Showing posts with label Repinski. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Repinski. Show all posts

Saturday, August 27, 2022

Archduke Leopold Hapsburg-Ancestral 13th Cousin

Who Do We Think We Are??

"Archduke Leopold Of Austria"

The Connecticut Factory Worker Who Might Have Been King

Archduke Leopold of Austria, Prince of Tuscany, spent most of his life in exile trying to chase down money — at least when he wasn’t at a costume ball in Greenwich, Conn., or getting arrested for drunk driving in Boston.

He was a Habsburg, a family that ruled Europe for a thousand years. At one point in his life he was first in line as a Pretender to the Throne of Spain on the Carlist branch. The grand-nephew of Emperor Franz Joseph, he stood in the line of succession to the British throne.  Pretty low down – 300th at birth, then he fell further. 

Come along and meet one of my ancestral Hapsburg cousins... 

 

Royal Birth  & Early Life

At the fall of Habsburg monarchy he remained in Austria and recognized the new republic in order to marry Dagmar, Baroness von Nicolics-Podrinska. The couple had one daughter. After divorcing his wife in 1931, Leopold eventually emigrated to the United States where he became a naturalized American citizen under the name Leopold Lorraine, and where he remarried. He died in 1958 in Connecticut

Leopold was born January 20, 1897 in Zagreb, Croatia, the second son of Archduke Leopold Salvator and Infanta Blanca of Spain. His father was descended from the Royal Hasburg family of Austria and his mother was descended from the Royal house of Bourbon-Spain. He had 9 siblings.

Leopold grew up in luxurious surroundings. His parents owned the Palais Toskana in Vienna, Schloss Wilhelminenberg in the Austrian countryside, a villa in Italy and a castle in Lower Austria. His father had a scientific bent, and patented a number of military inventions. Later on, those patents would throw off money when the Habsburg bank account wouldn’t.

During World War I, Archduke Leopold fought along with his older brother, Rainier, Both served as lieutenants of artillery in the Austro-Hungarian Army. At 19, Leopold distinguished himself in the Battle of Medeazza. Great-Uncle Franz Joseph I of Austria, awarded him the Order of the Golden Fleece.

Then everything went downhill.......

 

The Fall of the Austrian Monarchy & Life after Royalty

Austria, of course, lost World War I, and the monarchy fell. Leopold and Rainer decided to stay in Vienna and recognize the Republic, relinquishing their titles. But “archduke” made newspaper fodder, and they would always be known as such.

The Austrian government seized their Vienna home, the Palais Toskana

The Palce Toskana 

and subdivided it into apartments. Rainer and Leopold were allowed to live there.

The rest of the family fled to Barcelona, where they lived in a tiny house. The boys slept with their father in one bedroom, the girls with their mother in another.

In Vienna, Rainer ran a garage. Leopold went to work delivering films to theaters on a three-wheeled motorcycle. In 1925, police arrested him for running over a pedestrian. He then made the news as a police item when the New York Times reported his court appearance on April 2.

He told the court he couldn’t pay the $3 fine because he only earned $10 a month. On appeal, two workmen (probably monarchists) said the pedestrian caused the accident. Archduke Leopold didn’t have to pay the fine, but he did have to suffer the indignity of being described as an errand boy in print.

The Times also noted he had a wife and children to support. Actually, he had one daughter after his marriage in 1919 to the Baroness Dagmar Nicolics-Podrinska, a minor Croatian noble.

 

 

A New Life in America

 In January 1927, the New York Times sent one of its correspondents to find Leopold in Vienna. The reporter described the obscurity into which the Habsburgs had fallen. He found Rainer in his Palais Toskana apartment, “a degenerated palace” with corridors filled with old furniture. Leopold had an address in a middle-class flat, but he had sailed for America.  His wife and daughter stayed behind in Austria.

Archduke Leopold  landed in Hollywood. He told the Times in the summer of 1927 that he wanted to earn enough money as an actor to return to Austria. His motive was revenge: Count Laszlo Szechneyi had insulted him.

While the archduke acted, his secretary, Alfred Neuhardt, mopped his brow for him as he perspired under the lights. Leopold apparently had difficulty playing a German officer because he couldn’t salute. He explained that he never had to salute anyone in Austria, everyone saluted him.

