 1906-1930
Saratoga County NY 1906-1930
Name searches are free, and full access requires membership, with
special rates for Societies and Libraries.
From a posting by Avraham Labera
alaber@nycap.rr.com
- a commercial site offers an
on-line database on JewishGen January 26, 2004
Jewish Deaf
Community Center
Jewish Braille Institute
http://www.jdcc.org/
Jewish
Encyclopedia.com
Books
A free Jewish encyclopedia on the Internet and
it contains the complete contents of the 12-volume Jewish
encyclopedia, which was originally published between 1901-1906 and
contains over 15,000 articles and illustrations. Very slow loading
http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/
Jewish Education
Center Cleveland - teacher resources
http://www.jecc.org/
Jewish Festivals and
Holidays
Find out about the many festivals that
are celebrated throughout the Jewish year
http://www.ort.org/asp/article
.asp?id=157
Jewish Film Archive
Online
Subject indexes and distribution information
as well as reviews
http://members.aol.com/jewfilm
/index.html
Jewish Gangsters
There were a number of well known Jewish
gangsters in the 1920 and 1930s including
Meyer Lansky, Bugsy Siegel, Longy Zwillman and Moe Dalitz. The roots
of Jewish gangsterism lay in the ethnic neighborhoods of the Lower
East Side; Brownsville, Brooklyn; Maxwell Street in Chicago and
Boyle Heights in Los Angeles.
http://www.ilperetz.org/graduates/
michael_sugarman.htm
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org
/jsource/US-Israel/gangsters.html
A little known story about Meyer
Lansky has to do with the S. S. Normandie, a
French ocean liner seized by the United States
that caught fire during refurbishment at a Hudson River
port. Because the ship was to be used to ferry
American troops to Europe, the disaster fueled
speculation of sabotage. Because of the fire, it may
well be that it saved the lives of thousands of soldiers
from death at the hands of Nazi torpedoes. The story
that connects Meyer Lansky, the Normandie and that a
ferret squad existed was written as a novel by author Eric
Dezenhall entitled: "The Devil Himself: A Novel"
and is available at Amazon.com

Jewish Gombin
Historical Society
http://weber.ucsd.edu:80/~lzamosc/
gombin.html
JewishGen
ShtetlSeeker
Locate your town (shtetl)
http://www.jewishgen.org/shtetlseeker
/loctown.htm
Jewish Genealogical
Societies
There are some 80 member societies in the
world. A complete list, including the names of
the Presidents can be found at
www.jgsny.org/
Jewish Genealogy
JewGen
www.genhomepage.com/jewish.html
Jewish Genealogy
Links
Louis Kessler offers a lot of links to many
genealogy sites including Jewish Genealogy and Computer Program
Comparisons of features at
http://www.lkessler.com/jglinks.shtml
Jewish Genealogy
Month
http://www.ancestry.com/learn/library/
article.aspx?article=2431
Jewish Genealogy on
the Internet
http://www.avotaynu.com/
wwwsites.html
Jewish Genealogy
Resources
http://www.orthohelp.com/geneal/
geneal.htm
Jewish Genealogy
Resources on the Internet
http://www-personal.umich.edu/
~cgaunt/jewish.html
and there is a list of Jewish resources, including
JRI-Poland. Scroll down and click on "Immigrant and
Ethnic Heritage"
http://www.familytreemagazine.com
/categories.asp
Jewish Kop (head)
The Journal of Biosocial Science
claims that Ashkenazim Jews exhibit the highest average
I.Q. of any ethnicity, scoring 12 to 15 points above
Europeans. Such smarts are thought to be the result of
natural selection between 800 C.E. and 1700 C.E. During the
Middle Ages, Jews mainly worked in professions in which 'increased
I.Q. strongly favored economic success ... which led to
increased reproductive success." It is believe,
according to the authors, that Tay-Sachs and other genetic
disorders are the downside effect of the genes.
http://www.jewfaq.org/signs.htm
Jewish Language
Research Website
What a site! Here you will find:
Bibliography of printed resources on Jewish Languages
Jewish Language
Heblang (Hebrew Language)
Ladino Komunita (Discussions in Ladino)
Sephardi/Mizrachi Studies Caucus Mailing List
Hebrew Computing
Jewish Computing - and the list goes on and on.
http://www.jewish-languages.org
/resources.html
Jewish Link Index
http://www.jewishlink.net/
Jewish Memorial
Center
http://www.jewishmemorialcenter
.com/
Jewish Museum of New
York
www.thejewishmuseum.org
Jewish National Fund
http://www.jnf.org/
Jewish People
Finding List
Here is an often overlooked source
(ICQ) to find people all over the world by name, by
occupation and a lot more
http://www.icq.com/whitepages/
search.html
http://www.jewishpeoplefinder.com
Another source is
http://www.anybirthday.com/
Jewish Portal Sites
Absoluteastronomy.com
This online site is an information portal that provides
reference information and interactive features for a variety
of topics.
http://www.absoluteastronomy.
com/index/pages/1
Shamash
A Jewish portal site
http://shamash.org
Jewish Professional
Genealogists
Committee of Professional Jewish Genealogists
(CPJG) a list of members is available at the JGS of Los Angeles
http://www.jewishgen.org/jgsla
or send a SASE (self addressed stamped envelope #10) to
Eileen Polakoff, 240 West End Ave. #15A
New York, NY 10023
for a paper copy of the CPJG flyer. This list includes
researchers in Israel.
Professional Researchers
The Special Interest Group for Romanian
Jewish Genealogy offers a wonderful informational site about
dealing with professional researchers at
http://www.jewishgen.org/romsig/
rsdb/prof-sum.html
Jewish Public
Library
www.jewishpubliclibrary.com
Jewish
Reconstructionist Federation
http://www.jrf.org/
Jewish Resources
Webmaster Andy Tannenbaum
http://shamash.org/trb/judaism.html
http://www.shamash.org/
www.jewishmag.com
Jewish Telegraph
Roots Directory
The English Jewish newspaper, The
Jewish Telegraph, offers a totally-free Roots Directory for people
trying to locate lost family. To post a request E-mail to
mike1cohen@aol.com or
write to
Jewish Telegraph
11 Park Hill
Bury Old Road
Prestwich
Manchester, England M25 0HH
Include a full postal address.
http://jewishtelegraph.com
Jewish Theological
Seminary
The academic arm of the conservative movement,
includes a Rabbinical School, Cantorial School, Graduate School, and
affiliated institutions like Ramah Camps and the Jewish Museum in
NY. has it's own web site at
http://www.jtsa.edu/
Jewish War Veterans
of the USA
1811 R Street NW
Washington, DC 20009
www.jwv.org
Jewish Women's
Archives
Executive Director is Gail Twersky
Reimer. The mission of the Jewish Women's Archive is to
uncover, chronicle and transmit the legacy of Jewish women
and their contributions to families and communities, to the
Jewish people and the world. The JWA web site, which
hosts a 'Virtual Archive' of information on Jewish women, is
at
www.jwa.org
Jewish World Center
http://www.jewishworldcenter.com/
Jews - Who We Are (
Jewish People
)
http://www.shoreshim.org/tribefinder
/tribe/default.asp
Jun. 3 2005 (UPI) -- A University of Utah study of Ashkenazi
Jews suggests an unusual link between their genetic diseases
and their higher intellectual ability. The study, to appear
in Cambridge University's Journal of Biosocial Science, says
this unusual pattern of diseases among the Ashkenazim of
central and northern Europe is the result of natural
selection for enhanced intellectual ability. The study says
the selective force was the restriction of Ashkenazim in
medieval Europe to occupations that required more than usual
mental agility, the New York Times reported Friday. The
study has received mixed reaction, with some scientists
saying the finding is extremely implausible.
Others say the researchers have made
an interesting case. The Utah researchers say Ashkenazic
diseases like Tay-Sachs are a side effect of genes that
promote intelligence. They say for some 900 years Jews in
Europe were restricted to managerial occupations, which were
intellectually demanding. In the United States, Ashkenazi
Jews make up 3 per-cent of the American population but have
won 27 percent of its Nobel prizes. They also account for
more than half of world chess champions.
Jews in Sports
Maccabi USA
Sponsors the USA team to the World Maccabiah Games.
http://www.maccabiusa.com/
http://www.maccabiusa.com/index
.php?option=com_
weblinks&Itemid=23
www.Jewishsports.com
www.jewsinsports.org
Hank Greenberg
Authored by Mark Kurlansky and published by Yale University
Press
www.yalebooks.com
International Jewish Sports Hall of
Fame
www.jewishsports.net
Joint Distribution
Committee (American)
711 Third Avenue
New York, NY 10017-4014
Visits to the JDC archives for 'qualified,
committee approved researchers are by appointment only.'
Apply for an application form which needs to be accompanied
by two letters of reference or introduction.
http://www.jdc.org/about-jdc.aspx
Journal of On-line
Genealogy
A lot of articles and links
http://www.onlinegenealogy.com/
Judaism and Jewish
Resources
A well-organized index, carefully
monitored and rich with Jewish resources
www.shamash.org/trb/judaism.html
Kabbalah
Addresses a philosophical movement
that cuts across all Jewish denominations and religions and
is a continuously gathering resource for Jewish mysticism
http://members.tripod.com/theway
ofkabbalah/
Karaites
Survivors of an ancient Jewish sect
still living in Israel
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=
QHyNWh_ww4Y
http://www.philtar.ac.uk/encyclopedia
/judaism/kara.html
"Ketubbah: Jewish
Marriage Contracts of
the Hebrew Union College
Skirball Museum and Klau Library"

http://www.suite101.com/search.cfm?q=Ketubbah&Submit.x=12&Submit.y=13
The bridal price was the standard 100 zekukim, to which the
groom added a further 100 zekukim (also standard).
Religious documents would not necessarily contain secular
names, even if they existed - not the traditional Orthodox
Ketubbah. Some religious documents have a State seal - Jews
usually had to document their marriage at a local registrar,
often a church official until the mid-19th century.
Only the Hebrew name and occasionally kinnuy (cognomen)
appears in a Ketubbah, not the surname. In a get (divorce)
all first names, cognomens and other names the partner has
ever been known by -- including non-Jewish names -- are
included and all in Hebrew characters.
The traditional Ketubbah is written in Aramaic with a
few Hebrew phrases (particularly the date and location);
in Israel today, I believe, it is sometimes all
Hebrew. In some branches of Judaism the Ketubbah is
written in the local language, e.g. English, and
there is always an option to have a local-language Ketubbah,
too; often it's printed on the back of the traditional one.
Also, the traditional Ketubbah uses the formal Hebrew names
for both bride and groom. The surname is not usually given,
only the Hebrew names of the two partners and the names of
their respective fathers. Unless one has some idea of time,
location, Hebrew name of bride and groom, or fathers' name,
it would be hard to determine whether a specific Ketubbah is
that of an ancestor known primarily by surname.
The T'naim, on the other hand, contract at time of
engagement, might very well have been in Yiddish.
A Ketubbah was commonly preprinted. The handwritten info
useful to researchers includes: - date (in Hebrew) -
name of bride and groom (Hebrew) and their fathers (Hebrew)
- whether the bride (but not the groom) is unmarried,
widowed or divorced - the amount of the "official"
dowry (usually a standard 100 zuzim; which is halved in
the case of a previously married woman), and then the
groom "generously" doubles the standard sum (he is
free to add more money, which may or may not be recorded in
the Ketubbah).
The names at the bottom would be those of the two "ritual"
witnesses, who must be Sabbath-observant according to
Halacha. By custom, they are not close relatives. In the
printed Ketubbah, the word nun - alef - memsofit is usually
printed before each signature. The word is usually related
to formal speech and I assume here it relates to a written
declaration. Can anyone clear up the nikud/pronunciation and
precise meaning of the word?
The signatories may occasionally be useful in research.
Obviously, if the witness is a high-status person we can
assume that bride or groom's family had high status, but the
absence of high status proves nothing. With luck, we might
find a neighbor or a schoolmate--or a father's mechuttenim.
Posted by Michael Bernet
The Jewish Museum in New York and the
Jewish Theological Seminary have a selection of decorative
Jewish legal marriage documents from Yemen, Egypt, Italy,
Greek, Iran, India, Syria, the Netherlands, Croatia,
Afghanistan, Morocco, Turkey and Ukraine.
Witnesses
Two witnesses are required, adult males, who are observant
and keep the Sabbath according to all Orthodox requirements.
In most communities it would not be an immediate relative,
father, brother, but it could be a cousin, uncle or
brother-in-law. The groom (and the bride - and just about
anyone else), can sign the Ketubbah if they wish - but
they are not in a position to be legal witnesses. The
witnesses attest to the fact that the groom betrothed the
bride, and that he promised to fulfill the obligations
written in the Ketubbah.
The latter, but not the form. The Ketubbah is
usually signed before the commencement of the kidushin - marriage
ceremony - so the witnesses there cannot attest to the betrothal (which
has not yet taken place). The witnesses signed on the Ketubbah
attest that they have seen the bridegroom commit himself
contractually to the obligations therein. They must be adult
observant Jewish males who are not related to each other or to
either of the parties to the marriage. Uncles, cousins, and
brothers-in-law are all unsuitable ("posul") to act. Many
communities do not even allow second cousins.
"The bride and groom would each have a witness."
While this may sound strange, it is practiced in some communities.
Serving as a witness to the kesubo, (or indeed the marriage
ceremony) is considered to be an honor. Since there are two
honors going here, it is not uncommon for the bridegroom's family
and the bride's family to honor one witness each.
When it comes to signing the official marriage register, the rules
are quite different, and are determined by the local legal
requirements. In New York City and elsewhere in the US, I
guess the Jewish ceremony is not recognized and a separate civil
marriage is required, so there is no reason to use the same
witnesses.
In England, where Jewish marriage is recognized by statue,
the register is held by the Secretary for Marriages of the Shul, and
records the fact of a marriage having taken place under the shul's
auspices. Thus you might expect the witnesses to the religious
ceremony to sign the register, this is indeed practiced by the Shul
to which I belong and where my daughters married. But other
communities use different witnesses. On my own marriage certificate,
my wife's uncle - not a valid witness under Jewish law - is one of
the signatories. I believe the Shul concerned (the Sunderland
Beth Hamedrosh) used standard witnesses for all marriages. So
there is little that can be deduced about the relationship of
witnesses on a marriage certificate to the bride/groom. But you can
be sure (for Orthodox marriages) that the witnesses on a Ketubbah
were not related to the parties. From a posting by Perets Mett
and Michael Bernet
http://www.thejewishmuseum.org
Traditional text of the ketubah, and alternate
modern texts are discussed at this site
http://www.elaineadler.com/
Kindertransport
An organization of German Jewish
children sent to England during WW II
Reunion of Kindertransport
1A Frognal
London NW3 England
Phone: +44 (0) 171 431 6161
http://www.kindertransport.org/
history03_rising.htm
Kindred Konnections
Offers both a free and a paid Service
dealing with genealogy
http://www.mytrees.com/
Korzh.com
Crammer is a freeware flashcard and
reminder software that provides a method of computer based
training. It is intended to teach new foreign words or any
other terms, formulas, etc. Anyone can get free registration
of Crammer Pro for new dictionary by any theme (language,
history dates, computer-related terms etc.) or new
translation of Crammer's interface to another language)
http://www.korzh.com/crammer
Check out
www.korzh.com/crammer/dicts/
for a list of the various
languages
Kulanu
An organization devoted to rescuing
Jews in remote communities. The link
offers various types of mailing lists that may be of
genealogical value
http://www.rootsweb.com/~jfuller
/gen_mail_general.html
Landmanschaften
Books

