Chana Danziger Sheiner at extreme left front row. Mary Danziger Paris at extreme right front row. Man in hat back row- Abe Paris. I think Frances Danziger is just to Chana's left and Helen is behind. The woman between Frances and Mary is Evelyn Danziger Stillman, Barbara's mother. She confirms. The house number is 1346 Eastern Parkway.
Wednesday, April 6, 2016
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
Abraham Danziger
We do not have documentation of my grandfather at both ends of his life.
We have two birthdates for my grandfather, Abraham Danziger. 9 March 1878 and 15 January 1881.
The later one is from his father, Maer/Mayer Danziger, in his application for naturalization, in which he says his firstborn Abe was born Jan 15, 1881, in Poland.
Then we have the record from JRI-Poland in a set that includes Danzigers who fit the family structure.
Abram Icek Danziger is listed as born 9/3/1878 in Rawa. Elja Majer is the father. The other family are identified and Grandma Ella is confirmed as Elka WAJCMAN.
This also confirms that Abe's mother and Maer's wife was Rajza Necha GOLDBERG. Renee's Hebrew name is Reisel Necha, which adds weight to the claim that this is the right set of records.
Why the discrepancy between the birth dates?
How and when did he get to America?
Where is the official record of his death?
Ethel says he travelled incognito in the months before she came over with Maer and Ella and the children born in Poland. That puts the dates between October, 1912 and November, 1912.
Suppose he travelled from Poland to a German port and then to Baltimore, as did Ella and Maer in late 1913. We can look in the Baltimore Ship Manifests for someone born in Poland between 1878 and 1881. Perhaps he stopped with relatives in Miellosna, Poland, which may be Miłosna, of which there are four in Poland.
Death.
We are fairly sure that Abraham Danziger died in the apartment he shared with his wife Ella Wajcman Danziger near 529 Broad Avenue, Englewood, NJ. I visited him several times there. This apartment was near my parents' home in Tenafly, so my mom Laura could visit them and take care of him as he was fading. She told me a story of helping him pee in the night which was embarrassing for the both of them. So it is a good guess that Laura was the informant on his death certificate.
I wrote to the Health Department in Englewood for his death certificate. They returned my request because I could not show that the Laura Danziger Jacobowitz I claim as my mother was the same as the Lucy Danziger shown on her birth certificate. The next step is to ask my cousin Paula Kelman to send for the certificate, since she can show that she is a direct descendant through her mother Renee Danziger Weiner.
We have two birthdates for my grandfather, Abraham Danziger. 9 March 1878 and 15 January 1881.
The later one is from his father, Maer/Mayer Danziger, in his application for naturalization, in which he says his firstborn Abe was born Jan 15, 1881, in Poland.
Then we have the record from JRI-Poland in a set that includes Danzigers who fit the family structure.
Abram Icek Danziger is listed as born 9/3/1878 in Rawa. Elja Majer is the father. The other family are identified and Grandma Ella is confirmed as Elka WAJCMAN.
This also confirms that Abe's mother and Maer's wife was Rajza Necha GOLDBERG. Renee's Hebrew name is Reisel Necha, which adds weight to the claim that this is the right set of records.
Why the discrepancy between the birth dates?
How and when did he get to America?
Where is the official record of his death?
Ethel says he travelled incognito in the months before she came over with Maer and Ella and the children born in Poland. That puts the dates between October, 1912 and November, 1912.
Suppose he travelled from Poland to a German port and then to Baltimore, as did Ella and Maer in late 1913. We can look in the Baltimore Ship Manifests for someone born in Poland between 1878 and 1881. Perhaps he stopped with relatives in Miellosna, Poland, which may be Miłosna, of which there are four in Poland.
Death.
We are fairly sure that Abraham Danziger died in the apartment he shared with his wife Ella Wajcman Danziger near 529 Broad Avenue, Englewood, NJ. I visited him several times there. This apartment was near my parents' home in Tenafly, so my mom Laura could visit them and take care of him as he was fading. She told me a story of helping him pee in the night which was embarrassing for the both of them. So it is a good guess that Laura was the informant on his death certificate.
I wrote to the Health Department in Englewood for his death certificate. They returned my request because I could not show that the Laura Danziger Jacobowitz I claim as my mother was the same as the Lucy Danziger shown on her birth certificate. The next step is to ask my cousin Paula Kelman to send for the certificate, since she can show that she is a direct descendant through her mother Renee Danziger Weiner.