His film career went nowhere after he played two bit parts, one in a film by John Ford. Director Eric von Stroheim used him as an uncredited actor and technical advisor on The Wedding March. Shortly before leaving Hollywood, Leopold told Photoplay,

 

Archduke Leopold, right, with his brother Rainer and mother Blanca.

castle

Schloss Wilhelminenberg


palace

Palais Toskana

leopold

The original caption to this photo read, “Hollywood predicts that Leopold will soon become an idol in Filmdom.”

Back on the East Coast

Shortly after the New Year in 1928, the Times found Leopold in Greenwich, Conn., where his friends, Mr. and Mrs. W.H. Stumpfel, held a fancy costume ball in his honor. He continued to make the social pages at luncheons, parties and the racetrack. In 1928, the Times mentioned him along with Charles Lindbergh as attending an international polo match on Long Island.

Hungarian Prince

His fortunes seemed to brighten in 1929, when the Hungarian legation in Washington, D.C., declared him a citizen and a Hungarian royal prince. But the honor didn’t seem to help his finances. The next month his tailor sued him in Vienna for failing to pay him $1,000 for day and evening clothes.

 Then a few days later he made the papers again. At a dinner before the Beaux Arts Ball in New York, he got into a fight with Julius Fleischman Holmes, a wealthy sportsman, over Mrs. Holmes.

In August of 1929, he told the New York Times he expected to ride in a steeplechase in Belmont Park.

Grand Larceny

In early 1930, Archduke Leopold lived at a fashionable Sutton Place address in New York City. He shared an office with a real estate agent, Stefan de Pomierski, a Polish count he met at a party. However, as the archduke later told police, he didn’t have an occupation.

In March, he received a subpoena in connection with the theft of the Napoleon Diamond Necklace, which belonged to his great aunt, Archduchess Maria Theresa. It was all a misunderstanding, Leopold insisted.

Maria Theresa

Maria Theresa's Geni Profile

The full story of the Diamond necklace theft: 

The Napolian Diamond Necklace 

In 1929, following a decline in her finances, Maria Theresa engaged two agents to sell the Napoleon Diamond Necklace, a piece inherited from her husband, in the United States. After a series of botched sales attempts, the pair finally sold the necklace for $60,000 with the aid of the great-nephew of Maria Theresa, the Archduke Leopold of Austria, Prince of Tuscany but he claimed nearly 90% of the sale price as "expenses". Maria Theresa appealed to the United States courts, ultimately resulting in the recovery of the necklace, the imprisonment of her great-nephew, and the absconding of the two agents.

 In 1930 Archduke Leopold was cleared of the grand larceny charge in connection with the sale of the necklace that had been in the possession of the sister-in-law of the Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria, Infanta Maria Theresa of Portugal. The necklace, valued at $400,000, had been a gift to an earlier Habsburg, Marie Louise, from her husband Napoléon Bonaparte.  


Later Life and Death

After divorcing his wife in 1931, Leopold emigrated to the United States where he was known as "Mr. Leopold H(absburg) Lorraine".[2] In 1932 he remarried, also morganatically, Alicia Gibson Coburn (New York 20 January 1898 – New York City 25 August 1960). Their marriage remained childless and ended in divorce.

For a time Leopold sought a career in Hollywood and had several minor roles. He moved to Willimantic, Connecticut where he settled into a small house with his second wife and spent the rest of his life as a factory worker. He became an American citizen in 1953. 

 

My 13th Cousin (twice removed),  Leopold died on March 14, 1958  in Willimantic, CT, United States. His ashes are in tomb 91 of the Imperial Crypt in Vienna.


 

My Family Line to Archduke Leopold Haspburg of Austria 

Leopold Maria, Erzherzog von Österreich-Toskana is your 13th cousin twice removed.

