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HOENIG  Family  ^  W^ 

AR  5076 
Kirchenbirk,  Palkenau,  ^^  ^^ 


-53  pp.  typed  history  and  famn„  <- 

Copyright  1981  iamily  trees,  o 

-fe6^?!  5„S5SSS^£i"  tabf°POld  H°enlg 


R^rsonaa  aocumenrs  indexe 
Wame  n^.  Stammbaum-Hoenie 


Hoenig  Family 


Hoenig  Family  AR  5076 

-Card  2- 

*  Gemeinde  Altena  4.  gemeinde  Bassenheim 
I*.  Gemeinde  Burgbroh  6.  ^^^^SSSlm 
7.  Gemeinde  Flameisheim  8.  Gemeinde  Priesheim 
9  Gemeinde  Gappenauch  10  ^meinde  Hohenlim- 
v«,T.«r  n   Gemeinde  Kirchheim  12.  Gemelnae 
Kuchenneim  13  Gemeinde  Mayen  14  Gemeinde 
Ertfich  15.  Gemeinde  Merzbach  16.  Gemeinde 
Muensterreifel  17.  Gemeindte  Muenstermaifeld 
13.  Gemeinde  Niederzissen  19-  Gemelnae 
ochtendung 


Hoenig  Family 
-Card  3- 


AR  5076 


20  Gemeinde Polch  21.  Gemeinde  Schweinheim 
22.  Gemeinde  Sinzig  23.  Gemeinde  Solingen 
24.  Gemeinde  Wierschem 


TO 

my  daughters,  GAIL  SHARON  HOENIG 

and 

HEBE  MICHELLE  HOENIG 


who  will  continue 
the  family  heritage 
in  the  years  ahead. 


and 


MY  FATHER,    JOSEPH  HOENIG 


who  has  passed  down 
to  me  the  story  of 
the  hardships  and 
joys  of  our  family. 


ACKNQWLEDGBENTS 

This  book  could  not  have  been  written  without  the  assistance 
of  my  father,  Joseph  Hoenig,  who  was  skeptical  at  first  but  who 
then  became  extremely  interested  in  my  work.  He  provided  the  basic 
family  information. 

My  wife,  Doris  Carol  Hoenig,  and  my  two  daughters,  Gail  Sharon 
Hoenig  and  Helene  Michelle  Hoenig,  showed  extreme  patience  during 
the  many  months  it  took  me  to  complete  this  book. 

Others  who  provided  information  and  assistance  include: 

Joseph  Aschner 

Rosa  Hahn  Brick  "  - 

Karl  Budlovsky 

Edna  Morris  Esberg 

Ida  Sophie  Hoenig  Farber  (*) 

Selma  P.  Frank 

Fred  Glaser 

Kildegarde  Schoen  Hecht 

Paul  Glaser  Hill 

Ernst  Hoenig 

John  David  Hoenig 

Dr.  Julius  Hoenig 

Gustav  Hoenig 

'Morris  Hcenig  (*) 

Otto  Hoenig 

Poldi  Honlg 

Josef  Kreissl 

Robert  Lallement 

Elizabeth  Aschner  Laster 

Otto  Lowy 

Sonja  Hoenig  Nanni 

Bertha  Heller  Pfeffer 

Emma.  Hoenig  Preindl  (*) 

Frieda  Hoenig  Rupp 

Hermina  Weiss  Sagl 

Theresj.a  Sussner 

Helene  Unger 

Lici  Treuer  Weinrib 

Gerhart  and  Suzy  Weiss 

Gerda  Ann  Hoenig  Whitehouse 

Herrna  Fischer  Wiener 

(*)  Deceased 


A  sabbatical  leave  for  study  for  the  1981-82  school  year 
granted  to  me  by  the  New  York  City  Board  of  Education  and 
approved  by  '''Lisa  Joan  M.  Kenny,  Community  Superintendent  of 
School  District  25  Queens,  has  enabled  me  to  complete  this  book., 
which  is  in  partial  fulfillment  of  the  research  requirements  of 
the  leave. 

ii 


table'  of  comms 


I  ntroduction. ,...„... , i 

Family   Background 2 

Geographical  Setting 2 

Historical   Background , 3 

"Elder  Von  Honigsberg" .5 

More  Recent  History 7 

Earliest  Known  Family  Members ....   9 

Others  Migrate  to  America . . 11 

The  Holocaust , , ........  13 

Epilogue. 16 

Map  of  Ancestral  Cities  and  Towns 17 

Family  Tree  Charts 18 

Index .,....., 4-6 

Bibliography .... ......  53 


This  book,  is  unbound  so  that  holes  &zn  bz  punched  on  the  left 
side  of  each  pc.gt.  so  it  tia^  be,  'planed  in  a  looselsaf  book  or 
a  binder  with  a  clanip,   or  'it  can  be  "pieced  in  a  birder  which 
grasps  the  pages.   It  has  been  so  designed  aO  pages  con  be 
added  or  changed  at  a  later  date  for  vevis  ,ons. 


ii:I 


INTRODUCTION 

This  is  the  story  of  my  family  which,  probably  for  many 
centuries,  lived  modestly  and  'quietly  in  Bohemia  (now  part  of 
Czechoslovakia)  and  whose  descendants  today  are  scattered  over 
four  continents. 

It  is  my  hope  that  what  I  have  started  here,  a  project 
which  has  taken  more  than  two  years,  will  be  continued  with  an 
annual  updating  which  I  hope  to  initiate  shortly.  We  can  then 
correct  any  mistakes  or  omissions  contained  herein,  do  some 
more  historical  research,  and  update  the  charts  with  Information 
about  births,  deaths  and  marriages.  The  archives  of  the  Jewish 
State  Museum  in  Prague,  which  has  documents  and  records  from 
more  than  one  hundred  Bohemian  communities,  should  he  extremely 
helpful  in  this  effort. 

My  work  has  brought  me  in  contact  with  many  relatives  — 
in  person,  on  the  telephone,  and  by  mail.  Their  interest  in  this 
project  is  most  welcome  and  their  help  in  gathering  and  confirming 
information  is  most  appreciated.  Coming  in  contact  with  so  many 
relatives  for  the  first  time  is  a  great  thrill,  and  I  am  confident 
these  relationships  will  become  more  close  as  the  years  pass  on. 

Genealogy,  the  study  of  family  history,  is  a  fascinating 
field.  Knowledge  of  one's  roots  gives  one  a  strong  feeling  and 
pride  for  his  background  and  helps  to  unite  a  group  of  widely 
dispersed  people  whose  ancestors  placed  a  strong  emphasis  on 
family  ties.  It  is  an  area  in  the  social  sciences  which  should 
become  a  part  of  every  school's  curriculum.  To  this  end  I  am 
engaged  in  developing  such  a  course  of  study. 

This,  then,  is  the  result  of  these  efforts. 


Corrections,  revisions,  comments,  updated  information  and 
all  questions  should  be  sent  to  me.  This  book  is  not  published 
with  the  Intent  to  provide  anyone  with  a  claim  to  any  estate  or 
Inheritance  nor  is  it  intended  as  a  profit-making  venture. 

LEO  HOENIG 

453-C   FDR   Drive 

Apartment  0-150^ 

New  York,  N.Y.  1000i? 

U.S.A. 


October,  1981 


FAMILY  BACKGROUND 


Our^ widely  dispersed  families  are  descended  from  Josef  and 
Sophie_Lov  (or  Levi)  Adler  of  Palkenau  (now  Sokolov),  Jacob  and 
Rosa  Lov  (Levi)  Spiegl  of  Eger  (Cheb)  and  Mr,  and  Mrs.  (born  Lov/ 
Levi)  (first  names  unknown)  Steiniger  of  Falkenau,  on  one  side, 
and  from  the  three  sons  —  Bernbard,  Josef  and  Simon  —  and  two 
daughters  —  Sophie  (married  name  Klein)  and  a  Mrs.  Biaustern 
(first  name  unknown)  —  of  the  Honig  Family  of  Kirchenbirk 
(Brezova,  place  of  birches),  near  Falkenau.  At  this  time,  the 
names  of  the  parents  of  the  five  Honig  children  are  unknown. 

Josef  and  Sophie  Adler  had  two  daughters:  Anna,  who  married 
Wilhelm  Heller  of  Mies  (Stribro,  silver),  and  Theresia,  who 
married  Adolf  Fischer  of  Alt-Rohlau  (Stara  Role).  Jacob  and  Rosa 
Spiegl  migrated  to  New  York  City  with  ten  of  their  twelve  children 
in  the  early  1900 's,  while  the  Steinigers  were  childless. 


Bernhard  and  Josef  Honig  lived  in  Bohemia,  although  Bernhard, 
a  teacher,  also  resided  in  present-day  Roumania  as  well  as  in 
Vienna.  Simon  Honig  went  off  to  Hungary  and  was  never  again  in 
contact  with  the  rest  of  the  family.  Sophie  Hoenig  Klein  migrated 
to  the  United  States  prior  to  1861  and  settled  in  St.  Louis, 
Missouri,  while  her  sister,  Mrs.  Biaustern  lived  in  Vienna. 

The  spelling  of  the  name  Honig  was  changed  to  Hoenig  by  all 
of  those  who  migrated  to  the  United  States,  Canada  and  England. 


GEOGRAPHICAL  SETTING 

Falkenau  is  located  in  northwestern  Bohemia  —  today  a  part 

of  Czechoslovakia  on  the  Eger  (Ohre)  River.  Prior  to  World 

War  I,  Bohemia  was  part  of  the  Austro-Hungarian  Empire.  Since  the 
end  of  World  War  II,  the  names  of  the  cities  and  towns  in  the  area 
have  been  changed  from  German  to  Czech  and  most  of  the  German- 
speaking  people  who  once  lived  there  have  left. 

The  Czech  names  appear  in  parentheses  after  the  German  names, 
which  are  used  herein  since  these  are  the  names  of  the  communities 
which  our  families  used.  .. 

Falkenau  —  located  in  the  heart  of  the  brown  coal  basin  — 
today  has  many  glassworks,  textile  factories  and  coal -processing 
plants.  An  early  Baroque  castle }  built  in  1663,  and  two  early 
Baroque  churches  are  among  its  architectural  highlights. 

About  13%  miles  (22  km.)  to  the  east  of  Falkenau  is  Karlsbad 
(Karlovy  Vary),  where  a  number  of  family  members  lived.  Founded  by, 
and  named  after  Charles  (Karl)  IV  in  13^7-^18,  this  city  in  the 
19th  century  was  famous  as  a  resort  place  of  European  kings, 

princes  and  dukes.  Its  world-famous  baths  recommended  for  a 

variety  of  gastrointestinal  disorders  and  diseases  of  the  motor 

and  nervous  systems and  its  pensions,  sanatoria,  -colonnades 

and  luxury  hotels  date  from  the  last  century.  Today,  Karlsbad  is 
also  a  center  of  the  Czech  glass  and  porcelain  industry.  Kaolin 
deposits  are  nearby, 


The  most  famous  porcelain  factory  in  the  area  is  located  in 
Alt-Rohlau,  a  village  just  to  the  northeast  of  Karlsbad,  where 
the  family  of  Adolf  and  Theresia  Adler  Fischer  lived.  Emil  and 
Hermine  Fischer  Kreissl  were  among  those  who  worked  in  this 
porcelain  factory. 

Kirchenbirk  lies  to  the  west  of  Falkenau  in  the  Erzgebirge 
(Krusne  Hory,  Ore  Mountains)  on  the  road  to  Eger.  In  this  little 
mountain  village  ray  great  grandfather,  Bernhard  Honig  was  born  in 
July,  1830.  His  brother,  Josef  Honig,  also  lived  in  Kirchenbirk,  as 
did  Josef's  son,  Ariel,  and  his  seven  children. 

Mies  is  located  about  ifl  miles  (66  km.)  southeast  of  Eger, 
on  the  way  to  Pilsen  (Plzen).  In  this  town  lived  the  mother  and 
stepfather  of  my  grandmother,  Anna  and  Wilhelm  Heller. 

Our  ancestors  were  Jewish,  although  today  their  descendants 
comprise  not  only  Jews,  but  many  members  of  a  variety  of  Christian 
sects . 


HISTORICAL  BACKGROUND 

Assuming  that  the  Honigs,  Lovs,  Adlers,  Hellers,  Spiegls  and 
Fischers  lived  in  the  mountain  towns  near  Falkenau  and  Karlsbad 
for  many  centuries,  their  history  —  and  that  of  their  fellow 
Bohemian  Jews  — -  is  a  remarkable  study  of  survival  through 
centuries  of  massacres,  deprivation,  poverty  and  other  forms  of 
discrimination.  What  follows  now  are  some  highlights  of  the  plight 
of  these  Bohemian  Jews. 


The  disputed  history  of  the  earliest  known  Jews  in  Bohemia  1s 
shrouded  in  legend.  The  oldest  Jewish  sources  refer  to  Bohemia  as 
"Erez  Kena'an,"  or  "Slavonia/'  so  called  because  those  districts 

including  its  Jews  were  engaged  in  a  vigorous  slave  trade. 

Jewish  traders  are  mentioned  in  the  Ruffellstaetten  Tax  Ordinance 
of  906.  Their  caravans  traveled  the  great  trade  highway  from  the 
Rhineland  to  the  Middle  East,  and  in  that  year  they  formed  a 
community  on  the  left  bank  of  the  Vltava  River  at  Prague. 

Jewish  Bohemians  were  known  as  "Bene  Heth"  (Children  of 
Heth).  Because  there  was  a  great  deal  of  trade  with  the  East  and 
there  are  Byzantine  features  in  the  Old  Prague  Synagogue's  (Altshul) 
rituals,  many  assume  these  Jews  came  to  Bohemia  from  the  East.  It 
is  known  that  some  Jews  came  to  Bohemia  from  Germany,  Prance, 
Poland  and  Austria  in  order  to  escape  the  Black  Death. 

In  Prague,  Jews,  and  others,  who  brought  salt  or  goods  Into 
the  city  had  to  pay  a  tax  to  St.  Stephen's  Church  in  1067.  The 
Jews  called  Prague  "Mezigrade,"  and  from  this  city  they  spread 
Into  the  Bohemian  countryside. 

While  there  were  occasional  periods  of  toleration,  the  Jews 
of  Bohemia  from  the  11th  through  the  15th  century  suffered  through 
humiliating  restrictions,  punitive  taxes,  forced  baptisms,  violent 
persecutions,  and  expulsions  followed  by  readmissions . 