To learn about the history of these societies,
read
"Jewish Immigrant Associations &
American Identify in New York,
1880-1939"
Authored by Professor Soyer
Certificates of Incorporation for
Yurovshchina, Ukraine Society
http://www.shtetlinks.jewishgen.org
/yurovshchina/Landsman.html
Landsman
A Yiddish word for "countryman (Launtzmaun). Among
Jews of past generations, it would used to mean a Jew from the same
village, city or region, depending on the context. In the U S,
it is often used to refer to another Jew. Landmanschaften were an
extraordinary
number of fraternal lodges of mutual aid, benevolent, sick and
benefit, burial and free loan societies, formed by the immigrants
themselves. These societies also provided a sense of belonging, a
place to preserve their dignity when they fell on hard times. It was
also a way of preserving familiar ties to the Old World. In 1900,
there were over 1,000 societies in New York alone, and by 1935 well
over 3000.
Landmanschaften and Burial Societies
http://www.jgsny.org/cemfaqs.htm
Lists of Names of Officers
of Kielce, Kuznica, Labun, Ukraine, Michalowo, Ozarow, Pilica,
Sokolka, Wielun and Zabludow Societies were transcribed by Steve
Lasky and are documented online on the Museum of Family History
cemetery project webpage.
www.museumoffamilyhistory.com/
lia-sg-03sp.htm
www.jgsny.org
Landmanschaften Societies
A list of the various Landmanschaften Societies in the early
1900s
http://www.jewishgen.org/infofiles
/landshaf.txt
Landmanschaften Files at the American
Jewish Historical Society
The collection inventoried here. New York Metro area - "As a
general rule, there is a method of finding a Landsman shaft
and that is through the Landsmanshaft plot in a cemetery. Of
course, most Landmanschaften are long gone, but if they are
still active, they may have plots available in one or more
of their cemeteries. To find such plots in the NYC area, go
to the site of the JGS (NY) which has a cemetery plot index.
Click on Burial Societies in the New York Metropolitan Area
and run a query on your town and/or society name. This will
probably come up with one or more cemeteries in the NY
area.This is found under
www.jgsny.org
http://www.jewishgen.org/databases
/ajhsv.htm
Phone the cemetery and see if there is an active burial
group participating there and ask for the name of the person
arranging burials. This will be the Landsmanshaft
representative. There are over 10,000 plot references here
and this project was led principally by the indefatigable
Ada Greenblatt." From a posting by Joe Fibel
Societies at Mount Zion Cemetery
http://www.mountzioncemetery.com/
societies.asp
Language Problem
Although my web site is written in the
English language (only because I am a second generation
American on my mother's side), that doesn't mean that my
site can't be read (or for that matter any site) in
your favorite language. Google, in some cases, offers to
translate a web site for free, but there is another
suggestion made by Sally Bruckheimer in a posting.
"In Internet Explorer go to View pull-down menu, choose
Encoding and then MORE and pick what looks good. It will
either work or it will make the gibberish worse, in which
case put the choice back where it was. Hint: you may have to
install special fonts (available at Microsoft web-site)
to get 'odd' languages like Lithuanian
right. There is Lithuania (and every other language)
Windows which automatically work in the appropriate
language.
"I would like to point out, however, that there is a
difficulty connected with the use of non-ASCII characters,
i.e. characters with diacritical marks. On my screen, for
example, because my browser is not set up specifically for a
Lithuanian character set, there are a lot of characters
replaced by question marks. What would have been more
informatively written as "Siauliai", for example, is
displayed as "?iauliai", which doesn't convey much. It would
have been better, I dare say, to sacrifice the special S
character, and use the unadorned S, so that every browser
could display a better approximation, though inexact, to the
original."
Eureka! I found out recently that Google provides loads of
services and tools which are hidden for some strange
reasons. Google's language tool is one of them that you
don't want to miss.
You can have this Google feature translate my page into
another language - and quickly! You can ask this feature to
search for sites written in a specific language - a choice
of 35 are available at this time.
Or, you can limit your search to sites located in a specific
country. To use this site to not only translate a site
(including my pages) into a different language choice, you
can also use it to translate words and/or sentences from one
language to another.
www.google.com/language_tools
http://www.freetranslation.com/-/desktop-translator/
?6FFARYLE91X01HKT
Language Translator
http://www.refdesk.com
LDS (Church of the
Latter Day Saints)
On-line catalog
http://www.familysearch.org/Search/searchcatalog.asp
Legacy Project
The Legacy Events Index provides a
compendium of all the materials on The Legacy Project
website. By clicking on one of the events listed below, you
will be able to view all the scholarly and creative works on
this site that reflect on that particular historical event.
The Legacy Events Index will be expanded over time
http://www.legacy-project.org/
African Conflicts
Apartheid in South Africa
Armenian Genocide
Cambodian Killing Fields
Chattel Slavery
Chinese History
Conflicts in the Balkans
Holocaust
India - Pakistan Partition
Indigenous Peoples
Indonesian Conflict
Korean War
Latin American Repression
Middle East Conflicts
September 11
Soviet Repression
Spanish Civil War
Sri Lankan Conflict
The Irish Troubles
Vietnam War
World War I
World War II in Asia
World War II in Europe
Leo Baeck
Karen Franklin is director of family
research
http://www.cjh.org/p/pdfs/LBI07.pdf
Letter Forms in 14
European Languages
Copies of various forms that you can
use as a template to send your inquiries to a foreign
archive at
http://web.inter.nl.net/users/DJGH/letter.html
Libraries
Association of Jewish Libraries
http://www.jewishlibraries.org/
Digital Librarian
A librarian's choice of the best of the web and maintained
by Margaret Vail Anderson, a librarian in Cortland, New
York. Here you will find a wealth of links
http://www.digital-librarian.com/genealogy.html
Genealogy Libraries on the World
Wide Web
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~cgaunt/gen_web.html
http://public.csusm.edu/guests/history/websites/
Internet Library
Reference Center for Almanacs, Calendars, Telephone &
Address, Genealogy, Geography; Reading Room for Books,
Magazines and Newspapers from around the world; Web
Searching; Regional and Country information and more
http://www.ipl.org/
Israel Center for Libraries
http://www.icl.org.il/english.html
Jewish Theological Seminary of
America Library
http://www.jtsa.edu/Library.xml
Libraries and Museums
Worldwide libraries and Museums Internet connections for
genealogy and family history
http://www.dcn.davis.ca.us/~vctinney/media.htm
Libraries in Israel
http://www.huji.ac.il/huji/eng/library_aleph_e.htm
Library of Congress
Online catalog site
http://www.loc.gov/catalog/
Also I suggest looking at this
Library of Congress site
where you will be overwhelmed with links for Services for
Researchers.
http://lcweb.loc.gov/rr/
Library Power Sights
This site allows you to search many major libraries in the
US.
http://www.publiceducation.org/library/sub/paterson.html
Questia
The world's largest online library of over 45,000 books and
360,000 journal, magazine, and newspaper articles
www.questia.com
See also
'Books'
Ben Gurion University Library offers some
information in a periodical published in Hebrew from around
1917 to around 1925 known as "Reshumot" in contains memoirs,
reminiscences, eye witness reports of pogroms, etc. Another, even
better, resource, is the periodical "He-avar" (the English
language table of contents transliterates as Heawar)It was
published by the Association for the Historical Study of Russian and
Ukrainian Jewry.
Volume 21 has the index for volumes
1-20. The periodical appeared irregularly until about 1976.
Many volumes have abstracts in English. The contents
are straight history, book reviews, memoirs, correspondence,
biographies, etc. It is a treasure house!
Reshumot and He-avar are also
available at a number of university libraries in the U.S.
and may be available through Interlibrary Loan. The Library
of Congress and OCLC accession numbers, taken from the
WorldCat database, will help your librarian find them:
Reshumot GR98.A1, 5238064
He-avar DS135.R9, 6665265
From a posting by Ida and Yosef Schwarcz, Arad, Israel
Librarians Serving Genealogists (LSG)
http://www.cas.usf.edu/lis/genealib/
University of Haifa Library
http://lib.haifa.ac.il/
"Periodically I see people posting a request
that they need a local obit in some town in America. Here's a
tip: try the local library in that town."
"I have written to libraries in many parts of the US and in
most cases they are very willing to look up an obit for you if you
have the date of death. In some cases the local library even has its
own index of the local newspaper that does not exist nationally. In
one case in North Carolina not only did the librarian look up
the obit but when I explained what I was doing she also got me a
listing from the local phone book that helped solve one of the my
tree mysteries. What's more often the libraries will not charge you
at all or will ask for a small token donation to one of their funds.
My suggestion, try it and you might just find it works
for you too." Good luck in your researching. From a posting by
Allan Jordan
Library of Congress
Map Collections -
1544 to 1996
A huge collection. The American Memory
Maps can give you the graphic view of settlements, cities,
battles and territories at
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/mapcoll23.html
The Library of Congress Geography and Map Division (LCMD)
Russian maps have a scale of 1:126,000 (1 cm = 1.26 km/1
inch = 2 miles) and have Cyrillic lettering that will
indicate the historical Russian name that may or may
not be the same as the Yiddish name that you know. The LCGMD
Russian maps have two longitude scales with Polkova = 0 and
Paris, France = 0. To convert from Polkova to Greenwich, add
31 degrees 20 minutes to the longitude value shown on the
map.
The LCGMD German maps have a 1:300,000 scale (1 cm = 3 km/1
inch = 4.7 miles) with a Greenwich = 0 longitude scale and
will have the modern town name expressed with German
spelling. German s = English z; German Z = English ts;
German W = English v, German j = English y, and so on. To
convert from Paris to Greenwich, add 2 degrees 20 minutes.
Library of Congress web site
So much available here
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/
Libweb
Currently lists over 6600 pages
from libraries in over 115 countries.
http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/Libweb/
Locating a Town in
Central / Eastern Europe
"Sally Bruckheimer wrote in part: "...they
said they were from a big city near where they were from-rather than
the tiny shtetl which was the place. In Russia it was even more
complicated because you were registered as living in one town even
if you didn't live there any more. So you might have been born in
town X, registered as being a resident of Y, and say you were living
in Z the 'big city'.....There are different ways of answering 'Where
are you from?' I was born in L, my parents lived in M, we were
registered as living in N, I lived most of my childhood in O, I went
to school in the next town over, P, I married and moved to Q
although I was still registered in N, then we lived most of our
lives in two other towns, R and S, before we went to Riga...............
and... "Where were you born", and in the other "What is your place
of origin"-which could mean different things to different people."
At the Seminar in Toronto (2002), Julian and Fay Bussgang
spoke about 'permissions' being required (in some cases)
to move from one town to another. One had to get permission from the
'mayor' of the new town you wanted to live in, and then get
permission to leave the town of your current residency. This became
quite complicated so many just "retained" their current residence
while actually living in another town.
So when you see different towns listed - don't attempt to pick just
one. It probably means that at one time or another, they lived in
each of the ones mentioned. When you search names in a database,
keep those towns in mind. Some one in those town may be a cousin,
married sister, or in-law........ keep an open mind. And most
important - remember *everything*!!" From a posting by Freya
Blitstein Maslov
Help in finding information about a specific village or city can be
found at the Getty Vocabulary Program
http://www.getty.edu/research/tools/vocabulary/tgn/
just type in the name of the town or city. If nothing shows up, try
typing in another name of a town nearby that may be larger.
There are over 900,000 records for places arranged in hierarchies
representing all nations of the modern world and including
vernacular and historical names, coordinates, place types and other
relevant information. This is one powerful website for researchers.
http://www.jewishgen.org/ShtetlSeeker/loctown.htm
Longitudes and
Latitude Coordinates
Astrodienst Atlas database
Provides longitude and latitude coordinates based on a town
or village name. Database is at
http://www.refdesk.com
then click on 'Quick reference/Research'. You can
also go direct to the web site
http://www.astrologix.de/metalinx/detailed/1058.html
Here you will find a listing for the Astrodienst Atlas
Database and a lot more valuable reference links. At the web
site, just type in the name as best you can, and the closest
matching names of towns will come up. By clicking on the one
you are looking for, you will find the Longitude and
Latitude along with the current time zone.
Latitude and Longitude Conversions
http://www.export911.com/convert/distaLatIon.htm
Map of Europe
With country boards changes from 0 A.D. until 2000 A.D., Dr.
Roman Tunkel is offering to share an interactive map if you
will respond directly to him via E-mail at
tunkelr@juno.com
He can tell you where you can
purchase this unique map
Map of Poland and WW II Maps by Date
http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Index/picindexmaps.html
Old Maps of New England and New York
From Historical Ink
Reprints are available of maps from towns and villages in
Rhode Island,
Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire,
and New York. Most are from 1865-1892 and show the family
name on each house. $11 to $14. Also a few Ohio, Indiana,
Illinois and California towns. Photocopies only $5
http://www.oldmapsne.com
Old Map Photocopies,
Old Prints, and Old Articles of Interest to Genealogists
and Historians Pertaining to New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, California, England,
Scotland & Wales
from GLEASON'S OLD MAPS ETC.
http://www.oldmapsetc.com/
Periodical Historical Atlas of Europe
Twenty one on-line maps showing the states of Europe and
Mediterranean basin at the end of each century starting from
AD 1 to AD 2000. The site is fully bilingual. English and
French
http://www.euratlas.com/summary.htm
Places On-Line
A site sponsored by The Association of American Geographers
http://www.placesonline.org/
Lubavitch
If you believe a relative you are researching
may have been a Lubavitcher, write to the following address and ask
them for any records they may have.
Librarian
World Lubavitch Headquarters
770 Eastern Parkway
Brooklyn NY 11225
http://lubavitch.com/
MAC Computer
Transliteration Software
http://www.tranexp.com/win/NeuroTran-eng-mac.htm
Map Scales
Maps
What does the scale 1:2,700,000 refer to?
1: x is a universal way that a mapmaker expresses the scale
of the map that they prepared. The mapmaker is informing the
user of the map that 1 unit of distance on the map = x unit
of distance on earth; for example, for the map having a
scale of 1:2,700,000 means that 1 inch on the map covers
2,700,000 inches on the earth.
How far is 2,700,000 inches? You have to convert this unit
of measure to a unit of distance that you have some feeling
for, like miles, for example. Here is how to convert the
ratio form of scale into distance units that you understand:
1 inch (on the map) - 2,700,000 inches on earth. How
many miles does this equal?
2,700,000 inches x 1 foot/12 inches x 1 mile/5,280 feet =
42.6 miles
Therefore, on a map that has a scale 1:2,700,000, 1 inch on
the map is 42.6 miles on earth.
Thus, a map having a scale of 1:2,700,000 and a scale of 1
inch = 42.6 miles are equivalent maps in terms of the detail
that they will provide. To reverse this information, 40
miles x 5,280 ft./mi. x 12 in./1 ft = 2,534,400.
Thus your map having a scale of 1 inch = 40 miles is
equivalent to 1 in. = 2,534,400 inches, a scale of
1:2,534,000
For further information on map scales, check out
http://geography.miningco.com/library/weekly/aa110397.htm
http://geography.about.com/library/howto/htscale.htm
http://www.epa.gov/ceisweb1/ceishome/atlas/learngeog
/mapscale.html
Map Blast
Find your shtetl and driving directions to get there at this
site
http://www.mapblast.com
Map Sites Around The World
A very well designed web site offering full physical and
political maps as well as key facts
and statistics on countries of the world.
http://www.atlapedia.com/
http://www.expediamaps.com/
http://www.refdesk.com
http://www.fourone.com/maps.htm
Maporama
Headquartered in Paris, this map firm has created
the next generation of on-line mapping services. Its
cartographic databases contain 635,000 world cities
including comprehensive street-level maps for locations in
Europe, the Americas, Asia, and
Australia in addition to the United States and
Canada.
http://maporama.com
Mapquest
http://www.mapquest.com
Maps
http://geography.miningco.com
MultiMap
Offers free mapping services
http://multimap.com
Pilot Map
Although this site lists 19,500
Polish town names in
Polish, the characters are in Latin and the maps give
a great deal of detail
http://www.pilot.pl/
University of Texas
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/
WorldAtlas.com
www.worldatlas.com/
Yahoo Maps Web Services
An easy way to display geographical content if you
understand Web standard RSS format combined with either
longitude/latitude or address information. You can plot up
to 100 points on a map, including custom description, URLs,
labels, groups, icons and more.
http://developer.yahoo.net/maps/
Marriages

