melissa_ferguson on FamilyTreeCircles - journals

melissa_ferguson on Family Tree Circles

sort: Date Alphabetical
view: full | list

Journals and Posts


Anyone researching DYDA? UJEST (Galicia/Austria)?? Help Needed!

Records for my GGrandfather Aleksa DYDA show that he and his wife Katarzina (LAZOWSKI) were Polish from Ujest (Ujazd), Austria-Hungary, Galicia, (Poland). Records for his sister, Maria (Dyda) Hrycyszyn and her husband Wasyl HRYCYSZYN, show that they were Ruthenian, from Rohatyn, Austria. In modern day, these areas now referred to as: lower Poland- areas near or around: Gliwice, Breslau, Wroclaw, Brzezia (latitude 18, longitude 50), or the Ukraine, previous Galicia- Rohatyn (latitude 24 longitude 49). Any help researching any of these surnames would be greatly appreciated! It would be nice to even find another DYDA researcher!!

Aleksa Dyda b1879
Married 1905
Katarzina Lazowski b1884
Anna Dyda b1904 (daughter)


Maria Dyda b1883 (sister to Aleksa)
Married
Wasyl Hrycyszyn b1879
Kasia Hrycyszyn b/abt1903

Possible variants for Hrycyszyn; Hryczszyn, Hryezayn, Hryczsyn

Possible Given Name of Katarina Lazowski's Father: Hafory, Hafouy, Hafouzy, Hafozy, Kafory, Kafouy, Kafozy, Kafouzy.

1 comment(s), latest 8 years, 6 months ago

Searching for DYDA ancestors from Ujazd, Poland (Galicia)

Aleksa (Alex) DYDA & Katarzina (Lazowski) DYDA

Searching for my DYDA ancestors of UJAZD village, Poland (Eastern Europe).
(In the 1800-1900's Poland may have also been identified as Austria-Hungry, Glazien (Galicia), Ukraine).

Aleksa DYDA
Birth 25 June 1879 Ujazd, Poland (Galicia)---
Death 20 Feb 1963 Wisconsin, USA
Departed in year 1907 from the port in Hamburg, Germany, aboard the ship Batavia, to Ellis Island, New York, USA.

A landsman (farmer), my Great Grandfather, Aleksa (Alexander) DYDA, was one of the first settlers in a little unknown village of Marathon County in the State of Wisconsin, in the United State of America, called Kronenwetter. The founding (1910) Worzella brothers printed brochures to advertise their new 26,000 acre community. They described the village of Kronenwetter as a Polish community, they printed the brochures in the Polish language and sent them to major US cities. They also placed advertisements in major US city newspapers, reaching out to Poles, advertising to them in the Polish language. The brochures and advertisements alike included pictures of beautiful farms, including buildings and livestock. Aleksa must must have been enticed, as he chose to settle in Kronenwetter where the Worzella brothers built homes for the settlers starting from $350 for a three room house and $450 for a five-room house. When Aleksa DYDA left Poland in 1907, he also left behind his wife, Katarzina and their first born child, Anna. They were not long behind, and joined him a few months later in their new village. He was a simple man, with a simple view, starting a new journey in his life, with his wife, and the many children that followed...

...Current day, my journey...105 years later! Instead of sailing to a new land, my search is taking me back to the old land, a land I have never seen, a land I have never really heard of. DYDA is an unusual surname, and to my dismay, even much more scarce than I ever first thought. So here in 2012 I search back, from the great big USA, far away from that little Kronenwetter village that Grandpa Aleksa DYDA farmed all of his years, back across the sea, back in time, to his first little village in Ujazd, Poland. I search my family there; for his and Katarzina's parents, and anyone connected to our DYDA name.

Post your Genealogy Research on FamilyTreeCircles.com