During  the  First  Crusade  period,  in  1096,  Jews  were  massacred 
or  forcibly  baptized.  Two  years  later,  when  they  tried  to  migrate 
to  Poland  or  Hungary,  Duke  Vratislav  II  confiscated  all  their 
personal  property. 

In  1124,  Jacob,  a  Prague  Jew  who  had  been  forcibly  baptized, 
returned  to  Judaism.  When  he  removed  the  Christian  altar  and  holy 
relics  from  the  synagogue  he  was  immediately  thrown  in  jail.  A 
fire  destroyed  the  synagogue  in  11*12. 

The  attitude  of  the  Church  toward  the  Jews  became,  on  the  whole, 
benevolent,  and  conditions  improved.  Many  Bohemian  Jews  became 
scholars.  A  friendly  Papal  Bull  issued  by  Pope  Innocent  IV  in  1254 
was  confirmed  by  Ottocar  II,  Some  Jews  became  moneylenders. 

By  the  next  century,  however,  the  horrors  inflicted  on  Bohemia 'a 
Jews  reappeared.  In  1321  seventy-five  Jews  were  burned  at  the  stake 
In  Prague.  King  Johann  of  Luxembourg,  in  1336,  plundered  the 
synagogues  and  ordered  the  arrest  of  all  Jews  In  Bohemia  because 
he  was  unhappy  with  the  taxes  collected.  He  wanted  to  extort  a 
ransom.  Later  that  year  53  Jews  were  burned  to  death  in  Prague  and 
Jews  were  murdered  in  other  Bohemian  towns. 


Emperor  Charles  IV  divided  with  his  nobles  the  possessions  of 
Jews  massacred  in  1348  and  1349  during  the  Black  Death  in  Prague. 
The  entire  Jewish  community  in  Eger  was  butchered  in  1350.  Grave- 
stones in  the  Prague  Jewish  cemetery  were  demolished  on  April  18, 
1389  and  many  Jews  were  killed.  They  were  accused  of  committing  all 
sorts  of  "crimes"  during  this  period,  ranging  from  "insulting  the 
host"  to  "poisoning  the  wells."  As  usual,  these  charges  of  "crimes" 
were  merely  designed  to  make  the  Bohemian  Jews  scapegoats  for  the 
shortcomings  of  government  and  society. 

During  the  massacres  of  Jews  in  the  15th  century  only  the 

congregation  in  Eger  where  Jacob  and  Rosa  (Lbv)  Spiegl  lived 

before  migrating  to  New  York  was  allowed  to  develop.  In 

Chomutov  (Komotau)  where  Frieda  Honig  was  married  to  Karl 

Ritter  in  the  20th  century  the  entire  Jewish  community  was 

destroyed  during  the  Hussite  uprising,  of  1419-37. 

When  King  Ladislaus  II,  in  1499,  confirmed  the  rights  granted 
to  Karlsbad  by  Charles  IV,  he  added,  "as  an  especial  favor,"  that 
no  Jew  should  be  allowed  to  settle  there.  This  policy  remained  in 
effect  until  1793  when  Emperor  Francis  II  directed  the  city  to  obey 
the  nation's  general  laws  in  its  attitude  toward  Jews.  The  city 
fathers,  however,  paid  little  attention  to  the  Emperor's  decree. 

In  1541  Bohemian  nobles  conspired  to  charge  Bohemian  Jews  with 
"high  treason."  Jews  were  forced  to  pay  a  high  property  tax 
and  wear 'special  clothing.  Finally,  all  but  15  Jewish  families  were 
expelled  from  Prague  until  1554  only  to  be  thrown  out  again  five 
years  later  for  another  two  year  period.  More  expulsions  followed. 


During  the  17th  century,  Prague  Jews  were  granted  special 
favors  by  Emperor  Ferdinand  IT  in  the  hope  they  ivould  convert  to 
Christianity.  The  Prague  Synagogue  assessed  and  collected  taxes 
from  the  congregations  throughout  Bohemia. 

In  1715  all  Jewish  books  were  confiscated.  Prague  Jews 
staunchly  fought  against  the  French  and,  for  all  their  loyalty, 
In  17*15  all  60,000  Jews  were  banished  from  Bohemia  by  Maria 
Theresia  after  paying  a  160,000  gulden  "fine."  Undesirable  results, 
however,  convinced  the  authorities  to  readmit  the  expelled  Jews 
to  such  places  as  Mies  and  Pilsen,  but  not  to  Eger.  Also,  the 
Famlllanten  Gesetz  law  ■ —  limiting  the  number  of  married  Jews  who 
could  live  in  a  community  —  still  remained,  as  did  the 
insistence  that  Jews  wear  a  yellow  collar  on  their  coats  (the 
Jew  Badge),  and  a  limitation  on  the  number  of  Jewish  doctors 
remained  until  1782.  Another  Familianten  which  stated  that  only 
one  son  from  each  registered  Jewish  family  could  marry,  and  only 
after  his  father  had  died,  was  not  repealed  until  1849.  Many  Jews 
got  around  this  by  marrying  secretly  according  to  Jewish  law  or  by 
marrying  in  other  countries. 

An  edict  of  tolerance  (Toleranzpatent )  by  the  Holy  Roman 
Emperor  Josef  II  of  Austria  (who  was  the  son  of  Maria  Theresia)  on 
February  13,  1782  wiped  away  discrimination  against  the  Jews. 
Jewish  schools  with  compulsory  teaching  in  German  were  opened.  Jews 
were  allowed  to  attend  general  high  schools  and  universities  and 
had  to  serve  in  the  army.  They  were  allowed  to  enter  the  professions 
and  could  live  outside  the  ghetto.  At  this  time  Bohemian  Jews 
began  to  take  an  active  part  In  developing  the  country's  industry 
and  trade.  The  Hoenigsberg  family  played  a  leading  role. 

In  1785  Emperor  Josef  II  required  all  Jews  in  Galicia  to  take 
family  names.  In  1787  this  was  extended  to  Bohemia  and  all  other 
Austrian  provinces,  but  not  to  Hungary.  A  registration  fee  was 
charged  and  those  Jews  who  paid  large  sums  received  such  names 
as  Goldstein  or  Rosenthal  (for  gems  and  flowers).  Names  like 
Stahl  or  Eisen  (steel  or  iron)  went  to  those  who  paid  smaller 
fees.  Those  who  had  no  money  received  nonsense  names  such  as 
Ochsenschwanz  (ox  tail),  Treppengealender  (stairway  railing), 
Baucligeschwuhr  (stomach  ulcers),  Temperaturwechsel  (temperature 
change),  Wanzenknicker  (bug  squasher)  or  Galgenstrick  (dirty 
trick) . 


Ten  years  later  Bohemian  Jews  were  permitted  to  live  in 
places  where  they  had  resided  in  1725  and  they  could  engage  In 
any  occupation  except  selling  alocholic  beverages  or  leasing 
flour  mills.  New  synagogues  could  be  built,  but  only  with  the 
permission  of  the  government.  In  order  to  obtain  a  marriage 
license,  Bohemian  Jews  had  to  have  completed  a  German  elementary 
school  or  be  admitted,  to  a  Talmudic  school. 


"a3ER  VON  HQNIGSBERG" 

Although  there  is  no  evidence  to  indicate  any  relationship 
with  our  family,  one  of  our  namesakes  who  lived  In  Bohemia  did 
attain  royalty  during  this  period. 


Israel  Honig,  an  Austrian 'tobacco  manufacturer,  was  born  in 
Kuttenplan  (Chodova  Plana),  Bohemia  in  October,  1724.  The  eldest 
son  of  Loebel  (Leib,  Loew)  Honig,  a  poor  merchant,  he  was  the 
first  Austrian  Jew  to  be  ennobled,  for  on  September  2,  1789 
Emperor  Josef  II  conferred  upon  him  the  hereditary  title  "Elder 
von  Honlgsberg,"  and  the  right  to  acquire  an  estate  In  Lower  Austria. 

At  the  age  of  13,  Israel  Honig  left  his  native  Kuttenplan 
for  Prague  to  continue  the  Biblical  and  Talmudic  studies  he  had 
started  at  home  with  his  father.  Two  years  later,  in  1739,  he  was 
forced  to  return  home  to  join  his  father  in  business. 

Israel  and  his  brother,  Aaron  Moses  Honig  (1730-1787), 
became  involved  in  the  tobacco  business  —  then  virtually  unknown 
in  Austria  —  while  taking  trips  for  Loebel  Honig's  firm.  To- 
gether with  their  father  they  gained  great  wealth  as  a  supplier 
to  the  army  during  the  War  of  the  Austrian  Succession  (1740-1)8) . 

In  1752  the  two  brothers  and  their  father  took  over  the 
lease  of  the  Prague  tobacco  trade,  which,  from  1765  to  1774,  was 
expanded  to  several  Austrian  provinces  —  Bohemia,  Moravia, 

Silesia,  and  Lower  and  Upper  Austria with  a  ten-year  government 

contract  for  900,000  florins  annually. 

Loebel  Honig  obtained  permission  to  build  a  synagogue  in 
Kuttenplan  in  1756. 

During  the  Seven  Years  War  (1756-63),  during  which  Bohemia's 
Jews  heroically  defended  Prague,  the  Honig  tobacco  firm  again 
received  army  provisions  contracts.  Empress  Maria  Theresia  was  so 
satisfied  with  his  service  that  she  granted  Israel  Honig  letters 
of  patent  ( "Freibrief e" )  and  the  right  to  travel  or  settle  anywhere 
in  Bohemia  and  Moravia  in  1764.  Six  years  later  he  was  offered 
tobacco  concessions  for  the  crown  lands,  Galicia  and  Lodomeria. 

He  surrendered  his  contracts  in  1783  at  the  behest  of  the 
Emperor,  who  then  appointed  him  councilor  and  "Tabak  und  Siegel- 
getalldirektor,"  and,  in  1784,  "Bankaldirektor . "  He  thus  became 
the  first  Jew  to  become  an  Austrian  official.  Six  years  later  he 
received  the  title  of  nobility. 

Subsequently,  Emperors  Leopold  II  and  Francis  I  confirmed 
Israel  Honig' s  right  to  oton  his  estate  even  though  Jews  were  not 
allowed  to  own  land  in  Austria.  Throughout  the  four  years  of 
negotiations  Israel  had  refused  to  have  his  estate  listed  in  the 
records  under  a  Christian  sponsor's  name. 

Israel  Honig  died  in  Vienna  on  January  19,  1808. 

The  majority  of  his  descendants,  however,  were  converted  to 
Christianity.  Israel  Honig  had  six  sons  and  one  daughter.  Maxi- 
millian  Honig  (1754-1832)  helped  to  start  the  Vienna  Jewish 
community  and  served  for  30  years  as  Its  representative.  Enoch 
Honig  (1744-1815) another  son,  was  the  great  grandfather  of  Isldor 
Busch  (Bush).  Leopold  (Loew)  Honig,  Enoch's  son  and  Israel's 


grandson,  became  a  Prankist  in  Prague,  under  the  influence  of  his 
father-in-law,  Jonas  Beer  Wehle,  leader  of  the  pro-independence 
group.  Leopold  Honig  complained  to  the  Prague  police  and  sought 
protection"  on  November  9,  1800  from  the  rabbis  he  claimed  were 
trying  to  coerce  him.  Eventually  he  wrote  a  32-page  protest 
attacking  Prague's  rabbis. 

Aaron  Moses,  Israel's  brother  and  business  partner,  had  ten 
children,  six  of  whom  were  ennobled  as  Elder  von  Honigshofen  in 
1791.  Following  the  death  of  Aaron  Moses  Honig 's  wife  in  1796, 
all  the  children  were  baptized  and  this  line  of  the  family  eventually 
died  out. 

Adam  Albert  Honig  (1745-1811),  another  son  of  ioebel  Honig, 
was  baptized  in  1781  and  took  the  name  von  Honigstein  in  1784. 

Marianne,  Loebel's  only  daughter,  was  the  grandmother  of  the 
poet,  L.A.  Prankl.  Soliman  von  Honigsberg  (1804-1864)  was  secretary 
of  the  Prague  Jewish  community  during  the  19th  century.  He  pub- 
lished a  pamphlet  in  1848  entitled  Zur  Judenfrage  (Jewish  Questions). 

The  family  coat  of  arms,  recreated  on  the  front  cover  of 
this  book,  has  tobacco  leaves  and  golden  honey  bees,  symbolizing 
both  the  tobacco  business  and  the  meaning  of  the  name  Honig/ 
Hoenig:  honey. 

However,  even  though  the  family  names  are  the  same  and  both 
Honig  families  are  from  the  same  area,  there  is  no  evidence  at  this 
time  that  they  are  —  or  are  not  —  related. 


TO  RECENT  HISTORY 

Generally  speaking,  the  treatment  of  Jews  in  Bohemia  regressed 
again  in  the  19th  century,  but  by  l84l  the  law  prohibiting  land 
ownership  by  Jews  was  repealed.  The  hated  Jewish  tax  was  ended  in 
1846.  Two  years  later  the  ghetto  was  finally  abolished. 

Karlsbad's  Jews  had  to  wait  longer  for  better  treatment.  The 
city  records  and  documents  give  ample  evidence  of  the  strength  with 
which  it  opposed  Jews  settling  within  its  walls.  Jews  who  lived  in 
the  neighboring  village  of  Lichtenstadt  (Hroznetin)  made  many 
attempts  to  enter  Karlsbad.  All  proved  futile. 


They  were,  however,  permitted  to  stay  in  Karlsbad  for  medical 
care  or  on  peddlers'  licenses  from  May  16  to  September  14.  Except 
for  the  farmer  of  the  government  tobacco  monopoly  no  Jews  were 
allowed  there  for  the  rest  of  the  year  without  a  treating  physician': 
certificate.  Police  were  even  ordered  to  pay  special  attention  to 
the  "winter  Jews." 


David  Moser,  a  restaurant  owner  in  Lichtenstadt,  finally 
received  national  government  permission  to  settle  in  Karlsbad  in 
1830  in  order  to  take  care  of  Jews  who  came  there  for  winter 
treatment.  For  the  next  30  years,  nevertheless,  all  other  Jews 
doing  business  in  Karlsbad  lived  in  Lichtenstadt. 

Meanwhile,  in  1847,  a  group  of  Jewish  philanthropists  from 
Prague  received  the  government's  permission  to  found  the  first 
Jewish  hospital  in  Karlsbad.  There,  over  the  objections  of  the 
city's  authorities,  Jewish  Sabbath  and  Holy  Day  services  were 
held. 