http://www.allspacepics.com/Dogs/jewish-marriage.html
A traditional rabbi will not officiate at a
wedding held between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot (Pentecost),
the 50-day period during which the "omer" is counted daily.
Portions of the three spring months of Nisan, Iyar and Sivan are
involved.
Statistical studies of Jewish demographics in the
Polish-Lithuanian commonwealth during the 18th century show that
early teen marriages were the norm among one-quarter of the Jewish
population, ostensibly the more affluent class. i.e., it was in
those families best able to support grandchildren while they still
had children to support that the mother's age at first birth ended
to be lowest.
The traditional ages for Jewish marriages were 18-20 for boys, 16-18
for girls. The couple was billeted in their parental home, usually
the bride's, at least until the husband was old enough to support
his family on his own. From a posting to JewishGen by Norman H.
Carp-Gordon
Marriage Record Search
http://www.archives.com/?_act=marriageRecords&location=
US&cam=353&utm_source=Surname
SuperSearch.com&utm_campaign=TextLinks
Mathematics
Genealogy Project
http://www.genealogy.ams.org/html/search.phtml
Maven
The ultimate Jewish index, next to
this one.
http://www.maven.co.il
Medical Related
Information
Scientific research indicates that Ashkenazi
Jews have a disproportionately higher incidence than the general
population of several genetic disorders.
After the Romans defeated the Jews in 70 C.E., many fled in all
directions. Those Jews who settled in the Iberian Peninsula
and
North Africa became known as
Sephardim. Those who
eventually settled in Eastern Europe became the Ashkenazi
population.
According to the Technion and Rambam Medical Center in Haifa
researchers, 42 percent of all Ashkenazi Jews living today are
related to four women who lived between the 11th and 13th centuries.
Due to their religious and communal segregation, a great deal of
arranged marriages between cousins took place. With no new blood
coming in from outside the Ashkenazi community, the carrier
frequencies of certain disease-causing genes increased. This
information was obtained from an article by Tamar Fenton and
published in the April 17th, 2009 issue of American Jewish World.
According to
http://www.shtetlinks.jewishgen.org/Myadel/pandemics.htm
in 1848 there was a cholera pandemic all over Europe, with in
particular 3 million deaths in Russia. 1848 was also a year
of revolutions in most of Europe, but this did not affect Russia
or
Russian Poland.
"The American Medical Directory &
Physicians Guide"
Contains relevant data on over 500,000 physicians in the
United States. Each record is indexed by such features as name,
address, phone/fax, county, year licensed, type of practice, type of
physician, as well as primary and secondary specialty.
Fax : 905-751-0199. Tel: 905-751-0919
American Physicians Fellowship for
Medicine in Israel
An organization of North American physicians and other
health professionals dedicated to advancing the state of
medical education, research and care in Israel
http://www.apfmed.org/
Ancestry
http://dna.ancestry.com
Archaic Medical Terms
http://www.paul_smith.doctors.org.uk/ArchaicMedicalTerms.htm
"Back to your roots: Trying to trace
your family tree?"
An interesting article in the British Magazine "New
Scientist" of March 16, 2002. Once at the web site, use
the search engine at the top of the page and type in "Back
to your roots" (without the quotation marks). The
article is geared to genealogy.
http://www.newscientist.com/
Beta-Thalassemia Research Project
http://diamondgen.org/break.htm
Bone Marrow
http://www.giftoflife.org
http://www.helpruthienow.com/
Breast Cancer
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Judaism
/breast_cancer.html
Deceased Physician File
Files are located at
National Genealogical Society
Attn: Deceased Physician File
4527 17th Street North
Arlington, VA 22207-2399
There is a fee
Diabetes Mellitus
http://www.genomenewsnetwork.org/articles/2004/
04/02/diabetes.php
Diseases, Medical Terms and
Epidemics
Related to Genealogy
http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~hornbeck/disease.htm
The human genealogical project (Canadian Center for
Molecular Biology, Technion) has shown quite clearly
that, on average, any two humans on the face of the Earth
differ by less than only 0.1% at the level of their human
genome sequence. Yet it is this tiny difference which makes
the genetic contribution to the wonderful diversity of
humanity.
While archeology uncovers aspects of human history,
analyzing relics left behind, genetic archeology digs into
the diversity of contemporary human genome to unravel
mysteries about past history. The head of the department of
nephrology at Rambam Medical Center, Haifa, is Dr.
Skorecki who also heads the Canadian Center for Molecular
medicine Research, Technion, also in Haifa.
Dr. Skorecki and his colleagues have
applied analysis of DNA markers to unravel geographic
origins and historical relationships among communities in
the Jewish Diaspora. This information obtained from a
JewishGen Digest dated 1/19/01 submitted by Schelly
Dardashti. Schelly Dardashti E-mail address:
schelly@allrelative.net
DNA
Prior to the release of new genetic studies during 2000 and
2001 which showed that the majority element of Ashkenazic
Jewish communities stems from the Israelites of the Middle
East.
DNA Article - May. 1, 2003 It's All Relative: Tracing
with technology
By Schelly Talalay Dardashti
Discusses technological aspects (DNA) of genealogy and a new
DNA name project (Issroff etc) Given Names Database
update (JewishGen), Malka's Sephardic book award,
Gombin documentary on Israel TV.
http://www.jpost.com/
and then use their 'search engine.
"DNA Origins and Current consequences
for Sephardi, Mizrahi and Ashkenazi
males
and females:
Latest results from medical, Genealogical- Familial and
National-Ethnic Research, The Journal for the
Study of Sephardic & Mizrahi Jewry. March 2009 by
Abraham Lavender
http://sephardic.fiu.edu/journal/March%202009/Lavender_March.pdf
From a posting by Saul Issroff
DNA Study of Eyes
Many Jewish communities were formed by unions between Jewish
men and non-Jewish women, according to a new study announced
in May, 2002. This is the conclusion reached by a group of
researchers who examined the DNA of women in nine
communities around the world, including Morocco and
the former Soviet Republic of Georgia. The study
reported in The New York Times, contradicts the view
that most Jewish communities were founded by Jewish families
fleeing persecution or were invited to settle by local
rulers. The study appears in the May, 2002 edition of The
American Journal of Human Genetics.
The Website for articles and books on Ashkenazi mtDNA and Y
chromosome research is at:
http://booksreviewed.tripod.com
http://booksreviewed.tripod.com/dna7/
and with other articles on DNA also at:
http://www.newswriting.net
http://www.newswriting.net
http://dnanovels.tripod.com/novels.html/
"Finding Y-DNA Matches: An
Alternative
Approach"
Authored by Sidney A. Sachs, appeared in the Spring 2011
issue of Avotaynu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nGvB4CDUC30
For further information concerning the use of DNA testing.
http://members.cox.net/dmauck/Chart/
http://www.roperld.com/ymarkers.htm
Family Tree DNA
www.familytreedna.com
The Genealogist's Physician Lookup Service
Each State is listed with the years available going back to
the late 1800s, though most start around 1902. Also offered
is a "Free Resources" list - a list of faculty at
various medical schools and hospitals mostly in the late
1890s
http://members.aol.com/CensusResearch/PLS/index.htm
Genealogical Guide
A guide to over 149,000 medical practitioners providing
brief biographical sketches drawn from the American Medical
Association's Deceased Physician Masterfile", edited by
Arthur W. Hafner. Two volumes published in Chicago, Illinois
by the American Medical Association in 1993. In Boston,
available at: New England Historic Genealogical Society; (Ref
CS 5 D56 1993) Countway Medicine Library, Harvard; (Ref.
WZ 22 AA1 D598 1993)
Genealogical Records
http://www.archives.gov/genealogy/
"The
Genetic Strand: Exploring a Family
History Through DNA"
Authored by Edward
Ball

Glaucoma
http://tinyurl.com/ab66fs
Jewish Kidney and Transplant
Support Center
http://www.einet.net/review/98027-648017/The_Jewish_Kidney_and_Transplant_Support_Center.htm
Longevity Genes Project at Albert
Einstein
College of Medicine
http://www.aecom.yu.edu/longenity/page.aspx
Looking for a Physicist?
American Physical Society
One Physics Ellipse
College Park, MD 20740-3844
Phone: 301 209 3280
The New York Times offers an interesting article,
"Researchers say intelligence and
diseases may be linked in Ashkenazic genes."
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/03/science/03gene.html
Tay-Sachs
A commonly thought of as a mostly 'Jewish' disease'.
This is only because the gene is considerably more common in
Ashkenazim than in the general population. The Tay-Sachs
gene occurs in non-Jewish populations, as well. The Cajuns
and the Quebecois have somewhat higher than average rates of
the gene, as do people of Irish descent. But it can occur in
people of any ethnic background.
A similar disease is Canavan disease. It is caused by
a different gene and involves a different mechanism, but
unfortunately progresses in much the same way as Tay-Sachs.
It is also more common among Ashkenazim.
TIES
http://www.unlockthepast.com.au/events
"Tracing Jewish DNA for Family History &
Ancestry: Merging a Mosaic of Communities"
Authored by Anne Mizrahi Hart, M.A.
ISBN: 0-595-28127-3
VA Medical Records
National Personnel Records Center
Military Personnel Records
9700 Page Avenue
St. Louis, MO 63132
http://www.gruntsmilitary.com/howto.shtml
James Gross
larklane@juno.com offered
these suggestions in contacting the National Personnel Records
Center (NPRC) which handles military medical records. Many
records were burned in 1973 and the NPRC often sends VA records back
as a substitute. He suggests making up a business form letter
leaving off the street and city/state of the VA office. He sends the
letter to a local VA office giving them the deceased relative's
name, dob, dod, soc. sec. number, states that the person is dead,
mentions that the request is being sent under the Freedom of
Information Act and asks them to provide the VA # or File #, as well
as to advise which VA office would have the file. There is no charge
for a response. Do not ask for the actual file in this letter.
The next step is to take that info and do a request for a copy of
the complete military file from the NPRC in St. Louis. Enclose your
VA response letter and request that they obtain a copy of the VA
file as well. It seems that the VA medical records have to come via
the NPRC in St. Louis. The NPRC will probably mail your letter back,
unless you enclose both For SF180 and NA 13075. If you don't have NA
13075 (request for additional info), the NPRC will send back
your letter with a form and ask you to fill it out. Enclose a
photocopy of a death certificate, with Form SF180. Regardless of
what state you live in, you can send one of these form letters to
any VA office. Don't send too many VA requests to any one office. If
one VA office rejects your letter, try another office. Rather than
requesting the actual files, request only for file #'s and file
locations.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Personnel_Records
_Center_fire
"How to Locate Anyone Who Is or Has
Been in the Military"

Authored by Johnson & Knox and published in 1999.
Y-search
www.ysearch.org
Sorenson Molecular Genealogy Foundation
www.smgf.org
Ybase
www.ybase.org
Should you be interested in DNA, the cost for
one type of kit is $219.00. Details can be
found at
http://www.jewishgen.org/dna
Meshi Center for
Genealogical Research
http://www.dinur.org/resources/resourceCategoryDisplay.aspx?categoryid=474&rsid=0&sortField=visitorratingaverage
&sortOrder=desc
Miasteczko
(myah steh chkoh)
(See also Shtetls below)
As it was also known later in
Russian:
miestiechko (mye stye chkoh) have achieved an
official administration status through the Pale territory.
Status Miasteczko has been carried not only by Jews, there
have been established also
Ukrainian and German colonials small towns.
Name Shtetl remained for centuries associated with Jewish
way of life in Eastern Europe, and the nostalgic Yiddish
song about the
Galician "Shtetls Belz" reflects world of our fathers
that have disappeared."
Midwest United
States Database
Search the entire
database inventory of the collection's holdings.
http://www.jhsum.org/programming/
http://special.lib.umn.edu/umja/col/data/jhsum_whole.html
Military

World War I (WWI),
which was predominantly called the
World War or the Great War from its occurrence until
1939, and the First World War or World War I
thereafter, was a centered in Europe that began on 28 July 1914 and
lasted until 11 November 1918. America came into the war on April 6,
1914.
There were Jewish soldiers on both sides of
many of the European wars of modern times, notably in the
British, French, Prussian and
Austrian armies. See the article "Army"
http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com
American Battle Monuments Commission
Information galore about Military personnel. Best to write.
Room 4c014 Forrestal Building
1000 Independence Ave. SW
Washington, DC 20314
Phone: 693 6067
http://www.abmc.gov/home.php
American Military Cemeteries
Cambridge American Cemetery and Memorial (British Empire)
http://www.abmc.gov/cemeteries/cemeteries/ca.php
Ancient Faces
Military photos (vintage photos of Veterans, ships, etc. by
war, last name and branch of service and a lot more of interest to a
genealogist index.cfm-13842 - military photos - vintage photos of
Veterans, ships, etc. by war, last name and branch of service and a
lot
more of interest to a genealogist
http://www.ancientfaces.com/
Books