You
 

Maurice Joseph Repinski

your father

Evelyn M. Repinski

his mother-my grandmother

John Sr. S. Dulek

her father-my great Grandfater

Antonia Dulek

his mother-my 2nd great Grandmother

Paweł Ossowski

her father-my 3rd Great Grandfather

Katarzyna Ossowska

his mother-My 4th Great Grandmother

Konstancja Depka Prądzińska

her mother-My 5th Great Grandmother

Wojciech Jutrzenka Gliszczyński

her father-My 6th Great Grandfather

Magdalena Jutrzenka Gliszczyńska/Wyszk Borzyszkowska

his mother-My 7th Great Grandmother

Jan Żukowski, II

her father-My 8th Great Grandfather

Katarzyna Żukowska

his mother-My 9th Great Grandmother

Anna Wałdowska

her mother-my 10th Great Grandmother

Elżbieta Niemojewska

her mother-My 11th Great Grandmother

Anna Trzebuchowska h. Ogończyk

her mother-My 12th Great Grandmother

Małgorzata Trzebuchowska h. Ogończyk

her mother-My 13th Great Grandmother

Wojciech Mielżyński h. Nowina

her brother-My 14th Great Uncle

Łukasz Mielżyński h. Nowina

his son-my 1st cousin 14 times removed

Anna Mielżyńska z Brudzewa h. Nowina

his daughter-My 2nd cousin 13 times removed

Teresa Czarnkowska (Zaleska h. Dołęga)

her daughter-My 3rd cousin 12 times removed

Sophia Anna Charnkovska

her daughter-My 4th cousin 11 times removed

Catherine Leszczyński h. Wieniawa

her daughter-My 5th cousin 10 times removed

Maria Leszczyńska, reine de France et de Navarre

her daughter-My 6th cousin nine times removed

Elisabeth de France, duchessa di Parma

her daughter-My 7th cousin eight times removed

Mary Louise of Parma

her daughter-My 8th cousin seven times removed

Maria Isabella di Borbone, regina consorte delle Due Sicile

her daughter-my 9th cousin six times removed

Maria Antonietta di Borbone-Due Sicilie

her daughter-My 10th Cousin five times removed

Karl Salvator von Österreich, principe di Toscana

her son-My 11th cousin four times removed

Leopold Salvator, Erzherzog von Österreich

his son-My 12th cousin thrice removed

Leopold Maria, Erzherzog von Österreich-Toskana

his son-My 13th Cousin twice removed

 


 Sources and Further Reading:

https://www.newenglandhistoricalsociety.com/archduke-leopold-the-connecticut-factory-worker-who-might-have-been-king/

https://www.geni.com/people/Princess-Alice-of-Bourbone-Parma-Grand-Duchess-of-Tuscany/6000000002188374540?through=6000000008182044101

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archduke_Leopold_of_Austria,_Prince_of_Tuscany

https://www.geni.com/people/Leopold-Maria-Erzherzog-von-%C3%96sterreich-Toskana/6000000002188374761?through=6000000002188374721

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infanta_Blanca_of_Spain

https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/De_Castilla_Maria_De_La_Concepcion_of_Spain-1

 


 

 

Monday, February 17, 2020

Uncle Mike

Family History & Family Tree Research
Repinski Family Tree
Repinski Family Line
Memorials
Michael Degaro-Paternal Uncle

Memories Of My Uncle Michael Degaro

On this day in 1975, Michael Degaro passed into heaven.

Michael was my 1st uncle that I remember passing away.
My cousin Laura posted her memory of her father on her Facebook page a bit ago and as I had already been working on some posts of the siblings of my dad and all of my other paternal aunts and uncles, I figured this would be a good morning to further dig into the life of this man who's memories are in the "childhood file" of my brain.....


Michael Degaro (1932-1975)



My Uncle Mike was only 42 years old when he died.
He is buried in St. Bronislava in Plover Wisconsin, in the Repinski-Dulek family plot, having been one of the 1st of my uncles to have passed away. 



Brief Biography of Michael A. Degaro

Ancestry of Michael:

 Parents, Grandparents & Siblings

Michael was born on March 11, 1932 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
He was the son of Louis Degaro (B: 1903) and Margaret (Maggie) Cortez (B: 1906) of Milwaukee Wisconsin.


I have found that his ancestry from his father originated in this country in NY where Michael's grandparents immigrated to from Italy and that from his mother, it seems that her "Cortez" family originated in Mexico and before that from Spain. 

Michael's father, Louis was the son of Samuel Degaro (B:1867) in Italy and Anna ? (B: 1876) in Italy.
Samuel and Anna immigrated to the United States in 1895.

According to the 1920 US Census (screenshot below), Samuel and Anna Degaro had the following children and others in their household in Milwaukee in 1920:



Mike was the third son of the above couple, having Leonard (B: 1925), Samuel (B: 1929) and Joseph (B: 1936) as his three other siblings.

Father Louis was 29 years old and mother Maggie was 26 years old when Michael was born.


This snapshot of Michael Degaro's life was captured by the 1940 U.S. Census.
Michael Degaro was born about 1932, the son of Maggie and Louis. 
In 1940, he was 8 years old and lived in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, with his father, mother, and 3 brothers.


