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SUWALK/SULWALKI
Research Suggestions and Sources
© copyright 1995-2001 by FEEFHS; all rights
reserved
Latest Update: 1 February 2001 (Sonjaa Hoeke-Nishimoto,
A,G.)
Editor's Note: The following thread of eMail messages over
several days were prompted by a question to an AOL address of
FEEFHS from a Rochester New York genealogist who is seeking
Germanic ancestors from the Suwalki region of Lithuania, Poland
and Belarus. It is a current example of how persons with diverse
skills in several FEEFHS member organizations can cooperate to
offer tangible assistance to even an experienced record searcher
like Bob Eidschun.
From: Robert Eidschun of Rochester, New York
To: FEEFHS
Date: 21 December 1995, 16:23 EST
I am wondering what services your organization may offer to
assist me in locating records of
my immigrant ancestors?
My immigrant ancestors were ethnic Germans who came from the
Vilkaviskis region (Polish
- Wilkowyzski; German - Wilkowischen or Wilkowischki) in what is
now eastern Lithuania.
This region was part of the Polish-Lithuanian commonwealth up
until 1795; part of New
East
Prussia from 1795 until 1807; and part of the
Russian-administered Kingdom of Poland from
1807 - 1918. During all of these time periods this region was in
the district of Suwalki
(Polish name).
I have already found Lutheran Church registries in the Polish
State and Lithuanian Historical
State Archives containing birth records of some of my ancestors
between the years 1843 -
1886. However, I would like to find additional records, if
extant. Please inform me if and
how your organization may be of assistance, either through
membership or non-membership.
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Robert Eidschun [bob@esm.rochester.edu]
- - - - -
From: FEEFHS [feefhs@Wheel.dcn.davis.ca.us]
Dear Bob...FEEFHS might help you in these ways:
1) Open our URL on our WWW web site:
http://dcn.davis.ca.us/~feefhs/
2) GoTo and ClickOn the FEEFHS Master IndexPage.
3) ClickOn the Ethnic, Religious and National Index.
4) GoTo "Lithuanian Genealogy" and open the Lithuanian
Genealogy Society (LGS) HomePage. Contact them by snail mail
in Chicago.
5) GoTo the AOL page and contact GFS David Zincavage
[JDZ1@aol.com] He is the
Co-SIG for AOL Genealogy Forum's East European SIG (Special
Interest Group). He has
lots of background on Polish and Lithuanian sources and is a
great fund of knowledge in this
part of the world. He would also know if LBKS of Vilnius,
Lithuania, (a FEEFHS member organization) is likely to be
helpful for you or
not.
6) GoTo the FEEFHS Internet
Journal. Read the article
on the Ahnenstammkartei -
you should use the nearest
FHC to check it out. This may be one of the best ideas, as it
covers all Germans, including
Baltic Germans. It is said to be the largest German genealogy
database in existence, except
for the IGI itself. (Please see Infrequently Asked Questions -
Ahnenstammkartei for the rest of this thread).
7) GoTo the "Polish Genealogy" section of the Ethnic Index and
contact some of the Polish
genealogy societies such as the Polish Genealogical Society
of
Michigan (Jan Zalkeski, A.G.) and the Polish
Genealogical Society of the Northeast (CT) - (Johnathan Shea,
A.G.). They are two
of the 4 or 5 accredited genealogists with Polish specialties and
represent two of over a
dozen of FEEFHS Polish Genealogy Societies in our Polish
Cross-Index that might help you.
Jonathan Shea is particularly expert in the northeastern part of
Poland - see his background in
the FEEFHS Professional
Genealogists Database. You
would need a membership in most FEEFHS member societies to get
their attention, but both
of theses and some others are likely to have good ideas for you.
Shea also does client
research in that area some summers. There may be others too.
8) GoTo "Russian Genealogy" in the FEEFHS Ethnic Index and
consider the possiblity that
RAGAS and also consider
that BLITZ might help you too on
a contract basis (US$50.00
minimum). This is especially true if you find a Russian or
Belarus archive of interest in a
town near the modern border with Lithuania when your ancestors
came from, and if either of
them have excellent contacts there - which is quite possible.
9) The Genealogical Society of Utah has microfilm crews active in
a few places near your
area of interest including Poland and Belarus. See our various
status reports via the Cross Index of microfilm Status
Reports
10) Be sure to check the latest LDS Family History Library
Catalog (FHLC) at the nearest
Family History Center - It came out earlier this year and has
lots of new films of
churchbooks.