"American Women and the U.S. Armed Forces"
- A Guide to the
Records of Military Agencies in the National Archives Relating
to American Women.
Compiled by Charlotte Palmer Seeley and Revised by Virginia C. Purdy
and Robert Gruber. This guide describes records in the
National Archives and Presidential libraries that relate to American
women who interacted with and eventually formed a part of the
American military service organizations.
ISBN 0911333-90-8
"The Secrets War: The Office of
Strategic Services in World War II"
Edited by George C. Chalou.
ISBN 0-911333-91-6
Conscription Age
From December 5, 1868, the compulsory military service
begins with January 1 of the year in which the citizen has his 21st
birthday. Representation was no longer allowed. Temporary exceptions
were possible for a single son of parents who were not able to work
and similar difficult conditions in the family. The military service
was for three years of regular service and seven years of reserve
service. From an E-mail from Eugene A Moisey, Sr.
Defense Link
http://www.defenselink.mil/
Directory of Vital & Military Records
Includes Birth, marriage, census and probate
http://www.interment.net/
Insignia ranks of the Military
around the world
http://hemsidor.torget.se/users/k/klix/grader_e.html
Holzminden, Germany
http://www2.ac-lille.fr/patrimoine-caac/lenordenguerre/ot.htm
Jews who currently serve in the US Armed Forces
An excellent site created by
Second Lt. Jason Rubin, a marine.
www.jewsingreen.com
Military.com
http://www.military.com/Page/0,12170,1-OO-0,00.htm
Military Links
Links to many sites, (in alphabetical order) of
Military Sites around the world
http://www.123world.com/military/index.html
Military Records
On-line Searchable Military Records & Databases. This
website is very comprehensive and 99% free. There are some links to
paid sites, but theses are clearly marked. There are other links on
this site that are also very useful.
http://home.att.net/~wee-monster/military.html
National Personnel Records Center
There was a fire on July 12, 1973 that destroyed about 80% of the
records for Army personnel discharged between November 1, 1912 and
January 1, 1960, and about 75% of the records for Air Force
personnel with surnames from "Hubbard" through "Z"
discharged between September 25, 1947, and January 1, 1964. If a
record is not in NPRC's files it probably would have been in the
area that suffered the most damage in the fire, NPRC employees are
not always able to determine for certain if it was burned because:
There were no indices to the blocks of records involved. The records
were merely filed in alphabetical order for the following groups:
WW I: -
Nov. 1, 1912-Sept. 7, 1939
WW II: - Sept. 8, 1939 - Dec. 31, 1946
Post-WW II: (Army) Jan. 1, 1947 - Dec. 31, 1959
(Air Force) Sept. 25, 1947 - Dec. 31, 1963
Millions of records (especially medical
records) had been withdrawn from all three groups and loaned to
the Dept. of Veterans Affairs (VA) prior to the fire.
There is a great deal of information available
in records of the State Adjutants General, and other State "veterans
services" offices. By using alternative sources at the NPRC or
elsewhere, NPRC may often be able to reconstruct a veteran's
beginning and end dates of active serve, the character of service,
rank while in service, time lost while on active duty, and periods
of hospitalization. NPRC is usually able to issue NA Form
13038, Certification of Military Service - considered the equivalent
of a WD AGO discharge form, or DD Form 214, Report of Separation
From Active Duty - for the purpose of establishing eligibility for
veterans benefits.
Military Personnel Records
9700 Page Avenue
St. Louis, MO 63132
http://www.gruntsmilitary.com/howto.shtml
US Military Records & Awards
For information on obtaining US military personnel and
medical records or US military awards for yourself, or as surviving
next-of-kin for relatives.
http://www.archives.gov/facilities/mo/st_louis/military
_personnel_records/awards_and_decorations.html
http://www.vvnw.org
Veterans Web page with Info on Medals
(scroll down the page)
http://members.aol.com/veterans/warlib3.htm
WW I & WW II - Naval History
Names of lost ships and a whole lot more for several
countries
http://www.naval-history.net/
www.paulsilverstone.com
WW2 People's War
http://www.ginkgopress.com/
Military
There were Jewish soldiers on both
sides of many of the European wars of modern times, notably
in the British, French, Prussian and Austrian
armies. See the article "Army"
http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com
Military Links
Links to many sites, (in alphabetical order) of
Military Sites around the world
http://www.123world.com/military/index.html
Military Records
On-line Searchable Military Records & Databases. This
website is very comprehensive and 99% free. There are some
links to paid sites, but theses are clearly marked. There
are other links on this site that are also very useful.
http://home.att.net/~wee-monster/military.html
US Military Records & Awards
For information on obtaining US military personnel and
medical records or US military awards for yourself, or as
surviving next-of-kin for relatives.
http://www.archives.gov/facilities/mo/st_louis/military
_personnel_records/awards_and_decorations.html
http://www.vvnw.org
Veterans Web page with Info on Medals
(scroll down the page)
http://members.aol.com/veterans/warlib3.htm
WW I & WW II - Naval History
Names of lost ships and a whole lot more for several
countries
http://www.naval-history.net/
www.paulsilverstone.com
WW2 People's War
http://www.ginkgopress.com/
Missing Identity
Missing
Identity Web Site
http://www.missing-identity.net/index.php
Mogen David
This 'Jewish Symbol' first
decorated a Jewish flag in
Prague in 1354. There is more information available
from the June/July 2003issue of Hadassah Magazine
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_of_David
Money Transfers
VIGO
Money transfer company
http://www.vigousa.com/
Meest
Money transfer company
http://www.meest.net/
Mussar Movement
Began in Lithuania in the late 19th to
early 20th centuries and stressed education of the individual toward
strict ethical behavior in the spirit of Halacha. Check also the
Encyclopedia Judaica for a section on Mussar spelled Musar.
From the Svencionys ShtetLinks site: "The Musar Movement".
The founder and primary proponent of the Musar Movement in
19th-century
Lithuania was Rabbi Israel Salanter
(1810-1883), who established the first Musar Society in Vilna
in 1842.
Musar (literally, "moral
instruction or ethics") stressed the study of medieval
Jewish ethical texts. Musar was basically Orthodox Judaism
like that propounded by the Vilna Gaon. But Salanter,
unlike the Gaon, considered it unethical for religious Jews
to withdraw from the affairs of their communities - even for
Talmudic study.
Rabbi Israel Salanter and the Musar Movement
http://people.ucalgary.ca/~elsegal/363_Transp/Orthodoxy
/Musar.html
Musar, by its de-emphasis on Talmudic and Torah study and
its emphasis on involvement in the wider community, had been
designed to unite Hasidic elements with elements common to
the Haskala. However, it never had the appeal for the common
people that Salanter had hoped it would. Additionally, the
Jews who wished to concentrate on Talmudic and Torah studies
eventually rejected Musar also. Ultimately, although Musar
established itself in Israel, the
United States and Britain, it was not able to gain a
lasting foothold in
Lithuania.
http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/biography/salanter.html
For more information, plug in "Salanter" or "Musar
(or Mussar) Movement" into any search engine.
"The Yeshiva"
Authored by Chaim Grade and translated from the
Yiddish.
MyFamily.com
A site where you can develop your own
family web site.
http://www.myfamily.com/front.asp
Myths, Hoaxes &
Scams
Common genealogical myths
http://www.cyndislist.com/myths.htm
Museums
The American Jewish
Historical Society
Waltham, Massachusetts
http://www.ajhs.org/
Beth Hatefutsoth
Nahum Goldmann Museum of the Jewish Diaspora
Tel Aviv
Bloom Southwest Jewish Archives
University of Arizona, Tucson
http://parentseyes.arizona.edu/bloom/
Center for Jewish History
New York
http://www.cjh.org/
Harvard
Semitic Museum
Cambridge, Massachusetts
http://www.semiticmuseum.fas.harvard.edu/icb/icb.do
The
Israel Museum
Jerusalem
http://www.english.imjnet.org.il/htmls/home.aspx
Jacob M. Lowy Collection
National Library of Canada,
Ottawa
http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/6/6/index-e.html
Jerusalem Mosaic
Jewish Historical Museum
Amsterdam, Holland
http://www.jhm.nl/
Jewish Museum
London, England
http://www.jewishmuseum.org.uk/
The Jewish Museum
New York
http://www.thejewishmuseum.org/
Jewish Museum
Prague, Czech Republic
http://www.jewishmuseum.cz/
Jewish Museum
Venice, Italy
http://www.museoebraico.it/english/
Jewish Museum in Cyberspace
A portal to the Jewish American Hall of Fame and other
Jewish History sites
http://www.amuseum.org/
Jewish Museum
of Berlin
Berlin, Germany
http://www.jmberlin.de/
Jewish Museum of Franconia
Fuerth, Germany
http://www.juedisches-museum.org/
Jewish Museum of Greece
Athens, Greece
http://www.jewishmuseum.gr/en/index.html
Jewish Museum
of Vienna
Vienna, Australia
http://www.jmw.at/en/
Judah L.
Magnes Museum
Berkeley, CA
http://www.magnes.org/
Museum of
Jewish Heritage
New York
http://www.mjhnyc.org/findex.html
The
Museum of Tolerance
Los Angeles, CA
National Museum of American Jewish History
Philadelphia, PA
http://nmajh.org/
Queen's Park Synagogue
Glasgow, Scotland
http://www.glasspainter.com/synagogue/
Sephardic Museum
Toledo, Spain
http://www.spain.info/en/conoce/museo/toledo/
museo_sefardi.html
Sydney Jewish Museum
Sydney, Australia
http://www.jewishmuseum.com.au/
Tower of David Museum
Jerusalem
Vilna Gaon Jewish Museum
Vilna, Lithuania
http://www.jmuseum.lt/index.aspx
Virtual Shtetl
Museum of the History of Polish Jews Warsaw, Poland
http://www.sztetl.org.pl/?lang=en_GB
Yad Vashem
Jerusalem
Names of Relatives
"I think the specific use of *in-law*
may be unique to the
English language. German (and with it
Yiddish) and French have their own very special terms.
Hebrew has a general term for someone related by marriage. Thus the
groom is the wife's chatan -- and he is also the chatan of her
parents and of her parents (he is the gis of her siblings). The
bride is the kalah of her husband--and of his parents, but the
gissah of her siblings. The father - and mother-in-law are the
chotan and the chotenet. Actually, chatan (chusen in Yiddish)
is used by everyone when referring to the groom, and kalah (kalah
in Yiddish) to the bride.
There is a generic word in Hebrew for all to whom one is related by
marriage. They are the mechuttenim (mechutan m/sing, mechutenet
f/sing). This is a unique help for Jewish families. When one
family talks of *our mechuttenim* you know they're speaking
of the parents of their daughter- or son-in-law--a relationship that
tends to be ignored in many cultures. The same terms are used in
Yiddish (pronunciation varies according to geographic
dialect), but a mother-in-law is called mechutayneste,
brother-in-law is schwieger and sister-in-law is schwegerin."
From a posting by Michael Bernet
NARA
The
National Archives and Records Administration is an independent
federal agency that preserves our nation's history and defines us as
a people by overseeing the management of all federal records.
Genealogy researchers can access most documents as text files (not
HTML documents) via this route. Internet users can obtain
application information and publications. Their comprehensive
website can be reach at
www.archives.gov
http://www.nara.gov
You can search the Nara web site
from:
http://www.archives.gov/search/index.html?section=/research_room/genealogy/
Randy Thompson is Archives
Specialist at the National Archives and Record Administration
Pacific Region in Laguna Niguel, California.
Time Magazine - April 19, 1999 issue
"A Visit to the National Archives, The American People's Library"
www.time.com/time/magazine/0,9263,7601990419,00.html
National Archives -
Northeast Region
201 Varick Street, 12th floor (enter on
Houston Street)
New York, New York 10014
Telephone: 1 212
337 1300
Hours: 8:00-4:30 PM, Monday-Friday
Tuesday &
Thursday: to 8:00 PM
Open First and Third Saturdays of each month
The Northeast Region (New York City) maintains archival
records from federal agencies and courts in New Jersey, New York,
Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The New York
facility has extensive microfilm holdings of value for genealogy
research including:
Federal population censuses for all
states, 1790-1930; indexes for the 1880, 1900, 1910 and 1920
censuses (indexes are not available for all years and all states);
selected military service records and indexes; selected pension and
bounty-land warrant applications; indexes to selected passenger
arrival records for Eastern and Gulf Coast ports; indexes to
selected naturalization records processed through federal courts in
New Jersey and New York
WW II concentration
camp records
http://www.archives.gov/research/holocaust/bibliographies
/labor-camps.html
Travel Directions:
Subway: #1 or #9 IRT Local to Houston
Street stop
Bus: M10 Seventh Avenue Bus to Houston Street
Car:
A few blocks north of the Holland Tunnel
Street parking is
difficult. Garages are one block north of Houston St.
Access to Archival Data (AAD) System
On-line access to a selection of nearly 50 million electronic
records on a wide range of topics
http://www.archives.gov/aad/
Regional Archives System
National Archives -
New England Region
390 Trapelo Road Waltham, MA 02154
617 647 8100
Serves"
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island
and Vermont
National Archives - Pittsfield
Region
100 Dan Fox Drive
Pittsfield, MA 01201
413 445
6885
National Archives
- Northeast Region
Bldg. 22, Military Ocean
Terminal
Bayonne, NJ 07002-5388
201 823 7545
Serves: New
Jersey, New York, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands
National Archives - Mid Atlantic Region
9th and
Market Streets, Room 1359
Philadelphia, PA 19107
215 597 3000
Serves:
Delaware, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia
National Archives - Southeast Region
1557 St. Joseph
Avenue
East Point, GA 30344
404 763 7477
Serves:
Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Kentucky, Mississippi, North
Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee
National
Archives -
Great Lakes Region
7358 South Pulaski Road
Chicago,
IL 60629
312 581 7816
Serves:
Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin
National Archives - Central Plains Region
2312
East Bannister Road
Kansas City, MO 64131
816 926 6272
Serves:
Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska
National
Archives -
Southwest Region
501 West Felix Street
P O Box 6216
Fort Worth, TX 76115
817 334 5525
Serves:
Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas
National Archives - Rocky Mountain Region
Bldg.
48, Denver Federal Center
P O Box 25307
Denver, CO 80225
303 236 0817
Serves:
Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and
Wyoming
National Archives - Pacific Southwest
Region
24000 Avila Road
P O Box 6719
Laguna Niguel, CA
92677-6719
714 643 4241
Serves:
Arizona, Southern California Counties of Imperial, Inyo,
Kern, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San
Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura; and Clark County, Nevada
National Archives - Pacific Sierra Region
1000
Commodore Drive
San Bruno, CA 94066
415 876 9009
Serves:
Northern California, Hawaii, Nevada (except Clark County),
and the Pacific Ocean area
National Archives -
Pacific Northwest Region
6125 Sand Point Way, NE
Seattle,
WA 98115
206 526 6507
Serves:
Idaho, Oregon, and Washington
National Archives
-
Alaska Region
654 West Third Avenue
Anchorage, AK
99501
907-271 2441
Serves:
Alaska
National Atlas of
the United States
Easy to use, map like view of natural
and socio-cultural landscapes
http://www.nationalatlas.gov
National Foundation
for Jewish Culture
www.jewishculture.org
National Havurah
Fellowship
http://www.havurah.org/
National Museum of
American Jewish Military History
www.jwv.org
National Public
Radio
(NPR)
www.npr.org
National Sound Archives Digitations Project
at the Jewish National and University Library
(songs and readings from a variety of Jewish
communities and languages)
http://jnul.huji.ac.il/
Naturalization
Records See (
Emigration)
There are exceptions to the rule that an
immigrant must be a "legal resident" of the US for at least 6
years before he/she becomes eligible to apply for citizenship.
Immigrants who fall in certain categories (i.e. those who are
married to US citizens) may apply after only a 3 year residency.
Nerdworld Genealogy
Page
A commercial link site
http://www.nerdworld.com/users/dstein/nw192.html
Newspapers Around
The World including South America
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_newspapers_in_
South_America
Newspaper Clippings
and Fragile Documents
Documents don't last forever so it is important that you follow
these steps to insure that old newspaper clippings and documents
last as long as possible.
Use 100 percent cotton gloves to
keep finger oils off documents and photographs
Use an
acid-free ink pen to mark the backs of photographs
To repair books and mount artwork for framing, use self-adhesive
linen cloth tape
Use transparent mending tissue
(non-yellowing, acid-free, pressure-sensitive, archival-mending) to
restore documents.
Never laminate old newspapers or other
documents as the plastics in laminates can get sticky and discolored
if the items are stored where the document gets too hot, or they can
get brittle if your storage space is too cold.
Vendors of
Archival Supplies
Gaylord Brothers
Should you be a librarian, you would know of this library supplies
and Archival products catalog company - trusted for their quality by
many libraries and serious preservationists of genealogical
material.
http://www.gaylord.com/
Light Impressions
Offers similar items
http://www.lightimpressionsdirect.com/
New York Public
Library alternative
Books
"For those in the New York Metropolitan
area who find the New York Public Library lacking standard
Jewish Genealogical reference volumes, may I recommend the NJ
State Library in Trenton? It has on open shelves both editions
of
"Where Once we Walked", all three
Beider volumes, Malcolm Stern's major works on
"American Jewish Families", several Rosenstein's including "The Unbroken Chain" (both editions), three volumes of
the
Auschwitz death books, the recent edition of
Estelle Guzik's "Genealogical Resources in the NY Metropolitan
area", as well as many other standard works. "
"There is also a large collection of CD Rom's including about 70 of
the
World Family Tree disks and computers which are usually
unoccupied. The NJ State Library is close to the NJ State
Archives
which is the place to go to look up Births, Marriages and Deaths. The staff there is very
helpful and welcomes visitors." From a posting by Arthur Sugerman
Lawrenceville, NJ
sugerman@comcast.net
NFTY Alumni
http://www.nfty.org/alumni/index.cfm?
Occupations and
Business Terminology
Dry Goods - textiles or ready-to-wear clothing
usually sold in stores.
Official U.S. Bureau
Mapping
Here is an excellent site provided by the U.S.
Census Bureau that lets you find any geographic location in the
United States.
http://tiger.census.gov/cgi-bin/mapbrowse-tbl/
On-Line Resource
I found another great search site - though it
is a fee based site, it does provide a great service. Images of
every tombstone in the following Jewish Cemeteries: Saratoga
Springs, NY: Sharei Tephilah on Weibel St. Springfield, MA: Bnei
Israel Anshei Sfard, Kesser Israel, and City of Homes Assn. They are
all located on Wilbraham Ave. Utica, NY: Jonathan's lodge, House of
Jacob, House of Israel, Tzvi Jacob, Beth El, all located on Woods
Rd. Montreal, Canada: Baron De Hirsch on Savane St. - 20,000 records
and images, about a quarter of the entire Cemetery.
Declaration of Intention Documents
Contains detailed information about immigrants who applied
for US Citizenship, have been added to the database. High-resolution
images of each document can be viewed online. The following 11,000
records have been added recently: Jewish documents from: Circuit
Court District of MA (Boston area) 1906-1910 Kings County (Brooklyn)
NY 1906-1910 Oneida County (Utica area) NY 1906-1949 Onondaga
County (Syracuse area) NY 1906-1930 Saratoga County NY 1906-1930.
Name searches are free
Full access requires membership, with special rates for
Societies and Libraries.
www.jewishdata.com
Organizing
Genealogical Materials
In the birth, death, etc. columns, give each
folder a number where the information can be found. The 'other'
column lists folders or pages where other information about the
person can be found i.e. signature of a parent on the child's birth
certificate, or parent's name on a death certificate. You could also
include the page numbers for other kinds of documents i.e.
citizenship papers, ship information, etc. Some pages are referenced
by many people i.e. as a census record might be, or a birth
certificate may have several witness signatures who are also
relatives that you may want to reference in 'other' for that person.
Note: if you remove a page, be sure to write the folder number in a
corner so that you can return the page back to the same folder. As
you add more data, just write in the number of the folder where you
are putting it in the proper column and once in a while print out a
new copy.
Orphanage
Information
For information on the Hebrew National Orphan
Home orphanage and how to obtain records and listing all the
orphanages and other institutions under their care with information
and histories for accessing records, and over 200 URL links to sites
containing: Jewish Genealogy and Archives/Records and Holdings Page:
Information on the United Hebrew Charities Holdings; Federal & State
Census Page: 726 names and ages of children and adults residing in
the New York City Foundling Hospital from the 1890 NYC Police
Census - these names contain mostly NON-Jewish children and adults
who were working there at time of census; US Jewish Orphanage Page:
Orphanage Alumni Reunions Page; Jewish Genealogy Resources Page and
other Genealogical Resources Pages. This site is awesome!
http://www.hnoh.com/
Jewish Child Care Association
120 Wall Street
New York, NY 10005
Attn: Leona M. Ferrer, Disclosure Coordinator
Tel: 1 212 425 3333
Fax: 1 212 425 9397
http://www.jccany.org/site/PageServer
ORT
http://www.ort.org/asp/default.asp
Orthodox - Cutting
Beards and Hair
The torah forbids
using:
1.) a razor on a man's face. This is a dispute amongst
torah scholars re:
electric shavers,
but mot permit and the vast majority of orthodox Jews
rely
on that.
2.) In a separate verse
it is stated, that you can not round off the corners of
one's head, this is why "payes" are left slightly
longer and not cut down
to the skin, even with a scissors.
3.) For Kabalistic
reasons some Jews do not cut their beards at all and let
their payes grow very long.
Orthodox Jewish
Archives of Agudath Israel of America
84 William St.
New York, NY 10038
http://classify.oclc.org/classify2/ClassifyDemo?ident
=fst00588294
http://www.worldcat.org/title/checklist-of-jewish-materials-in-archives-of-agudath-israel-of-america/oclc/012669707
Pages of Testimony
They are a dynamic database that is constantly
being added to and updated. A posting by Zvi Bernhardt of Yad Vashem
on the JewishGen site on 11/22/02 offers an excellent response and
explanation of what to anticipate in using these pages. Assistance
is offered by E-mail names.research@yadvashem.org.il
Yad Vashem in Jerusalem at the Hall of Names has computerized their
(3) millions of testimonies and you can display the testimony on the
computer's screen and also print it for NIS 2 (about 43 US cents).
It is online. One of the search options is to search by the surname
of the person who have filled the testimony.
To submit a Page of Testimony, there is a link
on the left portion of the screen from the
Basic Search page. Click the words “Submit Additional Names.”
http://www.yadvashem.org/lwp/workplace/IY_HON_Welcome.
http://www.yad-vashem.org.il/remembrance/names/hall_
of_names.html
www.jafi.org.il/education/noar/sites/yad.htm
http://names.yadvashem.org/wps/portal/!ut/p/_s.7_0
_A/7_0_9E
Pale of Settlement

