Notes
Note NI5620 Index
Warsaw
Notes
Note NI5623 Index
New Haven, Conn.
Notes
Note NI5639 Index
Israel
Notes
Note NI5643 Index
Venezeula S.A.
Notes
Note NI5648 Index
Costa Rica
Notes
Note NI5651 Index
Had a son ....(engineer died in USSR)
Notes
Note NI5682 Index
No child.
Notes
Note NI5683 Index
No child
Notes
Note NI5692 Index
Notes..the relationship of Philip Marx as a son due to the second wife of Yehuda Leib is a theory and needs to be documented. This was based on the fact that on the gravestone of Philip Marx his father was YEHUDA LEIB..also Moses Rutenberg of Alabama recognized Philip Marx as a cousin"
from Thelma and Leonard Fletcher
Notes
Note NI5704 Index
Louis' original name was something like Yehuda Leib (or Laib) Pincus. Louis Pincus only spoke Yiddish. He came to America in about 1890 according to the 1900 census (Elka and most of the children followed in 1896). He became a naturalized citizen on Oct. 8, 1900. Louis owned a kosher butcher shop in Chicago -- at 215 Maxwell St. until about 1909, then at 630 Maxwell St. After his wife died in 1924, he lived with his daughter Etta Pincus Tarson and her family. Louis was diabetic, and died after he went into a diabetic coma from eating an entire pan of his daughter's cinnamon sour cream rolls when he was 86.
He had one son, Abe, with his first wife who died. Louis & Elka may have had other children who died as infants. Louis had a good education in Russia and a beautiful singing voice. He belonged to a tiny orthodox synagogue near their home. Charlotte said that it was like a little wooden house and he went there every morning. Records at Waldheim say that Louis was 83 when he died, but Charlotte thinks that is an error and that he was 86 or 87.
There is some conflicting information from Louis' death certificate. It states that he was about 84 when he died, born in 1849. His occupation is listed as a merchant in the clothing business and that he retired in 1910 after wroking in this occupation for 30 years. The certificate also states that he was a resident of Chicago for 45 years. His name is spelled "Lewis" and wife (Etta) is listed with the name "Ethel" as is his mother. This certificate was filled out by the Washington Blvd. Hospital clerk.
Notes
Note NI5728 Index
Surname may have been originally been Knigan or something similar.
Israel Tatarsky lived in Ichnya, in what is now Ukraine from about 1874 until at least 1888. Nothing is known about where he lived previously. He was in the wine or liquor business and was a member of a Trade Guild. The 1882 List of Jews Census for the Borzna district says that he owned a cellar and the Ukranian word implies that it was for storing wine or liquor. He had a mortgage or loan for some property from a Ukrainian woman. His nephew Ariya-Leib, son of Morduch Agranovsky, lived in his household, and had some kind of arrangement to be his manager or overseer without pay (an apprenticeship?). His three sons, Eliya, Shmuil and Zalman, all lived with their families either in his household or in nearby houses from 1882 until 1888.
Notes
Note NI5733 Index
Albert had a premium advertising business on Ohio St. Charlotte worked there for three months before she married Milt (at $12/wk, $11.88 take home) earning enough to buy Milt a watch for a wedding present. Albert owned the St. Clair and Eastgate hotels. Milt & Charlotte were married at the St. Clair hotel.
Albert & Iva adopted a child.