Descendents of Alex Richter

Last update 28 January 2009

My father Alex Richter was born 5 October 1895 in Nagyszollos, Hungary; his first wife was Malvena Roth , his second wife was Rose Schechter and his third wife was Frieda Greenberg .


Alex married Malvina Roth when he returned to Nagyszollos after WW I. Malvena was born in Halmi, Hungary; her father was a prosperous tavern-keeper (tavern at Halmi RR station). Sometime later Alex left Carpathia never to return. I have little information about him in the period between the end of WW I and the time that Malvina left him (they were then living in Paris) and returned to Sevlus (formerly Nagyszollos) in 1927. I do not know when or if they were legally divorced, but not long afterwards Alex arrived in the US and by 1931 had remarried.

Alex and Malvena had three children; Haznal (died as an infant), Olga and Yacov (born in Paris in February 1927 - shortly before Malvena returned to Sevlus). Malvena raised her two surviving children in Sevlus (she is said to have remarried in 1938 - not long before the region was reconquered by Hungary). Malvena, Olga and Yacov were deported to Auschwitz (about 1944). Yacov survived; Malvina and Olga are assumed to have died in Auschwitz.

Descendents of Alex & Malvena Richter

Haznal Richter, who died as an infant.


Olga Richter is said to have married a dentist; she was transported to Auschwitz (About 1944) and is assumed to have died there.


Yacov Richter was born 10 February 1927 In Paris, France; married (Appx 1947) to Martel (aka Martha) ?? They had both survived the holocaust, married in Europe and emigrated to Israel. Yacov and Martha had two children; she left him not long after the birth of their second child Meir, leaving the children in his care. Yacov died (14 August 1971) in an industrial accident and is buried in B'er Sheva.

Children of Yacov & Martel Richter:

  • Olga (Tsipi) Richter was born 5 January 1949 in Haifa and lives in Tel-Aviv with her son Daniel (born 21 November 1991, Tel-Aviv). Daniel's father, Zoltan Green, was born 3 March 1926, in Budapest and died 6 October 2001 in Tel-Aviv. He is buried in the Yarkon cemetary.

  • Meir Richter was born 10 September 1950 in Haifa.

    Meir married Sarah Yachamovitz on 25 March 1973 in Tel-Aviv. Sarah was born 12 October 1953 in Kfar Saba. She is the daughter of Binyamin Yachamovitz and Fella Nisenholtz. Sarah and Meir were divorced in 1985.

    Children of Meir & Sarah Richter:

    • Yacov (Kobi) was born 22 September 1975 in Tel Hashomer.
    • Ori was born 11 September 1981 in Kfar Saba.

    Meir married Tamar Habshush on 30 June 1987 in Ramat-Gan. Tamar was born 1 July 1959 in Kfar Saba. She is the daughter of Aharon Habshush and Bracha Gehati.

    Children of Meir & Tamar Richter:

    • Almog was born 16 April 1988 on Kibbutz Yisrael.
    • Dotan was born 22 October 1990 on Kibbutz Yisrael.
    • Shir was born 18 January 1996 on Kibbutz Yisrael.

Alex married Rose Schechter on 3 March 1931 in New York City. Rose and Alex were first cousins; she was the daughter of Harry Schechter and Pauline (Peppi) Schorr (Alex's mother Fanny was Peppi's sister). Rose was born 27 April 1909 in New York City, not long before the death of Harry Schechter. Her mother remarried and moved to Franklin NY when she was about 13 yrs old and Rose attended High School in Franklin NY. During WW II Rose enrolled in a trade school and qualified as an aircraft draughtsman but she never worked at it (daughter Paula was born in mid-1944). Rose died in Manhattan hospital of Leukemia (age 49) and is buried in the New Montifiore Cemetary, Pinelawn NY.

Descendents of Alex & Rose Richter:

Donald Richter was born 21 November 1931 in New York City.