http://avotaynu.com
This site shows the real extent of the Pale and includes the
district centers with the names they bore around 1900.
http://www.users.voicenet.com/~cherlin/Cherlin/Maps/pale.html
Other map sites are:
Levanda Index
http://mapcarta.com/13751932
Pale of Settlement Population
Statistics published in 1865
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/
ejud_0002_0015_0_15340.html
The Russian Pale Past and Present Jurisdictions
From the year 1880 until 1924, over one-third of Eastern European
Jews left their shtetls and emigrated to other countries - over 90
percent to the U.S. About 75 percent came from the Russian Pale
of Settlement, an area in which Jews were confined to by
Russian law. Fifteen western came from provinces of European
Russia and the ten provinces of Congress Poland. Eighteen
percent of these Jewish immigrants came from the Austria-Hungary
regions of Galicia,
Bukovina and Hungary and about 4% left
Romania.
Russian Pale 1835 - 1917
http://vladimirets.org/pale_of_settlement.htm
Eastern Europe since 1991
http://faculty.unlv.edu/pwerth/464.html
Guberniya (Province) Capital City -
City Name
- Country
Bessarabia
Kishinev
Kishinev
Moldova
Chernigov
Chernigov
Chernigov
Ukraine
Cherson
Cherson
Kherson
Ukraine
Grodne
Grodne
Grodno
Belarus
Kelts (CP)
Kelts
Kielce
Poland
Kiev
Kiev
Kiyev
Ukraine
Kolesh (CP)
Kolesh
Kalisz
Poland
Kovne
Kovne
Kaunas
Lithuania
Lomze (CP)
Lomze
Lomza
Poland
Lublin
(CP)
Lublin
Poland
Minsk
Minsk
Minsk
Belarus
Mohilev
Mohilev
Mogilev
Belarus
Pietrkov (CP)
Pietrkov
Piotrkow
Poland
Plotzk (CP)
Plotzk
Plock
Poland
Podalia
Kamenets-Podolsk
Podolia
Ukraine
Poltave
Poltave
Poltava
Ukraine
Rudem (CP)
Rudem
Radom
Poland
Shedlitz (CP)
Shedlitz
Siedice
Poland
Suvalk (CP)
Suvalk
Suwalki
Poland
Taurida
Simferopol
Simferopol
Ukraine
Varshe (CP)
Warsaw
Warszawa
Poland
Paper Roots
http://people.ne.mediaone.net/ehwoodward/paperroots.html
Patronymic
A name derived from that of the
father. Example: in a typical Russian name "Mikhail
Sergeievich Gorbachev" the second name is a patronymic:
it means "son of Sergei", and signifies that this
man's father's first name was Sergei. Many Jewish family
names originated as patronymics: for example my family name
was originally Israelovici, and became my
great-grandfather's last name because his father's firs name
was Israel. This was quite typical in Romania, where
the modern-style family name was not universally adopted
until late in the 19th century.
From a posting to soc.genealogy.jewish on November 18,2002
by Robert Israel
israel@math.ubc.ca
Pay per View
Has millions of records for any type
of material cataloged in a special library dating back to
the 11th century
http://www.lib.muohio.edu/catalogs/worldcat.html
PBS - Public
Television Service
Has a web page that offers information about a program
series entitled Ancestors, along with downloadable Charts
and Forms for personal use; and a genealogical resource
guide. Additionally, at this site you will find, Tips and
Tricks, other genealogical links, series overview, questions
about ancestors, and a broadcast schedule
http://www.pbs.org/kbyu/ancestors/
Pharmacy Directories
Directories of pharmacists, contact your
state's Department of Regulation and/or the State Archives.
http://www.dmoz.org/Health/Pharmacy/Directories/
Photography
(Note: See also Cemetery above)
Carl Mautz, (a commercial site)
Publishes photography books, buys and sells vintage
photographs, and supplies photo collectors with archival
quality acid-free polypropylene sleeves. If you are looking
for vintage photographs from the mid-19th to mid-20th
centuries, books on photography and photo-history, or
archival sleeves for storing your vintage photographs, this
is a good place to look
http://www.carlmautz.com/
Digital Photographic Restoration
Creating limited custom photographic restorations, damaged
photographs can be restored via unique digital techniques
http://www.town-local.net/index2.html
http://www.lilacdigital.com/
Photographic Handling
For long term storage, do not use clear vinyl pockets as
they contain a plasticizer that could create problems to old
photographs. Polypropylene sheet folders are best type of
use, offering pre- punched holes and photograph size
pockets. These pocket folders are available at most photo
shops.
Photo Search
A searchable database containing thousands of identified
photos as well as mystery photos for genealogy enthusiasts
looking for long-lost relatives. There are more than 9,341
surnames representing more than 21,551 records that have
added to the database available to those tracing their
roots.
http://deadfred.com/
Photo Studios
"Many European photographic studios offered articles of
clothing that the customer could borrow to wear during the
taking of photographs. A working man without a suitable coat
might wear a more formal dress coat for the purpose of the
photograph. The studio also
might offer the ladies a few blouses or dresses.
Photographers in the 'old' days had methods and tools for
creating environments with backdrops, props and furniture,
as well as costumes, makeup and wigs. Occasionally, a
paintbrush or pencil were used to enhance or modify the
photograph, but this was less common, as it required
artistic skills and was costly.
From a posting my Marlene Bishow
mlbishow@minspring.com
Photographing a Tombstone
Have the sun is at your back when taking a photo and include
all of the written words in the viewfinder. While at the
gravesite, you should also photograph other stones
surrounding your ancestors as there could be a connection
that you may not be aware of, at the time. You just never
know! While visiting the cemetery site, choose a cool day,
bringing drinks and snacks along, with possibly either a fly
swatter or a bug repellant. Cover your legs and arms, if
possible, and wear a hat.
When you find the writing hard to read, perhaps because of
weathering, I have used talcum powder spread into the
lettering which helps make the lettering readable while
taking photos.
"Photohistory 19th Century Photography"
Authored by Andrew J. Morris - History of Photography, Types
of Photographs, Dating Card Mounted Portraits, Photography
and Genealogy -
http://sydaby.eget.net/swe/emi_ref.htm
Politicians
This is a database of politicians including U
S Congressmen and State Legislators primarily. The list includes
usually, their political office, dates and places of birth and
death, and the cemetery where buried. The list is arranged
chronologically, and is a sub-listing of thousands of pol8iiticians
in the master list which includes all religions.
http://politicalgraveyard.com/plalphal.html
Portals
There is much more to surfing the web and
these Portal sites offer a great deal of information and links:
About
Lots of information
http://genealogy.about.com/
CyberJew
http://www.mjsu.org/
Digital Genizah
A Jewish Internet Source
http://www.uscj.org/metny/middletown/midrash.htm
eJewish.info
A new initiative by the Board of Governors of the Jewish
Agency. The main purpose is to establish a shared market directory
for Jewish information, products and services - an excellent
resource
www.eJewish.info
Haruth
Lots of links by Harry Leichter's Jewish Genealogy Link
Directory
http://www.haruth.com/JewishIndex.html
Infoplease.com
Offering a Almanac, Atlas, Dictionary and Encyclopedia
http://www.infoplease.com/
Jewish.Community
http://jewish.com
Jewish and Hebrew E-mail Discussion Groups
there's plenty here to keep you busy including Hebrew Computing,
Hebrew Translating etc.
http://www.avotaynu.com/wwwsites.html
Jewish Exchange
Books, music, software, movies
http://www.thejewishexchange.com/
Jewish Feminist
http://jew-feminist-resources.com
Jewish History
http://www.jewish-history.com/Default.htm
www.aish.com/literacy/jewishhistory/
Jewish Information Central
http://www.jewishportal.info/
Jewish Learning.com
http://www.myjewishlearning.com/index.htm
Jewish Link
Connecting the Jewish cyberspace world with everything
Jewish
www.jewishlink.net
Jewish Magazine
www.jewishmag.co.il
JewishNetwork.com
List your upcoming events and let the Jewish community know
about the great things you are doing. The listing is free.
www.JewishNetwork.com
JewishUniverse.net
www.JewishUniverse.net
Jewish World Review
http://www.jewishworldreview.com
JewZ
http://Jewz.com
jholidays
http://www.jholidays.org/
My Cinnamon Toast
A huge index of links to genealogy web sites and databases,
classified by surname and by region
http://www.mycinnamontoast.com/
Over Three Hundred Jewish Links
http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/~ab522/jewish.html
Shamash
A Jewish portal site
http://shamash.org
ShtetlGenealogy
http://www.ibiblio.org/yiddish/roots.html/
The Peace Encyclopedia
the first internet experiments in therapy for the Jewish People.
http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/Reference/?view=usa&ci=9780195334685
Virtual Jerusalem
http://www.virtualjerusalem.com/
Yizkor.org
Creates a free initiative that permits a family
administrator to capture the history and impact of a loved one. It
includes a biography, timeline, photos, videos, family tree and
funeral information.
http://www.yizkor.org/
Zipple
http://www.zipple.com/
Portrait Database
A viewable database of portraits that
will, over time, contain an image and information describing
every known portrait of an American Jew painted before 1865.
http://www.ajhs.org/research/loeb/
Postage
Postage Tip: Consider buying International
Postal Coupons, available at all Post Offices, when sending mail to
a foreign country. Because wages are not equal to Western country
averages, the recipient will be able to respond much faster and with
more assurance that they will respond, if you provide the cost of
the postage. Do not send cash or checks. In a number of countries,
postal workers have been known to open up envelopes that have been
mailed from the US and some other countries. Finding cash is the
main objective and reason for this act. Don't send cash!
Postage Info From Around The World
The world address Postal Information Service delivers links
to more than 40 postal authorities and Postcodes research tools that
are useful in genealogy
http://postinfo.net/
http://postinfo.net/links/PostInfo_forums/
offers postal tips by country.
Postal Service Domestic Calculator
This site offers information on postal regulations for
U.S. Mail Service
http://postcalc.usps.gov/
Prisons, Prisoners &
Outlaws
http://www.cyndislist.com/myths.htm
ProQuest Database
Some public libraries subscribe to this
database. Their subscription cost for the year at present is about
$2,000 and will be going up to $5,000 shortly, if not already. Point
being is to get your library to subscribe.
http://proquest.com
Public Access to
Court Electronic Records (PACER)
An electronic public access service that
allows users to obtain case and docket information from Federal
Appellate, District and Bankruptcy courts, and from the U.S.
Party/Case Index. Currently most courts are available on the
Internet.
Links to these courts are provided from this web site. There is a
charge to use this service.
Bankruptcies
http://pibuzz.com/
Criminal Records
http://pibuzz.com
http://www.blackbookonline.info/
U.S. Party/Case Index
http://pacer.uspci.uscourts.gov/
Public Records
Provides instant access to more than 10
billion public records including criminal records,
birth and death records, marriage and divorce records and real
estate records in any State in the US
http://www.publicrecords.com/
Criminal Records
A database of more than 50,000,000 criminal files. There is
a fee for access
http://criminalsearches.com/?gclid=CIH95KCg2pg
CFRIcawodsHGJcw
Rabbis
Ask The Rabbis just about any question you can
think of relating to Judaism
http://www.virtualjerusalem.com/
Rabbinic Genealogy Special Interest Group (RavSIG)
A special interest group for rabbinical family researchers
on JewishGen. More than 300 resources for rabbinic genealogical
research are listed in categories including bio-bibliographical
dictionaries; Chassidic rabbis; biographies; family genealogies;
Sephardi and Mizrahi resources; regions and countries; periodicals;
audiotapes and CDs. Indexes by author and by names of rabbis found
in the bibliography are provided
http://www.jewishgen.org/Rabbinic/infofiles/biblio.htm
http://www.jewishgen.org/rabbinic/journal/ashkenazic.htm
The Rav-SIG Online Journal has published articles on the Kassin
Rabbinic Dynasty and the Labaton Rabbinic Dynasty. It has also
published
"The Term "Sephardic Jew" - an essay;
"Sephardic Rabbis Impact Halachah Yoshiyahu Pinto",
"Shmuel Vital, Yosef ibn Zalach, Yosef Caro and Rabbi
Murad
Maslaton", "A Great Leader Rabbi for the Ahi Ezer community
in Brooklyn, New York and Damascus".
http://www.jewishgen.org/Rabbinic/journal/fathers.htm
Indexes to Meorei Galicia (Encyclopedia of Galician Sages)
with two indexes is on-line and includes 1,362 surnames and 324
cities, towns and shtetls found in Indexes to Meorei
Galicia. The indexes may be accessed from the Rav-SIG home page, in
the 'What's New Section:
http://www.jewishgen.org/Rabbinic
or directly at:
http://www.jewishgen.org/Rabbinic/databases/mgalicia.htm
http://www.jewishgen.org/Rabbinic/databases/mgalicia_names.htm
Books

