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A record of names and vital statistics of Gerstenbergers who have ever lived in the United States, with the European birthplaces of the different immigrants. Includes families of Gerstenbergers who settled in Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Texas, Wisconsin, and other places. Immigrant ancestors came principally from Saxony or Silesia, Germany.
This ten-year supplement lists 10,000 titles acquired by the Library of Congress since 1976--this extraordinary number reflecting the phenomenal growth of interest in genealogy since the publication of Roots. An index of secondary names contains about 8,500 entries, and a geographical index lists family locations when mentioned.
What happens when a meagerly-educated peasant girl is chosen in 1903 to leave her family and accompany her illiterate godfather from Europe to the Midlands of America? Young Anna Barbara Mrkvicka left the dirt floor of her over-crowded one room home to enter an unknown world and overwhelming challenges at every turn. Through Different Eyes describes the back-breaking peasant life of that era. Anna worked in the fields at six years of age. It travels with the young peasant in steerage on a daunting ocean voyage, and it reveals the frustrating immigrant experience of Ellis Island. It explores the sounds and smells of sleeping for six weeks on steamy tenement rooftops of New York Citys dangerou...
Includes entries for maps and atlases.
Beginning in 1924, Proceedings are incorporated into the Apr. number.
Ancestry (through ancestral wills) of Alyene Elizabeth (Westall) Prehn (b.1905), and some of the ancestry of her husband, Paul Henry Prehn (1892-1973), of Urbana, Illinois. Includes her autobiography.