The  "Patent"  of  February  18,  i860  removed  most  of  the  dis- 
criminatory features  against  the  Jews,  who  were  then  finally 
permitted  to  move  into  Karlsbad.  The  hospital  became  their 
meeting  place  and  Ludwig  Moser  became  President  of  the  congrega- 
tion. Most  Bohemian  Jews  were  house  peddlers,  food  dealers, 
feather  and  skin  traders,  or  dealers  in  rags,  old  iron,  cattle 
and  goats.  Some  were  glass  cutters,  leading  to  the  family  name 
Glaser,  as  in  Karl,  Kurt  and  Fred  Glaser  of  Karlsbad. 

Beginning  about  1850  many  Jews  decided  to  migrate  to  the 
United  States  to  escape  pogroms  resulting  from  unsuccessful 
uprisings  against  the  Hapsburgs.  Sophie  Hoenig,  my  great  grand- 
father's sister,  migrated  from  Kirchenbirk  to  St.  Louis,  Mo. 
prior  to  1861. 

By  the  turn  of  the  20th  century,  500  taxpaying  Jews  lived 
in  Karlsbad.  A  synagogue,  dedicated  in  1877,  became  the  center  of 
Jewish  cultural  life  there,  led  first  by  Rabbi  Dr.  J.H. 
ODpenheimer  (1870-72).  He  was  followed  by  Dr.  Rudolf  Plaut  (1872- 
82),  Dr.  Nathan  Porges  (1882-88)  and  then  Professor  Dr.  Ignaz 
Ziegler,  who  was  born  in  Dclny  Kubin,  Slovakia  on  September  29, 
1861,  and  who  studied  in  Budapest,  Hungary. 

Around  this  time  Jews  began  to  move  into  the  cities  and 
large  towns.  You  will  note,  for  example,  the  movement  from 
Kirchenbirk  to  Falkenau  by  the  family  of  Joshua  Honig,  the  move 
from  Lanz  (Lomnice)  to  Falkenau,  in  1902,  by  my  grandparents , 
Leopold  and  Hermine  Adler  Hoenig,  and  the  move  of  Adolf  and 
Tneresia  Adler  Fischer  from  Alt-Rohlau  to  Karlsbad. 

At  the  turn  of  the  20th  century  ^  Jews  lived  in  Falkenau 
and  20  surrounding  hamlets.  Falkenau  had  a  Jewish  cemetery, 
opened  in  1900,  on  Elbogener  Strasse,  succeeding  an  older  one 
in  Schonlind  (Lipova),  a  small  mountain  village  which  was  a  9.0 
minute  walk  from  Falkenau.  Josef  Honig,  my  father's  granduncle,  was 
the  first  one  to  be  buried  in  the  Falkenau  Jewish  cemetery.  The 
Falkenau  Synagogue,  with  a  garden  on  each  side  and  a  big  iron 
gate  in  front,  was  located  opposite  the  public  school  on  Turngasse. 
Falkenau 's  Jewish  community  also  included  a  Hebrew  School  and  a 
Women's  Benevolent  Society.  In  the  earlier  part  of  the  20th 


century  the  congregation  was  led  by  Rabbi  Solemn  Feuerstein  and 
Canto^KurzweirTne  Rabbi's  son,  a  lawyer  who  was  educated  at 
Charles  University  in  Frague.,  died  in  Philadelphia,  Pa.  U.S.A.  in 
1978.  He  was  Eduard  Feuerstein'. 

Rni-h  the  svnaszoeue  and  cemetery  were  destroyed  by  the  Nazis 
during^ War l!?as  «ere  most  of  the  others  in  Bohemia  including 
ttemfgnificent  lDth  century  synagogue  in  Koemgswart  where 
Wilhelrf  Loewy  —  my  father's  Godfather  and  husbana  of  Veronika 
Eg  Loewy,  fir-st  cousin  of  my  grandfather,  Leopold  Hoenig --- 
was  once  leader  of  the  congregation.  The  synagogue's  altar  had 


EARLISI  W«H  Mil  IS3KBS. 


^i   'T.Kinth'  LS-inna  married  Wilhelm  Heller  and  they 
g^35S?^^i^^lBtOT  and  one  half-brother  ol 
my  grandmother  were  born. 

<-    w™nQ  PT.*»indi     recalled  a  few  weeks  before  her  death  in 
My  aunt,  Etoa  ^indi    ^£  -ieller  ,came  every  year  to 
Vienna  on  May  27,  1^80  that  Wime-un  Dockets  were  filled  with 

a  glazier. 

Three  of  his  children  were  killed  by  the  gg-^^her 
was  caught  by  the  tesis  when  ^^^k^m£^  of  whom 
sister,  Marie,  and  f^f^^kh^iT^  Heller  was 
managed  to  escape.  Earlier  on  March  4,  xW£  ^  a  large 

accidentally  shot  to  death  oy  ^^oldiex     ^  by  ^  ^ 
stone  monument  was  erected  at  her  gravesiw* 

Bernhard  Konig,  my  father's  gra? father  ^J^f^f^ 
in  July,  1830-  He  became  a  teacher  of  greijn  ig*^  .^ 
Minna  Neuberger,  and  lived  in  Vienna.  &™       Drovince  of  Banat 
lived  in  Temesvar  CTimi§oara),  Romania  in jaiep   .^  Baroque   d 
Transylvania.  There,  m  "the  city  °-&f°?"  Frederick 

Renaissance  public  buildings ,  were  born  hi^ons^o  ^  ^ 
and  Leopold  (my  grandfather  after  whom  1  au         ^^  ^^ 
Bertha.  Johanna,  Adele  am  Michael  were  born       ^^^ 
and  Minna  Honig  ret »rned  there  Th •»«£»« ^  Neuberger.  Bernhard 
^ZT^JS^Z&B   at  the  age  of  87.  He  had 


two  brothers,  Josef,  and  Simon  (who  went  to  Hungary  and  was  never 

heard  from  again)  and  two  sisters,  Sophie  and  another first 

name  unknown  - —  who  married  a.  Mr.  Blaustem  In  Vienna.  Bemhard 
Honig  was  buried  In  Lundenberg  (Breclav),  where  Simon  and  Bertha 
Honig  Weiss  lived. 

My  grandparents,  1*0  were  married  in  1897,  moved  from  Lanz  to 
Zwodauer  Strasse  in  Schoenwart-Falkenau  in  1902.  In  Falkenau  they 
later  lived  at  Kreuzgasse  1,  Butterscheibe  18  and  Mauerdeich  4.  My 
grandfather,  Leopold  Hoenig,  was  a  salesman  for  the  dry  goods  firm 
of  Adolf  Hermann  in  Falkenau.  My  grandmother,  Hermine  Hoenig,  was 
a  housewife,  taking  care  of  their  eight  children. 

My  father,  Joseph  Hoenig,  arrived  In  New  York  on  Thursday, 
September  22,  1921  aboard  the  S.S.  Mount  Carol.  For  most  of  the 
years  until  his  retirement  in  February,  1966,  he  had  worked  as  a 
tailor  and  foreman  for  "GGG"  Clothes  in  Brooklyn,  N.Y.  U.S.A.  and 
the  Hilton  Clothing  Manufacturing  Company  in  Linden,  N.J.  He  had 
learned  tailoring  as  a  youth  in  Bohemia.  On  Sunday,  March  29,  1936 
he  married  Billa  Hirsch,  who  was  born  in  Polch  (near  Koblenz), 
Germany. 

I  was  born  on  Wednesday,  May  19,  1937  in  the  Bronx,  N.Y.  I 
am  a  graduate  of  Queens  College,  where  I  was  a  history  major  and 
where  I  received  my  bachelor's  and  masters  degrees.  I  have  been 
teaching  social  studies  at  Parsons  Junior  High  School  168  Queens 
since  1958.  During  many  of  my  summer  vacations  I  worked  as  a 
newspaper  for  the  now-defunct  Long  Island  Press  and  Long  Island 
Star-Journal  of  the  Newhouse  chain.  My  wife,  Doris,  and  I  were 
married  on  Sunday,  March  31,  1968.  We  met  when  both  of  us  were  on 
the  Parsons  faculty  and  she  then  taught  French.  Now  she  is  teaching 
English  as  a  Second  Language  at  Seward  Park  High  School  near  our 
Manhattan  home.  We  have  two  daughters,  Gall  Sharon  and  Helene 
Michelle . 


My  father  was  followed  to  the  United  States  in  1922  by  his 
older  sister,  Frieda;  in  1923  by  his  sister,  Ida,  and  then  by  his 
parents,  brothers  Adolph  and  Gustav  and  young  sister,  Gerda,  in 
1924.  My  grandfather  died  in  his  Brooklyn,  nTy.  home  after 
suffering  a  stroke  on  Monday,  April  14,  1930,  the  first  night  of 
Passover.  My  grandmother,. .nearly  13  years  his  junior,  outlived  him 
by  almost  34  years.  She  passed  away  on  the  night  of  Saturday, 
January  11,  1964  in  her  bed  in  the  Bayslde,  Queens,  N.Y.  home  of 
her  daughter  and  son-in-law,  Ida  and  Henry  Farber,  just  four  days 
shy  of  her  85th  birthday. 

My  father's  sister,  Emma,  did  not  come  to  the  United  States 
until  the  outbreak  of  World  War  11".  She  had  studied  In  Vienna 
where,  in  1925,  she  married  a  Tyrolean,  Alfonso  Prelndl.  During  the 
1940 's  and  1950 's  they  lived  in  New  York  City,  where  he  worked  as 
a  professional  photographer.  Both  returned  to  their  villa  In  the 
Vienna  hills  where  they  later  died. 


10 


Ida  Hoenig  Farber,  who  moved  from  Bayslde  to  Newhall,  California 
in  1969,  was  an  upholsterer.  She  died  on  Saturday,  March  1,  1980 
after  suffering  a  stroke.  Emma,  who  took  her  sister's  death  badly, 
died  of  a  stroke  in  her  Vienna,  bedroom  less  than  three  months  later. 
Henry  Farber,  a  retired  manufacturer  of  dental  tools,  died  of  a 
heart  attack  after  an  automobile  accident  in  which  his  wife,  Ida, 
had  been  seriously  injured  at  the  wheel  of  their  car  in  the  shopping 
center  of  the  Friendly  Valley  development  where  they  lived. 

Adolph  Hoenig  was  a  real  estate  manager  for  the  New  York  City 
Department  of  Relocation.  He  died  of  a  heart  attack  in  his  car  which 
he  had  parked  in  the  Macy's  department  store  parking  garage  at 
Elmhurst,  Queens,  N.Y.  His  son,  Rev.  John  David  Hoenig,  is  minister 
of  the  Palmyra  Moravian  Church  in  Cinnaminson,  N.J. 

Gustav  Hoenig  was  a  machinist  while  his  wife,  Lillian,  is  an 
electronic  data  processing  tape  librarian.  Their  sons,  Bruce  and 
Michael,  are  electronics  specialists  with  IBM  and  the  U.S.  Air 
Force  respectively. 

My  father's  youngest  sister,  Gerda  Ann  Hoenig  Whitehouse,  was 
an  officer  with  the  Chase  Manhattan  Bank  In  New  York  City.  Following 
her  retirement,  she  and  her  husband,  Orville  ("Win"),  moved  to 
Friendly  Valley  in  Newhall,  California,  on  the  same  street  as  Ida 
and  Henry  Farber. 

My  father's  other  sister,  Gretl,  died  on  September  16,  1916, 
at  the  age  of  nine,. about  three  years  after  contracting  diptheria 
in  an  epidemic.  The  treatment  had  caused  paralysis  on  her  right 
side  and  eventually  she  suffered  a  fatal  convulsion. 


OTHERS  fJIGRATE  TO  AffRJCA 

My  father's  family  was  not  the  first  of  the  Hoenig  clan  to 

migrate  to  the  United  States. 

As  noted  earlier,  ,'lophie  Hoenig the  sister  of  my  great 

grandfather,  Bernhord  Honig  who  was  married  to  Arant  B.  Klein 

from  Poland  came  to  St.  Louis,  Mo.  prior  to  1861  and  they 

resided  at  220?  Broadway.  She  was,  apparently,  the  first  of  our 
family  to  come  to  America...  Their  oldest  child,  Fredericka  (Ricka) 
Kohner,  was  the  second  wife  of  Henry  Kohner.  He  was  in  charge  of 
the  horse  and  wagon  yard  at  the  Anheuser  Busch  brewery  in  St.  Louis. 
They  lived  at  2029  Market  Street  at  the  turn  of  the  century.  Ricka 's 
sister-,  Bertha,  was  married  to  Julius  Abramson,  a  native  of  Hamburg, 
Germany,  who  was  president  of  the  Central  States  Paper  Company  In 
St.  Louis.  My  father  visited  these  relatives  in  1926,  lost  contact 
with  them  shortly  thereafter,  but  we  reestablished  links  during  the 
course  of  preparing  this  family  history. 

Although  a  great  deal  of  information  about  the  St.  Louis  branch 
of  our  family  is  not  yet  available  (some  of  it  was  obtained  from  the 
1880  and  1900  U.S.  censuses),  I  am.  hopeful  that  it  will  be  forthcoming 
In  the  near  future,  when  the  pages  involved  will  be  revised.  My 
correspondence  and 'conversation  with  this  branch  of  the  family  have 
been  most  cordial. 


11 


My  granduncle,  Morris  Frederick  Hoenig,  migrated  to  the  United 
States  in  i860.  He  probably  visited  Arant  and  Sophie  Hoenig  Klein 
in  St.  Louis  and  then  went  west  to  San  Francisco,  California.  We 
believe  he  was  married  there  and  had  several  children.  There  was 
a  fire  and  earthquake  in  San  Francisco  in  1893  and  we  believe  that 
Morris  Frederick's  family,  except  for  him,  perished.  He  then  went 
to  Fort  Worth  and  was  employed  in  a  bath  house  there.  He  married 
Lillie  Mae  Buff aloe,  adopted  her  two  children  from  a  previous 
marriage,  and  had  two  more  children.  They  moved  to  Dallas  in  1900, 
where  they  lived  at  297  Commerce  Street  along  with  their  three 
servants  and  34  boarders,  according  to  the  1900  U.S.  census. 