I am not sure how they are all related but as I am pretty good at the genealogical research aspect of things, I am sure that the connections are there somewhere. 

Michael grew up in Milwaukee Wisconsin and from what I can tell from all the Degaro names below, (see screenshot) that he had an extensive extended family in the Milwaukee area. 



As a young man, Michael served as a PFC in the United States Military. I am not sure how many years he served but must have been back in Wisconsin in the early 1960s as that is about the time that he married Mary Jo Woyak Repinski.....


Marriage & Children

Michael married my dad's sister, Mary Jo Repinski Woyak, in the early 1960s. 

I do not know much about my uncle's early life but I do know that he and my Aunt Mary Jo loved each other very much during their short life together and that they would raise four wonderful children together; Connie, Richard, Laura and Scott....my 1st cousins.




"My Childhood Memories of my Uncle Mike"

While growing up and visiting my grandparent's family farm, I remember seeing my Uncle Mike and being in complete awe of him. 
My parents would also take us to visit him and aunt Mary and their children at their home in Southeast Wisconsin many times when we were young.

He was a handsome man with a debonair look and from what I remember,  with a very witty sense of humor.



I remember one Christmas on the family farm where I was a bit sad that grandma had somehow forgot to give me a Christmas gift  (all of my brothers and sisters had gotten knitted mittens from her).

As I was crying in the front room of the farm house, he came in to the room and asked what was wrong. I told him that I didn't think that grandma cared about me as I didn't get anything from her....
A few minutes later, there was a giant (to me) pair of leather gloves handed to me....him saying that she hadn't forgotten about me, but that I was getting a special pair of "big man gloves" so I could help  with chores on the farm and that they would fit me better as I became a handsome young man.

My aunt Mary would go on to have another husband after Mike passed away and though my memories of the ensuing years have faded in the midst of time, I will always remember that one Christmas on the family farm, where I was given one of the best Christmas gifts from one of the finest men I have ever had the pleasure of knowing.

Rest in peace Uncle Michael Degaro.

Your Nephew John Repinski



Sources & Further Reading:

https://www.weremember.com/michael-degaro/2x6l/memories
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/77292475
http://www.usgwarchives.net/wi/cemetery/portage-stbronislava.html
https://www.ancestry.com/1940-census/usa/Wisconsin/Michael-Degaro_2qsv6l

Family Trees:
Mike and Mary Jo Degaro found in 11 trees
Mary Jo Degaro from tree :
Degaro/Kreuser Family Tree
"Doris Katherine Krueser Degaro was the wife of Mike's brother, Samuel Degaro"
Record information:
Birth date/date/1932 city Milwaukee Wisconsin USA
Birth date/date/1942 city Portage Wisconsin USA
Marriage mm/year city Portage Wisconsin USA
Residence year city Sheboygan Wisconsin USA
Death date/date/year city Ozaukee Wisconsin USA
Record information.
Father:Repinski given name surname (1907-year)
Mother: Dulak given name surname (1907-year)
Spouse:Michael A Degaro (1932-year)
Father: Degaro (1902-year)
Mother: Cortez (1907-year)
266 People
9 Records
11 Sources



Monday, February 18, 2019

Another Repinski Cousin in Texas!!

Family History & Research
Repinski Family Tree
Repinski Family Branch
David Repinski-Cousin
Mathias Rzepinski-3rd Great Grandfather


On Monday, December 17th, 2018  I received and email on my LinkedIn account from a David Repinski.
He saw my name on the site and that I lived here in Texas.

The email mentioned that my name, John, reminded him of his dear departed grandfather who had the same name as myself.

We started corresponding and we realized that not only do we live two towns apart (he in Southlake, TX and myself in Keller, TX) but that we both hail from the state of Wisconsin.
His family moved to Georgia when he was a young child.

Read on for my discovery of a new cousin that lives right around the corner from me here in Texas and in the process of researching I discovered my 3rd Great Grandfather, Mathias Rzepinski!!

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Nov 15, 2018-140th Birthday of GGM-Elizabeth Strojk Repinski

Family History & Research
Birthdays
Repinski Family Tree
Stroijk Family Line

Today would be the 140th Birthday of my Paternal Great Grandmother, Elizabeth Stroijk Repinski.

"Lizzie" was born on November 15th, 1878 in the tiny village of Sharon, Portage County, Wisconsin.


