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South Bend Area Genealogical Society
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"Serving South Bend, Mishawaka and Surrounding Areas"
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P.O. Box 11
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Notre Dame, IN 46556
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Helen JABLANOWSKI
[N7377]
15 DEC 1888 - 25 MAY 1968
- RESIDENCE: 1930, 202 Orange Ave, South Bend, IN
- BIRTH: 15 DEC 1888, Przasnysz, Russian Poland
- EVENT: Fact:
1910, Helen speaks Polish
- EMIGRATION: 1905
- BURIAL: St Joseph Cemetery, South Bend, In
- DEATH: 25 MAY 1968, South Bend, IN
Father: Jan John JABLANOWSKI
Family 1
: Alexander PUTRZENSKI
- Cecilia PUTRZENSKI
- Alex TRENT-PUTRZENSKI
- Irene PUTRZENSKI
- Hendric Henry Trent - PUTRZENSKI
- Wladislawa Lottie PUTRZENSKI
- +Victor PUTRZENSKI
- Stanislaus PUTRZENSKI
Family 2
: Walter Winencz WOJNUSZ
- MARRIAGE: BET 1925 AND 1930, St Joseph County, IN
INDEX
[N7377]
Source: djeanhill958@aol.com
My Fathers, Mother was from Krakow, Poland. I know spelling is wrong but her name was Wojnush sounds like Vonush.
Source:taltos017@yahoo.com
1) Helen shows up in the South Bend City Directory in 1936, as the widow of Alex, living at 2226 Bertrand, with her kids.
2) In 1913 Helen returns from a visit to her home town of Przasnysz, Russian Poland where she visited with her father Jan/John and gave birth to Stanislaus. She sailed on the S.S. Pretoria Hamburg to New York arriving 7/5/1913
3) Between 1925 - 1936 Helen marries Walter Wonosz. They live at 202 Orange Street in South Bend ..He works at Singers ... to date no record of offspring or the death / burial of either person .... In 1936 Helen appears in the South Bend City Directory as Putrzenski??? (see 1 above)
The origin of Przasnysz District
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The origin of Przasnysz District is related to the reform of ducal jurisdiction in Mazovia. In the 16th century, feudal courts were not stationary but circuitous i.e. travelling all around the region, periodically stopping at more significant centres. Those centres, jointly with their inhabitants falling under jurisdiction of relevant feudal courts, were regarded as separate administrational districts. Each district endowed with significant administrational and judicial powers was supervised by a starost (i.e. district commissioner) During the Old Polish period the area of Przasnysz District was ca. 1,825 km2, making it the largest such unit within Ciechan©dw province. Following the third partition of Poland in 1795 Przasnysz District was taken over by the Hohenzollern Dynasty of Prussia and incorporated into the so-called New Eastern Prussia. As a result of administrational changes introduced by the invading country (1799), the new Przasnysz District emerged. It was comprised of the 3 former districts i.e. Ciechan©dw, Przasnysz and Niedzborsk. The square area of the district totaled up to 2,743,4 km2 and its population was of 53.8 thousand inhabitants (1813).
This state continued till the implementation of the tsar's administrational reform in 1866 which reduced the district's area to 1,397.5 km2. During World War I, Przasnyski District was incorporated into the M?awa Region which was supervised by the Germans (1916). During the Second Republic period, Przasnysz was regarded as a district domicile within the Warsaw Province. Its square area amounted to 1,410.3 km2, whereas its population in 1938 amounted to 69 thousand inhabitants. During World War II, Przasnyszi District was incorporated into the Third Reich and regarded as a sub-section of so-called Regierungsbezirk Zichenau which included other North Mazovian districts. After World War II, Przasnysz District reappeared on the country's administrative map in the same shape as in 1939. It retained its basic form until 1975 when it was subdivided into newly created Ostro?e;ka and Ciechan©dw Provinces. After 1st January 1999, Przasnysz District again resumed its independent position upon the administrational map of the country.
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