Donald married Marlene Holland on 14 September 1952 in the Bronx NY. Marlene was born 26 Jun 1934 in New York City; she was the daughter of William Holland and Anne Peretz. Donald and Marlene were divorced in Israel in December 1973. Marlene died of cancer on 18 December 1981 in West Covina CA.

Children of Donald & Marlene Richter:

For snapshots of wedding, honeymoon , etc check out D & J's WEBSITE!

  • Evan Jacob Richter was born 5 September 1963 in Whittier CA. Evan was taken to Israel at six years of age. He returned the US with his mother after her divorce. Evan lived with his mother and her second husband and went to ? HS in ? CA; he recieved a BA in Theater Arts from UC Riverside. After his mother's demise Evan moved to NYC. He developed an interest in PCs, through which he met his wife to be.

    Evan married Elizabeth Ann Dimoff on 3 January 1993 in Park Slope, NY. Elizabeth (aka Bets) was born 8 October 1962 in Pontiac MI; she is the daughter of George Gerald Dimoff and Diane Marie DeBeane). Evan works as computer systems technician and Bets is an executive in the computer publications field. The family has resided in Brooklyn NY, ? CA and Portland OR.

    Children of Evan & Elizabeth Richter:

    • Alexander James was born 21 July 1993 in Brooklyn NY
    • Zoe Eleanor was born 25 May 1998, Portland OR

    Donald married Luna Medina on 22 Jun 1975 in Tel-Aviv: They live in Ramat Hasharon Israel.

    Children of Donald & Luna Richter:

    • Albert Alexander was born 5 July 1976 in Tel-Aviv.
    • Rachel was born 2 November 1979 in Tel-Aviv.
  • Marilyn Fay Richter was born on 10 January 1935 in the Bronx NY. Marilyn married Albert Palatnick on 10 Jun 1956, in New York City. Albert was born 20 July 1931 in the Bronx NY; he is the son of Joseph Palatnick and Yetta ??. Children of Albert & Marilyn Palatnick:

  • Their first born son was born in New York City. He is married and he and his wife have two sons.

  • Their second son, Stuart Ross Palatnick, was born 18 August 1960 in New York City. Children of Stuart and his partner Ariel Fortunato:

    • Adam Hai was born 17 September 2003
    • Leo Elias was born 16 May 2005

  • Their daughter, Amy Risa Palatnick, was born on 30 December 1962 in New York City. Amy married Robert Katz on 10 March 1996 in the 5th Ave Synagogue, NYC.Robert was born 7 September 1962 and he is a born again Jew (hozer b'tshuva) - a follower of R'Shlomo Carlbach. Robert has a doctorate and teaches High School Chemistry. Children of Robert & Amy Katz:

    • Eli (Eliahu Yisroel Leib Yerushalayim Yosef) was born 18 February 1998 in New York City.
    • Chaya (Chaya Yisca Yenta Esther Malca Bacol) was born 14 January 2000 in New York City.
    • Shlomo (Shlomo Yaakov Kalonymas Kalman Mordechai Moshe Shalom] was born 16 March 2002 in New York City.
    • Rivka (Rivka Hana Pesia Pua Hasdi Shulamit) was born 1 December 2004 in New York City.
  • Paula Richter was born 19 July 1944 in the Bronx NY.

    Paula married Richard Bernat in Los Angeles 18 August 1962. Richard was born Appx 1940. They were divorced in November 1964.

    Bruce Richter was born 28 February 1947 in the Bronx NY.

    Bruce married Elizabeth Wheat in 1968. Elizabeth was born about 1946; she died in an automobile accident shortly after they were married.

    Bruce married Debra Maddox in 1969.They were divorced 1971; Debra obtained complete custody of their son Scott.

    Bruce married Elaine Chaskis in February 1974 in New York City. Elaine was born 18 November 1946 in Brooklyn NY; she is the daughter of ?? Chaskis and Rose ?? Children of Bruce & Elaine Richter:

    • Judith Gayle was born 15 January 1975.
    • Rebecca - born 16 November 1978.