Sunday, November 04, 2018

November 4, 1896-Joseph & Elizabeth Repinski -Great Grandparents Wedding Anniversary

Family Tree History & Research
Repinski Family Line
Anniversaries
Joseph Repinski & Elizabeth Strojk

Today, November 4th is the 123rd Anniversary of the marriage of my paternal great grandparents.
Joseph P. Repinski and Elizabeth Strojk were married on November 4, 1896 in Polonia Wisconsin.


Monday, October 22, 2018

The Kashubian Exodus-The 1st Polish Settlers of North America-

Family History Research
Repinski Family Tree History
Repinski-Dulak/Dulek Line
My Kashubian Ancestors

My First Polish Settlers of North America 

"A Long Line of Kashubian Immigrant Ancestors" 


About a month ago I received a message from my cousin Shelby Repinski Ellison who just happened to be traveling abroad for work and she messaged me from Poland...the "Mother Land" of my dad's family.
To say I was a little jealous of her at this moment is just a bit of an understatement....

She asked if I knew of any of the areas where some of our family ancestors may have come from.
I have quite the list and I am sure that after sending numerous 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th and more Great Grandparents and the places that they came from in Poland....she was probably saying "Oh why did I ask??" (inject big grin).

Some day I hope to make it to Poland and visit all of the places I have discovered in my research. I haven't talked to her since her return but I do hope that she got the opportunity to explore a bit.

As I was going through some of the family tree branches on my Repinski/Dulek side to find these towns for her, I decided to do a little more in depth research into one of the areas that quite a few of my ancestors came from.

I already knew from previous research that most of my dad's ancestry from his mother's Osowski side of the family and her mother's Kiedrowski side of the family all came from an area of Northwest Poland called "Kashubian Pomerania".
A distant cousin, Arthur Newkirk, who lives in North Carolina has helped me with this line by finding and adding some of my ancestors to my family tree on Geni.com which is where I have a tree connected to the "World Tree". The more ones line is filled in on the World Tree, the better one is able to connect to other relations through out the world and throughout history.

The more I dug into my family lines, the more I realised just how intimately KASHUBIA and POMERANIA are connected to my dad's family lines from both his father, Clarence Repinski and his mother Evelyn  Dulek Repinski starting in the late 1800s and establishing the bedrock of our family as we know it today.

As one write up in an article on the first settlers says very well:

The hopes and dreams of these immigrants began to be realized as they moved into the 1880’s. 
Their simple log homes became part of larger and more comfortable white frame houses. Their children moved to their own farms or to the city for work or to set up a business. 
Seven more Polish Catholic parishes were organized. 
Even though the "chain migration” from the Kaszuby region had begun to subside by the mid-1880’s, immigrants from the Austrian and Russian partitions of Poland began to find their way to Portage County - usually after a short stay in Chicago or Milwaukee while deciding where to locate. 
Perhaps they were drawn to this area by the large, successful Polish community with its Polish Catholic Churches which had its beginning almost 150 years ago.

Some of those immigrants to North America and in particular the ones that settled in Portage County Wisconsin that are my ancestors have the following surnames: Repinski, Dulek, Osowski, Riemer, Kowalski, Cyzewski, Kosobucki, Mrocki, Zblewski, Kiedrowski, Kynter, Polzcynski, Janta, Wosocki,


Come learn about Kashubia and Pomerania and those Kashubian Poles who emigrated away from their homeland to make new lives for themselves...a very large part of the ancestry of my Repinski/ Dulek family history...


October 22, 1930-Grandparents Clarence & Evelyn Repinski married

Family History and Research
Repinski Family History
Anniversaries and Birthdays

Today is the 86th Wedding Anniversary of my paternal grandparents, Clarence and Evelyn Repinski.
Conrad "Clarence" Jospeh Repinski married Evelyn Mary Dulek on this day, on October 22nd, 1930 in Plover, Portage County, Wisconsin.

