Records of the Field family in the All Galicia Database

There are currently 1470 records for the surname Field (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:

  • Matla Golda, daughter of Samuel FELD
    birth record from Mościska Jewish Births (1909-1924)
  • Markus FELD, grandchild of , , ,
    Holocaust record from Lwów Ghetto Residents (1941-1943)
  • Bernard FELLD, grandchild of , , ,
    Holocaust record from Lwów Ghetto Residents (1941-1943)
  • Eliasz FELLD, grandchild of , , ,
    Holocaust record from Lwów Ghetto Residents (1941-1943)
  • Estera FELLD, grandchild of , , ,
    Holocaust record from Lwów Ghetto Residents (1941-1943)
  • Fradel FELLD, grandchild of , , ,
    Holocaust record from Lwów Ghetto Residents (1941-1943)
  • Volf FELLD, grandchild of , , ,
    Holocaust record from Lwów Ghetto Residents (1941-1943)
  • Mojzesz FELD, son of Dawid KUPFERBERG and Freide FELD
    and Chaja Gitla IGEL, daughter of Mojżesz SZWARZ and Malka IGEL
    marriage record from Dobromil Jewish Marriages (1916-1919, 1936, 1939)
  • Joseph FELD
    1789 property record from Lwów Żółkiew District No. 3 Josephine Survey (1789)
  • Mirel, daughter of David FELD and -
    1805 birth record from Lwów Jewish Births (1805-1872)

Search the All Galicia Database to see the full information available for all 1470 records. The AGD is updated with new records every few months, so check back often to see the latest results.

The Gesher Galicia Family Finder — connect with other people who are researching the Field family:

There are 11 entries listed in the Gesher Galicia Family Finder for this surname.

Here are the 3 most recent records.

Family & Location Researcher Researcher's Location Date Added
FELD in
Rzeszow, Poland
GG Member Philadelphia, PA
USA
Jul 24, 2019
FELD in
Siedleczka, Poland
GG Member Philadelphia, PA
USA
Jul 24, 2019
FIELD in
Gusyatin, Ukraine
GG Member Palo Alto, CA
USA
Aug 17, 2018

To see all Family Finder records as well as contact information for matching researchers, please log in now. If you're not a member yet, join us today!

Records of the Field family in Logan Kleinwaks' Genealogy Indexer website

There are 188 search results for the surname Field 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.

  • Berezhany Yizkor Book (1978), image 496 {y48}
    ... practice medicine. There were about forty lawyers thanks to the district court Some of these lawyers eked out a scant living from their profession Thore were also a num-bei of engineers, who completed their course of studies but could not find any work in the field. Most of the druggists couldn't find any work either. A fair portion of them left the town. The same fate met the young teachers. All of them faced a hopeless future. The situation of the artisans and craftsmen failed to improve after the first World War. in many instances their lot became even worse. For the working youth there were no prospects of even finding employ-ment in our town. They organized themselves in various youth movements and waited for '־Aliyah־־־ to Israel. "״״b0׳t ?' th* ■י"״׳•״ Committee RELIGION AND CULTURE ...
  • Berezhany Yizkor Book (1978), image 498 {y48}
    ... administrators col-lected taxes from the citizens of the town. They cared for the poor, the educa tion of the children and for the religious services. They had authority over the slaughter-house, they supervised the holy burial society and the great syna-gogue. The Habsburgs brought about cognizont changes in the lives of the Jews. They flooded them with instructions and enactments. First of all they levied high taxes. The government also limited the production of intoxicating drinks. In the cultural field It strove to Germanize the Jewish minority First, the Jews were given German family names, then they established government-schools for the Jews. They also placed a head Rabbi of the entire district. A decisive change took place in the days of the renewed Polish rule, following the First ...
  • Bobrka Yizkor Book (1964), image 244 {y80}
    ... of eastern Galicia, including many from our township of Boibcrkc, sought to better their economic condition by emigrating. Most of them went to the United States, where they knew that able-bodied men willing to work could earn a fairly good living. There was a valid reason for their eagerness to leave Boiberke. The town was situated in eastern Galicia, a province of the Austria-Hungarian Empire, which had its industries in other provinces, chiefly in Bohemia (now Chechoslovakia) and Upper Austria. Galicia was predominantly an agricultural land, a field where the Jews played a minor role. Although Boiberke was a large district embracing more than 90 villages, it was in many respects backward. It was only four European miles away from Lemberg (Lwow), then the capital of Galicia. Lemberg ...
  • Brzezany Yizkor Book (1978), image 496 {y91}
    ... no license to practice medicine. There were about forty lawyers thanks to the district court. Some of these lawyers eked out a scant living from their profession. There were also a num-bei of engineers, who completed their course of studies but could not find any work in the field. Most of the druggists couldn't find any work either. A fair portion of them left the town. The same fate met the young teachers. All of them faced a hopeless future. The situation of the artisans and craftsmen failed to improve after the first World War. in many instances their lot became even worse. For the working youth there were no prospects of even finding employ-ment in our town. They organized themselves in various youth movements and waited for "Aliyah"' to Israel. RELIGION AND CULTURE enowned Torah ...
  • Brzezany Yizkor Book (1978), image 498 {y91}
    ... educa-lion of the children and for the religious services. They had authority over the slaughter-house, they supervised the holy burial society and the great syna-gogue. The Habsburgs brought about cognizent changes in the lives of the Jews. They flooded them with instructions and enactments. First of all they levied high taxes. The government also limited the production of intoxicating drinks. In the cultural field it strove to Germanize the Jewish minority. First, the Jews were given German family names, then they established government-schools for the Jews. They also placed a head Rabbi of the entire district. A decisive change took place in the days of the renewed Polish rule, following the First World War. The law decreed personal, secret and democratic elections. Every Jews in town ...

Check out Logan Kleinwaks' Genealogy Indexer website for more search results.

Other ways to connect with people researching the Field family:

 

Gesher Galicia is a non-profit organization carrying out Jewish genealogical and historical research on Galicia, formerly a province of Austria-Hungary and today divided between southeastern Poland and western Ukraine. The research work includes the indexing of archival vital records and census books, Holocaust-period records, Josephine and Franciscan cadastral surveys, lists of Jewish taxpayers, and records of Galician medical students and doctors - all added to our searchable online database. In addition, we reproduce regional and cadastral maps for our online Map Room. We conduct educational research and publish a quarterly research journal, the Galitzianer. Gesher Galicia is also organized for the purpose of maintaining networking and online discussion groups and to promote and support Jewish heritage preservation work in the areas of the former Galicia.

You can search our free All Galicia Database, Map Room, and archival inventories, and read about member benefits starting at $50 per year. You can also join online.

Our general contact address: info@geshergalicia.org