My  father  visited  Morris  Frederick  Hoenig  in  Dallas  in  1926. 
During  my  father's  visit  with  the  family,  Uncle  Morris  told  him  to 
"be  sure  to  visit"  his  cousin,  Rlcka  Kohner  in  St.  Louis,  on  the 
way  home  to  New  York  City.  Later,  in  St.  Louis,  Ricka  Kohner  told 
my  father  how  she  had  met  Morris  Frederick  Hoenig  at  the  Louisiana 
Purchase  Exposition  In  St.  Louis  in  1904  and  gave  him  a  message  to 
write  to  his  father  (her  uncle),  Bernhard  Honig,  in  Vienna,  with 
whom  he  ted  not  kept  in  contact. 

Morris  Frederick  Hoenig  worked  with  the  Dallas  Water  Department 
from  1911  until  his  retirement  in  19^4 .  During  his  33  years  with 
the  department,  he  worked  in  nearly  every  phase  of  the  meter 
division.  He  set  the  first  meter  in  the  city,  number  1,  which  went 
to  the  then-Mayor,  W.E.  Holland.  He  also  did  the  first  meter  repair- 
ing for  the  city,  which  consisted  of  walking  from  house  to  house 
with  a  haversack  containing  a  few  tools.  He  set  up  the  first 
system  of  meter  records  In  1911,  which  was  used  until  1939,  at 
which  time  there  were  some  70,000  meters  in  the  Dallas  system.  He 
died  on  Friday,  December  31,  1948  and  is  burled  in  Dallas  Restland 
Memorial  Park. 

His  adopted  grandson,  Morris  Hoenig,  who  died  suddenly  on 
Sunday,  December  28,  1980,  was  an  instrumentation  technician.  Morris 
Hoenig 's  son,  Ronald  Morris  Hoenig,  is  a  fleet  sales  manager,  and 
his  other  son,  Thomas  William  Hoenig,  is  a  chemistry  professor. 
Morris  Hoenig' s  daughter,  Mitzi  Sue  Danford,  is  a  stenographer. 

Johanna  Hoenig,  my  father's  aunt,  came  to  New  York  City  in  1904 
and  worked  for  many  years  as  the  governess  for  the  children  of  Dr. 
and  Mrs.  Frederick  Sonderh.  One  of  the  children  later  became  an 
editor  of  Readers  Digest  magazine.  Johanna  Hoenig  maintained  her  own 
apartment  on  48th  Street  in  Woodside,  Queens,  N.Y.  until  she  was 
about  90  years  old.  She  lived  her  last  years  at  the  Neponsit  Home 
for  the  Aged  in  Rockaway,  Queens,  N.Y.,  where  she  died  on  Sunday, 
June  30,  1963,  exactly  four  months  before  her  95th  birthday. 

Oskar  Hoenig,  who  came  to  the  United  States  In  1914,  became  a 
partner  in  the  Witzel  Brothers  Soda  Company  in  the  Bronx,  N.Y. 
When  the  business  failed,  he  acquired  the  rights  to  the  firm  s  name, 
tried  to  start  anew,  but  failed  even  with  $10,000  he  had  borrowed. 
Despondent,  on  Wednesday,  April  13,  1932  he  committed  suicide  by 
sitting  In  his  car  with  the  motor  running.  He  is  buried  in  a  single 
grave  in  Woodlawn  Cemetery,  the  Bronx,  N.Y.  His  widow,  Helen,  re- 
married and  went  to  Germany. 

12 


On  ray  grandmother's  side  the  Spiegls  came  to  New  York  City 
before  the  turn  of  the  20th  century,  as  mentioned  on  page  2.  Jacob 
and  Rosa  Lov  Spiegl,  who  died  in  189*!  and  1897  respectively,  are 
buried  in  the  family  plot  at  Union  Field  Cemetery  in  Cypress  Hills, 
Queens,  N.Y.  with  several  of  their  children.  Their  daughter,  Paula, 
the  oldest  child,  married  Otto  Gess  and  they  lived  at  6  East  107th 
Street,  Manhattan.  Their  daughter,  Marie,  owned  a  lampshade  shop 
on  Madison  Avenue.  later,  for  a  while,  Marie  and  her  husband, 
Marcel  Lallement,  lived  in  Tahiti  and  then  opened  another  lampshade 
store  in  Beverly  Mills,  California. 

Mathilde  Spiegl  was  the  owner  of  a  millinery  firm  which  was 
located  at  687  and  later  701  Madison  Avenue  in  New  York  City. 
Mathilde' s  younger  sisters,  Hilde  and  Elsie,  were,  employed  in  the 
business.  Elsie  handled  the  firm's  books  while  Hilde  took  charge 
of  the  manufacturing.  Meanwhile,  Emma  took  care  of  the  home  and 
was,  according  to  Edna  Morris  Esberg  (Emma's  niece),  "a  fantastic 
cook."  Another  sister,  Bertha,  became  a  buyer  for  a  department 
store  in  Baltimore,  Md. 

Louis  Spiegl,  the  only  son  of  Jacob  and  Rosa  to  live  to 
adulthood,  was  a  manufacturer  of  laundry  dyes  in  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Marie  "Flossy"  Spiegl,  the  youngest  in  the  family,  married 
Martin  Morris  on  Sunday.  February  27,  1910.  He  owned  a  bank  vault 
and  safe  equipment  firm,  which  was  later  headed  by  their  son-in-law. 
Berthold  Esberg,  whose  widow,  Edna  Morris  Esberg,  mentioned  above, 
is  president  of  the  Peninsula  Section  of  the  National  Council  of 
Jewish  Women.  Mar-tin  and  Marie  Morris'  other  daughter,  Helen,  is 
married  to  Arthur  Purst,  a  New  York  attorney. 

Most  of  the  children  of  Jacob  and  Rosa  Spiegl  did  not  marry 
and  first  lived  on  East  96th  Street,  then  at  106  East  85th  Street 
and,  from  1912  to  1957,  at  790  Riverside  Drive  in  Manhattan,  New 
York  City. 

M  H0U3CAUST 

The  rest  ci    the  Pamilj  remained  in  Bohemia  and  Vienna  until 
the  outbreak  of  World  War  II,  which  brought  the  worst  horrors  of 
all  to  the  Jews.  Many  members  of  the  family,  such  as  my  aunt,  Emma 
Preindl,  fled  to  England,  Canada,  Australia  or  the  United  States. 
Others  who  remained  were  captured  by  the  Nazis.  Some  were  murdered 
on  the  spot  while  others  were  sent  to  the  concentration  carps  where 
many  perished. 

Otto  and  Elsa  Honig  Lederer,  who  owned  a  shoe  store  in  Rumburg, 
were  captured  by  the  Nazis  in  Milan,  Italy  and  executed. 

Her  brother.  Dr.  Herman  Honig,  an  eye  doctor  who  had  red  hair 
and  freckles,  according  to  my  father,  met  a  similar  fate  with  his 
family . 


13 


Another  brother,  Otto  Hoenig,  and  his  wife,  Gretl  Fischer 
Hoenig,  managed  to  flee  to  Hamilton,  Ontario,  Canada,  where  he  owns 
an  import-export  business ,  They  live  in  a  beautiful  house  on 
Colquhoun  Court  at  the  edge  of' a  cliff  overlooking  the  entire  city. 

Dr.  Julius  Hoenig,  son  of  Joshua  and  Bertha  Graz  Honig,  and  a 
half  brother  of  Oskar  Hoenig,  is  Professor  and  Chairman  of  the 
Department  of  Psychiatry  at  Memorial  University  of  Newfoundland  in 
St.  John's,  Newfoundland,  Canada.  His  wife,  Inge  Greve  Hoenig,  is 
an  artist.  Their'  son,  Peter,  is  a  New  York  lawyer,  while  their 
daughter,  Elizabeth  Hoenig  Rogers,  is  a  social  worker  in  London, 
where  her  husband,  Raymond  Rogers,  is  an  architect. 

There  was  another  doctor  in  this  family,  Dr.  Leo  Honig,  who 
lived  and  practiced  in  various  parts  of  Europe,  in  Montevideo, 
Uruguay,  and  in  New  York,  where  he  frequently  was  a  guest  of  my 
parents!  He  moved  to  Vienna  shortly  before  his  death  early  in  195b. 

His  nephew,  Dr.  Joseph  Budlovsky,  is  a  physician  in  the 
Ministry  of  Health  in  Toronto,  Canada.  Karl  Budlovsky,  Dr  Joseph  s 
brother  is  an  engineer.  He  is  at  McMaster  University  in  Hamilton, 
Ontario.  Karl's  son,  Sacha,  is  an  attorney  and  daughter  Vera 
Dernovsek  is  a  laboratory  technician,  as  are  Susan  Budlovsky  and 
Michael  Budlovsky,  the  wife  and  son  of  Dr.  Joseph  Budlovsky 
Margaret  and  Richard  Kardish,  Dr.  Joseph  Budlovsky 's  daughter  and 
son-in-law,  both  hold  degrees  in  chemistry. 

Theodore  Honig,  with  whom  my  father  loved  to  hand  wrestle, 
and  his  wife  and  two  of  their  three  children  did  not survive  the 
Holocaust.  Their  only  son,  Ernst  Hoenig,  lives  in  Sheffield, 
England  with  his  second  wife,  Sylvia. 

Joshua  Honig  had  a  twin  sister,  Helen  Honig  Mueller  who  baa 
grandchildren  living  in  the  United  States  and  Canada.  One  ofter 
granddaughters,  Lici  Treuer  Weinrib,  is  married  to  Dr.  Leonard 
weinrib,  a  dentist  in  Scarsdale,  N.Y. 

Also  close  with  the  family  of  Joshua  Honig  were  Tante  (Lydia 
Beer)  and  Si  (Ignaz)  Holzner  who  lived  in  Xl^Zrf^lT 
"After  my  father  died,"  notes  Karl  ^^'  «S£e?  grandsons 

£  r0ei^0^^^ 

where  he  is      broadcaster  for  the  Canadian  Broadcasting  Corporation. 

te  hos?s  a  popular  musical  radio  show  heard  throughout  th^ountry. 

His  wife,  Barbara  Hall  Lowy,  is  chairman  of  the  wencn  ue. 

at  a  Vancouver  high  school . 

tv    Bernard  Aschner,  grandson  of  the  Blausterns,  and  son  of 
Samuef  AscSerf  proprietor^  a  men's  shirt  and  underwear  manu^ 
turing  factory  in  Vienna,  was  a  world  renowned  Jgg^g  Sthritis. 
and  New  York,  specializing  in  gy neology,  °bgf ™0^  ln  1908 
He  was  credited  by  medical  authorities  with  the  discov  ery  ^ 

of  Aschner's  phenomenon,  the  slowing  of  the  ^j°^^ ,  ^audii 
on  the  eyeball    Dr.  Aschner  di d ^^^^^^tSitax* 
in  his  younger  days,  he  was  a  pioneer   in 
glands  from  dogs. 

114 


Dr.  Aschner  turned  to  the  treatment  of  arthritis  uoward  the 
clme  0f  his  career.  He  was  the  author  of  many  books  on  medicine, 
including  The  Art  of  Hc.-iil.fe.  and  Arthritis  ;  an  \  e   lured,  and 
™rou4  pr^eiiioml^rUcles.  He  received  his  M.D.  degree  from 
the  University  of  Vienna  In  1907.  He  served  as  i'rore,3ror  ol 
GynecSloS  and  Obstetrics  at  the  University  of  Halle,  Germany, 
llctuSn  those  subjects  at  the  University  of  Vienna    and  was 
an  obstetricia  i  ana  gynecologist  at  the  University  Clinic  ol 
Vienna. 

A  field  surgeon  with  the  rank  of  captain  in  the  Austro- 
Hungar'ian  army  in  World  War  I,  Dr.  Aschner  won  the  Knight's 
Cross  of  the  Order  of  Emperor  Franz  Josel . 

In  1938,  with  the  Nazis  overrunning^ Austria, . gned^Ne^ 
rVoSlolycnni^l^vesant  and  I^nWtals .  He  die.  on 
Wednesday,  Iterob  9,  I960  at  the  age  of  77- 

Hit  daughter    Elizabeth  Aschner  Laster,  is  a  social  worker. 

Geraldine,  is  a  mathematician  with  Bell  Laboratories. 

Dr     Aschner's  four  brothers  were  businessmen.  Emil  Aschner 

their  wives  perished  in  Auschwitz-,    me.r  cni-uic, 
alive . 

i mi-  «*  four  brothers  of  Dr.  Aschner  were  businessmen,  the 

caJErfSi »» "ESS  **-».  ft-  «  —  <-*•  ' 

professionals . 

Eva  Aschner  Vergeiner,  the  daughter  f  *^g*^  Jf? 
Aschner,  lives  in  Prague  end  is  ^^^fSaveSed  around     h 
fLuen:  in  English,  Czech  and  German  «d  ^VgJ^gf vt.gl  lner,  ls 
Worlc3   to  interpret  at  conferences.  Her_4!  gohn«r  Vergeine   ' 
gifted  in  mathematics.  Peter  As  chner    *g*f™£ 'fenichel 
rSE'dSl'^fSS fo-fandTe  two'cSren'were  ra. 
SuSePer!  Adefe^l  who  lives  with  Eva  in  Pragu* 

Oertrude  Aschner  Sc^war; J**^  ^dtoS  *!  i  "  *  , 
Aschner,  is  married  to  J/JJffJ  ™ a  psyche  »**»* 

SLr^^^SLfS'Rich^deschwarZ,  a  medica^   student. 

Joseph  Aschner,  a  son  of  ^»(^p^Pg?SS  S£S* 
a  professor  of  Posies  at  the City ^oiie  nt  consultant 

£  SSS?'l£wS  n^S.rSSS  Buchenauer  Aschner,  secono  ^ 
o?  Joseph  Ascnner?is  a  fashion  designer. 


15 


Ulrlch  Aschner,  brother  of  Joseph  Aschner ,  lives  In  Bogota, 
Colombia  (where  his  parents  lived  and  died  after  fleeing  from  the 
Nazis)  and  is  a  consulting  engineer.  The  four  surviving  children 
of  Dlrich  and  Carmen  Montoya  Aschner  are  all  professionals.  Dr. 
Pablo  Aschner  and  his  sister,  Dr.  Elena  Aschner,  are  both  physicians, 
while  Maria  Christina^ Aschner  Is  a  lawyer  and  Alberto  Aschner  is 
an  engineer.  Anton  Prohlich,  a  son  of  Joseph  Aschner's  adopted 
sister,  Trude,  and  her  husband,  Stefan  Prohlich,  is  a  physicist 
and  a  computer  expert.  Anton's  brother,  Miguel  'Prohlich,  is  a 
sales  manager  for  a  large  Austrian  corporation. 

