Family histories
Found in 88 Collections and/or Records:
Frank and Marion Weinberg, 1930-1943
Rev. Frank Weimberg was a Denver cantor, mohel, and shochet. He was born in Poland in 1866 and lived for 22 years in Denver before his death in 1930. His widow, Marion, lived in Denver for nearly 40 years and was one of the founders of Beth Israel Hospital and Old Folks Home. She died in 1943.
Frankel Family Papers
Freda and Charles Wenger, 1981
Freda Cohen and Charles Wanger were married in Rocky Ford in 1931. Both came from large Jewish Russian immigrant families. They moved to Denver after the birth of their three children.
Friedland Family Tree, 1885 - 1997
Family trees, certificate of naturalization, and notes about the family.
Gabelman Whelan Family Papers
Collection contains six boxes of papers, photographs, publications, textiles, correspondence, clippings, keepsakes, and other materials relating to the life, family, and career of Cyprienne Gabelman Whelan.
Ganz (Gans) Family, 1914-1992
Pincas Ganz (1868-1918) and Sarah Katz Ganz (1877-1962) were both born in Austria and married in 1895 in New York. They settled in Denver during the early 1900s with their three daughters Harriette (Hattie), Minnie, and Jeanette. When Pincas died of influenza in 1918, the family returned to New York to live with Sarah's family, where she worked for New York Life Insurance Co.
Gardenschwartz-Greinetz-Keller, 1864 - 2001
Family trees, census information, marriage certificate, and family information.
Genealogical Research, 1944-1983
Contains family histories, correspondence, genealogy forms, and notes. Also contains contacts with the American Jewish Archives and the Rocky Mountain Jewish Historical Society and Beck Archives
Genealogical Research and Family Trees, 1914-1984
Contains genealogical research, corespondence, family histories, and family tree charts.
George Nathan and Fanny Herzel, 1929-1990
Originally from Latvia, George Herzel was a Hebrew teacher and scholar in Denver from 1928 until 1946. George wrote several unpublished manuscripts on Jewish topics, two Jewish guidebooks, essays, and an autobiography. Both George and his wife Fanny (born in Poland, married in 1910) were certified notary publics.