Monday, March 14, 2016
Patrick Kearny
I met Patrick Kearny on the border of Maine and New Brunswick in 1970. He was hitchhiking and I was driving with my old friend Sally Steinhardt. Here is Patrick's version of what happened. (I have made some corrections in spelling and some details, but the story is his.)
12: There and Back Again With No Brakes
Late one summer in the early 1970s I was in Rochester looking to find a hitchhiking partner for an adventure. I had been all the way across Canada from the Pacific Coast to Quebec and now I wanted to see the Maritimes. My friend Winnie Olmer had some free time and so the two of us set out on Route 5 & 20 in an easterly direction. We were an odd looking pair. Winnie resembled Arlo Guthrie, long curly hair and hippie clothing. I had just finished working all summer in the open hearth and had short hair, work boots and a long mustache. Travel was slow, but after three days and many rides we found ourselves in Pitcou, Nova Scotia. One of the two ferries to Prince Edward Island left from Pitcou and we were hoping to catch it the next day. Unfortunately, it was getting dark, it had started to rain and I was getting a sore throat. We walked up to a farmhouse and asked the quiet, elderly couple that lived there if we could spend the night in their barn. After we promised not to light any matches, they agreed. I’d always wanted to sleep in a hayloft and that night I got my chance. It’s overrated, but even so it was nice to be in out of the rain.
In the morning I was still feeling pretty scratchy. I was afraid of getting really sick so far from home and so I decided to abandon the trip and head back to Pennsylvania. Winnie agreed to split up since both of us would make better time on our own. I started out first thing and got to the U.S. border in Saint Stephen, New Brunswick by late afternoon. The U.S. Customs officers gave me a hard time because some Canadians had dropped me off at the immigration station and then turned around and driven away. Technically I didn’t have a ride and the highway into the U.S. was limited access. I was made to wait on a bench with no indication that I would be allowed to enter the country. Fortunately, I was joined on the bench by a young couple also being hassled and they agreed to let me ride with them. This arrangement suited the customs agent and so we left as soon as my new friends had been cleared for takeoff.
I picked up a few more lifts and then, as the sun approached the horizon, I decided to sleep wherever my next ride dropped me off. After a long wait a young man and woman pulled over. He was driving a red 1957 Alfa Romeo Spyder Veloci [Veloce] convertible. I thanked them for stopping, but pointed out that there was no room for me in the two-seater. “Yeah there is,” he said, “I’ll just move my seat up a little and you can squeeze in behind us.”
Sure enough, by turning sideways and making myself very thin I was able to slip into the suitcase space behind the seats. I set my backpack on the sporty luggage trunk rack and held onto it with one hand. My driver, David Jacobowitz introduced himself and his friend, Sally Steinhards [Steinhardt], and away we went. We were somewhere south of Machias on Route 1. We talked about my trip and how much we all liked Maine. We were getting along well. They hadn’t said how far they were going, but I really didn’t care. After a while they started talking quietly to each other. I couldn’t hear what they were saying with the wind in my ears. Finally Dave told me that they were on their way to Sally’s parents’ summer home at Hancock Point. He said that I would be welcome to stay with them that night and that he was driving on to Virginia the next day and would be happy to give me a ride to wherever I wanted to get out along the way. I was amazed, once again, at my good luck. The sore throat hadn’t gotten any worse, but I was tired. I knew that a good night’s sleep under a roof would be just what I needed to recover completely. Knowing I wouldn’t have to spend the next couple of days hitching was a tremendous relief.
Sally’s parents couldn’t have been nicer. I don’t think this was the first time they had taken in a stray. Things like this happened a lot more in those days with so many young people on the road. We had a nice supper, then they gave me a thick towel and invited me to take a shower. After I’d cleaned up, I found Dave playing guitar for everyone in the kitchen. He seemed to be a very talented and outgoing guy. We planned to leave early in the morning, so I was soon shown to a room with a brass bed where I had a very good sleep.
As we started out the next day, Dave mentioned, not for the last time, that he absolutely had to be in Virginia [North Carolina] by the next day and so he wanted to make good time. However, on several occasions we passed something noteworthy and almost always Dave would pull over to investigate. Route 1 in Maine has always been a pretty good place to get distracted by the sea faring atmosphere, Victorian architecture, the folk art of eccentric Mainers and riotous commercial enterprise. Thus it was that we had only gotten as far as the Boston suburbs by late afternoon. A little disappointing, but Dave said that he had a friend who lived nearby and that he’d let us stay the night. If we left first thing, he could still get to Virginia by the end of the day.