Clarence was born May 23, 1907 in Sharon, Portage, Wisconsin to Joseph Repinski, age 33 & Elizabeth Stroik age 28.
He was the 6th of 12 children.
Clarence's siblings were:
Mary: 1898-died right after birth
George: 1899
Edward: 1901
Pearl: 1903-
Loyd: 1905
Clara: 1909
Dorothy: 1911
Theordora: 1913
Alwine: 1914
Evelyn: 1918
Regina: 1920

Evelyn was born April 26th, 1907 in Plover, Portage, Wisconsin to John Dukek, age 30 and Hedwig Kowalski, age 22.
She would be the 3rd of 12 children.
Evelyn's siblings were:
Chester: 1904
Johanna: 1906
Joseph: 1908
Irene: 1910
Maurice: 1911
Beatrice: 1913
Theresa: 1916
Isabelle: 1918
Angeline: 1920
Hedwig: 1922
John: 1925

Clarence and Evelyn would go on to have 10 children and 32 grandchildren (and many great and great great grandchildren to this day)  during their 86 years together:

From left to right top row: Mary, Althea, Margaret, Loretta, Clarence, Evelyn, Maurice, James,
Bottom Row seated: Richard, Shirley, Robert (Missing is Charles)

The ten children (and grandchildren) of Clarence Repinski and Evelyn Dulek Repinski:
Maurice (my father)
(Jane, John, James, Jackie, Jeff)
Loretta
(Robert, Donald)
James
(Diane, Kenneth, Alan, Thomas, Dale)
Margaret
(Linda, Karen, James, Christy)
Charles
(Lynn, Joseph)
Althea
(David, Audrey, Timothy, Amy, Jeffery
Mary
(Connie, Richard, Laura, Scott)
Shirley
(Danielle, Michelle, Kevin)
Richard
(Barbara)
Robert
(Shelby)


My Grandfather, Clarence, died on July 21, 1992
My Grandmother, Evelyn died on February 16, 2000

Happy 86th Anniversary in heaven Grandpa and Grandma!
We all Miss you both and love you so much....

Monday, October 15, 2018

Jacqueline Kennedy (1st Lady)-13th Cousin

Family Tree History & Research
Deitz-Pope Family Line
Smith/Angell Branch
New Discovery: Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy-13th Cousin


Today while researching one of my ancestral branches in my dad's family tree and then my mom's family tree I discovered a line that connects both of my family lines to one of the most popular 1st ladies that ever lived.

I was looking into my polish family lines and first discovered that one of my lines from my dad's Repinski side of my ancestry goes back to the Polish-Lithuanian noble Radziwill line in the 1600s.

From that line I drilled down through the centuries and discovered that I had a 13th cousin thrice removed named Antoni Stanislaw Albert Radziwill.

Read on for my discovery....

Monday, February 05, 2018

John Jenney-My 10th Great Grandfather

Family Tree History and Research
Monday, Feb 5, 2018



My first discovery of a New England Ancestor from my mother's family line that I discovered about a year and a half ago while researching my great grandmother's family history.

Little did I know that making this discovery the August before last that I would be starting an amazing foray into the history of our world and that this marvelous journey through history would enable me to discover numerous ancestral great grandparents and aunts and uncles that came to America on ships such as the Mayflower and the Fortune and the Anne and the Little James and ships that sailed in the "Great Migration" of the Winthrop Fleet and more.

I would find Ancestors that would settle Colonial America and become the founders The United States of America.

I would then find Ancestors that would lead me back across the ocean to England and mainland Europe and beyond.

I would find Ancestors that have given me noble and royal ancestors that in my wildest dreams I never imagined would be possible, but the pedigrees are all there written down.

I would also find through these Ancestors that humanity is ONE BIG FAMILY and that we are all related to one another in one way or another.

John Jenney-My 10th Great Grandfather

Today I would like to introduce everyone to my 10th Great Grandparents and my 9th Great grandmother who I descend from through my mother and through her grandmother on her father's side of her family.

When I first discovered my line to him, all I knew was the following (I penned this paragraph in my journal back in Sep of 2016):
That I accidentally discovered a direct line of descent from one of my great grandmothers to a family that helped settle Plymouth Mass., though they did not arrive on the Mayflower is unbelievable!

So it is that My 10th great grandparents, John and Sarah Jenney sailed a few years (1623) after on a ship called “The Little James”. 
They were part of the group that went to Leiden Holland in the early 1600s with William Brewster and the other pilgrims but for some reason they decided not to embark on the Mayflower and instead waited until 1623 to make the journey to New England. Once they arrived in Plymouth, they quickly became an important part of the new colony by erecting the 1st successful “Grist Mill” for grinding corn into mill and flour. 

John also created the 1st salt works for the colony and was part of the early governing council. Family records indicate that they were close friends of William Bradford and Miles Standish among others.