11) GoTo the FEEFHS
Professional Genealogists Database and look up Sonja
Hoeke-Nishimoto. A.G. She is on-site (full time at the
International Reference Desk - Level B1) at the Family History
Library (FHL), living in Salt Lake City. She is accredited to
deal with this part of the world (former Germanic parts of Poland
and the Baltics)...A few hours of her reasonably priced time will
likely unlock new treasures for you. She has a FAX, a telephone
and an eMail address.
12) GoTo the "Pomeranian Genealogy" section of the FEEFHS Ethnic
Index and ClickOn
Die Pommerschen
Leute. Then ClickOn Die Vorfahren
Database and run your
surnames thru this 3 Meg database with 89,000 listings of
Germanic full names with stadt and
kreis references. Chances are good you will find something of
value because of its proximity
to and its inclusion of some East Prussian Germanic surnames.
The editor and publisher,
Myron Grunewald, will provide details and has an eMail address
[MyronDPL@aol.com]
13) Since you are looking for German Lutherans (not German Jews)
I can't recommend the
Suwalk-Lomza SIG, as it is
set up to help Jewish record
searchers, and is known to do a fine job helping them. However
since you are in Rochester
(NY?), Bruce Kahn [bkahn@servtech.com], President of the Jewish Genealogical Society of
Rochester and past editor of
the LANDSMAN (the excellent Suwalk-Lomza [Jewish] SIG
Newsletter) lives
there. He may have some ideas for you, as he has done research
in this part of Eastern
Europe.
14) Your last paragraph indicates you have had some success with
both Polish
and Lithuanian archives. I am sure that the current SIG for the
AOL German chat hour
(Wednesday at EST) plus Teresa [GFSTeresa@aol.com] and Carol
[GFSCarol@aol.com] -
who are co-SIG's for the new German nad East European AOL Chat
hour at 2 pm Tuesday
afternoons) would welcome your presence and be delighted to hear
about the specifics of this
success, if you have access to the AOL
Genealogy Forum with its excellent message boards and weekly
chat hours.
25) You might also want to go to the FEEFHS Map Room - see the Russian Empire Map Index
for 1882 maps of the
part of Poland and the Baltics to refresh your memory of the
geography and major towns
there.
Bob...most record searchers either do not know how to do what you
have apparently already
done or have not been successful in trying to do it. Thus FEEFHS
will be interested in
hearing and publishing your success story here. We hope one or
more of the above
suggestions will help with additional ways to answer your
question.
- - - - - - -
From: Bob Eidschun: [bob@esm.rochester.edu]
I can't thank FEEFHS enough...for your response...I've spent so
much time in vain trying to
get more than just that held by the Lithuanian State Historical
Archives. I have already done
some the things you suggested, such as contacted Bruce Kahn and
David Zincavage, and
viewed microfilms at my local Family History Center during the
last five months, but your
other suggestions are things I would have never thought of.
...I've spent literally 1,000 hours so far researching my family
name (as did my father 20
years ago, but without much success), and have written hundreds
of letters, made hundreds
of phone calls, sent hundreds of email messages, viewed a
thousand or more Web pages, and
viewed over 50 microfilms at my local Family History Center
Library.
My father wrote to the Polish State Archives in English in Warsaw
in 1976 asking if
Lutheran church records for Vilkaviskis (Polish - Wilkowyszki)
were maintained by the
Archives, and the response he got (in Polish) was a simple "no."
I then wrote in August,
1995 and after posing the same question, the response I got was
"no."
I then found microfilms of such records made by the Church of the
LDS, and the first few
pages of these microfilms state that the records were filmed at
the Polish State Archives in
Warsaw! I then wrote back to the Polish Archives (this time in
Polish) informing them of
this but have yet to receive a response.
Through the new (August, 1995) Family History Library Catalog
(FHLC) I've recently
discovered that the indexes to even more Vilkaviskis Lutheran
Church records (more
precisely, records of the Evangelical-Augsburg Church) were
filmed by the Church of the
LDS at the Polish State Archives in 1994. But the Lithuanian
State Historical Archives
claims that they have these. I have an inquiry in with them to
search the records whose
indexes only were filmed by the
LDS, and I'm still
waiting for the search results.