When we got to the friend’s house there was a party going on. Although it was winding down, there was still some great food to be had. The hardwood floor where we rolled out our sleeping bags was not so great, but I’d seen worse. We got up at first light the next day, found a good diner for breakfast and had reason to expect a smooth trip down the busy corridor between Boston and Philadelphia.
Dave really loved that Alfa. He knew a lot about sports cars, how to handle them well and about some of the great drivers, like Jackie Stewart. He discoursed upon the art of the four-wheel drift, heel and toe pedal work and other niceties of sports car operation. These were soon to play an important role in our further passage.
We were on one of the old parkways in Connecticut, closing in on the city. The lanes were narrow and there were a lot of curves and no shoulder. Dave tapped the brakes as he leaned the car into one of these tight curves and there was a loud noise that sounded like we had just run over someone’s long lost ash bucket. Immediately afterwards a grating, rasping racket started coming from the front end. Dave took his foot off the gas and, when the car had slowed enough, pulled it up over the curve
onto the grass margin beside the road.
After jacking up the front of the car and removing a front wheel, he discovered that a front brake shoe had exploded. He analyzed the situation verbally, “With this shoe gone I won’t be able to use the brake pedal. That could destroy the drum. But I can slow the car with the parking brake lever. That only controls the rear brakes.
“There’s only one place on the east coast where I can get a new brake shoe for this car and that’s the Alfa Romeo [distributor's] warehouse in Newark. That’s on our way. Using the parking brake and downshifting I can get us there. They close at 5:00. We have just enough time. Let’s go!”
Why did I get back into that car? We were about to drive through some of the heaviest traffic in the country. I’d known this guy less than 48 hours and I was about to trust him with my life. Well, we were young and knew that we would live forever.
Dave had shown himself to be a very accomplished driver. I had been looking for an adventure and I was in too deep by now to quit. I don’t remember any hesitation.
We jumped into the car and started off.
The intensity of the traffic gradually increased as we approached New York. But things went well and, by the time we reached the Bronx, we were both pretty relaxed and were deep into a discussion about architecture. As Dave drove down the Major Deegan Expressway, we passed below the Bronx campus of NYU, which I was familiar with since my girlfriend used to go there. I told him about the dome of the library, from which I believe the opening scene of the movie Goodbye'Columbus was shot, and that got me onto skylights and glass domes. I said, “I have a cousin who once fell through the skylight of a synagogue.”
He looked at me funny and said, “I’ve got a cousin who once fell through the skylight of a synagogue.”
I said, “His first name was Robin.”
He said, “His last name was Danzinger [Danziger].”
We looked at each other in disbelief. We started pounding each other on the back and yelling at each other as Dave drove us down the busy six-lane highway in the congested late afternoon traffic with the top down and no legal brakes. I often wonder what passersby thought was going on and what they would have thought if they’d known about our brakes.
We continued onto the Cross Bronx Expressway and over the East River into Manhattan. As Dave drove, we worked out the connection. My father’s sister, Peg, had married [Sam Leslie, whose sister, Eva Lasowitz, had married Dave's uncle, Moe Danziger. Her son,] Dave’s uncle, Sam Leslie. Sam’s sister, Eva Danzinger, had a son, Robin, who was Dave’s first cousin and also my cousin Mike Leslie’s first cousin. [Dr. Sam Leslie had seen David's mother when she was pregnant with him]. Though we weren’t related by blood, I had met Robin, he was my age and I had always been impressed by the story of his teenage near-death adventure.
Dave decided that he would have to take me all the way home so that he could meet my father. He knew Sam and Peg, of course [I actually never met them that I remember, and Peg was the connection], so he was eager to meet his aunt’s brother. This was great news for me, as the ride I’d picked up in northern Maine was now going to be door to door and I would have the best ever, never-to-be-topped hitch hiking story.
But first we had to get the brake shoe. Time was running out. It was our rare good fortunate to cross the George Washington Bridge amid homebound traffic without too many delays and we soon made our way into Newark. I learned later that Dave once held a summer job delivering new cars from the docks [in Newark to a dealer in Englewood] to the holding pens in Newark, so he knew his way around the city. We arrived with less than 10 minutes to spare. They had the part. Dave bought it and the doors were locked behind him as he left the building. I’d assumed that my newfound cousin would install the brake shoe in the parking lot, but he must have been feeling confident with the way the car was handling and, hearing that we had a garage, he decided to wait until we arrived in Levittown.