Thomas  Aschner,  son  of  Carl  (Carlos)  and  Nelly  Wolf  Aschner, 
is  a  chemist  who  lives  in  Benedikt  Beuern,  West  Germany. 


cr*Tf  np.'F 

And  so  we  have  accounted  for  as  many  members  of  the  family  as 
has  been  possible.  Undoubtedly,  additional  information  will  be 
brought  to  ray  attention  and  this  will  be  added  to  the  charts  or 
in  an  appendix,  which  is  the  reason  why  this  bock  has  not  been 
bound  so  it  can  be  placed  in  a  loos.leaf  book  after  holes  are 
punched  on  the  left  side  of  each  page. 

If  anyone  has  been  left  out  this  is  purely  unintentional. 

As  family  members  pass  away  and  as  yoking  ones  are  born  and 
others  marry,  the  charts  will  have  to  be  updated.  You  will  be 
kept  informed  through  regular  mailings.  Hopefully,  this  will  also 
serve  to  unite  in  some  way  a  family  scattered  throughout  the  world. 

There  is  one  major  unsolved  mystery  and  that  Is  the  case  of 
the  whereabouts  of  the  two  children  —  George  and  Hedwig  (Heidi) 
—  of  Col.  Judge  Blaustern  Rhona  and  his  wife  (and  also  his  niece). 
Mitzi  Rosenfeld  Rhona.  The  children  were  apparently  lost  in  Austria 
during  World  War  II  and  may  have  been  taken  to  Sweden. 


M 


■ 


16 


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25 


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26 


CHILDREN!    OF   MICHAEL   HON1& 


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27 


CHILPR&j    OF   -SAMUEL   AMD  PAULA    18LA0STCRN)  ASCHNER.    U) 


(^1s)*sAmoel  Aschner 

V.'ennu.AitfflW 
w.PAUUA    BLAUSTeRw 


■  OR.  SERnKRD  ASCHNER 
Jan  11,  |g«3    Mar.9,l9(«0 
V.'ona,  AUSTRIA  Nful  VK.N.J.-WA 
i»  JOHANNA     KOENlG 
Feb-  23, WM-  Fib.  1,1910 

Nut-  ftnt.h.lw 


OLWER   LASTER 
Aug.24,iq2l- 

•* -ELIZABETH  ASCHMlR 


-0R.ANDREW  lASTEP, 
Apk.i?.WS3- 

m   MtCflEl£   6ARRCTT 
Sept.3,l4SV 

-<,ERAU>/NE    LASTfct 
July  Z7,l9S7- 


t-ST»/ENJ    lASTER. 
Oct.  2-1,190,0- 


EMIL    ASCHNER 

-Ho/s(oust 

Vituna,  AUSTRIA 

rn.LH.UE    FENICHEL 
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V.tnna  AuscVWiti 

m  ALICE  Zlf"\.BLER 
A  or.  ffi.lSlt-Holocottri- 
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-  PETER  ASCHMER.  "Jl 

WALTER  VEgbElNeel  EVA  V£RG&ISje£ 

Wsva  aschSIr       J    L  ,9fc3 


DRcSERHART  SCHWaRZ 
June  1 9,  19(2  - 


•m  GERTRUDE    ASCHNER 
Feb.  ii,  1911 - 


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I 


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Jul/  12,1941- 


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—  FEUX    ASCH(JG<c 

Apr.  U,iref  -  Dec. 2.9,1931 

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m-ULY        PAU-ESTER 

JvJvif  27. I?44-  Sept. 21 ,1919 


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j^-m  TRUDE   ASCHNER  I 
Mar.9,l9IS- 


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Viinnn.AiJiKlA 


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MART  JANE   NcCuEj    Mcirdn  2fc,i<HC- 
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28 


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CHILDREN    OF  SAMUEL  AMP   PA^LA   IBLAUSTHRH)  ASCHNER  {z) 


I 


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ChRISTOPH       FROHUCH 


CHILDREN    OF    HlGU£L    AMP    HIKI        FROHLICH 


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DR   PAP.LO  ASCHNER 
Oct.  20, l <} SO- 


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29 


CHI  LP    OF   ROSA   BLADSreRN/  RQSEMFELD 

FAMILY    OF     ROSA   5LAUSTERM   ROSEMF£uD'S     BROTHER 


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30 


CHILDREN*     OF    JOSHUA   UeHOSHUA)     H0M16     {>) 


JOSHUA    H0NI6 
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r*«UtWA    BEER 
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June  1,  l8Sfc-fe'b4.HiS 

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Febi.lSU?  -Pec  12, 1*155 


l&NAZ  H0UZN6R 
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31 


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June  2M400 -Dec-     (170 
FalU«noy,oa.«  HaWt.  East  SPRnAnY 

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32 


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HIS    WIFE,   LYOIA  BEER, 
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BEER    H0L2NER    AMD  MW\ 
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OF  JOSHUA  H'6m(6  -PAteE     ) 

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-  Holocaust 

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-n 
m  FRieDL 


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m    FfllEPL   bRUNHl/i 


JOHANHSEN 


ExmTH    HOLZMER 
TiplWi 


(jivoRceti) 

J    L-LYOIA     M0L2ME.R 


VU 


33 


50HS     OF     FRITZ     AMD    VERA    HOlZNlcR 


TteiSi'nij        S  y  (S/WY ,  Austn»!i« 
ffl.  VERA 

C;£cV«sslovaKia 


NICHOLAS    HOL2NER 
Sydwy,An^Bli(j 

STeueu    houher 

19- 
Sydwf.y,Au4r(ili<( 


50N     OF    OTTO     AND      SAREAfcA  (HALL)    LOUlY 


(R&^cnTo  lowy 

Mar.4,1^21- 

m.  BARBARA  HALX 

Oct  Z4*i<Uo- 


DA\fl£>  tOWY 
OtT.  Ig.flbt- 
Vnncai/Mr,  8.^' 

Canada. 


J>AU6MT£R     OF     EDlTK    HOL7-NER    JOHAMNSb^ 


€b^- 


JOK  AMHSEN 


hi.  EDITH    HOUZWt'R 
IBivnncep) 


-EVA    JoHAhiNSEN 

1%  - 

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m  HELEW       rid(Jl& 
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-  Holoco«ST 

-'  m  AM.Ma    MUELLER 

Karlsb<«t 

"MAX     MUELLER 

.11  (RMA    CPSTF.IN 


1   KARL  G LASER 
*   SOPIilE     MUELLER 


j  /.  SRlvST   ROBiTSCHEK 
2..H£P.rtAMt>J    AlTMAKin) 


j~   nv  EMMA     MUELLER 
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«i  Rosa   mueller 

lS*^  -  Api-l,R73 


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Helen    Mueller 
/<U7-  ltS2> 

f-iAW    6LASER 

l"lOg    -    HolocnUbt 
|14S 

FRE.I)  (FRITZ)  SlASER 


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I7II- 

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EMIt       ECKSTElM 

Binijl-ianilon,  MIT -USA 
■DR.  HERTA    TREUER 
915  -  i<?fe7 

8lnar.<:\*vi1l>Hi  N     -U^A 

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•M    LICI      TREUGR 
Aug  7,  I1H- 


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35 


CHtLDREN    OF  ARi€L    Mvip    KLARA  (6RUMHW)  MONI6 


(£jS)^ARi£l.     HONiG 


r*  KLARA   feRUKIHOT  I 
Ronsberg 


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*  Holocaust 


|-  LEOPOLD    HOMiG  ~" 
1681       -Holocaust 
KireVienfeirK 
w    ELW     POLLAU 

Pnxgus 

-dr.  merman*  moms'!    p  Herbert  honig 

•866        -Holocaust  -Holocaust 

m.lRCME    HetOueR  I      S-reA     HOUI& 


-Holocaust  J 
Iwhost 

OTTO     LEDER£R 

-Holocaust 

Ml  Ion,   i+oly 

•tn  EISA     HON'G 
'812       -Holocaust 

OTTO     I-I0EMI6 
Nw.  4,(897- 
K.Vct>e»U'i  K 
«t.6RETL     FISCHER 


tVen'u 


-J0.SEF     HrNil6 

1893      -Y.mkippo.-.WiZ 
KirckcnWK 


ROPOLP     PICK. 

■m.JOHAfjKi'A  "JENW"  HOMiG 
I  900  - 
KircVienKrK 

VLASTA  PKSHA 


L 


Richard    Hon  16 

-  Holocaust 
KfrcWnoirK 


-Holocaust 


ko«r  pick,  -*  esoni  peSua  "J 

-July       ,1980        ! 
m     DORA     STEiNER        PESKOMjJ 
Korlibod  ^—^ 

_  PESKA 

PE&V* 

PESKA 


36 


uLS^HOSMTS t>      ARnNT  £■    A'.U;   Sof-Hlu   (.HOSHiS)   Kl£i,\l  10 

CHILDrsci>     OF      rgMky  _  AjsLa  i  T'r>r\V5S\{\    K0f;;vlr;g.     tr.-*sr  Mft/yor  :'affsr) 
SON    OS-     H5NRY   ANX»    PRGDHRlKA  (KL-ElKi)   K0UM6R   Uc&ud ww/Rewra 


pjm>  Witty     K6HNER 
Ma/,  I844>- 
S*nyi«hY 
m-l     1-H6RESIA 
C.ISS2-  |s»!-^ 

St-UUiS.)  Mo- 


S     ! 


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■ADEU*    KOHNER 
Stt-u?.s,Mo. 

: 

i  Jan  iS  >fc  - 
st.l«isiM». 

m.Z  Fft£DER!'/.A(RfCV(A)KL6M  L,  J 

Ocf.l€8i-  I   j  j  jIMOW   KOKNES. 

;,_■.,„ 

i  UtoSEPK  Kon   (  i 
Dec-  ;SS4- 

i  j    Mar-igST- 
j     Si*-  Louis's  No. 

.vf.ieySilit)' 


or.  iw:  ,r 


.KoRN  I 


Th«     IiWi:-.    ok  litis  pajfc    is     KCd'/ip  'wit.    '-    .w  topefc/l    of 
-eeli/ii-e.    add.Ve.icsi    data  rrtiw  Hij   ftsi*ii!-j     i    I       rttwr  fcm're. 


Cc«  n  i«   ■  »n  '  ■■ 


(P^JOUVS     ASRAMSOM 
Oct.  I8'i3- 

HamljoiS^errnonv    SfLoufe.tfo 
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dan-ISW- 

St.l*i)i»,rlo.  S+.Uus.Mo- 


p  ALVIN    ABRAMSON 
Oct-  im- 

■Sfr-  Uoi'S,  Mo 

■  HERBERT    ABRAMSOM 
Nov-  ISU- 

St.  louiSjMo. 
-SiDMEY    ABRAMSOM 
Sh  Louis,  Mo. 
—  EtMER  D.  ABRAmW 
St- Louis  i  Mo 


I—  HAROLD     ABRAMSON 
W-7  - 


it'loUii.Mn 


■Sf -loyis,  Mo 


Sf.Coyi'i.rtd 


ABRAHAM 


.  ABRAMSDM 


.  ABKAV' 


CHILDREN     OP    MR.    AMD     MRS-    ZEPlM 

<LEtM     J 


rfQw  «i.  PAULIM6      K 

W  OB 

Bessie    kujim 


—  w.  Sylvia  zeviM 


<@: 


—  m.  ALMA    2EPIM 
St.UuT«,,Mo- 

DAUGHTER     OF    RACHEL     KLEIN 

MAURICE    FfiANiK 

-  rtzo-zi 

ST.teoiSiMo 
ffl-  RACHEL     KLEIN 
.1877-1480-  ;<U& 
■ir-Uui.Mo.   s+.LooJcfb 


Tfee  in^rmdiov,  cntUispage  is  incomplete- -Ta*>  hepe-ivl  of  receiv.Viy  atMrfowal  dafa  mlie  nftrr^trtvr 


38 


TtiE_L6y,0R  LEV/1,    FAMILY     OF    FALKEMAO  AMD  E6ER 


1.0*'    3R    LEVI 


t  .  i834-c.  (8S8 
«•>■  SCPHlS  Ltfll  OR    LEVI 


_  L6\l  OR  L£UI 


JACOB    SPleGI. 

1332  -J<m  7,(894 
ROSA    LoV  OR  UVI 
Apr.  (,,l?<fS- July  18,1897 
Fu'Kenau  M>2i*i  lei-KgMY  USA 


LSkiii0rtb,|3ohew,«     NfiuYork.WiKA 
m 


OTHER    AMSCeSTPgg 

*Onjfel"  and  ''^"fa"  jffjw    onw  t/i'stteci  with  Am<x  Adler.    TJie  Kohn   family 
lived  in  Siiweiss^  Bohemia-  They  ha,,  two  davghiers   -one  urn  named 
KarOhne  -  owe!  tLy    moved    'fo  Sdlzfcura.  Aus+ri^. 

Fsmlfy    Soetiw    was,  also  re  fated  tst^e  Alters   or   Lin  ttevi)  Family. 
Family    Boebm  livtd   \fl  MieSi    where    "ftey  owned  a  dry  goods  sfore- 
their  daughter  -  -ffrst  rawie   umKmouVi  -  warried    a   Mr-  RercU.  tut" 
notiiin^    rtiors    is    Kywum    except  "tWf"    tfi«y    perished  in  AwschMtz 
Or    Dwresienstadi   conceiHrertion  Camp. 


IS 


CHILDREN     Of    JOSEF      AND   SO?HI£    ADL£R 


JOSEF     AftLGR      ? 
e.  l8M~cl8S8 

(pS>~  WSQPHIE   LEV/! 


.H6UER 


y 


vIumelm   rieae 

m  AWWA   APLER 
i8S*-H36 


ADiJi-F     FISCHER 
-  i9'3 
Kot-UbM 
.  m  THERESIA    ASX-Ef?  „.,, 

Rtb^lSSl-Avr.K,"}^ 


40 


Feb .  II.,  I«t1- Apr.  14,  f30 

TtmM«r,Hwtt    6w>K.|.fr>,NY<JS» 

-  i»  HtRHiNE    A&t£ft 

Ocw-lS.UTl-.Jon.il.IlM 
A'»V,,6<h<ffli«  Bojsi'd«,l'(<)SA 

RICHARD    PFEFFER 

-  «  FfUJNit  Hett-ER 
-  Holocaust 


p 


;«■ 


Mi. 


i.v.ei 


n) 


1 81  o  c«  9]  -  H«t««»i.it  li" 
RoSA   Ktui^R^^,^ 
H!«j,c«at  Mi«;.,atcM. 