"Meorei Galicia: Encyclopedia
Lekhakhmei Galicia"
(Encyclopedia of Galician Sages)
A five volume bio-bibliographical work containing
extensively detailed genealogies of Meorei Galicia:
Encyclopedia Lekhakhmei Galicia (Encyclopedia of Galician
Sages) is a five volume bio-bibliographical work
containing extensively detailed genealogies of
The author, Rabbi Meir Wunder, is chairman of the Institute
for the Commemoration of Galician Jewry. The Institute's
main achievement is the published five volume Meorei
Galicia. See also my
Galicia
page.
Random Acts of
Kindness
Here is a site that offers the FREE services
of amateur genealogists, as well as those in the know on various
forms, visits to local cemeteries or court houses within the city or
area they live in. Most states are covered and, some foreign
countries. Although free, you are expected to return the favor of a
localized lookup in the future
http://www.randomactsofkindness.org/
Reconstructionist
Rabbinical College
http://www.rrc.edu/
Repeat Performance
Offers audio/video recordings of past
genealogy conferences, among other items of possible personal
interest
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0039761/
Research Foundation
For Jewish Immigration
The Archives
570 Seventh Avenue
New York, NY 10018
The Foundation is at the same address but is in Room 1106.
www.jgsny.org/resource2.htm
Reunion Information
A cousin, Phyllis Harris, sent me the
following piece just before we had our Soloski Family Reunion in
Minneapolis in 1991.
The Family Reunion
The family reunion is an event that punctuates
and dramatizes the flow of our lives.
Children are born, they grow up.
Our own parents pass on, friends die.
It is growing late, it is years since we began.
And we hardly remember growing older!
At the family reunion we look from the oldest
member,
Who may not be present next time,
To the youngest, who were not here last time.
We suddenly glimpse our lives
As a trajectory in time,
Beginning at one point and ending at another.
Our life is an arc, linking these points
To a larger network of interconnecting arcs.
Life is not only a series of experiences:
It is a whole - real, objective, and unique.
Life is a process of tracing on sand.
With some patterns deeper, larger and more beautiful.
Yet the wind and water ultimately wash over all.
By the same process, time constantly erases
its own surface
While forming a deeper structure we never see.
It is as if our disappearing lives are set in stone.
For beneath the sand there is rock
Constantly being shaped by our lives - by our tracings in sand.
At the family reunion the great chain of
generations
Threads its way to the present moment,
Linking the old to the young, the dead to the unborn.
It contains - and is contained - by our own life.
As human beings, we are born into a family.
We live without and within it; we color it and share it,
We bring to the family our gifts, our acts, our children,
Shaping it with all the days of our lives -
And even with our inevitable passage into eternal life.
Minutiae Software offers a software solution
for planning and coordinating high school, college, family, company,
etc. reunions. You can download a free working demo. Mention my name
should you buy the software.
http://minutiaesoftware.com/
For more information contact them at
mail@minutiaesoftware.com
Reverse Lookups
http://www.refdesk.com
Romaniote Jews
For more information about this minority of
Jews go to my
Greek
web page.
Roosevelt, Theodore
Teddy began his career holding many of
the anti-Jewish sentiments common to his social class. His
prejudices gradually crumbled as he came into direct contact
with Jews during his terms as New York City Police
Commissioner and Governor of the state. Perhaps even more
influential in this process were the high moral character
and courageous actions of seventeen Jewish Rough riders
who served with him during the Spanish-American War.
When he became President in 1901, he appointed the first
Jew, Oscar S. Straus, to serve in a President's Cabinet.
http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/
1906/roosevelt-bio.html
RootsWeb
The oldest and largest genealogy community on
the Internet
provides thousands of links to genealogical searches. This site
includes information and links to getting started; GenSeeker (Web
Sites) Multiple Search engine link; Soundex Converter; Obituary
Daily Times link; Message Boards and more
http://www.rootsweb.com/
Mailing List to most genealogy Mailing Lists
http://lists.rootsweb.com/
Routes Traveled From
Europe
Thank God that they were willing to give up
what little they had in the 'Old Country' and face the trials
they had to endure to leave the old country for a 'better life'.
As I learn, from various postings on the Internet, I will be adding
various methods and ways our ancestors found that lead them to their
new life ... our lives!
Russia - via Odessa
Poland to Warsaw by train and then to Trieste
where they boarded a boat
Russian Web site
This site was offered as a site that
has a lot of information, by a visitor to my site, however,
it is in Russian.
www.genealogia.ru
Samaritans
An in depth article about these
people, by Judith Fein, appears in the April 2005 issue of
Hadassah Magazine. The Samaritans claim that they are
descendants of the tribes of Menassah, Ephraim and Levi.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samaritan
Sandborn Fire
Insurance Maps
Another useful database I found at my local
library is the CD-ROM version of the Sandborn fire insurance maps.
They are also a ProQuest product, but I'm not sure how widely
available they may be. The Minneapolis Public Library has a
set for many towns in
Minnesota. They can be accessed in the library, of course,
and by remote users, but only if their card is registered with the
Minneapolis system.
The maps show a neighborhood in great detail, with the outlines of
the buildings and the street addresses for each one. Many of the
commercial sites are also identified. Several
years ago, my father went through the Minneapolis City
Directories from 1903-1919 and
listed the addresses where his father's cousins lived. That
neighborhood no longer exists; it's been replaced by freeway
interchanges and the Metrodome, but thanks to the maps, I have a
good idea of what it was like then. I've taken Dad's list and
plotted the locations on a map. It's interesting to see how some of
the families moved on to "better" neighborhoods as they
became more established (or had more family members working.)
From a posting by Carol Gurstelle Roseville, MN
cgurstelle@attbi.com
http://www.loc.gov/rr/geogmap/sanborn/
Sandek
The person who holds the baby during the
circumcision.
It was (and is) a post of honor. Often a relative (grandfather) of
the baby.
http://www.ebris.com/bris_stuff_sandek.html
Search Engines
The Web isn't all play. Though not the answer
to everything, the Web can cut down research time. Essentially, a
search engine is a type of software that creates indexes of
databases or Web sites based on content. When you submit a search
term or word, it goes out and 'reads' its indexes and returns
applicable results. Think about it, the Web has an estimated 800
million plus searchable pages; it takes more than six months for a
new page to show up on a search engine listing, and even the best
search engines only searches one sixth of the Internet's pages.
The ultimate in going back in time is to find Archives.org. With
this site you can go way back to the good old days of Web surfing
(circa 1996) with the WayBack Machine
http://archive.org
At this site, you just enter a
favorite URL into the WayBack Machine address box and click your way
down memory lane. You can even type in
http://jewishwebindex.com
and you can see how far my web
site has come since August, 2000.
The BIG Ten
Links to the best resources and information about each
engine and directory listed, including how to get started, advanced
techniques, tips and tricks and more at
http://websearch.about.com/cs/thebigten/
Tips in using Search Engines:
Most returns you receive from a search engine contain foreign
language sites in addition to English. Unless you can read the
particular language, you are best off to save time and ignore those
particular sites.
The tilde ~ (that squiggly line that is on the upper left of the
keyboard to the left of the number 1 key on some keyboards or to the
left of enter being the caps version of the hash [#] key on others)
is Google's newest operator. Now you can search not only for a
particular keyword, but also for its synonyms. Indicate a search for
both by placing the tilde sign (~) immediately in front of the
keyword.
A search for ~genealogy provides results for genealogy, family
history and family tree. A search for ~obits gives results including
obits, obituaries, and death notices. Try a keyword with and without
the tilde to note the variation in search results.
Searchable database (by town name) of
archive documents for towns in
Belarus, Lithuania, Poland, Moldova and Ukraine
based upon the archival holdings of the foregoing countries.
http://www.routestoroots.com/resrch.html
800 go
http://www.800go.com
1 800 Search
http://www.1800ussearch.com
About.com
http://about.com
Aeiwi
An unusual web site. Use their built in search engine
http://www.aeiwi.com/
All The Web Search Engine
A remarkable resource and worth the visit
http://www.alltheweb.com
Alta Vista
Searches 350 million pages
http://www.altivista.com
Ask.com
The newest version of Ask.com has been dubbed "Ask3D" for its
3-paneled search results which represent the three stages of each
search: type a query, review results, and click through to content.
While other search engines tend to treat this process as a
step-by-step undertaking, Ask3D is presenting all three steps on a
single page, to align more closely with the way people actually
search
www.ask.com
Big Book
http://www.bigbook.com
Britannica
Type in a keyword or two and you'll get a complete info file
on the subject
http://www.britannica.com
ComNet
At this site, enter a topic for a web search plus local
links of business directory services
http://www.comnet2000.com
Copernic2000
One of the best around. Uses ten selected search engines at
one time. You are required to download a free program, but the
download time is well worth it.
http://copernic.com
CyberDifference
A commercial multi-lingual search engine searching in
Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, Italian, Japanese, Chinese,
Korean
http://www.cyberdifference.com/
Database America
http://www.databaseamerica.com
Dog Pile
A multi-engine that scours the indexes of Yahoo!, Excite,
Lycos and several others.
http://www.dogpile.com
Fact Monster
Offers definitions, details and figures
http://www.factmonster.com/
Fast Search
Searches 575 million pages
http://www.fast.no
Four 11
http://www.four11.com
Freeality
This is a mega site offering Search Engines; People Find;
E-mail & Reverse Lookups; Maps; Travel; Reference & Research and
more
http://www.freeality.com/findet.htm
Genealogy Portal
Features eight separate search engines to assist you in
researching your family history.
http://www.genealogyportal.com/
GoTo (see Overture)
Google
Searches 575 million pages though the site claims to have
partially-indexed more than 1 billion pages, so it may actually have
the overall lead for search engines.*
http://www.google.com
Help Resource
Provides links according to topic and connects you with
maps, calculators, conversion tables, dictionaries, encyclopedias,
biographies and newspapers
www.helpresource.com/homework_help
Hot Bot
Now owned by Lycos it is still an independent search engine
www.hotbot.com
Infobel
www.infobel.com
Info Space
Offers an International E-mail Address Directory
http://infospace.com/
http://www.infospace.com/pla/mail.html
InvisibleWeb
Find people, business, email addresses, maps, genealogy
links and more
http://www.invisibleweb.com/
iSleuth
http://www.isleuth.com/webs.html
iTools
Links to 2000 edition of the CIA World Fact book
www.iTools.com/research-it
IXQuick
This search engine will search in Dansk, Deutsch, English,
English UK, Espanol, Francais, Italiano, Nederlands, Norsk, Polski,
Portuguese, Suomi, Svenska and Turkce
www.ixquick.com
jiskha
An educational site that provides instant answer services
www.jiskha.com
Kishka
A portal site referring to Jewish information
www.kishka.com
KnowX.com
Bills itself as "The most comprehensive source of Public
Records on the web"
www.search3.knowx.com
Liszt
A primary tool for searching through tens of thousands of
mailing lists. To search for almost anything, you type in a word or
two in the search box and then read the descriptions that are
returned.
http://www.liszt.com
LookSmart
A key Web directory
http://looksmart.com
Lycos
A hybrid of directory and search engine
http://lycos.com
My Starting Point
Includes Calendar, Maps, City Guide, People Finder
http://www.starting-point.com
Navigator
Used by the New York times newsroom as a starting point for
searching the Web.
http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/navigator/index.html
Net Detective 2000
A commercial tool that allow you to find information on
living people. Cost for the program is $25.00
http://www.collector-club.com/DET/members/102932/
News Library
Search any state for news articles
http://www.newslibrary.com/nlsite/index.html
Northern Light
Searches 350 million pages
http://www.northernlight.com
Oingo
A "meaning-based search" engine which is a database of
1,000,000 words and meanings linked in a semantic network.
http://www.oingo.com
Overture
Formerly known as GoTo - a great on-line tool for searching
http://overture.com
PepeSearch Portal
Works with 30 different languages and uses the Fast Search
site at
http://www.pepesearch.com
Phrase Finder
Searches the meanings and origins of phrases, books
http://www.phrasefinder.co.uk/
Pro Fusion
Offers a gateway to Genealogy and Encyclopedia links
http://www.profusion.com/
Refdesk
A great source for Quick researches using over 300 sites
http://www.refdesk.com
Research Papers
Find a topic you want, then click the 'Ask elibrary'
button at
www.researchpaper.com
Reunion
http://www.reunion.com
Reverse Lookup
http://www.refdesk.com
s9
A resource for searching biographies of nearly 30,000
notable men and women from ancient times to the present. It
can be searched by birth years, death years, positions held,
professions and achievements.
www.s9.com/biography
Search Queen
www.searchqueen.com
Search Shark
Offers a free people finder, Military searches, E-mail
addresses and much more including a Genealogy search link.
http://www.search-shark.com
Search Systems
Provides links to 4,372 free databases as a public service
by Pacific Information resources, Inc.
http://pac-info.com
Slider Search Engine
Offers a directory of over 2.5 million websites, ftp search,
whole web search and a free Encyclopedia
http://www.slider.com
Springboard
http://springboard.telstra.com.au/directories/global.htm
Switchboard
Find a person, business, maps, Email addresses
http://www.switchboard.com/
Teoma **
Touts itself as being even better than Google
http://www.teoma.com/index.asp
Tinney Mega Search Site
A site worth investigating
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Milton_Tinney,_Sr.
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/topsearchenginesdirectories.htm
Vivisimo
A clustering search engine meaning you don't get lots of
random hits
http://vivisimo.com/
Web Crawler
Now known as Overture
http://web.webcrawler.com/
Who Where
Offers an E-mail address listing and can also be used to
search for phone numbers and street addresses
http://www.whowhere.com
Xrefer
The Web's reference engine. From a single keyword
search-line you can sift through 300,000 entries about
facts, quotes and words, or you can limit a search to just
one of those three areas.
http://www.xrefer.com/
Yahoo
Yahoo can limit a search to only URLs (web site addresses)
if you know this trick. This trick is especially good if you
only know part of the URL. Simply place u: in front of the
keyword or keywords and then press Enter.
www.yahoo.com
Your Dictionary
Provides the most comprehensive and authoritative portal for
language & language-related products and services with more
than 1,800 dictionaries with more than 250 languages.
http://www.yourdictionary.com/about.html
Search Sites that also may be of value include
www.pageszoom.com
www.teldir.com
www.world-address.com/francetres
*Google also owns the former Deja.com newsgroup message
archive and has made the entire archive available. you can
search messages going back to 1995.
** Teoma give you 3 types of results for every search. 1.)
under the Results heading, you get a list of Web sites
generated by an automated keyword scan; 2.) under the Refine
heading, the search engine suggests ways to narrow your
search for better results; 3.) under the resources heading,
you'll find a list of subject-specific pages created by
enthusiasts and experts.
Shabbetai Zevi
The 17th century mystic
who was exiled by the Ottoman sultan to Ulcinj
(Montenegro), north of Albania. In 1676, he
wrote to the head of the community in Berat, Albania
asking that High Holiday prayer books be sent to him.
Author Gershom Sholem wrote that Zevi died and was buried in
Ulcinj.
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/Zvi.html
http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/13480-shabbethai-zebi-b-mordecai
http://www.littman.co.uk/cat/halperin.html
Shtetl
The word comes from the German word "Stadt"
meaning city with a diminutive ending, thus a shtetl is by
definition, a small town, or even a village.
Alexander Sharon
a.sharon@shaw.ca stated
in a posting "Name shtetl is the direct Yiddish translation
of Polish Miasteczko, which defines small town. Concept of shtetl
was completely unknown in the Western Europe where Jews have been
local town ghetto residents and could not become owners of the land
and run the administrative affairs."
Shtetls were developed during the colonization period of the 16/17th
centuries in the Poland/Lithuanian Commonwealth. In the colonization
of the Commonwealth "Wild East" known as Kresy Jews have played an
enormous role, probably exceeding role of the pioneers in
colonization of the American West or Boertrekkers in Southern
Africa.
Localities established by the Jewish colonists were different in
nature from the traditional neighboring agricultural villages and
farms since they have been offering many of amenities usually
available only in a larger towns, such as: general and specialized
shops, market place (Jews have usually reside in the buildings
surrounding the Market Square), and trading/craftsmanship services.
http://www.hopesite.ca/rekindle/links/jculture.html
http://www.jewishgen.org/communities/
Shtetl Finder
If you know the name of your ancestral
shtetl, this site, sponsored by JewishGen, will help you
access the information that is now available
http://www.jewishgen.org/infofiles/shtetfnd.txt
Shtetl Foundation
The mission of the Shtetl Foundation
is to document and celebrate the rich and vibrant
Jewish History in Europe before its destruction during the
Holocaust with the building of a full-size replica of a
typical East-European Shtetl in Rishon Le-Zion, Israel
http://www.shtetlfoundation.org
Shtetl Life
"Net Captures Lost World of Shtetl",
referred to
Centropa and its project "Witness to a Jewish
Century".
Centropa is the Central Europe Center for Research and
Documentation, and the project is described as unearthing
invaluable records of once-thriving Jewish communities, the
main source of information and photographs being elderly
Jews. Centropa's activities are described at
http://www.centropa.org/mainpage/main.asp
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,57204,00.html?tw=wn_ascii
ShtetLinks
A JewishGen web site that was
developed to give genealogists who are interested in a
particular shtetl in Belarus; Bessarabia; Latvia; Lithuania;
Galicia; Moldova; Poland; Romania; Slovakia; Ukraine and
elsewhere that Jews have lived in the past
http://www.shtetlinks.jewishgen.org/
ShtetlSeeker
"Perception that there were entirely "little
Jewish places" or entirely "Jewish towns" is not entirely
correct. Jewish people could constitute the majority of the shtetl
population, but places were not "entirely Jewish".
Shtetl could be artificially 'subdivided' into the Jewish and
Gentile 'suburbs', one can notice that often village had two
names e.g. Velyky (Large) Shtetl and Maly (Little)
Shtetl, Vysokie Shtetl (High, probably on top[ of a hill)
and Niskie Shtetl (Lower, probably at hill's bottom). In
larger towns, Jews used to reside in separate suburbs (Kazimierza
Krakow, Naleki in Warszawa) or they were occupying
certain parts of the street in the smaller town."
From a posting by Alexander Sharon.
This site gives variant spellings of towns and villages, as well as
map co-ordinates
http://www.jewishgen.org/ShtetlSeeker/loctown.htm
Slavophilia
A comprehensive guide to Internet
resources on Russia and Central/Eastern Europe
http://www.slavophilia.com/
Smithsonian
Search the Smithsonian
web, just type the keyword you want to search for into the
input field.
http://www.si.edu/Museums
Social-Cultural
Jewish Sites
http://shamash.org/lists/scjfaq/HTML/faq/20-05.html
Soundex
The 1880, 1900 and most of the 1910 censuses
have Soundex indexes on microfilm, which are coded surname indexes
based on the way a surname sounds, rather than how it is spelled.
Soundex is a code that gives numeric values to most consonants in a
surname. All vowels and some consonants are disregarded.
1 - B P F V 2 - C S KG J Q X Z 3 - D T 4 - L 5 M N 6 R
Disregard A E I O U W Y H
An on-line Soundex converter is available at
http://www.nara.gov/genealogy/soundex/
Soundex Coding Correction
Renee Steinig
rsteinig@suffolk.lib.ny.us
asks this question: "Have you had trouble finding a Soundex card
for names containing the letters H or W? Renee goes on to
answering this question in her posting dated March 9, 2003 which you
can find in the JewGen archives
http://www.jewishgen.org/Jewishgen/DiscussionGroup.htm
scroll down to find the section headed Archives
Sources, Tips and
Contact Information for Jewish Genealogy
Books

"Encyclopedia of the Holocaust"
Gutman, Israel, Editor and published in New York by
MacMillan Publishing Company, 1990.
"The Encyclopedia of Jewish Genealogy"
Kurzweil, Arthur and Miriam Weiner, editors. Published in
Northvale, New Jersey and London by Jason Aronson Inc.,
1991.
"Finding Our Fathers: A Guidebook to Jewish Genealogy"
Author Dan Rottenberg, published in Baltimore: Genealogical
Publishing Company, Inc., 1986.
Spielberg
(Steven) Jewish Film Archive of the Hebrew University
Located in Jerusalem the archive has
inaugurated its Virtual Cinema Project. This is a must-see site! One
hundred and twelve films have already been posted on the archive's
site. Titles include Jewish Communities; the Holocaust; Pre-State
Israel; Israel Since Statehood and the Hebrew University. You will
be watching the films on your computer
http://www.spielbergfilmarchive.org.il
State Links
Welcome to the ultimate source of authentic
and reliable information about the US States on the net. The links
in this directory will guide you to the official sites of the states
you are looking for.
http://www.123world.com/usstates/index.html
Also use my
United States by States
page for even more links and information
Synagogues
Most U.S. synagogues are Orthodox, according
to a new American Jewish committee census. Of 3,727 synagogues
throughout the United States, 40 percent belong to Orthodox
congregations, the census stated, while 26 percent are Reform and 23
percent are Conservative. The other groups, including
Reconstructionist and Secular Humanist, account for 3 percent or
less of all synagogue affiliations, according to this 2001 survey.
In a 1936 Census of Religious Bodies survey, 2,851 synagogues were
counted at that time.
"There are quite a number of genealogical sources that may be
obtained through accessing the records of current or former
synagogues, aliyot being just one.
Here are just a few examples for newcomers to family research.
There may be an "offerings" book or card system to record the
donation; memoriam boards with the names of relatives or prominent
office bearers being commemorated; marriage applications (special
forms giving background information on the parties being married)
-- separately from the marriage registers themselves; letters to the
secretary of the synagogue in connection with a family life event,
etc.
Sometimes hidden away in the archives of some synagogues are copies
of Ketubot (marriage contracts), lists of members names and
addresses (sometimes with their names in Hebrew and the dates
of yahzheits of family members), or other family information. There
may just be a book recording the circumcisions performed by a former
mohel (usually a surgeon).
Of course the treasure's details recorded in old accounts ledgers
may be a treasure trove of information, especially for the period
pre-1900. Most of the time, such records are normally inaccessible
to the average family historian.
With a number of these suggestions, there are varying levels of
difficulty regarding access. It usually is beneficial to be able to
visit the synagogue in person, following sufficient notice.
So I would suggest to researchers, try to see if there have been
listings made of the contents of synagogue archives, especially
those with significant attachment to bygone generations." From a
posting by Terry Newman
List of Synagogues by affiliation
http://www.uscj.org/
http://www.shj.org/
http://www.ou.org/
http://jrf.org/
http://blogs.rj.org/reform/
https://www.aleph.org/
Listed by country
http://www.shemayisrael.co.il/synagogues/index.htm
Synagogues by cities in the US
http://shamash.org/trb/judaism.html#usenet
Synagogue Records
Everyone in a small, orthodox congregation
knew each other and kept up on the news. Deaths? You didn't get a
reminder of the Yahrzeit date from the synagogue, but gave it to
them. Marriage records? A marriage was a contract between the two
families, why would the synagogue need a record. Births? Boys got
circumcised which was the Mohel's business; girls got named but why
record it? Mohels might have kept a record for their own use, but
maybe not - and who cared anyway, they weren't thinking bout
genealogists. I have been involved in some synagogue records for
genealogy. What is there is mostly the minutes of meetings about the
new roof. There may be Sunday School class lists. There may be lists
of paid memberships. But these are 20th century, large, American
synagogues. The typical, small synagogue of the 19th century had
much less.
What records do exist for defunct congregations are in some archives
of the Jewish community, depending on the locality's decision. Some
may be at places like the American Jewish Archives. European
congregations (as a whole) were destroyed in great turmoil - their
records were not sent to a central archive. From a posting by Sally
Bruckheimer on July 02, 2002.
http://www.cjh.org/p/pdfs/USSynagogueRecords.pdf
Steven Morse
Steve has added a new search tool to his
repertoire. Unlike his previous tools, this one is not a search
application. Rather it is a tool that lets other people build search
applications for whatever data they might happen to have.
Although I personally don't have a database to share, I can see how
valuable this would be to genealogists if others with databases
adopted Steve's tool to make their databases available to the
masses. I'm sure that there are many of us who have such data
(perhaps cemetery data for example) and want to make it available
and searchable, but don't have
the web expertise to do so. With Steve's tool, it's very simple to
make this data available.
So if you have a database that you'd like to share, check out
Steve's new tool.
http://stevemorse.org/create
and the instructions for using it are clearly described on his
frequently-asked-questions
page. At the end of the faq page he gives several demonstrations and
examples of using the tool.
As usual, if you have any questions about it, please direct them to
Steve rather than to me. His E-mail address is at the top of the
website. From a posting by Diane Jacobs
kingart@ix.netcom.com
Web pages by Stephen P. Morse
http://www.stevemorse.org/
Telephone Directory
Sources

