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JEWISH GENEALOGY RESEARCH. Pete Tanner Suncoast Genealogy Services. About Me. Born & raised here in Clearwater Bar Mitzvah & Confirmation right here at TBI Married 3.5 years – met my wife here at TBI One 2 year old daughter & baby on the way
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JEWISH GENEALOGY RESEARCH Pete Tanner Suncoast Genealogy Services
About Me • Born & raised here in Clearwater • Bar Mitzvah & Confirmation right here at TBI • Married 3.5 years – met my wife here at TBI • One 2 year old daughter & baby on the way • Researching my genealogy on a regular basis since 2006 • Board Member – Jewish Genealogical Society of Tampa Bay • Member – Association of Professional Genealogists • Bachelor’s Degree from UF and Master’s Degree from USF in Information Systems • Work as a Computer Programmer for the City of Clearwater
Do You Know Your Ancestors? Jankel Born around 1780 in NE Poland He was my 7x Great-Grandfather
What Is Genealogy? • Genealogy is the study of your unique family history. It is a personal record of your ancestors - when they were born and where they lived, who their children were and who they married, and where you belong in your extended family tree. • It’s not just about dead ancestors! • It’s also about your current living relatives
Jewish Genealogy • We are not just a religion, but also an ethnicity • Your “Jewishness” is passed to you from your mother (Matrilineal) • Determination of Kohanim or Leviim descent comes from your father (Patrilineal) • Proof of Jewish status to become an Israeli citizen
Jewish Genealogy Myths • Our last name was changed at Ellis Island
Jewish Genealogy Myths • Our last name was changed at Ellis Island • Ellis Island officials did not change names • Checked medical health (turned away if too sick) • Made sure immigrants could take care of themselves • However – Names were changed before and after arrival at Ellis Island
Jewish Genealogy Myths • All the records from Europe were destroyed in WWI and WWII
Jewish Genealogy Myths • All the records from Europe were destroyed in WWI and WWII • Some records may have been destroyed in bombings • However, most survived • Nazis wanted to preserve synagogue records so they could identify the Jews • Depending on where your relatives lived, there could be a large number of records available
Jewish Genealogy Myths • The towns that my family were originally from no longer exist
Jewish Genealogy Myths • The towns that my family were originally from no longer exist • The towns are probably still there • However, there may not be any Jews living there anymore • In many cases, the current residents of the town remember the Jews that once lived there
Jewish Genealogy Myths • No one in my family knows anything about our past
Jewish Genealogy Myths • No one in my family knows anything about our past • Have you asked anyone? • Many Jewish families don’t like to talk about the past, but they may know more than you think • Learning a small amount of information may be enough to get you started • Reach out to distant relatives if necessary
Where Did I Start? • 7th Grade Project – “My Family Tree” • Interview family members • Take good notes • Write a report about my family • Who Did I Interview? • Two parents • Four grandparents • One great-grandparent
What Did I Learn? • Family from England, Russia, Poland • Only learned one town name – “Stanslav” • Almost all settled in New York City • Lower East Side, Brooklyn, Bronx • One family settled in Scranton, Pennsylvania • Some family lines – no info at all
What Did I Learn? • Family Stories: • Great-Grandmother who died early – no one knew her name • 3x Great-Grandfather who went to Israel (Palestine) and died there • Paternal line suspected to be Cohanim
Fifteen Years Later (2006) • Found my report in the back of my closet • Decided to revisit my research • Discovered many, many more resources via the Internet • Started building my tree once again online • Have been addicted to it since
My Current Family Tree • Sixty-Five direct descendants • Eight generations • Exact town where each family line originated • Contains over 1,800 people • Brothers, Sisters, Aunts, Uncles, Cousins • Includes anyone who shares a common ancestor with me • Hundreds of relatives alive today • Living relatives in England, South Africa, Israel, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil
How Do You Get Started? • Be a good detective • Learn how to search the various online resources • If a record you are seeking isn’t available online, see if you can find it offline • Talk to other people who are researching common surnames or towns • Don’t give up • Everyone will hit a brick wall – don’t let it discourage you • If a record isn’t available now, it may become available in the future
Ancestry.com • Most popular genealogy website • Contains the greatest amount of records • US & State Census Records • Immigration Records • Military Records • Birth, Marriage, and Death Records • Naturalization Records • Newspaper Articles • Message Boards • Other Users’ Family Trees
Census Records • US Federal Census – Taken every 10 years • 1940 is latest year currently available • State Censuses – Varies depending on state • Gives a snapshot of a family at that point in time • Most include name, address, age, place of birth, occupation • Some include years married, year of immigration, naturalization status • Example – Tannenbaum Family In 1920
Immigration Records • Information about the immigrant at the time of their arrival to the US • Information varies depending on year of arrival • Most include name, age, occupation, nationality, place of birth • May list family members from their last place of residence • May list who they are coming to live with in the US • Example – Sylvia Bloomberg Arrival