Before we left the warehouse, we witnessed an amazing thing. Dave was about to pull out of the parking lot, when he stopped the car and pointed across the street. A middle aged black man wearing shades and a sporty hat and smoking a cigar had just placed a 16’ 2x4 on the roof of a shiny, chrome bedecked 1958 Chevrolet Z a beautiful car. The yardman was walking towards the car with a roll of heavy string, but the customer waved him off dismissively. He got into the car and drove slowly out of the lot, making a big, swooping left turn onto the busy street. A driver coming up behind him had to brake hard to avoid running into the Chevy. The driver had gone wide to the outside of the lane, then back all the way to the center line before finally straightening the car in such a way that the front of the 2x4 swung slowly to his right, then back to the left, centering perfectly over the chrome hood ornament.
The car proceeded at funeral pace down to the light at the end of the block where the process was repeated as the driver made another big left turn through the intersection. This time oncoming cars on both streets had to make way and there were tires squealed and horns honked from both directions.
Maybe nothing surprised us on that particular day. We grinned at each other and went on our way. I imagined the driver building a home, one board at a time, picking each one up at the lumberyard and carrying it home this way, making ten or twelve trips a day.
In order to get from Newark to Levittown we had to travel down the sixteen lane New Jersey Turnpike, then cross over the Delaware River to the Pennsylvania Turnpike on the toll bridge, and travel a few more miles on local roads. I had not called ahead and, when my father told this story in later years he would always say, “So here comes Pat with some hippie needing a brake job and I thought, ‘Oh Jeez, I’m going to be out in the garage all night after working in the locomotive shop all day.’”
But then he would add that all Dave wanted was to borrow a hammer and that he put that brake shoe on as fast as he could have done it himself. Afterwards my mom made us a big pot of spaghetti and Dave and my father had a long talk about our families and who knew whom. After all of this Dave got in his car and continued on his way. He really did have to be in Virginia [North Carolina] by the next morning. I deliberately did not ask my cousin for contact information. I wanted to see if we could bump into each other again someday in this small world.
Thirty years passed. I hadn’t seen my cousin Barbara in almost that long, when I ran into her at a funeral and she told me that Dave had told this story at a family reunion that summer and... he’d forgotten the part about the brake shoe. She said that he lived somewhere in Vermont. I wasn’t surprised. When I finally tracked him down he was living a mile away from my son. Every word of this story is true. If you don’t believe me, just ask David.
Saturday, January 30, 2016
Jakubovits in the 1848 and 1892 Hungarian Census
Vivian Kahn sent this image of the 1892 Hungarian Census which shows the members of the Jakubovits family and where they lived. Vivian ..."check further into JAKUBOVITS records and I came across
this page from the 1869 census that I may not have sent to you. Notice
that it lists three of Aron’s sisters—Amalia, Fani, and Eleonora.
Appears that Bernath was living with Herman and his family at that
time. I’ve uploaded this record to Geni.com as well."
Census Year | Last Name | First Name | Year of Birth | Religion | Marital Status | Employment Status | Birthplace | Nationality |
szülöhelye | honossága | |||||||
1869 | Jakubovits | Herman | 1826 | Hebr | Szobránce | |||
1869 | Glancz | Rachel | 1829 | Hebr | Riviztse | |||
1869 | Jakubovits | Amalia | 1857 | Hebr | Szobránce | |||
1869 | Jakubovits | Fani | 1860 | Hebr | Szobránce | |||
1869 | Jakubovits | Eleonora | 1862 | Hebr | Szobránce | |||
1869 | Jakubovits | Aron | 1864 | Hebr | Szobránce | |||
1869 | Jakubovits | Bernath | 1847 | Hebr | Szobránce | |||
1869 | Margucz | Erzsibeth | 1847 | Hebr | Rivisce |
There are several Jakubovics records in the 1848 Census.
Vivian (NEUMAN) Kahn: "Farkas is Wolf in Hungarian so Zev Wolf is definitely listed and this is your JAKOBOVITS family.
...
There is also a Simon Neuman b. Ubriz abt 1836 living with Aron, Fani and the children in Szobrancz in 1848. Have you come across Jankel (Jakob, Yakov) JAKUBOVICS b. Vajnatina in 1796? He is also listed in 1848 Szobranc census with wife Malka HERSKOVCS, 57, b. Szerednye,and daughter Eszter, 14, b. Szalok.
Jankel (short for Jakob) was born in Vajnatina, Hungary. The word is not Magar but Magyar. Orszag means country. Jankel is 11 years older than Aron and they were born in the same place, which means they are most likely related and could be brothers. -visz and -viz are suffixes that are used alternately with -vits, -vitz, and -vics. I’m pretty sure that the 8-year old is Hani, not Haim, based on comparison with other names in on the page. Look at the letter m in Slyama, Simon, Neuman, Abraham, etc. The name is Simon, not Froim. The letter S looks like an F in old script. See Fani and Farkas (i.e. Wolf) and note difference. Simon could be a younger brother or her nephew."