Web phone directories don't always
have the latest phone number for a person. Some areas of the
country have had several area code changes in the past few
years. The base number may be correct, but is the area code?
Directory Assistance
Dial 800 FREE 411 as an alternative and it will get you
directory assistance free by following the prompts. Works
for phones or text messaging and it works for both
residential and business listings throughout the U.S.
Caveat. You will receive some advertising. Nothing is really
free, you know.
http://www.directory-assistance.net/
An on-line resource
White Pages where you can find a person or business; find an
area code; find a zip code; find E-mail addresses and find a
web site
http://www.whitepages.com/?site_id=15277&gclid=CNPJ4IGKj68CFcMbQgodOiDh0w
Golden Pages
Publishers of old Israeli telephone books
http://jewishyellow.com/news.html
http://sydaby.eget.net/swe/emi_ref.htm
World Wide Searchable Telephone Directories
http://www.infobel.be/infobel/infobelworld.html
http://www.phonebookoftheworld.com/
Yellow Pages
Available for many countries - the URL I list is for Romania
www.yellowpages.ro
www.yellowpages.com
Terraserver
Microsoft Terraserver contains digitized
aerial photos and digitized topographical maps of the United States
provided by the US Geological Survey.
http://terraserver-usa.com/
Time Line
Here is one of the neatest family tree
enhancements to come along in time: a personalized timeline.
You need only add any name and the time period you are
interested in, and this site will print out a fascinating
personalized page for you, based on the history between the
start date and the ending date. There's more, and it is free
at
http://www.ourtimelines.com/
Another Time Lines of History site which offers 'Days in
History' - by country
http://timelines.ws/
Town Names
"Basically, the only
thing consistent about any of our ancestral towns is its
latitude and longitude. Most of these communities were under
several different
sovereignties throughout their histories. Each time the
sovereignty changed so did the name. Some times the change
is small consisting of the same sound in the new language
and sometimes the new King, Tsar, Prince etc. changed the
name entirely. Furthermore, the Jews of the community almost
always had their own pronunciation and spelling.
As an explanation of the above, one of my wife's ancestors
came from the (now) Lithuanian shtetl of Eisiskes (current spelling) The
Jews always called it
Eishishok. However, Judy Baston, the Lithuanian SIG
Moderator a couple of years ago downloaded the names of all
the Jewish immigrants from this town on the Ellis Island
Data Base. I took this list of 450 people and made up a
listing of the way they spelled Eishishok. Their were
105 different spellings.
The city of L'viv (current spelling) in Ukraine
has officially been Lemberg, Leopol, Lvov, and Lwow
and probably others. See the wonderful book
Where Once We Walked (Revised Edition) by Gary
Mokotoff and Sally Ann Sack with Alexander Sharon which
should be in your local library. From a posting by Joe
Fibel
Translating Services
-
Languages
page
Just in case you didn't think of it,
contact a nearby university or college's foreign language
department. They may offer to write letters and translate
letters into English. A nominal fee is usually charged.
Travel
There are many books available on
travel - see
Traveling Roots
page
Distance Calculator
If you want to know how far it is from Los Angeles to
Kiev (the answer is 6,305 miles or 10,147 km or 5,479
nautical miles, or for that matter from anywhere in the
world to anywhere else, try this free service offered by
Bali Online. Scroll down and select 'Distance
Calculator'.
http://www.indo.com/
Travel Safety Abroad
Information on travel safety abroad in light of the current
world situation as well as information on conversion to the
Euro currency
http://travel.state.gov/
Tribe Finder
I didn't find anything for my maternal
grandfather, but maybe you will have better luck.
http://www.shoreshim.org/en/tribefinder/TF_search.asp
UJC
(United Jewish Communities)
http://www.ujc.org/
Unclaimed Property
Administrators
Has a list of unclaimed assets
http://www.unclaimed.org
Union of American
Hebrew Congregations
(Reform)
838 Fifth Ave.
New York, NY 10021
http://uahc.org/
Union of Orthodox
Congregations
http://www.ou.org/
Unions
A possible source for
historical information about individual labor unions in the
U.S. is the
Labor-Management Document Center
New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations
Cornell University
142 Ives Hall
Ithaca, NY 14853-3901
Phone: 607 255 3183
Fax: 607 255 9641
email:
HRN1@Cornell.edu
http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/asc/collections/laborlinks.htm
The United
Synagogue of Conservative Judaism
http://uscj.org/index.html
United Nations
Treaty Collection
Treaty Collection - United Nations Treaty
Collection - English and Francais
http://untreaty.un.org/
United States
Legislative Branch
http://thomas.loc.gov/
http://www.hg.org/legislative.html
University and
College Links
The majority of Universities and Colleges are
now on-line. Use my search engine to find the one you are looking
for their URL.
Harvard
http://www.haa.harvard.edu/
http://www.aad.harvard.edu/haa/html/contin01.html
Universities of the World
The ultimate source of authentic and reliable information
about the universities of the world on the net. The links in this
directory will guide you to the official sites of the universities
you are looking for.
http://www.123world.com/universities/index.html
University of Berkley, California Library
http://sunsite2@berkeley.edu:8000/
University of California Library web
site
http://www.melvyl.ucop.edu
Yearbook Searches
Joe Bott has a large collection of Yearbook images on his
web site called Dead Freds Genealogy Photo Archive at
http://www.deadfred.com
University of
Judaism
http://www.uj.edu/
University of Texas
Check this site out as it offers so much
http://www.lib.utexas.edu
The Perry Castaneda Collection of Historical maps
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/historical/index.html
United States
(see also my
United States
Page)
http://www.infospace.com
http://www.switchboard.com
Information on obtaining Vital Records, maps, related links,
Birth, Death, Marriage, Divorce records for all of the
United States and the top 100 genealogy sites:
http://vitalrec.com/index.html
U.S. GeoGen Project
The goal of this project is to create a
national network of county oriented pages listing locations of
interest and hard to find places to the genealogist along with their
geographical coordinates, so those researchers that follow can
easily find the locations
http://geogen.org/welcome.htm
U.S. Married Woman's
Act of 1922
http://www.nara.gov/genealogy/natural.html
Follow-up page re women:
http://www.nara.gov/publications/prologue/naturall.html
USGENWEB
http://www.usgenweb.org/
USNET Newsgroup
SOC.GENEALOGY.JEWISH.
You need to cut and paste this address into the address bar
of your browser
news:soc.genealogy.Jewish/
Vilna Gaon and his
Family - Eliyahu's Branches
"The Gaon of Vilna". His surname is not Gaon -
this is the title he was given in respect of his great scholarship (Gaon
means "genius"). His full name was Rabbi Elyahu ben Shlomo
Zalmen
The noted Israeli genealogist, Chaim Freedman, has created a web
site devoted to
"Eliyahu's Branches: The Descendants of the Vilna Gaon and His
Family". The site includes a Journal; Books; Microfiche and Maps
http://www.avotaynu.com/gaonbook.html
VitalChek Network
A commercial voice and fax network that helps
a researcher obtain a certified copy of a birth, marriage and death
certificates - as well as other vital records. The site also offers
the information on obtaining a vital record from VitalChek's listing
of participating agencies:
http://www.vitalchek.com/
War List (see
also "Military" on this page)
A web site that offers information on Civics &
Politics, Military History, Historical Personalities and includes
the following war information, among others: Arab-Israeli Wars,
Crimean War (1853-1856), Cuban revolution, French Wars of
religion Iranian Revolution Revolutions of 1848, Romanian
Revolution, Russian Revolution, Russ-Japanese Wars, Spanish American
War, U.S. Civil War, War of 1812, WW I and WW II
http://dir.yahoo.com/arts/humanities/history/by_subject/
military_history/wars/
Wars of the World

First German (Robert Frolich) to be captured by an
American (Sgt. John Letzing) in World War I.
The sergeant earned the French Croix de Guerre.
Billed as the 'ultimate source of
authentic and reliable information about the Wars of the
world on the net and in alphabetical order
http://123world.com/wars/
Weddings, Simchas
and Celebrations
A wedding is a simple thing, according to
Jewish Law. A bride accepts something worth more than a dime in
today's currency from the groom and the groom speaks words of
acquisition and consecration. The two actions are witnessed and then
the marriage is consummated. The rest is just frosting on the cake,
so to speak - the white gown, the veil, the chuppa, etc. are customs
not mandated by any law.
A Jewish marriage requires an act of kinyan (that the bride be
given - and that she accept - something of value from the groom).
Sephardic and Oriental Jewish marriages still use coins whereas
European Jews substituted rings for the coins of ancient times. an
excellent article appeared as a "Special Supplement" to the
American Jewish World newspaper of October 8, 2004 or the July 15,
2005 issue It was written by Marlena Thompson, a prolific freelance
journalist and book reviewer.
http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:EFjPnlLBDF0J:www.jewishfamily.com/jc/lifecycle
/wedding_customs_old.phtml+%22Marlena+Thompson%22&hl=en
Search then for Marlena Thompson
Aufruf (Reading the Torah)
Traditionally on the Sabbath prior to the wedding

Mikvah in Gerona, Spain
Photo taken by Ted Margulis
Mikvah
(ritual bath) - an act of spiritual purification.
A 13th century Mikvah, which belonged to the medieval Crespin
family, was discovered in the City of London in 2001 and has been
reconstructed and on display at the Jewish Museum of London.
http://www.hadassahmagazine.org/site/apps/nlnet/
content.aspx?c=twI6LmN7IzF&b=6696679&ct=11288891
Mayyim Hayyim Living Waters Community Mikvah
www.mayyimhayyim.org
Signing Ten'im and Ketubbah at the tisch
Takes place just prior to the wedding ceremony, with the
bride and groom greeting their guests in separate rooms. At the
tisch (table) two documents are signed before witnesses, the
tena'im between the parents of the bride and groom and the Ketubbah,
or marriage contract. The tena'im means literally the "conditions"
of marriage and is a notarized legal contract that specifies the
date and place of the proposed marriage and financial arrangement
reached by the two families, including the dowry, any future
financial support and the penalty for breaching the wedding
contract. In some Sephardi communities (Italy, Holland, Greece,
Bulgaria and Yugoslavia) the tena'im ins included within the
Ketubbah
text.
Bedeken
After signing the Ketubbah, the groom is escorted to the
waiting bride. He veils her face to avoid repeating Jacob's famous
mistake when he married Leah innstead of his beloved Rachel. In
Yiddish it is called 'bedeken di kaleh' (veiling the
bride).
Chuppa
Symbolizes the home that the couple will establish together.
Circling the groom - traditionally the bride circles the groom seven
time at the chupa.
Breaking the glass
The groom breaks a glass under his right foot - the most
recognizable element of the
Jewish wedding but has limited religious significance.
Mizinke
One of the last dances of the wedding reception paying
tribute to a mother who has
brought her last daughter to the chuppa.
Wooden Synagogues

