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    1. Re: [POLAND] another major breakthrough possible
    2. Eveline Tiefenbach
    3. Hi Vera I reg. to the site, looks safe to me, and they do have a lot of scanned church records and others. Not to good in reading the old german writing but will give my best, looks like Agnes Martha Bleschke, b. 16 Mar 1872 in the morning at 8 3/4 (that is 8:45 am, I believe) in (can't read village) ~ 25 May 1872 (not sure of the word in front of this date, might be ~) she is the daughter to Ferdinand Bleschke and Auguste Langmann, I can't read the rest but I do read a name Amalin Kalitz ?? Hope this helps Eveline Tiefenbach Greetings from Germany -----Ursprüngliche Mitteilung----- Von: Roman <romankal@verizon.net> An: poland-roots <poland-roots@rootsweb.com> Verschickt: Di, 27 Nov 2012 4:50 am Betreff: Re: [POLAND] another major breakthrough possible Vera, You are asking us to examine a record located at a site requiring registration. Some of us are not willing to register into unknown WEB sites. So if you really want people to review the record, you may need to find a way we can see it without the need to register. I have a similar opinion about records only viewable on A dot com. Roman On 11/26/2012 9:44 PM, Vera Miller wrote: > > Hello all, > I think I could have another major breakthrough on my Bleschke ancestry. > Can anyone please look at pg. 24, record no. 185 > Contents»Church books»Evangelic Lutheran»Parishes outside the Latvian territory»BELOSTOKAS»1872-1872 Born, Married, Died > > > on http://www.lvva-raduraksti.lv/en/menu/lv/2/ig/15/ie/316/book/32851.html? > I believe I just found Agnes Bleschke's birth record. I was told my great-great-grandmother had a sister Agnes but no one really knows much about her. I had my Bleschke ancestors researched by Bialystok archives in 2009 but this record was missed. > I also found another brother of my great-great-grandmother- Hermann Ferdinand Paul Bleschke on this website. He was born in Schwiebus in 1864 but died in Bialystok. This record was also missed by Bialystok archives. > Thanks to Debbie Greenlee for helping me indirectly to find these records! I asked her for researcher recommendations for various areas of Poland. One researcher, Iwona Dakiniewicz, worked out great. > I am trying to find records that Pauline Kretzer's parents and siblings followed her to Bialystok from Zgierz. Pauline married in Suprasl in 1855 when she was 19 years old. I was looking at records on www.lvva-raduraksti.lv to see whether I could find Pauline's parents and siblings in those records. The website has records up to 1875 and I still haven't found her family there. Maybe Pauline moved to Bialystok with another family to find a husband? Pauline's father was 52 years old when she was married. Maybe he and his 42 year-old-wife with younger children didn't follow their oldest child to Bialystok. > Thanks to everyone who has helped me with my search. > Vera ********************************* Need to contact the list manager? Write to Marie at Poland-Roots-admin@rootsweb.com ---------------------------------- Discussion of Polish food, culture, and customs are welcome on the list as long as the discussion stays pertinent to the topic of this list: researching our Polish roots. ---------------------------------- Browse the list's archives here: http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index?list=poland-roots Search the list's archives here: http://archiver.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/search?aop=1 ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to POLAND-ROOTS-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    11/26/2012 09:19:08
    1. Re: [POLAND] another major breakthrough possible
    2. Vera Miller
    3. Hello Eveline! Thank you so much!!! I now understand why these records are so hard to read. These books for Bialystok parish are duplicates. My heart sank when you wrote Auguste Langmann. Then I looked at the page for my great-great-grandmother's brother Emil's birth record. His mother also looks like Auguste Langmann and then I looked at the scanned page from Bialystok archives for Emil. The same child births are on the same page as my beautifully written page from Bialystok. The writing is worst for the 1870s on this website because these are the last years and the writer just wanted to get the job done. This year is not as bad as the later ones. The ones from the 1830s and 1840s are so easy to read. Thanks again! Soon, I will have Bialystok archives look for Agnes' marriage and child birth records. I really hope she married and had children in Bialystok. Only her brother Emil's family knew of her existence and now I can tell his family