      Andrea, born 6 March 1967, is Elaine's daughter by previous marriage to (?) Pickering.

    Alex married Frieda (Greenberg) Roff on 16 June 1962, in Brooklyn NY. Frieda was his second wife and Rose's first cousin. She was the daughter of Harry Greenberg and Sarah Schechter (sister of Rose's father Harry Schechter). Frieda was born Appx 1904 in New York City and she died (Appx 1998) in Detroit MI. She is buried in Florida beside her last husband Saul Ganellin. Frieda had previously been married to Alexander Roff and had one daughter (Myrna) by him. Frieda and Alex had no children (see the Schechter Connection).


    PROFILES

    Alex Richter

    Alex received religious training and may even have been ordained as Rabbi. As young man he was athletic, attractive and very much a 'ladies man'. He served in Hungarian army (WW I) as a machine-gunner on the Italian front. By his own account he was severely traumatized by his experience in the trenches and in combat. He said that towards end of the war he was wounded and left on battlefield where he was rescued by young Italian girl who ministered to his wounds and other needs. When he recovered he did not return to the army, but deserted and made his way home.

    He married Malvina Roth, daughter of a prosperous tavern-keeper (he ran the tavern at the Halmi RR Station). Not long after the end of the war he left (or was forced to flee?) Karpathia (accompanied by younger brother Emil?). I am not clear as to why he left: I've heard that he was being hunted as a deserter, that he fled to avoid the persecution visited on supporters of the abortive Communist regime of Bela Kuhn (he and Emil seem to have had communist leanings - see notes for his brother Josef), also that he left simply to seek gainful employment. In any event, he never returned to Karpathia though I have heard that he and Malvina resided in Budapest for a time.

    He travelled about Europe. He was in Israel (1924 or later) and is said to have visited a cousin, Avraham Drummer, who had made aliyah in 1921. At the time he may have been working on a ship (as waiter or Steward). He and Malvina were living in Paris when their third child, Yacov, was born in February 1927 (Alex never saw his son Yacov until they met some 44 years later in Israel). Malvena refused to remain in Paris. She left Alex and returned to Sevlus where she raised son Yacov and daughter Olga (their first child died young) and remained in touch with her Richter relatives. She is said to have remarried to a widower with six children in 1938, and was left with the children when he ran off about 1940. She and daughter Olga (who married a dentist?) were murdered in Auschwitz. Yacov survived the concentration camps, emigrated to Israel and met his father there (about 1970).

    Alex arrived US about 1927/8; supposedly he and his brother Emil just walked off the trans-Atlantic ship they were working on. Later, both had to leave the country and come back in legitimately (through Canada?) in order to get US citizenship. In his first years in the US he worked at various jobs including garage mechanic, waiter and sometimes as synagogue cantor. Early in 1931 he married his first cousin Rose, daughter of his mother's sister Pauline (Shorr) Shechter. For the remainder of his working-life he worked as a waiter; he was a member of the waiters union and of the Alexander Olshanetsky Lodge of the Knights of Pythias.

    The Family of Donald Richter

    Donald attended grade school at the Rabbi Israel Salanter yeshiva and then, the Bronx High School of Science. He recieved a Bachelor of Science Degree in Civil Engineering from CCNY (1955) and served in the US Army Corps of Engineers during the Korean war (1952-1954).

    Donald married Marlene Holland on 14 September 1952 in the Bronx NY. Marlene was the daughter of William and Anne Holland. William Holland was born William Hurland, somewhere in Austria (Appx 1900); he was the youngest of five children and the only son. During most of his adult life he worked as a delicatessen counterman. Will married Anne Peretz (Appx 1933, in New York); Anne was the daughter of Jacob Peretz (nephew of noted Yiddish author I L Peretz) and Rebecca ?? Jacob and Becky Peretz had a candystore in Brooklyn.