Monday, October 5, 2015
Russellton PA for Laura Danziger Jacobowitz's 100th Birthday
My mother Laura (Lucy) Danziger was born one hundred years ago, on August 30, 1915, in Russellton, PA. You may remember the story of her surprise birthday party.
After Linda and I left Cleveland in early October we drove to Russellton to see what we could see.
From Aunt Ethel's description of where they lived, I had picked out a likely house,
"The entire Complex consisted of 4 rows of houses -- train-like -- with 4 lanes separating each row of houses....""...This process continued till Mom had reached the 3rd row of and then the 4th row where our house was located. "
Source: West Deer Township History, 2004, John Graff and others for the 150th anniversary of the township.
"These first miners were recruited from other Western Pennsylvania mines. Later many would come directly from their homelands in eastern, central, and southern Europe. By the end of 1904 the mine was in operation. Twenty- five double houses and seven singles had been completed and occupied. Many of the early families boarded one or two more. Several local men also labored at the mine, making a labor force in the neighborhood of a hundred men. This coal operation was known as the Bessemer Coal and Coke Company. A subsidiary operation known as the Bessemer Supply Company was set up about 1905 to serve as the company store. It must be remembered that the local store and post office had been in operation before the mining town was built. "
HOME>WESTERN PA>FREEPORT COALFIELD>RUSSELLTON
http://www.coalcampusa.com/westpa/freeport/russellton-pa/russellton-pa.htm
After Linda and I left Cleveland in early October we drove to Russellton to see what we could see.
From Aunt Ethel's description of where they lived, I had picked out a likely house,
"The entire Complex consisted of 4 rows of houses -- train-like -- with 4 lanes separating each row of houses....""...This process continued till Mom had reached the 3rd row of and then the 4th row where our house was located. "
113 Pine St is the second from the top on the western-most street.
(Zrebny's Pizza is actually a couple of blocks north of here.)
=========================================
West Deer Township History |
The houses on Pine Street are all company houses.
113 Pine Street from Google Street View |
Images from Google Maps
![]() |
113 Pine Street - Company Housing |
The county map shows the four streets in the lower right corner of E-5.
What was going on in Russellton when Laura was born?
1912 The First Bus
Story from Bill Catherwood and note a from John Graff
One of our senior citizens tells us that the first "bus" service in West Deer was from Culmerville to the Railroad Station in Cheswick. It was a covered truck with benches on each side of the bed for passengers to sit upon. There was a set of steps on the floor between the benches that was pulled out and shoved back for the passengers getting on and off. In addition to the driver there was a conductor who collected fares and took care of the steps. This service was started about 1912 by people whose last name was McHarg who later sold it to the Norris family, {story from Bill Catherwood)
It is interesting to note that a similar service was started at the same time using very similar vehicles near Hibbing, Minnesota transporting workers to the open pit iron mines. While the West Deer bus service later became part of the P.A.T. system, the other became...Greyhound. (JG)
1914 | Company Bank is opened in Russellton. |
Bairdford, town and shaft, are constructed. | |
A tornado struck Russellton. | |
1915 | UMWA was first organized in West Deer. |
Culmerville Russellton Transit Company was organized. | |
Bairdford Mine, begins operations. | |
1916 | Mules were retired from the Russellton Mine. |
Bus service was available to Springdale | |
1917 | The first coal was removed from the new Russellton No. 2 shaft.(Bessemer Coal and Coke Company) |
Superior mine has underground explosion closes (after May 1918 according to other sources) | |
1918 | The great flu epidemic hit West Deer. |
A tent hospital was erected near the old Flat Top Restaurant for flu epidemic. Many die. | |
January 1, 1918, Bessemer Coal and Coke Company sells mines to the Republic Steel Corporation. | |
Superior mine reopens Unions Organized and Strikes:
The first union charter in West Deer was issued to the miners at the Francis Mine at Curtisville No. 2, in 1915. Later charters were issued to locals at Russellton, Bairdford, Curtisville No. 1, and Superior.
The unions were all chartered in 1915 but were not recognized by the three coal companies involved. Early in 1916 a general strike by the unions forced recognition and the negotiation of a contract which was signed by the coal companies and was endorsed by the United Mine Workers of America on April 10, 1916.
