[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Radomske family

John Rauchert jfrauchert at shaw.ca
Thu Jan 10 19:21:19 PST 2008


One other resource which may be of interest I have found is this translated 
work:

East German Fate by the Black Sea

http://www.lib.ndsu.nodak.edu/grhc/order/general/muller.html

>From the description it seems a pretty interesting history of the German 
Settlements in the Dobrudscha Region.

John F. Rauchert Calgary, Alberta

----- Original Message -----
>> Date: Mon, 7 Jan 2008 22:01:43 -0800
>> From: Ang Drake <gnaang at hotmail.com>
>> Subject: [Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Radomske family
>> To: <ger-poland-volhynia at eclipse.sggee.org>
>> Message-ID: <BAY123-W32546237325B613826A478CF480 at phx.gbl>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
>>
>>
>> Hello all,
>>
>> I am a distant cousin of Cal Radomske. He was researching our Radomske 
>> family tree in the early 90's. After he passed away, I took on the 
>> monumental task of researching our family tree. I am a decendant of Johan 
>> Radomske b. 1832 and Whilamina Phifer. Their son August, his son 
>> Clarence, and my mother. I have done alot of research on other surnames 
>> in my family tree, but they are scottish and english roots. I am new to 
>> this research, and have no knowledge of Johan other than his year of 
>> birth. Our family though is really big, and me and another distant cousin 
>> have updated all the decendants...whew! But our ancestors...I had always 
>> assumed due to language barriers they would be hard to find. Cal had much 
>> more knowledge about this side of it than i do, and I'm not sure where to 
>> start. Seeing his name here, i figured this would be a good place to 
>> start. Can anyone help me?From Angela and Serenna Drake"being a mother is 
>> the greatest gift and biggest challenge of all"
> 




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