Talnoye, Ukraine Wooden Synagogue Before 1914
http://www.museumoffamilyhistory.com/ce/ek/jfs-01.htm
Among the many tragedies of the
Holocaust was the fact that the wooden synagogues of Eastern
Europe - some 1,000 structures - were systematically burned
to the ground by the Germans as they conquered territories
and murdered, or deported, the Jewish population. A few of
these magnificent structures survived and a group has
documented them, as well as the history of these synagogues,
in a video tape that can be purchased through Avotaynu. The
video includes photos of many of the famous wooden
synagogues of the past and file footage of Jewish life
before the Holocaust. It also documents a trip to
Lithuania to film the few (abandoned) remaining
wooden synagogues there. The narrator
is Theodore Bikel. You can order the tape at
http://www.avotaynu.com/books/synagogues.htm
Workmen's Circle
National Office
45 East 33rd Street
New York City, NY 10016
Tel: 212 889 6800 or 800 922 2558
E-mail:
wcfriends@aol.com
An outline of Landsmanshaftn and shtetl based Workmen's
Circle archives are available at the AJHS
http://circle.org/
The World
Fact book 2001
For detailed country listings and
reference maps
http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/fbhome.html
World Family Tree
This site claims to have 130,000,000
plus names and a guarantee of instant success. It is
a commercial site but they do allow Free searches to see if
your family tree is already on their site.
http://www.genealogy.com
World Jewish
Congress
www.wjc.org.il
Worldwide
Directories
http://www.teldir.com
http://www.infobel.be
Yad-Vashem
Yad-Vashem - means a memorial, located in
Jerusalem at a place called the 'Mount of Remembrance, and stands as
the memorial erected by the Jewish people to the victims of the
Shoah. It celebrates it's Jubilee Year as of Rosh Hashanah 2003.
Yad Vashem is a vast complex of museums, unique outdoor monuments,
exhibition halls along with a major archives, library and other
resource centers extending over 45 acres.
It is a memorial to over 5,000 destroyed Jewish communities and more
than one million murdered Jewish children. It is the official
repository of the State of Israel for all materials relating to the
Shoah and it holds over 55,000,000 pages of documentation on the
Nazi crime of genocide against the Jewish people.
Yad Vashem has, and is, examining more than 3.2 million entries of
Swiss Bank accounts, trying to identify and sort out the information
they contain and identified 54,000 dormant accounts owned by Jews -
a far cry from the mere 800 that the Swiss Banks had claimed to have
been able to find. Over 4.3 million records of Holocaust victims
have been completed and examined.
Yad Vashem at the Hall of Names has computerized their millions of
testimonies and you can display the testimony on the computer's
screen and also print it for NIS 2
(about 43 US cents). It will be soon on-line. One of the
search options is to search by the surname of the person who have
filled the testimony.
Construction began on a new, cutting-edge museum that will bring the
story of the Holocaust to life. Yad Vashem is also the official site
for honoring the 'Righteous Among
The Nations" -- Gentiles like Raoul Wallenberg and Oskar Schindler
who risked their own lives to save Jews from the Nazis. At this
site, you will find a map of Yad Vashem, FAQs
for visitors and more
http://www.yad-vashem.org.il/visiting/home_visiting.html
Home Page
http://www.yadvashem.org.il/index.html
A Report on the New Facilities at Yad Vashem
According to a posting by Israel Pickholtz on 5/23/00, this is his
observation.
"Nothing has changed in the microfilm department." "There seems to
be not much more total table space than before, but the large
numbers of computers (in some cases the computers, not just the
screens are on the tables) seems to reduce that total available
space. At many of the computers, there is no place to put your notes
except on your lap. And they have more tables than chairs, so very
time I stood up, some one took my chair. Oh well, I can live with
that. There is no longer a photocopy machine, but they have a
copying service that costs more than the old card-fed machine."
"The atmosphere was very laid back. People brought food and drink to
the tables. The
noise did not bother anyone, though I have heard that somewhere
there is a quiet
research room. The rest rooms are close at hand."
"The computerized system for getting at the Pages of Testimony is
quick and you can
search by any parameter you can think of. Including what is most
important for me - by submitter. They could probably cut down on the
clutter by eliminating some of the more exotic ones. It would make
it quicker to find the ones you want. I mean do we really need to
find all Pages submitted by people living on Jabotinsky Street, no
matter what town?"
"The output is reasonable and with a single click you can see the
scanned Page of Testimony itself. You can print to the office
printer and they charge one shekel (about US
$ 0.25) per page."
"There are some bugs in the inputting they did of the Pages, but
they are working on reviewing all the input and the Pages that have
not been checked are marked accordingly, if you know how to read the
code. I did a look-up for "mother's maiden name Pikholz" and got one
Page - but the original had no such information! No one could
explain that one. Other such problems will probably work themselves
out in the proofreading. But I would have liked to have seen a box
of correction forms on the table, so that I could point out errors
without stopping what I was doing."
"The intermediate output is a bit problematic. Say you are looking a
Page on a specific for Moshe Horowitz and you put that information
into the search. You try with his hometown, but for whatever reason
it says "no matches." So you just give the name and it gives you say
twenty Pages. You are supposed to click on the one you want, but
since the system gives you no other information, you have to look at
them one by one. I suggested that they put the name of the submitter
on the output, thus giving a better chance to pick the right one.
The person I suggest it to thought that a reasonable change. Of
course, in a perfect system, the user could customize the output,
but we don't want to wait years."
"The biggest problem is that you have to go there to use it. The old
research room opened at 7:30 and the old library at 9:00. Now the
complex opens at 8:30. You can order material until 3 p.m. and they
close at 5 p.m., which is better than it was, but still inadequate.
Closed Fridays. They are talking about getting the system on-line in
maybe
a year."
"The air conditioning was working well and I left feeling less
frustrated than after past visits. Had I known how to prepare myself
in advance, I would have gotten even more
done. They have gotten their new facilities and system off to a good
start."
Holocaust Research at Yad Vashem
International Institute for the Holocaust Research
PO Box 3477
Jerusalem 91034
Phone: +972 2 644 3480 Fax: +972 2 644 3443
E-mail:
research.institute@yadvashem.org.il
http://www.yadvashem.org/
Submit a Page of Testimony
To submit a Page of Testimony, there is a link
on the left portion of the screen from the Basic Search page. Click
the words “Submit Additional Names.”
http://www.yadvashem.org/lwp/workplace/IY_HON_Welcome.
Web Site
www.yadvashem.org
Yad Vashem's Central Database of Shoah Victims
http://www.yadvashem.org/wps/portal/IY_HON_Welcome
Dr. Judith Levin
archive@yad-vashem.org.il
Yad Vashem has a minimum fee of $10, which covers the first hour of
research. Prior to undertaking further research, Yad Vashem will
contact the researcher and clarify what, if any, further costs will
be. Charges are based on time, and number of pages printed. They
have provided a new InfoFile to JewishGen which clarifies Yad
Vashem's policies. The vast majority of names requests are charged
under $20, including multiple searches. Of course, there are
complicated cases where there will be additional charges.
The Yad Vashem databank has, in addition to the computerized Pages
of Testimony, a databank of German and Berlin memorial books; the
deportation lists from France compiled by Klarsfeld; most of the lists of deportations from
Bohemia and Moravia to Theresienstadt; a list of
Jews deported from Thessalonica; transcription of the card
catalogue of prisoners in Mauthausen; and the lists of
Hungarian Jews from the 'Neve' series; and a list of Dutch
Jews.
E-mail to
names.research@yadvashem.org.il
Yad Vashem
The Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority
Jerusalem
91034 Israel
http://www.yad-vashem.org.il/visiting/index_visiting.html
The various lectures given that afternoon at Yad Vashem are included
on the set of Lecture CDs containing the Jerusalem 2004 Conference
lectures, which were recorded using MP3 technology. This set runs
$40 including handling and shipping [200 NIS including vat].
It includes all the lectures that were given during the 2004
Conference in Jerusalem, except a couple whose sound was so
distorted that we did not want to include them and ruin the quality
of the set of CDs. If you are interested in ordering the entire
gamut of lectures, please go to IGS site: and you can download and
print the order form.
http://www.isragen.org.il/ROS/CD/2004ConfCDlecture.pdf
Yahoo Directory
You will find Beginners' Guides; Chats
and Forums; GEDCOM; Lineages and Surnames; Magazines,
Organizations; Tombstone Rubbings and a whole lot more.
http://dir.yahoo.com/Arts/humanities/history/genealogy/
Yiddishkeit
I found an
excellent description of this Yiddish word in the Hadassah
Magazine article by Leah F. Finkelshteyn. It goes: "What
is "Yiddishkeit"? The term encompasses Jewish
culture, secular or religious. Its language,
Yiddish, was born from a fusion of
Hebrew, German and Slavic tongues. Its
attitude can be cultured and warm or folksy and abrasive.
Leah continues to mention a superbly illustrated anthology,
Yiddishkeit: Jewish Vernacular the New Land edited by the
late comics writer Harvey Pekar and historian Paul Buhle.
"Yiddishkeit cannot be defined neatly in word or pictures.
"You sort of have to feel it by wading into it."
http://www.hadassahmagazine.org/site/apps/nlnet/
content.aspx?c=twI6LmN7IzF&b=6696679&ct=11519079
YIVO
YIVO - Institute For Jewish Research (Yiddisher
Visnshaftlekher Institut)
555 West 57th Street
Suite 1100
New York, NY 10019
Dedicated to the study and preservation of the
Eastern European Jewish heritage. There
is much to learn from this extensive collection. The idea for YIVO
was conceived by
Yiddish-speaking scholars both in Vilna and Berlin in
1925.
http://www.baruch.cuny.edu/yivo/
http://www.baruch.cuny.edu/yivo/index.html
http://www.yivoinstitute.org/
YIVO is also located at the
Center for Jewish History
YIVO Institute for Jewish Research
15 West 16th Street, (between 5th and 6th Avenues)
New York, NY 10011
Phone (212) 246 6080 Fax: (212) 292 1892.
The street entrance to the Center for Jewish History and
YIVO is
20 West 17th St. (between Fifth and Sixth Avenues)
"YIVO Guide to the YIVO Archives"
Compiled by Fruma Mohrer and Marek web. this is the first
repository-level finding aid to the archives of the YIVO
Institute for Jewish Research in New York. The guide
includes descriptive entries for over 1,400 collections, an index of
key words and subject headings, and a brief history of the institute
and archives both in Vilna and in New York.
Copies of this 448 page Guide may be ordered from M. E. Sharpe, Inc.
80 Business Park Drive
Armonk, NY 10504
the cost is $125.00
Phone: 914 273 1800
800 541 0563
Fax: 914 273 2106
Use their Record Group Numbers to access particular files. If you
visit their new facilities, call the Archivist in advance and
arrange to have the Record Group available for your use, or they
will have to retrieve them from their warehouse delaying your
search.
YIVO has only a small percentage of donated Landmanschaften papers.
However, you
might want to ask AJHS (housed in the same room as YIVO in
Manhattan) to search their index of original incorporation
papers for Landmanschaften formed in New York City. AJHS does charge
a research fee for this service or you can do the search yourself at
no cost.
Other organizations will move to the Center for Jewish History
Center for Jewish History include Leo Baeck Institute, Yeshiva
University Museum, American Jewish Archives, American Sephardi
Federation and Sephardic House.
Landsmanshaft Collection
Includes the Record Group (RG) numbers and a listing of
YIVO' s collection
http://www.jgsny.org/
click on "New York Landsmanshaft and Other Jewish Organizations"
and then click on the top entry, "YIVO' s catalogued
Landsmanshaft collection."
"A Guide to YIVO' S Landsmanshaftn Archive"
This is a listing of 918 organizations including all Landsmanshaft
contained in
Authored by Rosaline Schwartz and Susan Milamed, YIVO
Institute for Jewish Research, New York, 1986, and "Guide to the
YIVO Archives", compiled and edited by Fruma Mohrer and Marek Web,
YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, 1998. The list also includes 33
additional Landsmanshaft collections that YIVO has acquired since
then.
"People of a Thousand Towns"
More than 2500 cities are listed at the web site
"The Online Catalog of Photographs of Jewish Life in Prewar
Eastern Europe"
http://yivo1000towns.cjh.org
A catalog of 17,000 photos of Jewish life in Eastern Europe is
available
online. Based on photos in the archives of the YIVO Institute for
Jewish Research,
"People of a Thousand Towns" provides a visual record of
thousands of pre-World War
II Jewish communities. The pictures span the late 19th century to
the early 1940s and document the lives of large Jewish centers,
small towns and villages. In some cases, the pictures in the YIVO
archives are the only known photographic traces of communities later
wiped out by the Nazis.
Yeshiva University
http://www.yu.edu/
Yizkor Books
"What is a Yizkor Book"
http://members.aol.com/rechtman/index.html
"Since it is unlikely that a used copy of a Yizkor would be
available for donation to an individual (most copies held by
libraries and other repositories would not become available) and
since the cost of obtaining the original will be high through any
used book dealer, I suggest two alternates that may be useful to
others, also."
"This Yizkor has been made available as a print-on-demand title
through the National Yiddish Book Center's Steven Spielberg Digital
Yiddish Library.
http://www.bikher.org/+yb
The Center also has some books for
sale at lower prices: "Many of the titles listed in this catalog are
also available as used books for $16. Most are shelf-worn but sound
and complete; sometimes the paper is yellow or brittle. Although not
always suitable for the rigors of library use, used books are often
an excellent value for students (and collectors) To check the
availability of a particular used title or titles, please email
orders@bikher.org
"Perhaps this Yizkor is available as a used book from this source.
Since this is a Yizkor
book, it is not likely available but is worth a try." Alternately,
the Polish gentleman and his fellow
Rubiezewiczers could purchase a single copy of the
print-on-demand version, with the cost shared amongst them. If our
friend wants to own the book himself, he might arrange to pay back
to his friends their portions of the cost over time. In this way,
the book becomes affordable, he ends up with the book, and everyone
has access to something that was originally out of reach.
Collaboration can be very useful!
Submitted by Donna Dinberg Librarian, JGS of Ottawa Ottawa, Ontario,
Canada
donna.dinberg@lac-bac.gc.ca
"Yizkor Books Online" section
In the New York Public Library Website, DOROT Jewish
Division. They seem to have almost completed the job, reporting that
650 out of 700 books are available for viewing
http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/jws/yizkorbooks_intro.cfm
then click on "Yizkor Books
Online".
The New York Public Library has their whole Yizkor Book collection
online
http://yizkor.nypl.org/index.php?id=1741
There's another way to view the Yizkor books
that are on the New York Public Library website. Steve Morse has a
one-step webpage that let's you go directly to any page in the book.
From the NYPL site you need to step through by 1, 10, or 50 pages at
a time, but you can't go directly to a specific page. Steve's viewer
is in the Holocaust Section of his one-step website at
http://stevemorse.org
TIME Magazine
Article (May 31, 2004) about the Yizkor Book
project
http://www.time.com/time/generations/article/0,9171,
1101040531-641131,00.html
UCLA (University of California Los Angeles)
The Yizkor Books are located on the third floor of the University
Research Library, along with an extensive Holocaust collection.
http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/index.cfm
Yizkor Book List
http://www.isragen.org.il/YIZ/Rambam_books.htm
http://www.klezmershack.com/articles/winkler/yizkorlinks.html
Xerox Parc Map
Viewer
Select a point on the map to zoom in (by 2),
http://pubweb.parc.xerox.com/map
Zip Code Companion
Use this handy database to find the
zip codes for specific cities, states and even area codes in
42,000 US locations. Enter a zip code and it provides
matching city, stat, and area code, along with the time of
day. Zip Code Companion also includes all FPO and APO codes.
Try it for free as shareware. Type in zipco101.exe to
download the program.
http://www.pcworld.com
411Web.com
If you need to match an area code with a city (or vice
versa) or can't find a Zip code you can use this site and
the site also includes a lot more i.e. Yellow Pages, White
pages, etc. This site also provides find person, business,
maps and reverse telephone searches.
www.411web.com
Zip Codes: International and Zip 4 Code Look up
http://www.refdesk.com
Tips
- For Newbies
1. Check the JewishGen Info page for more information at
http://www.jewishgen.org//
Also, I heartily recommend reviewing Gary Palgon's web site
http://www.familytreeexpert.com/
2.) Start a large notebook and discuss with ALL of your
existing relatives your intention to create a family tree.
Get names, dates of births and any other info that they may
have, including marriage dates, etc. Keep good notes.
Remember, not all of the information you receive will be
accurate.
3.) Find your oldest living relatives and call, write or
visit them and take down any information they can offer. If
you have a small tape recorder, that's even better,
especially if they don't realize they are being taped.
4.) If you are visiting a relative, take family photographs
with you. First of all, they will be conversation starters
and most likely will lead to other pieces of information
that would have never come up if you just asked questions
from a prepared list. But do make a list of questions that
can be asked at the end of your interview, and also
interject those questions in your casual conversations. Be a
listener ... not a talker. You will learn more that way.
5.) If you have a computer, get a genealogy program and
start filling in the information
you receive, about yourself, your siblings and your parents
and grandparents, etc. I personally use Family Origins, and
although I have tried many others, this program is simple
and inexpensive ... but most importantly, it offers great
flexibility. (I have no interest in the company or their
products.)
6.) Check old Family Bibles, letters, pictures (negatives),
etc. Anything that your immediate and distant family might have in old drawers, attics,
basements, etc. may prove to be of value.
7.) Check out your local newspaper's obituaries for
information and also check your library for old issues of
newspapers and stories about your relatives. Some newspapers
are represented in various web sites; their own or included
in other web sites.
Check through my site for links in the
Books
web page. Click on the blue
underlined word "Books" to go there now, or later.
8.) The Mormon Church Family History Centers are
usually a gold mine of information. I would suggest you find
one person who is on the staff, that will help guide you
through their massive holdings. Check the Family History
Library (FHL) catalog at the FamilySearch® site
http://www.familyserch.org/Search/searchcatalog.asp
You can purchase your own copy of the FHL Catalog from
Family Search and avoid having to visit the library each
time.
9.) Contact your local funeral homes, or the funeral home in
the area you are researching, for information that they may
have in their files relating to the individual you are
researching. They may just have a missing piece to your
puzzle in their files.
Civil records may also contain clues, particularly death
records. Death certificates and obituaries are perhaps the
least reliable of all documents notoriously inaccurate. The
'informant' was usually a grieving next of kin and quite
often the informant was mistaken. The information was never
verified. Civil marriage records will often contain the name
of the person who officiated at the ceremony. By looking up
the name of the person who performed the ceremony, you may
be able to obtain a lot more information.
10.) Use my web site links to locate Gazetteers, magazines,
articles, books, Census information and much more ... all
available at little or no cost to you.
11.) Check also, Archives, both provincial, state and
national. Local synagogues may also have records as may
hospitals, if they will share them with you. Probate records
may also provide clues, since many people will provide money
or lands to their relatives.
12.) I would suggest that you start your search by working
with either one of the many unique Subject pages i.e.
''Holocaust, Genealogy' or one of the other Country page
from
the ones offered at my site. For the most part, the links
have been qualified to contain genealogical information that
will help you in your research of your Jewish family tree.
Note that anytime you see a red, underlined word, that is an
internal web page link, (one that I have built which
contains links to outside web pages) whereas when you see a
URL
or Internet Address underlined in blue, that is an external
web link to an outside web page.
13.) Once you have located your shtetl - and get its name
spelled correctly, the best way
to get an understanding of the town and it's environs, is to
locate a Yizkor (Remembrance) book for that town. Most
Yizkor books usually have a local map, a map of the
neighborhood, history of the town and surrounding area, a
description of the town, societies and personalities, a list
of Martyrs, etc.
14.) If you still need more help, may I suggest you make a
request on the Jewish Genealogy web site. As a tip, make
sure that in the Subject line of your message, you try
to be as succinct as possible. 'Looking for my Schwartz
Family' won't do anything for you, but 'Schwartz Family from
Plunge Lithuania' will catch the eye of anyone who is
interested in the Schwartz family name, and those who may be
interested in Plunge and/or Lithuania. Be sure to sign your
full name and city and country you live in. It's happened
where someone from your past finds YOU! because of this
information. Good Luck
15.) A friend set-up a class
address/phone/E-mail list on
http://spreadsheets.google.com
She & I have access to make any changes/additions. After
hard copy was mailed to everyone, she can give access to
anyone on the list so they can view spreadsheet at any time.
Saves resending new info every time there is a change. Was
thinking this could be useful for organizing/sharing
genealogical data. Set-up a spreadsheet to your liking and
persons who are working together from anywhere in the world
could have access to make entries. Others could have access
to view it. I am not a computer whiz, so perhaps some of the
computer mavens might want to comment on whether this is a
good idea and make further suggestions. From a
posting by Ellen Barbieri
Celia Male offers the following suggestions when
contacting a possible relative:
1.) You never let the person feel threatened and
therefore hang-up on you!
Hence the first words are most important - you must not be
mistaken for a
double-glazing or mobile phone sales person. If you are
ringing someone with
connections say to Vienna or Lemberg, get those *key*
words out in the first
few seconds. Even saying a few words in the native language
may help to break
the ice. Ask if it is a good time to talk.
2.) You must ring at a *good* time [i.e not in
the middle of lunch/the Wimbledon
finals/a great opera on TV or radio/siesta time etc and ***definitely***
not
late at night. Preferably not in the evening either - people
want a goodnight's
sleep! I also avoid early in the morning. If you are phoning
another country,
make quite sure you have checked the time difference very
carefully.
3.) Please take into account that the person may be
orthodox, hence definitely avoid the Sabbath, to start with.
4.) You should have all the geographic/historic facts at
your fingertips so as to hold a reasonable conversation. If
you have addresses where the family used to live, you should
have them in front of you, so you can reminisce. If you know
the person was from Prague, Berlin or Warsaw,
be sure you have done your homework. Asking about childhood
memories of the place and regional food is a great
icebreaker!
5.) You can mention others of the same age/from the same
place and ask if they happen
to know them. Say they would be most interested to hear of
this discussion.
6.) You must have a family tree handy, with dates and
names ... then you can ask about Uncle Otto or great-aunt
Hermine. Highlight, the vital missing links beforehand so
you can talk freely and sensibly.
7.) You must take special care with the holocaust and let
the person talk, if they wish to and definitely not ask too
many questions.
8.) Do give the recipient of your call your full name
and address and telephone number so they can phone/write
back. Also you can mention a few names as references. State
clearly what you are trying to establish and stress that
there is no money or fees involved - i.e. it is humanitarian
and/or genealogical.
9.) Ask if you may phone back again after you have thought
about all the valuable things you have been told. Even the
very old now have email - that may be better.
10.) If the person is very old, cannot hear well or sounds
confused, ask if they have children who may be interested.
Talking about children and grandchildren can also break the
ice.
11.) Stress that you are always there to answer any
questions or give help if required. And remember to say
thank you.
The opening gambit is probably the most important - plus
clearly stating your name and where you live. Also you must
be prepared to feel worn out at the end as it can be
emotionally draining. People sometimes talk for ages and
age. Yes, it is definitely a genealogical process - about
which little, if anything, has been written. From a
posting by Celia Male [U.K.]
Finding People In The United States
I see many requests to locate people & thought I should
share the techniques I have found helpful. I have found over
150 people in last 2 yrs. This is very tedious &
time-consuming. I use
www.stevemorse.org
Birthdays and Related Persons.
This brings up family groups. Ex. I
was looking for female about age 70, married & moved to
Troy, NY, her mother lived in Bronx, NY in early 60s. Found
DOB (she is 72) on
NYC Manhattan index at Mormon library, then entered
DOB & first name only on the Steve Morse web site & got
family grouping with unknown husband & children listed in
Troy & IL. I entered children's names on Steve Morse web
site to get their spouses. Got DOB for husband &
kids/spouses. Then went to phone directory big yellow & the
ultimates & found them. I click on zabasearch through Steve
Morse web site & got addresses/ph#s.
Often these are old but give clues,
sometimes find unlisted phone #. I believe zaba makes
everyone a year older on 1 Jan. Ex. anyone b.1942 becomes 65
Jan 1st & U S search changes age on their birthday. Both
keep the deceased on for several years. Another family
grouping included 1st wife who died in 1988, so I learned
2nd wife's name, daughter's name then found her spouse's
name. I went to CA birth index to verify I had correct
person (knew mother's maiden name)
then to phone directories. I take detailed notes, especially
when there are multiple entries, then sort & analyze.
I use several phone directories as the info varies. Some
claim to update every 3-6 months but difficult to tell. I
found an incorrect listing that was 3 yrs old still on-line.
Best to enter last name only & go through whole list. I use
reverse phone & address directories to eliminate the wrong
ones. Important to read carefully, as I have found
relatives/married children in original household/phone #.
I keep record of wrong persons so as not to contact them
again.
Keep checking multiple phone
directories every 3-6 months. When I can't get phone #, I
write & enclose stamped self-addressed post card. Almost
100% of time, person will write back if them or if
incorrect. It's becoming more difficult to get phone #s,
more unlisted, more cell phone users, & now more
Internet-based phone services ex. Vonage which are not in
phonebooks.
From my experience, it seems older
people (60-75) & divorced re marrieds have
more unlisted phones & I have been much more successful
reaching their children, most of
whom I had no knowledge of. I always get last 4 of zip
code, can do on Steve Morse web site or USPS. Large apt &
condo mail will not be delivered without a unit # which you
might be lucky to find in phone directory. Also, large
buildings have multiple last 4s, so
I usually check 2 sites to be sure it is correct. I also
recheck area codes. You will get a recording phone
disconnected when it is still right # but a new area code.
Area codes are the one area I have trouble using Steve Morse
web site. I find it easier to Google area codes & write in
town/state.
Phone behavior is very important. You
want the person who answers to like you & want to help you.
People are suspicious these days, so I start by telling them
a little about me & what info I am looking for & being
polite. I have had several people call relatives & seek info
for me. One led to finding the person I sought. In another
case, I reunited 2 relatives in CA (college student &
cousin of her grandmother). As they were telling me how
they were related to surname in NY/NJ, I realized I had
spoken to their relative. Happy Hunting & Thank you Steve
Morse!
From a posting by Ellen Barbieri
more to come ...
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