    Marlene met Donald when she was 14 yrs old at rehearsal for a Department of Parks production of Hamlet (she was Queen Gertrude he was Claudius, Hamlet's uncle and the usurping king); the play was never performed but the rehearsals were productive. Marlene graduated from Hunter HS (June 1952) and she and Donald were married the following September. In 1956, a little over a year after the birth of son David, Donald accepted a position as an aircraft designer with North American Aviation and they moved to Southern California. They lived in the town of Whittier (and environs) until they emigrated to Israel in mid-1969. In Whittier Marlene gave birth to Cara, Jesse and Evan. After they had been in California for a few years, they were joined by Marlene's parents who took up residence in the nearby town of Pico-Rivera (they opened Bill and Anne's Sandwich Shop which featured the best pastrami sandwiches West of New York City).

    Marlene's brother Leonard was born (Appx 1937, in New York); he is married to Lynn ??. Lenny is a successful hair stylist and beauty salon operator; he and his wife Lynn are partners in business as well as marriage. Lenny and Lynn Holland have two children; Deborah (born Appx 1960) and Lance (born Appx 1964).

    Donald and his family moved to Israel in July 1969. Donald worked for Israel Aircraft Ind Ltd, and the family resided in nearby town of Kiron. Marlene and Donald were divorced in Israel in December 1973 and she returned to US with son Evan. She remarried (Appx 1975) and she and Evan went to live with her second husband Robert Faller of W Covina CA. Marlene died of breast cancer on 18 Dec 1981 in West Covina CA - in accordance with her wishes she was cremated and her ashes were scattered.


    Donald married Luna Medina on 22 June 1975 in Tel-Aviv: Luna Medina is the eldest daughter of Albert Medina and Eva Mizrahi. Luna was born in Istanbul Turkey, attended the French International High School in Istanbul and emigrated to Israel in June 1969 arriveing about two months after her brother Daniel (Dano). Her parents followed a few years later (in 1973 - a few months before the Yom Kippur War), arriving with Luna's grandmother Luna Reytan (her father's Mother) and their youngest daughter Liza. They purchased an apartment in Bat-Yam and then returned to Istanbul where her father still had a business to run. Grandma Luna and sister Liza remained in Israel. About the time their first grandson Albert (aka Berty) was born her parents finally relocated permanently in Israel.

    Luna's brother Dano married Rebecca (Riki) Ventura, the daughter of David Ventura and Mazal ??; they reside in Rishon Leziyon and have two sons - Avraham (Avi) born 2 June 1981, and David (Dudey) born 27 June 1983. Lunas sister Liza married Avraham (Avi) Basan, the son of Aharon Basan and Rosa Ben-Melek; They reside in Bat Yam and have two daughters - Rosa (Rozi) born 27 April 1979 and Eva born 6 March 1983.

    By the time Donald remarried, all four of the children he had with Marlene had returned to the United States. Donald and Luna have two children - Albert and Rachel. In the following years the family resided in Shikun Bavli, Bat Yam and Ramat Hasharon. Donald unerwent heart surgery in March of 1991 and accepted early retirement from Israel Aircraft Industries in February, 1993.

    Yacov Richter

    (the following is the translation of an extract from a seventh grade school paper on 'family history' prepared by Almog, grandaughter of Yacov Richter)

    Yacov Richter was born in Paris, France on 10 February 1927. He was the youngest child of Alexander and Malvina (Roth) Richter. Shortly after Yacov's birth his parents separated; Malvena left Paris with her children and returned to her home in Sevlus, Cz, where she raised Yacov and his sister Olga (an older son, Haznal, died as an infant). Yacov attended vocational school and studied mechanics, metalworking and welding. In 1944 the family was sent to the Auschwitz death camp, where Malvena and Olga were put to death.