My 10th Great Grandparents-America's First GristMill

Beyond the Pilgrim Story


Sunday, February 04, 2018

Alice of Saluzzo, Countess of Arundel

Family Tree History and Research
Sunday, Feb 4, 2018

Alice of Saluzzo, Countess of Arundel
23rd Great Grandmother
1269-1292

Another new discovery today.
And another noble ancestral Great Grandmother!
Through my mother's (Marlene Grace Dietz Repinski) family line comes a young lady who only lived for 23 years but it must have been a pretty awesome 23 years.
She comes from a very old Italian family line and married into a noble English line which would give her many descendants that would help shape the history of our world.

This line descends to my mother and my siblings and their children through her grandmother (our great grandmother), Grace Pope Dietz. From Grace's line, this branch would go back through her fathers Pope family line to my 5th great grandmother, Ruth Hammond Pope and through her mother, Sarah Holmes Hammond's line to her Clark family line and then the Strong family line (which I have not had a chance to research yet).
Eventually this line would lead back to the noble English Leigh and Strafford families to the Goushill and then finally the FitzAlan noble lines.
In this line would be knights and ladies, a Lord Mayor of London and other historic figures of English history.

Alice (or Alecia) Saluzzo FitzAlan is the 1st ancestor of Italian heritage I have discovered.


Shall we get to know this woman, who though she only lived a short 23 years, left descendants including me and my siblings and the Dukes of Norfolk, the English Queen Consorts of Henry the VIII, Winston Churchill, Princes Dianna and the current Royal Family.



Alice of Saluzzo, FitzAlan-Countess of Arundel


Thursday, February 01, 2018

Hans-Adam II, Prince of Liechtenstein- 15th Cousin



Family History Research 

Feb 1st, 2018
Our Noble and Royal Ancestors

Repinski-Dulek Family Line

Another discovery a few days ago while researching a number of my mother's family lines back to Europe gave me quite a surprise...


A 15th cousin from my father's (Maurice Joseph Repinski) family line through his mother, Evelyn Dulek Repinski.
...And a Royal cousin at that!!


Introduction

This particular line I knew of, but didn't know of this branch until this last week.
A line that has nobility and royalty going up and down everywhere it seems...

My Grandmother Evelyn Dulek Repinski and her Noble Nalecz Ancestral Branch

From what I have been able to discover, it seems that my paternal grandmother, Evelyn Dulek Repinski descends from a line of "Szlachta" that goes back from her father's mother's line and back to her 6th Great Grandmother (my 8th Great Grandmother), a woman named Anna Katarzyna Pradzinska Gostomska H Nalecz.
Her maiden name being "Gostomska H Nalecz". 

In Poland at this time, the maiden name was given after the married name and often that maiden name is a conglomeration of two family surnames.
I started researching the reasoning for naming system and what I have found is that the part of her surname that is Nalecz, is the "Szlachta" or "Clan" name of a number of noble polish family lines. 


The Nalecz Coat of Arms



Szlachta

The Polish term "szlachta" designated the formalized, hereditary noble class of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, which constituted the nation itself, and ruled without competition.
In official Latin documents of the old Commonwealth, hereditary szlachta are referred to as "nobilitas" and are indeed the equivalent in legal status of the English nobility.

Today the word szlachta in the Polish language simply translates to "nobility". In its broadest meaning, it can also denote some non-hereditary honorary knighthoods granted today by some European monarchs. Occasionally, 19th-century non-noble landowners were referred to as szlachta by courtesy or error, when they owned manorial estates though they were not noble by birth. In the narrow sense, szlachta denotes the old-Commonwealth nobility.

In the past, a certain misconception sometimes led to the mistranslation of "szlachta" as "gentry" rather than "nobility".
This mistaken practice began due to the economic status of some szlachta members being inferior  to that of the nobility in other European countries.
 The szlachta included those almost rich and powerful enough to be magnates down to rascals with a noble lineage, no land, no castle, no money, no village, and no peasants.
At least 60,000 families belonged to the nobility, however, only about 100 were wealthy, all the rest were poor.

As some szlachta were poorer than some non-noble gentry, some particularly impoverished szlachta were forced to become tenants of the wealthier gentry. In doing so, however, these szlachtaretained all their constitutional prerogatives, as it was not wealth or lifestyle (obtainable by the gentry), but hereditary juridical status, that determined nobility.

