Records of the Flomm family in the All Galicia Database

There are currently 207 records for the surname Flomm (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:

  • Malke FLAM
    death record from Stanisławów Jewish Deaths (1845-1863)
  • Moses FLAMM
    death record from Stanisławów Jewish Deaths (1845-1863)
  • Mendel FLAM
    death record from Stanisławów Jewish Deaths (1845-1863)
  • Janko FLUM
    1788 property record from Żółkiew Josephine Survey (1788)
  • Ester FLAM
    1806 death record from Zbaraż Jewish Deaths (1804-1858, 1894-1942)
  • Isacus PFLAUM
    1823 school record from Pest University Jewish Medical Graduates (1770-1921)
  • Abraham FLAM
    1831 death record from Brody Jewish Deaths (1815-1861)
  • Lea, daughter of Mayer FLAM
    1833 birth record from Brody Jewish Births (1815-1861)
  • Ester, daughter of Sussie FLAMM and Cipra
    1837 birth record from Drohobycz Jewish Births (1816-1869)
  • Moses Leib, son of Mayer FLAM
    1838 birth record from Brody Jewish Births (1815-1861)

Search the All Galicia Database to see the full information available for all 207 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 Flomm family:

There are 8 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
FLAM in
Yavoriv, Ukraine
GG Member Paris, France
FRANCE
May 9, 2018
FLAM in
Brody, Ukraine
GG Member Paris, France
FRANCE
May 9, 2018
FLAM in
Olesko, Ukraine
GG Member Paris, France
FRANCE
May 9, 2018

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

There are 178 search results for the surname Flomm 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.

  • Bobrka Yizkor Book (1964), image 236 {y80}
    ... into Purim players. They performed the Biblical play "Joseph and His Brethren." He took the role of Joseph and his younger brother took the role of Benjamin. On Purim eve they went from house to house of our town and performed to the delight of old and young. We youngsters would follow them for hours on end. A year later, in 1918, while the cannons of war were still belching flame, our town folks in New York, members of the Progressive Boibcr-ker Young Men's and members of the Boibcrkcr Sick and Benevolent Society, as well as two or three members of the Boibcrkcr Women’s Aid Society, and several none affiliated individuals, gathered to organize the Boibcrkcr Relief Committee in New York. Some months after the armistice, one of our Boiberker, my good friend Julius Engelbcrg, went ...
  • Brzozow Yizkor Book (1984), image 528 {y94}
    ... derived from the fact that he was the source of the vodka. He calms them down, smooths the ruffled feathers and tries to restore them tb a state of sanity. He praises them both to the skies, upbraids them, reminds htem of their rcspec-table status and their responsibilities to their families. In fact, he does everything possible to quench the fire before it breaks out in a mighty flame. Choosing the one who still evinces some signs of reason, he tries a number of tricks to get him out-side, but does so in such a manner as will not impugn his honor or make him appear the loser trying to get away from the fight. Once they have been separated and one of them has been led respectfully, like a bridegroom to the altar, to the door, the other, con-sidering himself the winner, mouths ...
  • Busk Yizkor Book (1965), image 320 {y99}
    ... was no way of knowing from which side or at what moment danger, which equalled death, would come. Furthermore, we were weighed down by the fearful conviction that one day we would have to leave the shelter — inferior but nevertheless safe — for the woods, where death lurked behind every tree and bush. , Slowly, the spring came, the snow melted ,and the meadows began to bloom. A new season was in sight. One day at the beginning of March 1944, Mr. Kubalski came, gasping, with the news: the Germans were taking over the barn. Soon they would bring over the horses and install a field kitchen in the barnyard. "They’ve already arrived in the village. It is too late to run away. This is the end !** A few minutes later we heard the voices of soldiers leading horses. We saw nothing and could ...
  • Husiatyn Yizkor Book (1968), image 317 {y198}
    ... Trees) all the youngsters would visit the court where the celebration of the holiday assumed a national and religious character. The wife of the Rebbc, a woman of aristocratic bearing, and dressed in the latest of fashion, would serve us small packages of fruit from the Holy Land. This would link us to the land of our forefathers, where the holiday was celebrated because the trees were already in bloom. The Rcbbe’s court was not enthralled by the new national ideas, however. In the latter part of the 19th century, when the Haskallah movement as well as the Return to Zion Movement started to grow, most of our compatriots remained aloof from, and even hostile to, these progressive ideas which were appearing on the Jewish scene. The entire Chassidic Dynasty which wielded great influence ...
  • Bobrka Yizkor Book (1964), image 233 {y80}
    ... . Working in the coal mines was not pleasant, he began to look around to find friends. Since he was tall, dark and handsome, he made friends with some members of the Monarchist party. He soon learned the language of the country and the new friends especially the women folks, befriended him to the extent that at one lime they pul him up as a candidate opposing the one time Prime Minister Leon Blum. When Hitler invaded France this young man had to flee and was hidden near Nice, where he caught rheumatism which could be seen on one of his hands, lie asked me for S25.00 which I gave him and he promised that lie would send me the whole story of his life in France among the so-called Monarchist of the land, which would be very much interesting for publication but he never did. and no one else ...

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

Other ways to connect with people researching the Flomm 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