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Abt 1869 - 1869 (~ 0 years)
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Name |
Michael, Hannah [1] |
Born |
Abt Jan 1869 |
Gender |
Female |
Died |
Oct 1869 |
Buried |
27 Oct 1869 |
Brooklyn, Kings Co., NY |
- Salem Fields Cemetery
Michael plot, Beth-Israel section
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Census |
1870 |
New York, NY |
- 1870 Census Mortality Schedule
U.S. Census Mortality Schedules, New York, 1850-1880
about Hannah Michael
Name: Hannah Michael
Age: 9/12
Gender: Female
Birth Year: abt 1870
Place of birth: New York
Month of Death: Oct
Cause Of Death: Digestion group Labor Mesenteric
Place of Death: New York, New York, New York
Census Year: 1870
Family Number: 4
Line Number: 27
Roll: M7
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Related to my family |
Y |
_STAT |
Never Married |
_UID |
71D6F7C962134546823C24C042F79A53CFA2 |
Person ID |
I6944 |
Buyer, Stier and Related Families |
Last Modified |
6 Mar 2011 |
Father |
Michael, Solomon, b. 24 Dec 1830, Wrzesnia Poland (Wreschen, Posen, Prussia) , d. 9 Jan 1894, New York, NY (Age 63 years) |
Mother |
Abrahams, Esther, b. 29 Jun 1834, Wrzesnia Poland (Wreschen, Posen, Prussia) , d. 9 Dec 1898, New York, NY (Age 64 years) |
Married |
Abt 1852 |
New York |
_UID |
C18B993FEECC49B8AE75F6B724962817A8B7 |
Photos
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| 259 Water Street a modern picture of the building at 257-259 Water street (corner of Peck Slip). Solomon Michael's tailor shop was at this location between 1855 and 1869. This building was erected in 1873. |
| Numbers (from right) 11-5 Peck Slip; 9 Peck Slip second house from right
(from the New York Public Library Digital Gallery) |
| Numbers (from right) 15-1 Peck Slip (from the New York Public Library Digital Gallery) |
| Peck Slip 1850 from the New York Public Library Digital Gallery http://digitalgallery.nypl.org; many more images available--search for Peck Slip
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| Peck Slip, 1881
Watercolor on paper, 20 x 14 in.
Museum of the City of New York, 71.62.2
Bequest of Riesa Friedman
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| Modern Scene in Wrzesnia
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| Modern Scene in Wrzesnia
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| Modern Scene in Wrzesnia
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| Old Panorama of Wreschen
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| old photo of Wreschen
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| Synagogue in Wreschen
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| Synagogue in Wreschen
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| Drawing of Peck Slip
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Documents
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| Tree written by Edith Buyer in Ed and Roy Buyer's baby book, 1922
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| Michael and Hamerschlag Handwritten Family Information possibly by Annie Hamerschlag Michael |
| 1852-4 map of Peck Slip (from the New York Public Library Digital Gallery) |
| 1857-62 map showing location of 9 Peck Slip (from the New York Public Library Digital Gallery) |
| 1857-62 Peck Slip map (from the New York Public Library Digital Gallery) |
| 1882 map of Posen province in Prussia now Poland |
| Location of Wrzesnia within Posen province
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Histories |
| Hamerschlag and Michael Families
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| Wreschen
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News |
| peck slip sale nytimes dec 2 1900.jpg NY Times Dec 2 1900 |
Albums |
| Peck Slip, Manhattan (12) Bernard Michael was born at 9 Peck Slip, where his father Solomon had a tailoring shop. Peck Slip has a long maritime history, serving as an East River slip used by boats to dock until 1810. In fact, Peck Slip once offered George Washington and his troops protection as they fled from the Battle of Brooklyn. Peck Slip was the site of the ferry to Brooklyn before the Brooklyn Bridge opened in 1883. More recently, it was used as a fish market parking lot until the Fulton Fish Market relocated to the Bronx in 2005. In 2006, the Landmarks Preservation Commission approved a design for a park at Peck Slip; construction is due to begin in 2014. 9 Peck Slip was on the east side of the street between Pearl and Water Streets. |
| Jewish Communities of Prussia: Wreschen/Wrzesnia (10) When our ancestors lived there, Wreschen was a town in the Posen province of Prussia. Today the town is known as Wrzesnia, Poland. According to Wikipedia, Wrze?nia's had a large Jewish community which is mentioned as one of the congregations which suffered severely during the persecutions of the years 1648–1651. All the early documents were destroyed in the conflagration of 1873, in which the synagogue, an old wooden building, also was burned. From International Jewish Cemetery Project (International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies),
Jewish settlement in Wrzesnia began in the 16th century because in 1579 75 Jews paid tax. Czarniecki soldiers murdered about 100 Jewish families in 1656. A fire in 1873 burned the synagogue. Jewish population: 1905-490 and 1921-151, 2.3%. On September 10, 1939 Germans occupied the city. They destroyed the synagogue in 1940. A French POW camp was there during WWII. The first Jewish cemetery in Wrzesnia was in the 16th century. Another was established in 1868. The only trace is two gravestone fragments stored in the Museum of Children Wrzesnia.
An old Jewish cemetery was located in the center of the city bordered by the Fabryczna, Staszica and Szkolna Streets. It occupied an area of 94.5 acres. At the end of 1924, an agreement was reached between officials and the Jewish community to exchange the old cemetery for a parcel of land located on Strzalkowska highway at E end of town, the present location of the Municipal Cleaning Authority. The Nazis leveled it using the tombstones for hardening the surfaces of roads and streets. A small fraction of archival books may be found in the State Archives in Poznan. |
Family ID |
F54 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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