To initiate a search with the Lithuanian State Historical
Archives, you must pay a fee of
U.S. $70. They charge $18 for a photocopy of each record found,
and provide a
paraphrase-like translation. To engage their services, I
recommend writing to them first (in
English) to inquire about their "current procedure." They will
respond quickly with their
latest fees and how to pay them, etc. (Bruce Kahn of the Jewish
Genealogical Society went
there in October and paid them in person on my behalf). The
address is:
Lietuvos Valstybinis Istorijos Archyvas
Gerosios Vilties 10, 2015 Vilnius
LITHUANIA
Robert Eidschun (Polish - Eidzun; Lithuanian - Eidziunas)
[bob@esm.rochester.edu]
- - - - - - -
To Bob Eidschun
From: FEEFHS
Bob...Pat Eames of the U.S. National Archives also serves as the
Washington D.C.
volunteer base for RAGAS in her spare time...here are her
thoughts on the Belarus archive I
was thinking about, in response to her copy of our suggestions to
you.
- - -
To: FEEFHS
From: Pat Eames, Russian-American Genealogical Archival Service,
U.S.
[ragas@DGS.dgsys.com]
Thanks for sending me a copy of your message to Robert Eidshun.
It is interesting
information and another example of the miracle of the Net for
communication. What Mike
Miller has accomplished in 2 short weeks is another miracle.
Suwalk is 117 km from Bialystok; many records for towns in the
vicinity of Bialystok are
kept at the regional state historical archives in Grodno,
Belarus. It is worth a try, however
the Grodno archivists are very busy with archival work and are at
least 4 - 6 months behind
in answering genealogical inquiries (these requests do not rank
very high on their list of work
to do).
Pat Eames of RAGAS U.S.
- - - - - - -
To FEEFHS
From: Bruce Kahn Jewish Genealogical Society of Rochester, NY
[bkahn@servtech.com]:
I was pleasantly surprised that you two were in communication.
Bob is amazing...very
industrious and intelligent. I have been in communication with
him for quite a while. I gave
him a few leads and he went...after them. It is very gratifying
to work with someone like
that.
He wrote: "To initiate a search with the Lithuanian State
Historical Archives, you must pay a
fee of U.S. $70. They charge $18 for a photocopy of each record
found, and provide a
paraphrase-like translation."
...this part is not exactly correct, although you would never
know it from communicating
with them. The $70 research fee is correct. The way that the
documentation fee works is as
follows.
$ 5 per document (page, I think)
$13 for translation
$18 for both
My personal recomendation is to only pay the $5 for the copy, and
get it translated yourself
(particularly if it is not in Lithuanian!). I found several
ommissions and errors in the
(Polish) translation that I had them do a year and a half
ago.
This policy is relatively new, and a real boon for genealogists.
When I first started working
with the LVIA, it was $20 per document. I like the current
policy much better. Although,
as Bob found, they don't really tell you all of the options.
Bruce Kahn, JGSR Jewish Genealogy Web Pages http://www.memo.com/jgsr/
- - - - - - -
To FEEFHS
From: David Zincavage [GFSJDZ1@aol.com]
(Suwalk)...is Southwestern Lithuania, near the border with
Northeastern Poland.
Vilkavishkis, "the place of the wolf or wolves" is a town which
has been the seat of a county
(powiat) in the Government of Suwalki.
Actually, corresponding with Mr. Eidzun, I have come to prefer
the theory that his surname
is, in fact, Lithuanian in origin: probably "Eidzunas" from
_Eidys_ a diminutive form
probably coming from the ancient pagan Lithuanian name
_Eidvydas_. There was a 13th
century notable of that name, which would mean: "one who goes in
pursuit."
His letter indicates contact with both the Lithuanian Archive in
Vilnius and the Polish
Archive in Suwalki already. The specificity of the dates he
cites probably is juat what
survives. This area was fought over in both WWI and WWII, and
records have been
destroyed.
There is some possibility of boldly going where -to date- no
non-sophisticated-Jewish-
researcher has gone before and hunting in notarial records and
court records. These sources
are alluded to in LANDSMEN. If Mr. Eidzun's ancestors were in
the gentry, some cousin
may have confirmed nobility, and St. Petersburg might have some
records.
Dave
Postscript: This is the end of this particular thread for
the moment. BVut
maybe it will give you a better idea of
- one of the reasons why FEEFHS was originally created by its
founders
- one small way a few persons in some of our member
organizations have recently
combined their experience to help an experienced record searcher,
and
- some of the ways that you can be helped (with hypertext
links above) if you too have
a record searching problem in the region called Sulwaki.
Happy hunting!
0 - 0 - 0
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