Peace End tranquility never existed in the coal industry. On one hand was a constant demand for higher wages and better working conditions and on the other economic pressures for just the opposite. Labor strife was common. The strike was the only weapon the miner had and he had to use it frequently to better his working and living conditions. He lived in a company house, bought his groceries on credit at the company store, and lived by company rules. He was free, however, to quit his job and work someplace else under the same conditions. On the other hand, the coal companies often were generous in their contributions toward facilities for the miners' health, recreation, and religious welfare. Mining town histories are full of stories of the good, the bad, and the ugly.
|
"These first miners were recruited from other Western Pennsylvania mines. Later many would come directly from their homelands in eastern, central, and southern Europe. By the end of 1904 the mine was in operation. Twenty- five double houses and seven singles had been completed and occupied. Many of the early families boarded one or two more. Several local men also labored at the mine, making a labor force in the neighborhood of a hundred men. This coal operation was known as the Bessemer Coal and Coke Company. A subsidiary operation known as the Bessemer Supply Company was set up about 1905 to serve as the company store. It must be remembered that the local store and post office had been in operation before the mining town was built. "
HOME>WESTERN PA>FREEPORT COALFIELD>RUSSELLTON
http://www.coalcampusa.com/westpa/freeport/russellton-pa/russellton-pa.htm
Christopher DellaMea - 2010 - No preview
Visit to Cleveland
Late September in 2015, Linda and I took a trip to De Kalb, IL, to see her brother and sister-in-law. On the way back we stopped in Cleveland with the Epsteins and had a reunion with some of the Paris and Greenberg second cousins.
From the left - David Jacobowitz, Susan Paris, Linda Rodd, Rob Greenberg, Earl Greenberg, Mike Paris, Myra Pollak (Greenberg), Natalie Epstein (Zuckerman).
Linda has sketched our family tree for her prep., and she was asked to send it. Here it is:
Someone brought photos and I hope that Mike will scan them and identify the people in them.
From the left - David Jacobowitz, Susan Paris, Linda Rodd, Rob Greenberg, Earl Greenberg, Mike Paris, Myra Pollak (Greenberg), Natalie Epstein (Zuckerman).
Linda has sketched our family tree for her prep., and she was asked to send it. Here it is:
Someone brought photos and I hope that Mike will scan them and identify the people in them.
![]() |
Mary Danziger Paris next to Abe Paris Lillian, William in the chair, and Hyman. |
Susan Paris writes: Mary Danziger Paris with her
husband Abe Paris and William Paris seated in the baby chair, Lillian
next to Mary Paris and Hyman next to Abe Paris, taken about 1919. My
Dad was born in February 1918. This photo looks like my Dad may have
been 10/11/12 months old..
![]() |
Seder 1932 |
Anna/Hanna/ Danziger and family Seder about 1932 on 117th St, Cleveland.
The photo is annotated on Geni.
The back of the photo has Jacob Scheiner crossed out and replaced by "Sam."
The woman between Mary Danzinger and Lillian Paris on the left is Dorothy Danzinger.
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Seder Annotated |
![]() |
Is this Mary Paris? |
=================================
After the brunch at Bravo, Susan, Linda and I rode out to Parma to the Workman's Cemetery, where our great-grandfather Maer (Mayer) Danziger is buried.
Susan Paris had already taken a photo of this stone.
But on the way to finding it again, we noticed these stones, just a few rows away.
![]() |
Anna Married Sol Greenberg after Jacob Scheiner died. |
Mother Anna Greenberg is Chanele Danziger, Abraham Danziger's sister.
![]() |
Anna Greenberg (Danziger) |
![]() |
Jacob Scheiner |
Then we traced the family from the lower-class Jewish area on Kinsman Road up to Wood--- and Beachwood.
This is the front door of the building at 11734 Kinsman, where according to the 1921 and 1923 city directories, Abe Danziger had a candy store. Evidently the family lived in the apartment above the store. It is just around the corner from the house where his sister Anna lived with the Sheiner family.
11734 Kinsman is just around the corner from Anna Scheiner's house at 3311 E 117th Street.
Anna Scheiner Greenberg (Danziger)'s House at 3311 E 117th Street |
The other store, at 6314 Central Ave in 1921, was not to be found.
Here is a map with important Danziger locations. The bogus Abe Danziger is at 2552 E 63rd St.
The next morning we had breakfast with the Danzinger boys, Jeffrey (Duffy) and Howard.
Sunday, October 4, 2015
Munro Kreinik's Estate
On June 12, 2015, I got a message from Ruth Kreinik about an inquiry from Los Angeles administration seeking the family and heirs of Munro (or Monroe J) Kreinik, who died intestate.
