Records of the Ender family in the All Galicia Database
There are currently 366 records for the surname Ender (including soundalike names and spelling variants) in the All Galicia Database (the AGD), Gesher Galicia's free searchable collection of genealogical and historical records from the former Austro-Hungarian province of Galicia, which is now eastern Poland and western Ukraine. Here is a sampling of some of the results you can find there:
- Peisech HINDES
death record from Stanisławów Jewish Deaths (1845-1863) - Mendel ZWILLING, grandchild of , , ,
Holocaust record from Lwów Ghetto Residents (1941-1943) - Fajge ANDER, grandchild of , , ,
Holocaust record from Lwów Ghetto Residents (1941-1943) - Fajge ANDER, grandchild of , , ,
Holocaust record from Lwów Ghetto Residents (1941-1943) - Josef ANDER, grandchild of , , ,
Holocaust record from Lwów Ghetto Residents (1941-1943) - Ryfka ANDER, grandchild of , , ,
Holocaust record from Lwów Ghetto Residents (1941-1943) - Selman ANDER, grandchild of , , ,
Holocaust record from Lwów Ghetto Residents (1941-1943) - Majer Leib PERLMAN r HINDES and
marriage record from Tarnopol Jewish Marriage Banns, Marriage Certificates (1916, 1920-1939) - Meier HINDES, son of Dawid HINDES and Chawe HINDES
birth record from Fond 424 Jewish Births (various towns), part 2 (1890-1911) - Abraham ENDE, grandchild of , , ,
Holocaust record from Lwów Ghetto Residents (1941-1943)
Search the All Galicia Database to see the full information available for all 366 records. The AGD is updated with new records every few months, so check back often to see the latest results.
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There is one entry listed in the Gesher Galicia Family Finder for this surname.
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Records of the Ender family in Logan Kleinwaks' Genealogy Indexer website
There are 168 search results for the surname Ender at Logan Kleinwaks' Genealogy Indexer website, a few of which are listed below. Note that results listed below are limited to purely Galician sources, such as telephone and business directories from Galician cities, or school records, but they do not include the many other sources available on his website that span all of pre-war Poland. You may need the free .DjVu web browser plugin to view these files.
- Baligrod Yizkor Book (1964), image 421 {y24}
... as the result of the marital union of Polish and Lithuanian royalty■ In 1795 Prussia became Lord and Master of Suwałk and the Prussians ruled until 1807 when Suwałk took on a French flavor under Napoleons1 rule. It is under the enlightened reign of Napoleon that the first Jews, forty-four in all, were permitted to settle in Suwałk itself. That was in 1808 and the Suwałk vicinity, one imagines, must have appeared ... as a great cosmopolitan area to those Jews; for the Prussian influence was still greatly felt, Suwałk itself was under the control of the worldly French; Scottish rebels had made a settlement in the adjoining town; the countryside was Polish and the Liu and Lithuanians were only a short distance away. ... - Baligrod Yizkor Book (1964), image 422 {y24}
... triangular arc! formed by the borders of Poland, Prussia and the Baltic States. The course of events affecting Suwałk Jewry, the stages of humiliation and annihilation at the hands of both the German Nazis and the violently Anti-Semitic Polish, Latvian and Lithuanian peasants, was to be paralleled in the history of the treatment given and the attitudes shown to other Jewish communities unfortunate enough to find themselves under the dreadful yoke of Nazi do-mi nation. This volume is a memorial book dedicated not only to those who lived in the Suwałk vicinity, or those who grew up there, or studied there, or served their military duty there, or migrated from there or even perished there, or the descendants of all the foregoing, but it is a lxiok dedicated to World Jewry, not only of this ... - Baranow Yizkor Book (1964), image 252 {y32}
... structures rose. Consequently Baranow gave the appearance of a young town. The calendar was a casualty of the impact of the fires. Thus, for a long period, events in the community did not occur according to the calendar year, but so many years pre or post the conflagration. In the dismemberments of Poland, the southern part of the country known as Galicia (which included Baranow) was annexed by Austria. Under the so called benevolent Austrian regime, Baranow was a thriving community in which lived some 250 Jewish families. Its geographical loca-tion as a border town contributed to its comparative prosperity. World War I imposed changes on the town. Baranow was occupied by the Russians and many skirmishes were fought in and around it. Those who could, migrated deeper inland, to more secure ... - Berezhany Yizkor Book (1978), image 480 {y48}
... even at the last moment. All of sudden, we. received encou-raging news. The Gestapo informed our representatives, that it had the authority to exempt 200 men with required skills. These men would have to reside in army barracks under a heavy German guard. They would work and would not be harm• ed. An admission card to these barracks could be obtained for an enormous sum of money and was given to men only. Two days had goe ... the Ges'.apo finished off the ghetto, as well as the people in the barracks. Even this time he Germans succeeded in deceiving those, who believed them. Under a heavy guard the barracks dwellers were brought to the cemetery. Only one witness of that event. Menachem Katz. survived and told us what had happened. ... - Berezhany Yizkor Book (1978), image 482 {y48}
... with the city of Lvov, and according to Nazi plans continued district after district and town after town. This Is how the Germans operated. During the darkness of the nigl.t, or close to dawn, they would surround the town, attack Jewish homes, make thorough search, seize people and bring them to a central-assembly place under a hail of shots,, beatings insults and shouts. They stood there for long hours and then were led away to the train railroad station under heavy guard. The train arrived, the people were brought into the coaches, which were locked and sealed and the train left. After travelling for hours In overcrouded coaches, they arrived at their destination. The coaches were opened, and the people led out. The Germans forced them to remove their clothing and then they wer led away ...
Check out Logan Kleinwaks' Genealogy Indexer website for more search results.
Other ways to connect with people researching the Ender family:
- Search for the surname Ender (and soundalike names) in the JewishGen Family Finder. You may need to create a free login and password before using their website. JewishGen is the largest Jewish genealogy website on the Internet and has thousands of databases.
- Post a message on the Ender family message board at Ancestry.com.
- Sign up for an e-mail mailing list about the Ender family at RootsWeb.com.
- Search for other online content about the Ender family at the genealogy search engines Mocavo.com and/or Linkpendium.com