Thread attached on merging: gaska family or bieniek
i have an address for a cousin of ours in katowice....her name is irena gaska the address i have is 4^-^00 Siemianlijce sl ul lesna 5c f woj. katowice My Mom used to write her. I called the international operator and was told there is no phone listing for her...I am trying to find my Dads family there..if anyone can help me I sure would apprecite it!
Thanks! Debbie Bieniek Pennsylvannia USA
Thread attached on merging: Jan Bienick Anna Lagowska BIENICK MAY HAVE BEEN SPELT BIENIEK
Jan and Anna were my grandparents Jan was born in Bedziemysl anna born in Borek Wielki ....does anyone know of family still alive there? Please respond if u can
Debbie Bieniek
Thread attached on merging: Bienieck or Gaska Katowice Bedziemysl or Borek Wielki Poland
My grand parent came over many years ago....they met and married in New Jersey...all their family did not come to America....anyone with help finding my extended family would be appreciated
Merged: looking for family Koper, Prusak or Bieniek?
Looking for family Koper, Prusack or Bieniek? My mother was Janina Koper, She had 2 brothers Leopold, Janek and a sister Sophie. Are there any living relatives? I live in Australia and want to find my relatives!
I am the grand son of Anna Lagowska who was born on or around April 15, 1897 in the town of Borek. Here is some info that I have ANNA LAGOWSKA, corka Jana i Agaty z domu Przydzial, uro=dzila sie w Borku Wielkim dnia 26.IV.1897 URZAD PARAFIALNY RZYM-KATOL W SEDZISZOWIE MLP POWIAT, DEBICA
Any help will be appreciated.
Thank Ron Bienick Grandson
are u looking for a translation or general info.
Anything will help. I think the part I inserted in Polish is her birth record if you would like could you please translate that part.
£agoski is not used in Poland, so apparently the w didn't make the trans-Atlantic crossing. That was common because driopping the w made the name closer to the oiriginal pronunciaton: la-Guss-kee rather than la-GOW(rhyming with cow)-ski.
Yes, except in extreme eastern Poland where the £ is pronoucned like the Russian hard L, the most common pronunciation today is the English W sound. So £agowski would come out sounding like: wa-GUSS-kee.