September 2017, I found a marriage record for Izzy's marriage to Wilhelmina Vetter in the New York Marriages Index. Ancestry entry.
Ruth Kreinik, June 12, 2015: "I received an interesting phone message this afternoon and returned the call from Ms. Akeeba Evans with the Public Administrator Operations, County of Los Angeles regarding Munro Kreinik. I told her I wasn't the 'Ruth Kreinik' she was looking for, didn't know Munro Kreinik (his father was Isidore 'Izzy') but I thought that possibly I could forward her request to you, David, who might be able to shed some light on her search. She said Munro has passed away and is looking for his relatives."
Jon Probstein: [Annotated by David Jacobowitz, 2015] This is the information I have from the probate of Pearl Leiterman’s will in 1997:
================
Robert Rout is working with his son William Christopher Rout (Chris) on the estate.
Chris has been appointed Special Administrator on the estate. Greg Gaddis of the Shephard Group
September 2017, I found a marriage record for Izzy's marriage to Wilhelmina Vetter in the New York Marriages Index. Ancestry entry.
Ruth Kreinik, June 12, 2015: "I received an interesting phone message this afternoon and returned the call from Ms. Akeeba Evans with the Public Administrator Operations, County of Los Angeles regarding Munro Kreinik. I told her I wasn't the 'Ruth Kreinik' she was looking for, didn't know Munro Kreinik (his father was Isidore 'Izzy') but I thought that possibly I could forward her request to you, David, who might be able to shed some light on her search. She said Munro has passed away and is looking for his relatives."
Jon Probstein: [Annotated by David Jacobowitz, 2015] This is the information I have from the probate of Pearl Leiterman’s will in 1997:
3. The following family tree is based upon my own personal knowledge and based upon
information received from my family - all members who are deceased have the following
symbol at the end of their name (D).
4. The deceased was the daughter of Julius Leiterman (D) and Jennie Kreinik Leiterman
(D). She never married and had no issue. She had one brother Irwin (D) who died without
issue in 1933.
5. On the Paternal Side: The deceased’s father, Julius Leiterman (D), who was the son of
Isadore Leiterman (D) and Annie Bendet Leiterman (D), had abandoned the deceased and
her mother in the early 1940’s and there was no further communication between him and
any other member of the deceased’s family. No surviving family members of the
deceased have any information regarding the paternal side.
6. On the Maternal Side: The deceased’s mother Jennie Leiterman (D) was the daughter
of Sarah Levy Kreinik (D) and Joseph Kreinik (D). She had four sisters and three
brothers.
A. Anna Levin (D) had two children:
1. Lila Probstein, 98-01 67th Ave, Forest Hills, NY, who had two children:
a. Susan Probstein (D), who had no issue.
b. Jon M. Probstein, 69-81 108 St., Forest Hills, NY 11375, who has no issue.
2. Stanley Levin, 767 Coral Drive, Cape Coral, FL 33901, who had two children:
a. Debbie Levin (D), who had two children:
issue.
issue.
b. Jeffrey Levin, 4 Lincoln Road, Brewster, NY 10509, who has two children:
issue.
B. Sol Kreinik (D) had two children:
1. Gladys Kreinik, 69-40 Yellowstone Blvd., Forest Hills, NY 11375, who has no issue.
2. Jacob Kreinik, New Hope Community, Loch Sheldrake, NY 10759, who has no issue.
C. Harold Kreinik (D) had two children:
1. Coralee Leveen (D), who had three children:
a. Judith Bell, last known address 122 Chestnut St., Springfield, MA 01103, who
has no issue.
b. Deborah Leveen, address unknown, who has no issue.
c. Harriet Leveen, address unknown, who has no issue.
2. [Dorothy Walker] 0, last known address 8805 Wandering Way, Baldwinsville, NY 13027,
who has three children, names and addresses unknown.
D. Rose Daniels (D) had two children:
1. Donald Daniels, 112-20 72nd Dr., Forest Hills, NY 11375, who has no issue.
2. James Daniels (D), who had one child:
a. Andrew Daniels, 26 Castle Lane, Bayshore, NY 11706, who has no issue.
E. Pearl Marrow (D) had two children:
1. Joseph Marrow, 463 Woodlands Rd., Harrison, NY 10528, who has two children:
a. Evan Marrow, 29 Billard Ave., Hastings, NY 10706, who has no issue.
b. Tracey Marrow, 200 E. 71 St., NY, NY 10021, who has no issue.