    Yacov survived - probably due to his vocational skills. He told his children that when he learned of the fate of those sent to the death camp, including his mother and sister, he determined to get revenge. He escaped from the camp and, one night, dressed up as a girl, he managed to lure a German soldier into an alley behind a nightclub and kill him. He put on the soldier's uniform, took his papers and stole a military motorcycle. Yacov was fluent in German, the war was coming to an end and discipline in the German army was lax. Yacov was able to survive on-the-move, killing Germans whenever he could and frequently finding himself in danger of being caught. The war ended but he continued his private crusade, Sometime in 1947 he married Martel (Martha) ??, who had also survived the Holocaust, and made his way to France and from there they decided to go to Israel.

    In December 1947 they left Marsielles aboard the ship 'Komemiut' (Independence) for Isreal. Once at sea it was announced that the ship carried a cargo of Phosphates and was sailing for Morocco. On the way they encountered another ship 'Atsmaut' (Liberty) which was carrying illegal immigrants bound for Israel and trying to dodge the British blockade. Both ships were stopped by British warships. They were refused permission to unload passengers in Israel and were directed to dock at Cyprus for inspection. Under cover of fog, the two ships eluded the British warships and managed to unload their passengers at the port of Haifa in the dark of night.

    From Haifa Yacov and Martha made their way to 'Tel Hanan' (today called 'Nesher'). At that time there was trouble with the Arabs, mostly in the cities. Yacov joined the Hagana in Haifa. The Haganah managed to control the terror in Haifa but its response was so harsh that Arab residents began to flee.

    Yacov and Martha had two children: Tzipi who was born 5 January 1949 and Meir who was born 10 September 1950. Martha left Yacov and her children when Meir was about 6 months old. From 1951 to 1954 Yacov and the children lived on Kibbutz Givat Haim where Yacov worked as a welder and the children lived in the Children's house of the kibbutz.

    In 1954 Yacov went to work on construction of a Bromine plant at the Dead Sea and the family moved to Be'er Sheva. In 1956 he worked on the Eilat-Ashkelon oil-pipeline and later, on kibbutz G'vulot manufacturing chemical spray-tanks and then he worked on a construction project in S'dom. During this period (1954 to 1962) Zippi and Meir lived with various 'foster' parents in Be'er Sheva, Eilat, Jerusalem and Hadera.

    In 1962 Yacov and a friend of his opened a welding shop in Eilat. Yacov bought a house and brought the children to live with him in Eilat. In 1968 the partnership was dissolved. Yacov left Eilat and went to to work in Be'er Sheva; the family relocated again. In Be'er Sheva he met Irma, a divorcee and mother of a son and a daughter. The families were lived together in Be'er Sheba until Yacov's death.

    Yacov met his father, Alex, and his half-brother Donald (who had come on Aliyah to Israel in 1969) in 1970; Alex had not seen Yacov since he was an infant. Later, he met other siblings - Marilyn and Paula - who were visiting Israel. Yacov died in an industrial accident in 1972; he was electrocuuted when a crane he was operating hit a high-tension wire.

    Yacov was 45 years old when he died; he is buried in the Be'er Sheva cemetary and is remembered as a lively person, friendly and entertaining - who enjoyed sports, music and dancing.

    The Family of Meir Richter

    (the following is the translation of an extract from a seventh grade school paper on 'family history' prepared by Almog, daughter of Meir and Tamar Richter)

    Meir is the son of Yacov and Martha Richter. He was Born 10 September 1950 (28 Elul 5710) in 'Imaot' hospital, Haifa. At the time of his birth the family was living in Acco. About six months after his birth Martha left Yacov and her children. Neither Meir or his sister have any memories or knowledge of her. After Martha left, Meir, his father Yacov and sister Zippi moved to Kibbutz Givat Haim, where Meir and Zippi lived in the Children's House of the Kibbutz. On the Kibbutz they were 'adopted' by a Kibbutz family, Naoma and Zvi Keel who had three children of their own.