that I found her birth record. This group is awesome!!! Vera > To: romankal@verizon.ne > From: liebeemmi@aol.com > Date: Tue, 27 Nov 2012 04:19:08 -0500 > CC: poland-roots@rootsweb.com > Subject: Re: [POLAND] another major breakthrough possible > > Hi Vera > > > I reg. to the site, looks safe to me, and they do have a lot of scanned church records and others. > > > Not to good in reading the old german writing but will give my best, looks like > > > Agnes Martha Bleschke, b. 16 Mar 1872 in the morning at 8 3/4 (that is 8:45 am, I believe) in (can't read village) ~ 25 May 1872 (not sure of the word in front of this date, might be ~) she is the daughter to Ferdinand Bleschke and Auguste Langmann, > > > I can't read the rest but I do read a name Amalin Kalitz ?? > > > Hope this helps > Eveline Tiefenbach Greetings from Germany > > > -----Ursprüngliche Mitteilung----- > Von: Roman <romankal@verizon.net> > An: poland-roots <poland-roots@rootsweb.com> > Verschickt: Di, 27 Nov 2012 4:50 am > Betreff: Re: [POLAND] another major breakthrough possible > > > Vera, > > You are asking us to examine a record located at a site requiring > registration. Some of us are not willing to register into unknown WEB > sites. So if you really want people to review the record, you may need > to find a way we can see it without the need to register. > > I have a similar opinion about records only viewable on A dot com. > > Roman > > On 11/26/2012 9:44 PM, Vera Miller wrote: > > > > Hello all, > > I think I could have another major breakthrough on my Bleschke ancestry. > > Can anyone please look at pg. 24, record no. 185 > > Contents»Church books»Evangelic Lutheran»Parishes outside the Latvian > territory»BELOSTOKAS»1872-1872 Born, Married, Died > > > > > > on http://www.lvva-raduraksti.lv/en/menu/lv/2/ig/15/ie/316/book/32851.html? > > I believe I just found Agnes Bleschke's birth record. I was told my > great-great-grandmother had a sister Agnes but no one really knows much about > her. I had my Bleschke ancestors researched by Bialystok archives in 2009 but > this record was missed. > > I also found another brother of my great-great-grandmother- Hermann Ferdinand > Paul Bleschke on this website. He was born in Schwiebus in 1864 but died in > Bialystok. This record was also missed by Bialystok archives. > > Thanks to Debbie Greenlee for helping me indirectly to find these records! I > asked her for researcher recommendations for various areas of Poland. One > researcher, Iwona Dakiniewicz, worked out great. > > I am trying to find records that Pauline Kretzer's parents and siblings > followed her to Bialystok from Zgierz. Pauline married in Suprasl in 1855 when > she was 19 years old. I was looking at records on www.lvva-raduraksti.lv to see > whether I could find Pauline's parents and siblings in those records. The > website has records up to 1875 and I still haven't found her family there. Maybe > Pauline moved to Bialystok with another family to find a husband? Pauline's > father was 52 years old when she was married. Maybe he and his 42 year-old-wife > with younger children didn't follow their oldest child to Bialystok. > > Thanks to everyone who has helped me with my search. > > Vera > ********************************* > Need to contact the list manager? Write to Marie at Poland-Roots-admin@rootsweb.com > ---------------------------------- > Discussion of Polish food, culture, and customs are welcome on the list as long > as the discussion stays pertinent to the topic of this list: researching our > Polish roots. > ---------------------------------- > Browse the list's archives here: > http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index?list=poland-roots > Search the list's archives here: > http://archiver.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/search?aop=1 > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to POLAND-ROOTS-request@rootsweb.com > with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of > the message > > > ********************************* > Need to contact the list manager? Write to Marie at Poland-Roots-admin@rootsweb.com > ---------------------------------- > Discussion of Polish food, culture, and customs are welcome on the list as long as the discussion stays pertinent to the topic of this list: researching our Polish roots. > ---------------------------------- > Browse the list's archives here: > http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index?list=poland-roots > Search the list's archives here: > http://archiver.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/search?aop=1 > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to POLAND-ROOTS-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    11/26/2012 10:10:30