2. Valerie Rout, 160 Wells Hill Rd, Lakeville, CT 06039, who has three children:
a. Romanie Rout, 7 Tratt St., Essex, CT 06426, who has no issue.
b. Christopher Rout, 53 E 74 St., NY, NY 10021, who has no issue.
c. Robert Rout, Jr., 515 Trinity Place, Westfield, NJ 07690, who has no issue.
F. Isadore Kreinik (D) had two children:
1. Monroe Kreinik, address unknown, who has no issue.
2. Carol Kreinik (D), who had no issue.
G. Ruth Bergin, 793 Forest Ave., Rye, NY 10580, who has no issue.
[ Ruth married Ed Bergin, Bergen, or Bergman, depending on source. DWJ]
Jon Avner
Web: www.jonavner.com
Email: jonavner@jonavner.com
Phone 212 794-0373
Fax 212 202-6495
===================
November 1964
Jennie Kreinik married Julius Leiterman: New York Times Deaths:http://www.nytimes.com/1964/11/18/deaths.html?_r=0
LEITERMAN—Jennie, beloved mother of Pearl, loving sister of Anna Levin, Rose Daniels, Pearl Kline, Ruth Bergman, Sol and Isidore Kreinik. Services Wednesday, 2:30 P.M., at “The Riverside,” 76th St. and Amsterdam Ave.
NOTE: Pearl married a Kline (probably Klein), and Ruth's last name here is BergMAN (an error). Most sources spell it Bergin, but a few have Bergen.
Robert Rout is working with his son William Christopher Rout (Chris) on the estate.
Chris has been appointed Special Administrator on the estate. Greg Gaddis of the Shephard Group
From: "Robert H. Rout" <therouts@icloud.com> Hi David, ========================== |
Hi David
========= Joseph (Yussel Flum) Kreinik's Descendants' Chart
Thanks for responding so promptly. Here 's my latest understanding of the Munro Kreinik lawful intestate heirs:
There appear to be a total of 18 heirs who share in the Estate of Munro J. Kreinik as set forth below.1. Of the 12 grandchildren of Joseph and Sara Kreinik, Munro Kreinik's grandparents, there remain 4 living grandchildren, Lila Probstein, Joseph Marrow, Jacob Kreinik and Dorothy Walker who are lawful heirs.
2. Then passing to the next generation, the 8 deceased grandchildren of Joseph and Sarah Kreinik are Stanley Levin, Gladys Kreinik, Coralee Leveen, Donald Daniels, James Daniels, Valerie Rout, Monroe Kreinik and Carol Kreinik. Of those 8, only 4: Stanley Levin, James Daniels, Valerie Rout and Coralee Leveen had children.
3. Those 8 deceased grandchildren were survived by 8 living great grandchildren who inherit in their place. Those eight living great grandchildren are Jeffrey Levin (son of grandchild, Stanley Levin), Andrew Daniels (son of grandchild , James Daniels), Robert, William Christopher and Romanie Rout, (children of grandchild, Valerie Rout) and Judith Bell, Deborah Leveen and Harriet Leveen, (children of grandchild Coralee Leveen), all 8 of whom are lawful heirs.
4. Then passing to the next generation, there are 2 living great great grandchildren of deceased great grandchild, Debbie Levin, (daughter of deceased grandchild, Stanley Levin). They are Stacy Ann Neves and Shane A. Corso, both of whom are lawful heirs.
I have no information on the family tree of Munro Kreinik's mother's parents -his maternal grandparents - except that I presume that his mother's parents (Goldman ?) had a daughter in addition to Munro's mother and that daughter had grandchildren or great grandchildren named Vikki Benkel and her brother Andrew Benkel and Kevin Cutler and his brother Greg Cutler. Those last four named appear to be lawful heirs. I don't know if Munro's mother's parents had any other children in addition to Munro's mother and her sister who might also be lawful heirs.
Thus, the total number of lawful intestate heirs of Munro Kreinik appear to be 18 as listed on Amended Attachment 8 to the Petition for Letters of Special Administration except that one of the heirs is erroneously listed there - Stanley Kreinik - whose name is not on any of my Kreinik family trees - and one not listed who should be listed in place of Stanley Kreinik is Jacob Kreinik who is a son of Sol Kreinik.Thanks and please let me have your thoughts on this, David. I'm copying my son , Chris, the Special Administrator of the estate.BobRobert H. Rout
160 Wells Hill RoadLakeville, CT. 06039Tel. 860-435-2273E-mail: therouts@icloud.com
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