    In 1954 Yacov went to work on construction of a Bromine plant at the Dead Sea. Zippi and Meir went to live with 'foster' parents, Yoska and Klara Miller, in B'er Sheva. In 1956 Zippi and Meir went to live with another 'foster' family in Eilat and through 1962 (while their father worked at various jobs in the South of Israel) the children lived with 'foster' families in Jerusalem, Hadera, B'er Sheva, Kibbutz G'vulot and other places. In 1962 the children returned to living with Yacov when he opened a Welding shop and bought a home in Eilat. Meir completed grade school in Eilat and then attended the Eilat Maretime Acadamy where he studied to become a Ship's Engineering Officer.

    Meir finished his studies in 1968, and was asked to defer his military service and sign up for Maratime sea-duty because of the shortage of qualified seamen for the Israeli Merchant fleet. After the six-day-war arms were frequently transported by Israeli merchant vessels so they did not wish to use foreign seamen. In those years Meir served aboard Zim Line ships and sailed to many parts and ports of the world. On 17 February 1970 Meir was inducted into the IDF and served in the Naval Service. After basic training he was trained as an undersea weapons technician and served as torpedo-man on a submarine. Later, he worked on weapons instalations for the Torpedo Boats that had been 'hijacked' from Cherbourg. After his father Yacov died he asked to be transferred to Eilat and completed his military service there on 14 March 1973.

    During Meir's service in Eilat he met Sarah Yahamovitz and they were married on 25 March 1973 at Bet Hamehandes in Tel Aviv. They lived in Ramat Gan and Meir worked as a welder in the Nerost-Kur plant which produced stainless steel milk containers for T'nuva. In 1974 they moved to Ra'nana and Meir went to work for Israel Aircraft Industries as a flight mechanic. In 1985 Sarah and Meir were divorced and he left Ra'nana and went to live in Tel Aviv.

    Sarah and Meir had two sons: Yacov (Kobi) was named after his father and was born On 22 September 1975 (17 Tishri 5736) at the 'Sheba' hospital in Tel-Hashomer, Ori, was born on 11 September 1981 (13 Elul 5741) at the 'Meir' hospital in Kfar-Sava.

    Kobi attended primary school in Ra'nana for nine years. The following three years he studied Industrial Electronics in Tel-Aviv High School. In 1993 Kobi was inducted into the IDF and served in the Air Service. After completing his military service he worked for Station 2 of Israel TV as a lighting and sound technician for the Dan Shilon program. At present he is working as a technician for FM station 103 with radio announcer Natan Zahavi and sings with the rock group Viki V'Hahushim. Kobi lives in Ra'nana; his hobbies are singing, playing musical instruments, electronics and computers.

    Ori went to school in Ra'nana for eight years and attended the Kibbutz school Ort-Sh'faim when his mother moved to the Zoren settlement. In 1996 his mother returned to Ra'nana and Ori attended the Ostrovsky High School for the next three years. In 1999 Ori was inducted into the IDF and is, at present, serving in a 'specil unit'. Ori lives in Ra'nana; his hobbies are reading, and travel - in and out of Israel.

    In 1986 he met Tamar (Tami) Habshush at the wedding of mutual friends; at that time Tami worked for the periodical 'Hanoar Haoved V'Halomed'. On 30 June 1987 Tami and Meir were married at the 'Bon Ton Hall' in Ramat Gan and went to live in Holon.