ERNST    HEELER 
)8,;>«<>S     -HolocooST 

Hita.Cuclt. 
nv/WMIE  "BERTtC   BtWBAUtf 

IBIS  CR'il  -Mol«oiA+. 

ALFR6C    HAHN  ,    „__ 
Jul,  3.lS1i-C=1    lt,flS7 

Br«Klt<i,M(i)SA 

.  m  MARIE    HEt-CER 

C*c  S.iW-Mai-.  n.llli 

MU»S,U£ol    Aimxi^NV  USA 


etm-hikCd  Fischer 

Jcip  In,  IJIJi'J  -  Hdoamsr 

*H   R.klaU.GUKM 


All  (VhlaO  **t&&J 

APOl.F     SOSSNER 
NM-2.1l88fc-A|'>-.'<«1l'M>'». 

-m  HEt£M6    FlScWfcR 
JclLS.IiWS-JaM  24,1% 
Hit  Witao 

-JULIE    FISCHER 

c .  1817   -  HelouM/Sf 

-JftSE-F   FISCHER 

ix^i "  I6!' 

-ROSA    FISCHER 

iMfa-  J«n.n,^30 
All  PiWo„ 

RiJOOlF   BARBIER 
181=)  -CJ-VJ        .    „   . 
SM  tc)  NaiK-Jkiciutf 

_n,.FAUlr.    FtiCHEl? 
,£*8-Jo«.  7,l937, 


@ 


lorl&aJ 


EMKA 
l<|00-  Jan 


FISCHER      \rf-7?, 

Jon.  It,  1177     nt3' 
lime  I  J 


rHllDR''-»    Op     W1LHELH    AMD    t  AWh    HEU.ER 


Richard  PrepreR 

(600-   HclocauSt 
(?ST  -  Holocoosf 


HtlENE    HELLCR 
l8<j0<s^-  Holocaust 

ROSA    HELLER.  

-ttor.'hWI 


I893«»9S  -Mocotfrt 

m  ArtMiE  ''BEPTet."6vlXB/MJM 

ALFRED  (Abraham)  HAHN 
JdW  i,IS1i-Oc-t.lt,,l%-? 

BrooW.f*,!*'*  USA 

«i  HARlS  (Fa«sete)  H£U£R 
Ott.S.ltW-  rtftr  11.1^74 
Kinase*.     Bi-ou'in.Hf  USA  ^ 


ELSi£  j 


HA*  Pf  £FFEP- 
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I w    PEOTHA    PF6-FFEI?     | 

J»n.l4-tfH-  J 


WALTER    HEUER  | 

1913-  !974««7S    L 
hi  .  B6S0HA  J 

■KURT         HELLER 


1 93S«a3^-Holocoor 


r—  OR    EoudARD   BRICK 
-Sao-    ,i£17S 

_i,,RCSA  WAHN 

-H6RTA     HfXHN 

—  WILLI  E     HA  UN 

BR    ARiWR    Hfiie&Eft-] 
m.AhJWSUESE    HAHK 


CALViN    ROTHMM 
m  J  6  AN    HAHN 


}- 


@ 


-  RICWAiRD   5CH\A)ART2 
Oct.  i,iq<W- 
EurmstiKtf- 

*  m.VARS>L.<h'A   NjOVAK 


-m  HS^Mg     HCUtR 


The    fart^   of     Lwp^   Hoenig  a«d    Heroine    AdUc 
of  A««a  Hettw.   appears  on.  pages    75anc!  26- 


-CMARlES    W.RIB.ER 
"]     (Stttris.  Nf  l/SA 
LcHRlS-fOPHER    KRIESER 
Queens,  NV  USA 
J,^SOM     ROTHMAM 

OueetiS,  *H  "SA 
AMY     RoTHMAIvl 

Qu^MS.NiY  USA 

Hoemg  ,  daughter 


41 


CHILDREN     OF      ADOLF     AND    THESESIA    (ADiefi)    FISCHER 


e»lL   KREISSt, 
Ot  HERMlNt    FISHER 
U83-Cec,l<)i7 


ANNA  KAO^vjk 

j— R 'CHARD    KR&SSl 

j      &r.  l7,ll0Z-llolc«05T 

'     <k  JUANCISKA    DuKRScHM'DT 


.>» 


i-EOPlSLD  WEISS 

Auj.  I.VHOO- Jtfiy  |l.ll7fc 

"I         i-TftERESA  SJS3MER 

I     "ay  It,  wii- 


ADolF   SUSSMEft 

Nov.  l^Sgfc- Apr.lt>,  I W 

mttELCNE  FtScMER 

•M^ISes-J^.^ilfalj  AMTOtJ      UMSElt 

■  marie  so&SMeR, 


LJ 


<~  r>'. 


1 


H6(.eMe  uhger 
act-  s,  i<m- 


ANTOKJ    ONG&R. 
Noil    5,1953- 


£MMA    FI5CMER  — 

ifOO-j0„,  ((0,1977 

Israel 


0SKA.R  URi    V.'lEK*e.ft  T 

JJnel*,  lfil-0„„e  i?,rt(,<J    ! 

■*   HERMA      FIScHeR  L 

Dec. 30  i^22-  ( 


2.FIRAH  URI 
Feb  10,1*47- 


Adoi{  a*4    TWesia    Frsdier's     o1W   children,    listed   on  page  40, 
did  not  hove  any    children. 


I  •§  *..;;* 


Anna     KadoraveK    kre.ssl    h 
ti^es      .n    Toronto,   C«>- ada  , 


Vial  r- .sister,    Mariar'i'ie    ScWu)af2    (.bo<n  Dec.l,|0|2), iu'ko 
tier  brotvier-in-  low,  Josef    Kfvissl. 


42 


CHILDREN     Of     RiCRARD    AMD   FRANClSKA     PORRSCHMIPT     KRE&SL 


(^♦Richard  kreissl 

0c*.n,>l0l-  lUlocaost 
Ait  R<klav,c»cttt. 
ftl.  FRAWCISKA    QlKKSCrlMtBT 
Mar.  f,l')04-feb-,2,l(JSS 
SalC.chcjluVt 


BRIAM     BOOTH 

Mor.  JW.MJ17- 
rhiw  Je«  ,0«  uW'rt  t»<r 

m  GERTRUDE  KREISSL 

Mar.  turn- 

AKAfol.l<w,(i«-l, 
»IH1 


-  JOSCF   KR6ISSL 
Har.  23.1^2^- 
AH  SaMav,Cit<.U 
m  U)EN£>\'   HALL 
Fefa.rt.H.IS- 
AWifltLiutn/tknWK. 
<*>fiti  "(,I1S(/ 


rL..,- 


PRANY    FOSTER. 
Am    23,1120- 

«Mlro(fori*,rl«Ml'rjf«,e«5 

■  m  marie   kreissl 

J(Jl,6  i.rt^o- 
Aft  fbtflaVi'ucli. 
«A/««.23il1SB 


-FRAWK.    KR.EISSL      I 


Mor.7,l13il-     , 

m.JEAN    HOWARD 

Ja.i  10,\<M1- 
S#\k*rA ,  Uha.il.irt,  E*g  ■ 
<of,h  2I.HS1 


r Richard  booth 

J,;iy  I7,i"?4<)- 


-JAMET     BOOTH 

ftk  <t,  nsi- 

-H&L6M    fSOOTH 
Feb   28,I1!>&- 

■SrlAhlE     KREKSL 
June   2feirtS7- 

fEReMce    Robb 
WW48  - 
.  o,   FRArjeeS  KR&lSSL 
Sept.  s, HS8- 

<*> July  at.,1180 

-KEViNi'     KRCISSL 
May  2fc-,il7l- 


-  MICHAEL     FOSTER 
May  2,rtSU- 


-S7TSV6W    I' OSIER 
Moo  2S,i%t- 


—  MARK   kreissl 

Jon  2,i%3- 


-DrWD    ROfcEP.TS 
Mar.  2*  1 1^1- 


.  CAROL      ROBERTS 
nor  i?,  ;%2- 


ROMALD     RflflF.RTS  J 
July  \2,\1Zt~ 

MiU^CUrtUlrt.Ert).  L 

•m  PAULA  KaeisSL  J 

Scpr.M.1131!--  J 

M-t  AsliltMiCieiJL,  .       j 

<k>  Hoj   i(»,rtS7  J 

IVar.cis.Wa   AtrrKhfliidt     Kw««l      WM   H.«    d«*rWer    of     X«ef   &r«Ui*M.t   CI»rr,i«flJ5fc) 
and    Marie   Togel .    Franc  isKa    had    +«Jo    bratU.rs;,    Josef   *n&    Frwr.2    J>)iyscUr»i.dt. 


^3 


fcb.  23,1832- vW  7,  tgcuj- 
«  R«A   Lotf  OR  LEVI 


Apr.  hjIMS-Joly  IS,  (8?  7 
FalKenuy  Mew  YcrKiM  WA 


0T7CA.6ESS 
Oct-  rKM- 
Rutslo 

-*.  PAULA  SpiE&L 
Feb.  18  4,8- 


marcs  l    la  ue me  mt 

Se<*r.  11,1881-  Oct.  IS/m 

fiance.       i«s  A.mel.-s  <il 

«  I  map.ie  uwse  icy'^njjR 

rwi   masie  °k'ss 


Wow/srk      Us  Cycles 
i  ARDI£-    SlEOERMANN 


.  STELLA    GCSS 

c/ITfO  -  No  J  vns 


-€E 


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Ap,.  it,  IS73-  Jutre.3,r?37 


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Dec.l,  1 874 -Sept-.  ¥,i9S"i 

-HfLDA   Spie&L 
Apr-,  n.lilb-  ('?,.0 

Eger,  8ohe*i,e.     n-w  fai-tOM? 


f" 


OLIVER     BtfELL 

-Sept.      ,I%S 
Philadelphia,  fa.  USA, 
ftt-CLARfl     SPIE-5L    ' 
Pec.30,ir/«.-Mciy  r?.!^*,1 
E$er,  fjoUmm     Phi'l<:.<ielr'liifl,Pr  .WA 


j-AMWA    SPIEGL 

n.  ,',  I  %%o  -  Sept.  S,  H08 
£(jer.  $a)M»~itt    Niiu  Y»fK  ,WY  USA 

-BERTHA     SttESL 

-Sept.  2^i(^57 
eS«<".  BoiWa     Neu)  York,  f-iY  USA 

Marti*/    Morris 
Feb.27,|g«,-  Oc+-  IfiWtS 
Lai^ow,  EN*      Wew  Yort  i«Y u» 
-m. MARIE   "FLOSSY"  SPIES L 
May  20,1887 -Nov.  7,  iri  U, 
cjer,  Bobtn,;a     Mt„i  ^.k,  :y  vst\ 
»  Fcb.27,»9iO 

S0iG<r.L    (<«iawt*  I 

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SP|£<&I_        (Sci) 

«  -IS 


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m  Bom  Morris       /J] 

Dec.  8,  It  10-  >l|/ 

New  IWUiWi 

c^Sept.^.l^Ai  i 

Arthur  furst^ 

J.;»,e2£,l9lS-  

■  Hi   HELEN   MCRReP-—^-' 
Apr.3,1114- 
NetiiYorK.ur     i 
-"Sfpt.s.KHi    I 


en 


ttflnl 


THE   CHiLPRENi     Of   JACOB    AMD    foSA   iLov/LEVl)  SPIE6L    U) 


L 


ELSIE    SPItTGL 

Mar.  IS,  1883- July  23,1135 


■SON      OF     MARCEL       LALLE  ME  N'T 

Uii"s  -first  uit'fe  aied    iV>  cliiltibirHi.  The  SBn  was   reavee!  bw    Harcel 
LallemettT  andi   his  second    wife,  Maria    Gess    Lallemefd.) 


(>  4*V:  M  A  ^C£L      L  ALL  £  M6  MT 

— "    SepT    ZI.I38I  -Off  iS{rt7* 

FreiKii         Las  PitM^pt 

ffl.t    MASiS   '. 0UI5t  ScOniTTTcR 

-Mew,  <!)!«■? 

FtV(f»t6 

fit.  2.  MARK  6£36 

Aug.*.  iS<)3~Fels.  MWl 


-ROfiSRT     LALLeMCMT 
May  9,1^17- 

PrwBte 

tn    6K6TA    WOLF 

«pr.  11,1933- 

Cttfagejll. 

*Ju«.3o,i«t£3 


TBRiAM   D.LAUEMEtfT 
Doc  7,flS3- 

UsAngtleS 

-TERRX    5.  LAU6MENT 
Feb   2l,l<?Sfe- 


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HS 


INDEX 


NOTES: 


Wherever  possible,  married  women  are  listed  by  their 

maiden  names. 

Where  more  than  one  person  with  the  same  name  is  listed, 

one  of  the  following  identification  codes  is  used: 

w/-  wife  of  h/=  husband  of  s/=  son  of 

d/=  daughter  of 

Family  names  spelled  with  3  are  listed  as  if  spelled  oe. 