An individual nobleman was called a "szlachcic", and a noblewoman a "szlachcianka".
Definition of Sclachta


Our Branch to the Nalecz/ Sxlachta Noble Line of Poles

Brief Bio of My 8th Great Grandmother, Anna Katarzyna Pradzinska Gostomska H Nalecz:

Gender: Female
Birth: circa 1680
Death: November 9, 1739 (55-63)
Łąkie?, Pomorskie, Poland
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Jan Jerzy Babka Gostomski h. Nałęcz, Sr. and Anna Katarzyna Babka Gostomska
Wife of Jakub Aubracht Prądziński
Mother of Elżbieta Depka Prądzińska; Anna Pałubicka and Józef Aubracht Prądziński
Sister of Jan Jerzy Babka Gostomski Jr.; Julianna Katarzyna Prądzińska and Konstancja Trzebiatowska
I do not know much more about her than the above. I do know that her father and going back 3 further generations carry the Nalecz Szlachta Coat of Arms/ Clan Surname though (See pedigree below).

 It is from my 13th great grandfather in this line, Dobrogost Gostomski, and his brother that our lines diverge, with one brother's line going to Prince Hans and the other brother's line descending to myself and my family through our other ancestors.

**And for those that know my father and his brothers and sisters, let me know if anyone sees in the photo of Hans below, a resemblance to any of them.  I do!!

The Line of Family Divergence
(Two branches of the same branch divide)

Our Mutual Ancestors
Dobrogost (alias Anzelm) Głowacz z Pawłowic (z Pawlowic vel Gostomski).
*Dobrogost was my 14th Great Grandfather and Cousin Hans' 14th Great Grandfather as well.

A little bit about 14th Great Grandfather, Dobrogost:
Born: early 1400s
Place: Sandomierz, Poland
Died: around 1466 
Place: Torun, Poland

Parents: Jan "Głowacz" Leżeński and Katarzyna Leżeńska
Jan and Katarzyna (our 15th Great Grandparents) had the following children:
1.Hieronim Dogrobost Z Pawlowic Vel Gostomski(our 13th Great Grandfather).
2.Jakub Dobrogost Z Pawlowic Vel Gostomski (Han's 13th Great Grandfather).

Our mutual 14th Great Grandfather, Dogrobost, was the Ensign of Sandomierz, starost of Lublin, voivode of Sieradz, and one of the founders of the city of Głowaczów.

In 1445, as a knight of the Grand Duke of Lithuania Witold Kiejstutowicz, he fought the Teutonic Knights at Chojnice.

He died 1466 staying in Toruń during peace negotiations with the Teutonic Knights, of the plague.


Our Royal Cousin




Johannes Adam II Ferdinand Alois Josef Maria Marco d’Aviano Pius von Liechtenstein, Fürst von und zu Liechtenstein 
15th cousin.

Pedigree From Myself to Prince Hans

John Joseph Repinski
(Me)
 My Father 
His Mother
(My Grandmother)
her father 
(My Great Grandfather)
his mother 
(My 2nd Great Grandmother)
her mother 
(My 3rd Great Grandmother)
her father 
(My 4th Great Grandfather)
his mother 
(My 5th Great Grandmother)
her mother
(My 6th Great Grandmother)
her father 
(My 7th Great Grandfather
his mother 
(My 8th Great Grandmother)
her father 
(My 9th Great Grandfather)
his father 
(My 10th Great Grandfather)
his father 
(My 11th Great Grandfather)
his father 
(My 12th Great Grandfather)
his father 
(My 13th Great Grandfather)
↘︎
his brother 
(My 12th Great Uncle)
his son 
(1st cousin 14 times removed)
his daughter 
(2nd cousin 13 times removed)
her daughter 
(3rd cousin 12 times removed)
her daughter
(4th cousin 11 times removed)
her daughter 
(5th cousin 10 times removed)
her daughter 
(6th cousin 9 times removed)
her son 
(7th Cousin 8 times removed)
his daughter 
(8th cousin 7 times removed)
her daughter
(9th Cousin 6 times removed)
her daughter
(10th cousin 5 times removed)
her daughter 
(11th Cousin 4 times removed)
her son 
(12th Cousin 3 times removed)
his son 
(my 13th cousin 2 times removed)
his son 
(My 14th Cousin once removed)
his son

Johannes Adam II Von Liechtenstein is John Repinski's 15th Cousin

I hope to meet my cousin someday and now that I know we have kin in the little principality of Liechtenstein, I will surly be putting that little mountain country on my bucket list of places to visit someday.

Warm Regards

The Family Historian

John