Several William Larkins but none in Brooklyn If you want the pages can u send a sase to Chris Granville PO 25 Selma OR 97538 and put Larkin on the envelope
ORourke Michael 41 born Ireland Kings County 18 ward Brooklyn several others in different counties
On your Gansbergs If you send a sase envelope and 3.25 i will order the 1880 soundex and see if they are on it but only families with children under 10 were on it... Or you can go to a mormon church Family history center and order the 1880 census and see if they are listed If you know where they would have been?? Chris
Gansberg Dora 23 born Hano County NY 9th ward 5 E.D.
Would be really nice if you sent me your mailing address I have 4 pages of Lannings in Warren County........ Chris
This is an example of a very misspelled last name!!! Hummer Mahlon was recorded as Mahlon Homer 52 born NJ Warren County Independence
Wegener Frederick 23 born Hano Hudson County Union Twp Wegener Otto 33 Prussia Hudson 1 ward Hoboken
John Hock 64 born bavaria Essex County Livingston TWP John 40 Prussia Middlesex NW Brunswick John C 43 Germany Camden Newton Joseph 46 Bavaria Essex 6 ward Newark Bridget 70 Ireland Essex 1 ward Orange Charles 42 Bavaria Essex 6 ward Newark Daniel 49 England Gloucester Clayton Dennis 50 Ireland 1 ward Orange
Please send me a mailing address I cant type that much info Chris
Joseph Lips 44 born prussia Hudson County 1 ward Hoboken
Mary Hock 82 Morris County NJ born NJ Sebastian Hock 34 camden county born bade William Hock 30 bergen county born bade
Hi Vince, The couple that run the Weehawken site that's part of the Hudson County site at rootseweb would probably love to have that photo on the town web site! Just click on the Weehawken box and then on their email address and it should pop up. Maureen --- Original Message ----- From: "Vince Cirucci" <vciinves@usit.net> To: <NJHUDSON-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, February 15, 2001 4:59 PM Subject: [NJHUDSON-L] Hoeggers Recreation Club > Hi all > I have a photo of about 45 men standing in front of a building in Weehawkin, NJ, all possibly members of the above mentioned Club. I would like to post the photo to the list. Can someone tell me how ? > > I thought some may find photo of a family member and possibly assist in ID-ing time frame. > > Vince > > > ==== NJHUDSON Mailing List ==== > Visit the Hudson County N.J. GenWeb page at: > http://www.rootsweb.com/~njhudson/ > > >
Not an Armenian historian, but the Bolsheviks took over all the Soviet Republics just before ..... not sure if Armenia was one of them, but if not it was right on the border. ----- Original Message ----- From: <Bubylu@aol.com> To: <NJHUDSON-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, February 14, 2001 8:36 PM Subject: [NJHUDSON-L] Armenians in Hudson Cty in 1920 > Hello List, > I have just come upon some interesting information. If this is silly to > some of you please excuse me. I received the 1920 census for Weehawken and > West Hoboken and much to my surprise I came across many, many Armenian names. > Could someone please tell me how come there were so many Armenian's in > Hudson County in the 1920's. Could it be the result of the Armenian > Holocaust? I am not > Armenian but I am interested as to why people from other countries come to > America and especially why they chose to settle in certain areas. > Thanks for your help, > Lois Segall Friedman > > > > ==== NJHUDSON Mailing List ==== > If you are unsubscribed from the NJHUDSON list unintentionally, simply > resubscribe. A full mailbox, computer error, or spam may cause you to be > unsubscribed. > > >
Hi all I have a photo of about 45 men standing in front of a building in Weehawkin, NJ, all possibly members of the above mentioned Club. I would like to post the photo to the list. Can someone tell me how ? I thought some may find photo of a family member and possibly assist in ID-ing time frame. Vince
Hi, Was at the FHC this morning. Looked up Holy Name and found they have it broken down by an index of five groups of names. When you find where your name is then you go to the film number and that should give you the block & plot. block & plot may not necessarilly be the same for all persons of that name and you might need more than one film. That's the way it was explained to me. Claire in Howell, NJ
>>I would appreciate look-ups of the NJ State Census for 1895 and the 1910 Federal census Indexes for brother and sister Joseph Gillen and Sarah Gillen.<< Sorry, but there are no indexes for any of the NJ State Census. And, 1910 has no index for NJ. ----------------------------------------------- FREE! The World's Best Email Address @email.com Reserve your name now at http://www.email.com
My guncle Harry Murphy was a minister in Jersey City. The address I have (1920) 221 Clinton Ave Jersey City Is this address the church or his rectory (house) ? What is the denomination of the church (protestant ?) TIA Albert
Half the 1870 requests will be posted later today or tomorrow Please Please Please if requesting a lookup Put First Names you know PUT THE COUNTY!! not the City... PUT EVERY SPELLING YOU KNOW DONT REQUEST A COMMON Name Search for a whole state I enjoy doing the lookups when i dont have to keep trying to find which county they are in or guess at the spelling.... Chris
Lois, Nothing silly about your question at all. I cannot offer any suggestion as to specifically why them came but come they did. I am sure the state of the wars and unrest in European Countries along with the chance to perhaps better themself during that time period had a lot to do with it. Initial locations of immigrants no matter what nationality or culture pretty much located (at first) near the Port they arrived at. The Port of New York (Ellis Island) which is actually located in Jersey City is but a stones throw from Hoboken and a mite further to Weehawken. The same is true for other Ports of Entry weather it be Massachusetts, Maine, Pennsylvania, California, New Orleans, etc. Ports always equal a large city and a large city means jobs, generally menial jobs but often the new arrivals look for any job to get started in their new country. Some new arrivals had jobs promised to them prior to their departure from their native land and they in most cases boarded a train for transportation to other areas of the country. But generally speaking the majority settled initially within a short distance of their port of arrival. Housing was readily available as was a mode of transportation, the amount of new arrivals alone accounted for new job opening to serve them also. Hope this is what you are looking for. Jim
I currently have the microfilms for these Union City churches: Holy Family (Baptisms 1857-1941) (Marriages 1870-1925) St. Anthony of Padua (Italian) (baptisms 1899-1911 and marriages 1899-1924) St. Roccos(Italian) (baptisms 1911-1912 Marriage 1911 Confirmation 1913-1983 If you would like me to research a name please please please... I need the surname and the church in which you wish me to search AND a date at least within a decade. For marriages I have to have it within a year or two since they do not have indexes for marriages. I wish I could just be on the look out in general for everyone's names, but that is just not realistic. Holy Family in particular is a very big church. I only have the films for a month. Even if you have requested before you need to do it again because I have cleared my look up files to start fresh with these churches. Remember a name and a date please. I hope I can help someone as others have helped me in the past. Just returning the random acts of geneological kindness. Theresa __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get personalized email addresses from Yahoo! Mail - only $35 a year! http://personal.mail.yahoo.com/