Abelos,  Adolf:  18 
Abramson,  Alvin:  38 
Abramson,  Elmer  D.:  38 
A^-i-qmson,  Harold:  38 
Abramson,  Herbert:  38 
Abramson,  Julius:  1.1,19,38 
Abramson,  Sidney:  38 
Adler,  Anna:  2,3.9,40,41 
Adler,  Hermine:  8,9,10,18,25, 

26,40,41 
Adler,  Josef:  2,9,39,40 
Adler,  Theresla:  2,3.8,40,42 
Adwell,  Jane  Ruth:  22 
Altmann,  Hermann:  35 
Altmann,  Leo:  35 
Altmann,  Max;  35 
Arnold,  Henry:  20 
Aschner,  Alberto:  16,28 
Aschner,  Anna-Maria:  29 
Aschner,  Bibl:  29 
Aschner,  Dr.  Bernard:  14,15,28 
Aschner,  Carl  (Carlos),s/Samuel 

Aschner :  16,29 
Aschner,  Carlos,s/Ulrich 

Aschner:  28 
Aschner,  Carolina:  29 
Aschner,  Dr.  Elena:  16,28 
Aschner,  Elizabeth:  1,15,28 
Aschner,  Bull:  15.28 
Aschner,  Erika:  29 
Aschner,  Eva   25,28 
Aschner,  Pelix,  s/Samuel:  28 
Aschner,  Felix,  s/Ulrich 

Aschner:  15,16,28 
Aschner,  Gertrude:  15,28 
Aschner,  Hannelore:  29 
Aschner,  Joseph:  1,15,16,28 
Aschner,  Juan  Pablo:  29 
Aschner,  Katherine:  15.28 
i  inner,  I.othar:  29 
Aschner,  Maria  Christina:  16,28 
Aschner,  Dr.  Pablo:  16,28,29 
Aschner,  Patricia:  29 
Aschner,  Peter:  28 
Aschner,  Richard:  15,28 
Anchor,  Samuel:  14,15,18,28, 


Aschner,  Thomas:  16,29 
Aschner,  Trude:  16,28 
Aschner,  Ulrich:  16,28 

Barbier,  Rudolf:  40 
Barrow,  Mary  Veasey:  20 
Barszcz,  Lucas  Andrew:  26 
Barszcz,  April  Jene:  26 
Barszcz,  Thomas:  26 
Beer,  Anna:  18,31,33 
Beer,  Lydia:  14,31,33 
Bickerstaff,  Alan:  22 
Bickerstaff,  Holli  Michelle:  22 
Bledermann,  Ardie:  44,45 
Biedermann,  Car'olyn:  45 
Blaustern,  Alina  (Carla):  18 
Blaustern,  Col.  Judge:  16,30 
Blaustern,  Emma:  18 
Blaustern,  Fannie:  18 
Blaustern ,  Mr .  &  Mrs . :  2 , 10 , 1 4 , 

18 
Blaustern,  Paula;  18,28,29 
Blaustern.  Rosa:  18,30 
Boehrn,  Mr.  &  Mrs. ;  39 
Booth,  Brian:  43 
Booth,  Helen:  43 
Booth,  Janet:  43 
Booth,  Richard:  43 
Bradberry,  George  Lee:  21,22 
Erlck,  Adeline:  25 
Brick,  Dr.  Edward:  4l 
Brick,  Elsie:  41 
Brick,  Johann:  41 
Buchenauer,  Helga:  15,28 
Budlovsky,  Anna:  31 
Budlovsky ,  Daniel :  32 
Budlovsky,  David:  32 
Budlovsky,  Gustav:  31 
Budlovsky,  Dr.  Joseph:  14,31,32 
Budlovsky,  Karl:  i, 14,31,32 
Budlovsky,  Margaret:  14,32 
Budlovsky,  Michael:  14,32 
Budlovsky,  Sacha  Alexander:  14, 

3?  •  , 

Budlovsky,  Vera:  14,32 
Buell,  Oliver:  44 
Euffaloe,  Lillie  Mae:  12,18,20,22 


■ 


46 


IM5EX 


Busch  (Bush),  Isidor;     5 
Puxhaum,  Annie  "Bsrtel;' :     40,41 

Ce Ji,  Anthony:  25 

Call,  Louise:  25 

Call,  Peter:  25 

Call,  Pietro:  25 

■son,  Carolyn  Earlene:  22 
Howard  Carl:  21,22 
Howard  Carl  Jr. :  22 
Howard  Carl  III:  22 
Kathrin  Irene;  22 


irson 
Carson 

Carson 

n 


22 


32 

32 


i>i  ,'< rd,  SI  e        -  ie; 

DaiueX     Alexander;     45 
DsMel ,  Sano:     45 
a\  Li     iV. :     2J 
'  -emovsek,  Honsa : 
D«rnoirsek.   Itobert 

..  ihmid  .     Franc  i.ska: 
chm!  L1  .    rans .     43 
.  sc  imidi  ,  ■  :  -■  f  •     43 
Purrschmidt ,   Josef,    s/Josef 
Durrschmldt:     4: 

Eckstein,  Emi'j  :      ,5 
Enste.iv!.   Irma:       5 

r  ,  ,:  rthold:     44,45 
.:  -.  g,  Llr^e:     4;, 


42,43 


]     r! 

Henry: 

10   i]  ,25 

de    , 

Bophie: 

! 

;'!'  n  Lche 

.,  Lillie:     15,28 

Peue  i    bein ,  Bduard :     Q 

Feu  '.rst< 

:in.   Rabbi  Solomon:     9 

'- 

Adolf : 

8,40,42 

■ 

Edmund 

40 

:  ■  ■■■  :r 

Eua: 

40,42 

Fj  3cher 

Gretl : 

l4    i 

;i  ■■■  he  ■ 

Helena 

40,42    - 

S'lecher 

Henna: 

i,42 

■    ii  ■"- 

Hermi  n 

:     3,4C  42 

?  iCher 

40 

i 

Ju]  ie: 

m0 

i    ii-: 

4C 

ii 

i:0 

■ 

Micha  ■  ■ 

43 

.   r  , 

Steven: 

b     nk,   - 

irf.i 

i! 

Pr  >nk,  Selma  P. 

1,33 

Pr?nkl, 

L.A.:     6 

Pre  ilich,  Alexanc 

Pronlich,   Ant  u 

'8,29 

Prohlich,  Chrlstoph:  29 
Prohlich,  Cornelia:  29 
Prohlich,  Lisl:  28,29 
Prohlich,  Miguel:  16,28,29 
Prohlich,  Miki:   28,29 
Prohlich,  Monika:  28 
Prohlich,  Stefan,  h/'lrude 

Aschner:  16,28 
Prohlich,  Stefan,  s/Anton 

Prohlich:  29 
Prohlich,  Ihomas:  29 
Proelich,  Irina:  24 
Purst,  Arthur:"  34,44,45 
Purst,  Nancy:  45 

Gallagher,  Patrick:  22 
Gangloff,  Andrew:  2b 
Gangloff,  Andrew  "Chip",  s/ 

Andrew  Gangloff:  26 

tngl  I  '  Edward:  26 

ii  Ann:  26 
Gangloff  Lisa:  26 
Gam   .  Mi,  h  Le:  28 
Gess,  Marie:  13,44,45 
Gess,  Otto  A.:  13,44 
Gee   St  La:  44,45 
Glasej   Fred  (Prl1  :):  1,8,35 
Gla&i  c,   Karl:  8,35 
Glaser,  Kurt:  (i 
Glasi  •■■   ?au]  (Hill):  1,35 
Glas<  r,  itep]  nie:  35 
Glass,  Ellen:  32 
Gcldenstehi,  Sw.j:     i,  23 
Goldstein,  Lillian  Charlotte: 

11,25 
Graz,  Bertha:  It, 18,33 
Greve,  Ing  :  14,32 
Grunbut,  Friedl:  33 
Grunlriut,  Klara:  18,36 
Guti  psi  '•>    Sandra  Alexandra: 

31,32 

:  a  .  Rita:  22 
Hahn,  Anneliese:  41 
Hahn,  Alfri  -:'  9, 40, &?. 
Hahn,  Ke:  fca:  4] 
Hahn,  Jean:  ;' 
Hahn,  Ro: : 
Hahn,  Mi  Llie 
Hajak,  Adele:  15 

I    1  bara:  14,33,34 
Hall,  Wendy:  4-, 
Hanson,  Daniel  Joseph:  23 
Haver,  Elizabeth  J.ynn:     20 


47 


INDEX 


Hayes,  Eugene  Ward:  20 

Hayes,  J.W.:  20 

Hayes,  Marshall  Tobey:  20 

Hecht,  Michael:  23 

Heidler,  Irene:  36 

Heller,  Ernst:  40,*ll 

Heller,  Fannie:  40, 4l 

Heller,  Helene,  dA'alter 
Heller:  Hi 

Heller,  Helene,  d/Wilhelm 
Heller:  4  0,4 1 

Heller,  Hermine:  18,27 

Heller,  Kurt:  ill 

Heller,  Marie:  9,40,41 

Heller,  Rosa:  9,40,41 

Heller,  Walter:  ill 

Heller,  Wilhelm:  2, 3, 9, '10, ill 

Herlinger,  Erich:  23 

T-'erlinger,  Otto:  23 

Herman,  Susan:  14,31,32 

Hermann,  Adolf  (dry  goods):  10 

Hermann,  Karl:  35 

Herzlg,  Ernest:  33 

Herzig,  Hanna:  33 

Hill,  Paul  (Glaser):  1,35 

liirsch,  Billa:     10,25 

Honig,  Aaron  Moses:  5,6 

Honig,  Adam  Albert:  6 

Hoenig,  Adele:  9,18,27 

Hoenig,  Adolph:  10,11,25 

Honig,  Anna:  31 

Honig,  Ariel:  3,18,36 

Honig,  Bernhard:  2,3,9,10,11, 
12,18 

Honig,  Bertha,  'd/Bemhard 
Honig:  9,10,18,23 

Hoenig,  Bertha,  d/Morris  Fred- 
erick Hoenig:  20 

Hoenig,  Bruce  Albert:  11,25 

Hoenig,  Daniel  Jason:  25 

Hoenig,  David  Andrew:  25 

Hoenig,  Elizabeth  "I.iesel": 
14,32 

Honig,  Elsa,  d/Ariel  Honig: 
14,36 

Hoenig,  Elsa,  d/Joshua  Honig: 
32 

Hoenig,  Elsie  Ann:  25 

Honig,  Emil:  27 

Hoenig,  Emma:  1,9,10,11,25 

Honig,  Enoch:  5 

Hoenig,  Ernest:  i ,14,31 

Hoenig,  Frances:  21 

Honig,  Frieda,  d/Joshua  Honig: 

4,31 


Hoenig,  Frieda,  d/Leopold 

Hoenig:  1,10,25 
Honig,  Friedrich  "Fritz":  27 
Hoenig,  Gail  Sharon:  i,10, 

25 
Hoenig,  George:  21 
Hoenig,  Gerda  Ann:  1,10,11, 

26 
Hoenig,  Gordon:  21 
Hoenig,  Gretchen  Hermine:  25 
Honig,  Gretl:  11,25 
Hoenig,  Gustav:  1,10,11,25 
Honig,  Keihrlch:  27 
Hoenig,  Helen,  w/Oskar  Hoenig; 

.12,31 
Honig,  Helen,  w/Albert  Mueller; 

14,18,35 
Hoenig,  Helene  Michelle:  i, 

10,25 
Hoenig,  Henry:  20 
Honig,  Herbert:  36 
Honig,  Dr.  Herman:  14,36 
Hoenig,  Holly  Arm:   25 
Hoenig,  Ida  Sophie:  1,10.11, 

Honig,  Use:  36 

Honig,  Irma:  31 

Honig,  Israel:  5 

Honig,  Johanna  "Jenny",  d/ 

Ariel  Honig:  36 
Hoenig,  Johanna,  d/Bernhard 

Honig:  9,12.18 
Hoenig,  Rev.  John  David:  I, 

11,25 
Honig,  Josef  (died  1900):  2, 

3,8.10,18 
Honig,  Josef,  s/Ariel  Honig: 

36 
Hoenig,  Joseph,  s/Leopold 

Hoenig:  1,10,11,12,14,25 
Hoenig,  Josephine  (Sonja): 

i,27 
Honig,  Joshua:  8,14,18,31, 

32,33 
Hoenig,  Dr.  Julius:  1,14,32 
Honig,  Dr.  Leo:  14,31 
Honig,  Leopold,  s/Ariel 

Honig:  36 
Hoenig,  Leopold,  s/Bernhard 

Honig:  8,9,10,18,25,26,40,41 
Hbnig,  Leopold  (Loew),  s/ 

Enoch  Honig:.  5,6 
Hoenig,  Leopold  (Leo),  s/ 

,  eph  Hoenig:  cover, 10,25 
Hoenig,  Lillie  Mae:  21,22 


48 


INDEX 


feg,  r^ebel  (Leib,  Loew): 
Honig,  Marianne:  6 
Honig,  Marie:  27 
Honig,  Maximillian:  <=; 
Honig,  Michael:  9,]  8^27 
Hoenig,  Michael  Lee:  11  25 
Honig,  Minna:  27 
Hoenig,  Mitzi  Sue:  12,22 
Hoenig,  Morris:   .12,21  22 
Hoenig,  Morris  Frederick'  Q 
12,18,20 


31 
12,14,31 
1,14,36 


12,22 

31 


2,8, 


12,22 


Hoenig,  C0ga: 
Hoenig,  Oskar 
Hoenig,  Otto: 
Honig,  Paul:  32 
Hoenig,  Peter:  14,32 
Honig,  Poldi:  i,27 
Honig,  Richard:  '35 
Hoenig,  Ronald  Morris: 
Hoenig,  Rosa  (Rosel): 
Honig,  Rudi:  27 
Honig,  Simon:  2,10,18 
Hoenig,  Sophia  (Soohie) 

10,11,12,19,37.38 
Hoenig,  Sylvia:  14,31 
Honig,  Tea:  36 
Honig,  Theodor;  14,31 
Hoenig,  Thomas  William: 
Honig,  Veronika:  9,18 
hoenig,  Victoria  Lynn:  22 
Honig,  Wilhelmina:  32 
Honig,  Zdenka:  32 
Von  Honigsterg,  Soliman:  6 
Holland,  W.E.  (Dallas  Mayor) 

12  " 

Holzner,  Edith:  33,34 
Holzner,  Emil:  33 
■ ' .  ler,  Erna:  33 
Holzner,  Franz:  33 
Holzner,  Friedl:  33 
holzner,  Fritz:  33^34 
Holzner,  Ignaz:  .14,31,33 
'olzner,  Lydia,  d/Emil 

Holzner:  33 
Holzner,  lydia,  d/Franz 

Holzner:  33 
rloliner,  Martha:  33 
Holzner,  Max:  33 

Dlzn-jr,  "Jcholas:  34 
Holzner,  Otto:  33 
Holzner,  Robert:  33 
Holzner,  Steven:  3'j 
Holzner,  '"era,  o/Emil 
Hcj.^ner:  33 


Holzner.  Vera,  d/Fritz 

Holzner:  33  34 
Holzner,  Walter:  33 
Howard,  Jean:  43 
Hradetchny,  Hildegarde:  23 

Jacewicz,  Joann:  32 
Jacewicz,  John:  32 
Jacewicz,  Joseph:  32 
Jacewicz,  Linda:  32 
Jacewicz,  Mary  Ann:  32 
Jilek,  Vladimir:  33 
Johannsen,  Eva:  34 
Johannsen,  Mr.;  33,34 
Jones,  George:  20" 