    Meir's wife Tamar (Tami) is the daughter of Bracha and Aaron Habshush. She was born on 7 January 1959 (27 Tevet 5719) in the Kiryah Hospital, Tel Aviv. Until she was three months old the family lived in Shekunat Hatikvah in Tel Aviv, then moved to Holon. From two to four years of age she lived in an 'infants home' and at age four she went to a religious nursery school in Holon. She attended Revivim elementary school and then the Holon High School where she studied Accounting. At age 16, She joined the Education Section of the Noar Haoved v'Halomed (Youth That Works and Studies) movement and went to the 'Sahar' Nahal unit which was assigned to the kibbutz Kfar Masryk (of the Shomer Hazair movement). In March 1978 she was inducted into military service. After basic training at 'Camp 80' she was assigned to a spotter outpost near the village of Dir-Al-Asad (between Karmiel and Acco). From there She went to Ramot Naftali (general security) for six months and for the last eight months of service she returned to Kfar Masryk for additional volunteer service and worked on the kibbutz as an instructor for infants and in the nursery school.

    Tami remembers her military service as an important and enjoyable period of her life - full of pleasant, memorable experiences. Through it she learned about kibbutz life and communal living and she remained on the kibbutz for some time after completing military service. In 1981 she returned to live with her parents in Holon and went to work as a senior secretary for Herut - a company dealing with air conditioners, heaters and alarms - while continuing to take courses in Accounting. In 1983 she went to live on Kibbutz Yizrael, where her brother Amnon lived. She worked as a cotton inspector, then as a instructor for infants and as a teacher in the kibbutz grade-school. In 1985, she was sent by Noar Haoved v'Halomed to work at their Training Center in Tel-Aviv.

    In December 1987 Tami and Meir left Holon and entered Kibbutz Yizrael. Meir went to work in the Kibbutz factory 'Mitronics' which manufactured automatic swimming-pool cleaners; he worked as quality control inspector, managed the packaging storeroom and as a technician refurbishing pool-cleaner motors. Tami returned to working in the kibbutz Grade School and continued to attend the Oranim Educational Seminar; She now works in the Electronics section of the Kibbutz factory Mitronix.

    Tami and Meir have three children: Almog, born 16 April 1988; Dotan, born 22 October 1990; Shir born 18 January 1996.

    Tami enjoys reading, ceramic sculpture, music and Net-surfing; Meir's passtimes include guitar playing, singing, drawing, athletics and hiking.

    When he was a student in the Maretime Academy he went on a training voyage to Europe on the ship 'Moledet'. At the port of Marseille a number of passengers came aboard. Among the passengers was a young woman who, when she heard Meir play guitar and sing, told him that he sang very well - much like Elvis Presley. He later learned that the young woman was Corinne Allal, a popular performer of the day in Israel. As a youth Meir enjoyed the nickname Elvis - Meir was a devoted fan who sang his songs and even tried to dress like him.

    Elizabeth Dimoff

    Elizabeth was the eldest of three children - David Peter b 27 Oct 63, Mary Margaret b 18 Sept 64. On mother's side they were the fourth generation to be born in Rochester MI. Her grandparents were among those responsible for building the town of Rochester; most of her relatives still live in Michigan. Bets maternal grandmother, Selma Adele (LaCroix) (DeBaene) Case was Ms Senior Michigan of 1988; she won the talent award at a pageant in Atlantic City same year; her husband Walter Thomas DeBaene Sr died in 1961 (emphysema and liver cancer). Mother's family ancestry (we're talking real mutt!) is Belgian, German and English; on father's side French, Canadian and and American Indian. Bets is 1/32nd Blackfoot indian; ancestor George Drouillard (member of the Lewis & Clark expedition) sired children with a Blackfoot squaw.

    Her paternal grandparents Peter Dimoff and Lena (?) divorced in 1940 (later, Lena married Walter Kroll). Peter came to America by himself, when he was 14 yrs old. There seems to be no record of his arrival at Ellis Island; family lore says that he came in via Canada (had relatives there). When he came to US he left his whole family behind. Father's ancestry is Polish and Bulgarian; probably Greek, Macedonian, Armenian and Russian also (there are plenty of Dimoff's listed at Ellis Island (all from that part of the world).

    (c) 1997 donb@012.net.il

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