Naturalization Records • Usually consist of two separate forms • Declaration of Intention (First Papers) • Petition for Naturalization (After 5 year residency requirement) • Contain a wealth of genealogical data • Name, DOB, Place of Birth, Arrival Date, Port of Arrival, Spouse’s Name/Age/Birthplace, Children’s Names/Ages/Birthplaces, Current Residence, Witness Information • Example – Irving Schechtman Naturalization
JewishGen.org • Premier website serving the Jewish Genealogy community • Non-Profit – mostly staffed by volunteers • Relies on donations to operate • Full of resources, including tutorials for beginners • Offers online interactive courses on various Jewish Genealogy topics • Overview Video – This Is JewishGen
JewishGen.org • Country-specific databases • Ex: Poland, Hungary, Ukraine, Romania, UK, Latvia, Lithuania • Holocaust database • Family Finder – towns & surnames currently being researched by other site users • Town Finder – 6,000+ Jewish communities, mostly in Europe • ViewMate – Allows you to post photographs & documents online and request help from other users • Burial Registry (JOWBR) – contains around 2 million records of Jewish burials throughout the world
Tombstone Inscriptions • Tombstones are important to Genealogy, but even more important in Jewish Genealogy • Hebrew name listed – important when looking for records from Europe • Father’s name listed – may be your only reference to the father of an ancestor • Many Jewish cemeteries will photograph a tombstone for you (sometimes at a small cost)
Tombstone Inscriptions Fischel Son of Yitzchak Maite Daugher of Israel
Special Interest Groups • Websites and mailing lists centered on one specific area of interest • Most are centered on a geographic region • Users often communicate and help each other with research • Great resource to help with specific questions • Many SIGs raise money for projects • Obtaining records • Translating records • Photographing Jewish cemetery tombstones
Newspapers/Obituaries • Families often posted life events in the newspaper • Births, Marriages, Deaths, Anniversaries • Visits from out of town relatives • Articles written about relatives • Many websites provide newspaper archive access (most for a fee) • Many newspapers also available overseas
Newspapers/Obituaries My 3rd Great Grandmother – Leah Cohen (nee Rybicki) Obituary printed in the Jewish Chronicle of England Died on 10 Jul 1923 in Manchester England Prior to discovering this, I knew nothing of her seven other children
Newspapers/Obituaries My 2nd Great Grand Aunt – Fanny Cohen (nee Brown) Printed in the Auckland (NZ) Star in April of 1897
Newspapers/Obituaries • Obituary records can be a great source of current information about your relatives • Recent obituaries may list the name and city of residence of your living relatives • That information can then be used to track your relatives down • I often use Facebook to find relatives and make contact with them
Family Stories • Great-Grandmother who died early – no one knew her name • 3x Great-Grandfather who went to Israel (Palestine) and died there • Paternal line suspected to be Cohanim
Mystery Great Grandmother • First I found her in the 1930 Census • Learned her first name, age, date of arrival • Next I pulled their NYC Marriage Record • Learned her maiden name, parents names • Next I found her Naturalization Record • Learned her birth city and exact arrival date • Next I found her Immigration Record • Learned who she listed as family in the US • Finally I pulled her NYC Death Record • Learned death date, how she died, place of burial
3x Great Grandfather Died In Israel Printed in the Jewish Chronicle of England on 7 Feb 1908
Paternal Line Cohanim • The Cohen line has been passed from father to son without interruption for 3,300 years • Until recently, there was no way to prove you were a Cohen • Now, scientists have identified a set of genetic markers that all are shared by all Cohanim • These markers are called the Cohen Modal Haplotype • Only men can be tested for the markers
Paternal Line Cohanim • In June of this year, I had my Y-DNA tested • A few weeks later, I received my results, which included the following • My grandfather was not just making things up! • My DNA says I am definitely a Cohen!
Genealogical DNA Testing • Besides providing Cohen matches, DNA testing has other uses for Jewish people • DNA Shoah Project – Collects genetic material from Holocaust survivors and their immediate descendants in hopes of reuniting relatives displaced during the Shaoah • DNA surname & geographical projects track the DNA of people with specific surnames or from specific areas in Europe
Genealogical DNA Testing • Three basic types of DNA tests for genealogy • Y-DNA: Passed from father to son • Looks at your direct paternal line • Can only be taken by males (only males have a Y) • mtDNA: Passed from mother to all her children • Looks at your direct maternal line • Can be taken by anyone • Autosomal DNA: Present in all of us • Looks at all your non-sex DNA (22 pairs) • Can estimate your ethnicity • Can match you with possible cousins who share DNA
Genealogical DNA Testing • I have taken a Y-DNA test and an Autosomal DNA test • Y-DNA test confirmed Cohen heritage and provided matches to other males with matching Y-DNA • Autosomal DNA test provided an ethnicity breakdown and matches to both male and female “cousins” who share my autosomal DNA • More About Autosomal DNA
My Ethnicity • My ethnicity breakdown: • European Jewish • Poland, Ukraine, Romania • Persian/Turkish/Caucasus • Iran, Turkey, Armenia • Central European • Austria, Germany, Slovenia, Czech Republic • Finnish/Volga-Ural • Russia, Finland • Uncertain • Alien (according to my wife)