Kaderavek,  Anna:  42 

Kardish,  Richard:  14,32 

Klein,  Arant  B.:  11 .12  1Q 

37,38  ^.^,13, 

Klein,  Benjamin  Julius:  19 
Klein,  Bertha:  11,19,38 
Klein,  Bessie:  19,38 
Klein,  Emanual:  19^ 
Klein,  Fredericka  (Ricka) : 

11,12,19,37 
Klein,  Julius  Benjamin:  19 
Klein,  Lee  Ludwig:  19 
Klein,  Ludwig  Leo:  19 
Klein,  Nathan:  19 
Klein,  Pauline:  19,38 
Klein,  Rachel:  19,38 
Koenig,  Johanna:  28 

Kohn,  Karoline:  39 

Kohn,  Mr,:  39 

Kohner,  Aaron:  37 

Kohner,  Adella:  37 

Kohner,  Ann:  37 

Kohner,  Clara:  37 

Kohner ,  Flora : 

Kohner,  Henry: 

Kohner,  Joseph: 

Kohner,  Louis: 

Kohner,  Simon: 

Kohner,  ilieresia: 

Koller,  Frana:      27 

I  n   s  I  ,  Bid.]  :  40,42 

Kreissl,  dances:  43 
Kreissl,  Frank:  43 
Kreissl,  Gertrude:  43 

Kre  ssl,  Josef,  s/Emil 
Kreissl:  i,42 

si,  Josef,  s/Richard 
Kreissl;  43 


37 

11,19,37 
37 
37 
37 

39,37 


49 


index 


Kreissl,  Kevin:  43 
Kreissl,  Marie:  43 
Kreissl,  Mark:  43 
Kreissl,  Paula:  43 
Kreissl,  Richard:  ~42,43 
Kreissl,  Shane:  4 3 
Krieger,  Dr.  Arthur:  ill 
Krieger,  Charles:  ill 
Krieger,  Christopher:  ill 
Kurzweil,  Cantor:  9 

La  Blanc,  Catherine:  22 
La  Blanc,  Eddy:  22 
La  Blanc,  Kimberlin:  22 
Lallement,  Brian  D.:  45 
Lallement,  Marcel:  13,44,45 
Lallement,  Robert:  1,45 
Lallement,  Terry  S.:  45 
Laster,  Dr,  Andrew:  15,28 
Laster,  Geraldlne:  15,28 
Toaster,  Oliver:  28 
Laster,  Steven:  15,28 
Lederer,  Otto:  14,36 
Lisenbee,  Jeffrey:  29 
Lisenbee,  Larry:  28,29 
loebel,  Regina:  31 
Loewy,  Ernst  (Lowy):  33 
Loewy,  Wilhelm:  9,18 
Long,  Dorothy  Sue:  21,22 
Longwell,  Gerald  Richard:  21 
Longwell,  Paula  Cheree:  21 
Longwell,  Robin  Jeree:  21 
Lov  (Levi),  Rosa:  2,4,13,39, 

44,45 
Lov  (Levi),  Sophie:  2,9,39,40 
Lovett,  Doris  Carol:  i,  10,25 
Lowy,  David:  3^ 
Lowy,  Ernst  (Loewy):  33 
Lowy,  Otto:  i, 14,33,34 
Lustig,  w/Slmon  Weiss:  1.8,23 

Mack,  Violet:  25 
McCue,  Mary  Jane:  28 
McLendon,  Ira  N. :  20 
Meyer,  Anna:  32 
Meyer,  Franz:  32 
Meyer,  Joseph:  32 
Miller,  Mr.:  23 
Miller,  Ruth:  23 
I^dnor,  Wanda:  22 
Montoya,  Carmen:  16,28 
Morris,  Edna:  1,13.44,45 
Morris,  Helen:  14,44,45 
Morris,  Martin:  14,44 
Moser,  David:  8 


Moser,  Ludwig:  8 
niell         '  Lb>  ft:  18,35 
Mueller,  .Anna:  35 
Mueller,  Emma:  35 
Mueller,  Franz:  35 
Mueller,  Helen:  35 
Mue'Uer,  Rora:  35 
teller,  Sophie:  "35 
Mullen,  Rev.  Lonnie  Reed:  21 
Mullen,  Tonnie  Reed  III:  21 
Mullen,  Lonnie  Reed  IV:  21 
Mullen,  Paula  Jean:  21 
Mullen,  Susann  Rachel:  21 

Nanni,  Michele:  27 
Nannl,  Thomas:  27 
Neer.,  Linda:  21 
Neubacl  fferl  ha:  24 
Neubach,  Milan:  24 
Neuberger,  Anna:  Q,l8 
Neuberpjtr,  Minna:  9,18 
Novak,  Varslcva:  41 

Opel,  Eric:  45 

Oppeaheime  r.  Rabid  J.H.:  8 

Ornstein,  Carolina:  23 

Or-nst-  Ln.  Hal  rlella:  23 

Ornsti  ir.j  Mr.:  23 

Osborr.e,  Clifford  Rolle:  20 

Osborne,  Clifford  Rolle  II:  20 

Osbora  i  '.'i  ]  I  Lam  Eugene:  20 

Osterreieher,  Hermine,  33 

Pallester,  Lilly:  15,16,28 
Peska,  Egon  (Pick,  Kurt):  36 
Peska,  VJasta:  36 
Pfeffer,  Bertha:  i,4l 
Pfeffer,  Karl   4] 
Pfeffer.  Max:  41 
Pfeffer,  Richard:  4os4l 
Pick,  Kurt  (Peska,  Egon):  36 
Pick,  Rudolf:  36 
Plaut,  Rabbi  Dr.  Rudolf:  8 
Pollak,  El? a;  36 
Pollai  Mr.:  r4 
Forges,  Rabbi  Dr.  Nathan:  8 
Preind]  ,  A3  fonro:  10,;  5 
Price.   1  1   Jayni 

Reich,  Mr.;  3° 

Rhona,  Col.  Jud^e  (Blaustern): 

Rhona,  George:  .16,30 

Rhona,  Hedwig  (Heidi):  16,30 

Richer,  Janet:  25 


50 


INDEX 


Ritter,  Karl:  4,31 
Hitter,  VJilhelm:  31 
Robb,  Terence:  43 
Roberts,  Carol:  43 
Roberts,  David:  43 
Roberts,  Ronald;  43 
Robitschek,  Ernst:  35 
Rogers,  Daniel;  32 
Rogers,  Katya:  32 
Rogers,  Raymond:  14,32 
Roselli,  Maria  Eugenia:  28,29 
Rosenfeid,  Mr. :  18,30 
Rosenfeld,  Mitzi:  16,30 
Rossi,  Vincent:  32 
Rossi,  Vincent,  s/Vincent 

Rossi:  32 
Rothman,  .Amy:  4i 
Rothman,  Calvin:  41 
Rothman,  Jason:  4l 
Rupp,  Rudolf:  25 

Sachs,  Enrika:  18,27 
Sagl,  Alfred:  ?4 
Samek,  Egon;  35 
Samek,  Ernst:  35 
Schlesinger,  Victor:  23 
Schmitter,  Marie  Louise:  44, 

45 
Schoen,  Hermann:  23 
Schoen,  Hildegarde;  i,23 
Schoen,  Morris:  23 
Schubach,  Jonathan:  45 
Schubach,  Kenneth:  45 
Schubach,  Michael:  45 
Schultz,  Alice;  32 
Schwartz,  Richard:  41 
Schwartz,  Wenzel:  41 
Schwarz,  Doris:  15-28,29 
Schwarz,  Dr.  Gerhart:  15,28 
Schwarz,  Marian:  15.28  _. 
Schwarz,  Marianne:  42 
Schwarz,  Richard:  15,28 
Sgall,  Rosa:  33 
Sondem,  Dr.  Frederick:  12 
Scndem,  Mrs.  Frederick:  12 
Speckman,  Patricia  Sue;  21 
Spiegl,  Anna:  44 
Spiegl,  Bertha:  13,44 
Spiegl,  Clara:  44 
Spiegl,  Elsie:  13,45 
Spiegl,  Emma:  13,44 
Spiegl,  Hilda:  13,44 
Spieg],  Jakob:  2,4,13,39.44, 

45 
Spiegl.  Louis:  ' 14,44 


Spiegl,  Marie  "Flossy":  14,44 
Spiegl,  Mathilde:  13,44 
Spiegl,  Paula:  13,44 
Sprusil,  Boris:  23,24 
Sprusil,  Franz:  23 
Sprusil,  Olga:  23,24 
Sprusil,  Robert:  24 
Sprusil,  Tamara:  24 
Stanley.  .Annette:  35 
Steiner,  Dora:  36 
Steiniger,  1%*.  &■  Mrs.:  2,39 
Sussner,  .Adolf:  40,42 
Sussner,  Marie.;  42 
Sussner,  Theresia:  1,42 

Thielernan,  °auline  Fjiima:  21 
Togel.  Marie:  43 
Treuer,  Fritz:  35 
Treuer,  Dr.  Herta:  35 
Treuer,  Lloi:  i, 14,35 

Unger,  Anton:  42 

Unger,  Anton,  s/Anton  Unger: 

42  ' 
Unger.  Helene:  i,42 
Uri,  itay:  42 
Uri,  Tally:  42 
Uri,  Zfirah:  42 

Verge iner,  Eva:  15,23 
Vergeiner,  Walter:  28 
Von  HonigsbeF!  .  Soliman:  6 

Wallis,  Leah:  2 
Waxman,  Mr.:  18.:  j 
Waxman,  Else;  27 
Weinrib,  Eleanor:  35 
Weinrib,  Janet:  35 
Weinrib,  Dr.  Leonard:  14,35 
Weiss,  Adolf:  23 
Weiss,  Anna:  23 
Weiss,  Bertha:  23 
Weiss,  Caroline,  w/Julius 

Weiss:  23 
Weiss ,  Carol  i  ne ,  vsM  >n '  <  ■ 

Weiss :  23 
Weiss,  Ethel:  23 
Weiss,  Gerhart:  1,23 
Weiss,  Gisela:  23 
Weiss,  Greta,  d/Heinricb 

Weiss :  23 
Weiss,  Greta,  d/Morrir, 

Weiss :  2 3 
Weiss,  Gustav:  24 
Weiss.  H&.ns:  23 


■  i 


INDEX 


s/Simon  Weiss 

23 

k2 


23 


23 
23 

;  2k 


■  '  Lss,  tieim  Lcli:  23 

Weiss,  Hermina  (Mina):  i,24 

Weiss,  Josef 3  s/Hans  w^isr 

23 
Weiss,  Josef 3 

?? 
Weiss j  Julius 
Weiss,  Kurt: 
Weiss,  Leopold: 
We  Irs  s  Marine:  2 
Weiss,  Marie.   2^ 

1 3  PfcnJ  ca : 
W  !  >s  ,  Morris  : 
Weir'-,  Rudolf: 
Weiss,  Simon: 
Weiss,  Therese 
Weiss,  WllheLm:  2^ 
Wnlte,  Buford  Fritz:  2:' 
White j  Kenneth  Dewayne: 
White,  Hoy  Howard:  22 
vilhitehouse  Florann:  26 
Whitehou  ■■-  Orville  ''Win" 

26 
Whitehouse,  William;  26 
Whiting,  Marj  Elizabeth: 
Wiener,  Morris: 
Wiener,  Noufi  .  ;!2 
Wiener,  Oskar  Uri 
Wiener,  Thomac;  23 
Wiener,  Vera;  23 
Winger 3  Marry:  25 
Witzel  Brothers  Soda  Co.:  12 
Wolf j  Greta:  45 
.  Neilj/ :  16,29 
n.  Crystal  Lynn:  SO 
Worden,  Demise  Wrsy  :  20 
Warden,  Eddie  Wray:  20 
Worden,  Eugene  Thomas:  20 


'■\: 


forden,  fSugene  Wray 

Woi'den,  Julia  M&rie 

Warden,  Kimbra  Lynn 

Vor"  T:>  Nfecy  Veazey 


20 
20 
20 


Ze)  in,   Alin  .:       ii 

pin,   Mr  ;     8 

...;...  Sylvis 
He  ;]         ru  Ai  Di .    Egr» 
■■■ ,  Alia  ;     15,28 


:-- 


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Dpnath,  Dr.  Qakar,  gohmj.fche  Dorfjuden.  1926,  Uarkus 
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Friedlaender,  Dr.  Markus  H*?  Die  Jjideij  in  Botamen.   1900. 
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Hrasky,  Dr,  Josef,   Sin  Be  U.  rag  zur.  Kenntnls  aer 
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Prague.    (An  account",  written  In  German,  of  Bohemian  Jews  '  . 
the  17th  century.) 

Zisgler,  Dr.   Xgnaz,  Dokumente  &ur  Geschiohte  per  Jud an 
In  Karlsbad  (3.791  -1869) ,   1915,  Rudolf  Bengst enoerg ,  Karlsbad . 
(A  full,  personal  account  of  -Jewish  life  in.  Karlsbad,  deaiij 

particularly  with  David  and  Lazar  Moser;  written  in  Germi 

Ziegler,  Prof.  Dr.   Ignaz,  Kin  VbJksbuch  i'Jber  Die  Propn*"1 
Israels ,    193.3,  Julius  Kittla*   Successors,  MfthrT-Oatrau. 
Czechoslovakia.    (Published  on  the  50th  anniversary  oi  Or, 
Zlegler's  appointment  as  Rabbi  of  Karlsbad.   Contains  a  bio- 
graphical sketch,   his  picture,   and  signature  written  in 
German r ) 


Various  pamphlets  on  Tlraifoara  (Temeavar)   and  Romanli 

supplied  by  the  Romanian  National  Tourist  Office,   573  This 
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Translations  from  German  to  English  provided  by  ray 
father,   Joseph  Hoeni#. 

personal  accounts  of  the   fareiiy  given  by  the  many 
relatives  listed  on  page  1. 

The  1830  and  1900  United  States  Censuses  wert   ale<    used  to 
obtain  information  about  the  Spiegl  Family  of  New  yon    znd  the 
Klein.   Kohner  and  Abramson  Families  cf  St.    Louie,  Missouri.   This 
research  was  completed  at  the  U.S.   National  Archives  branch  in 
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Center, 

Mimeographed   a'c   Parsons  JHS   168   Queans.,    Flushing  1 
11366,   USA.    net  printed  at   school   expense. 


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