Abt 1849 - Aft 1930 (82 years)
-
Name |
Etta "Yetta" Devorah Romm [1, 2] |
Nickname |
Yetta |
Birth |
Abt 1849 |
Kovno Gubernia, Russian Empire [3] |
Gender |
Female |
Death |
Aft 1930 |
Baltimore, Baltimore County, Maryland |
Notes |
- In 1930, Etta/Yetta was living with her son-in-law and daughter Rueben and Rachel LEVINE of Baltimore. She was shown as age 80, born in Russia.
Shown on Geni as Etta Devorah ROMM, born 1848 died May 7, 1930 at the age of 82, a daughter of Yehuda Laib ROMM and Rella KROK, wife of Shlomo SAVILEVICS, mother of Myer SAVILEVICS, Celia SHAPIRO, Hyman SMITH, Simon SMITH, and Ruchel Minna LEVINE, sister of Rucha Nessa SHAPIRO, Chiva Rivka (Ida) (Chiva Reva) ROMM, Rochel ROMM, Pessa Leba ROMM, Max ROMM, Joh Romm and Toba Gittel Romm half sister of Mari-Leah Romm NACHAMSON
|
Person ID |
I47240 |
Strong Family Tree |
Last Modified |
30 Aug 2020 |
Father |
Yehuda Laib Romm, b. Abt 1827, Ponedel, Kovno Gubernia, Russia d. Abt 1860, Kovno Gubernia, Russian Empire (Age 33 years) |
Mother |
Rella Krok, b. Abt 1833, Tzelkay, Kovno Gubernia, Russian Empire d. Abt 1897, Rakisik, Kovno Gubernia, Russian Empire (Age 64 years) |
Marriage |
- Baltimore Lithuanian Jewry Stays Connected.
Within Baltimore's flourishing Jewish community, there are organizations that are working to keep alive connections to ancestors. The B'nai Abraham and Yehuda Laib Family Society (BAYL) is one such organization that is committed to maintaining relationships among descendants of the society's progenitors. According to Phil Shapiro, a member of the society, nearly three-quarters of Baltimore's Jewish population have roots from Lithuania.
BAYL hosted its 115th anniversary picnic on Sept. 4 in Baltimore. The society normally hosts reunions every five years. It was attended by approximately 170 individuals from all over the nation and was recognized with letters from the president of Lithuania as well as both the Israeli and American ambassadors in the country.
Originally founded in Baltimore in 1901, BAYL is believed to be oldest Jewish family society in the world. The idea was that the first relatives who came to the United States from Europe would save their money to help other members of their families immigrate. While family societies were common in the 1930s, very few are left today.
The two families that formed BAYL are linked by Rella Krok, whose first husband was Yehuda Laib Romm, and she later remarried Abraham Abramson. The members of the families used to get together every Saturday night to pool pennies, bringing over another family member when they had accumulated $20. All of the members in attendance at the Baltimore reunion are descendants of the original family society.
Another organization dedicated to Lithuanian Jewry, Remembering Litvaks, Inc., "undertakes projects dedicated to remembering the Jewish communities that existed in Lithuania, including educational programs dedicated to researching and teaching the history of Jewish life in Lithuania and improving the physical condition of Jewish gravesites and other locations of historical significance to Lithuanian Jewry," according to its website. Shapiro is involved with that organization as well.
The organization recently introduced the Ruvin Bun Award, which "will be given for research and education regarding the original vision of the Lithuanian state as a tolerant, multicultural society with a Western-style constitution that established a democratic government." More information on the award can be found at bit.ly/2cJmUYh.
Baltimore Jewish Times
September 15, 2016 By Daniel Nozick
|
Family ID |
F14121 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Family |
Shlomo "Solomon Smith" Savilevics, b. Bef 1850, Kovno Gubernia, Russian Empire d. Yes, date unknown |
Marriage |
- Daugher Rachel was a member of the B'nai Abraham and Yehuda Laib Family Society membership and its associated family tree revolves around a woman named Rella Krok, who was born about 1833. Her father, Laibe Krok, was born in 1800. Laibe and his wife Rachel Krok lived in the tiny hamlet of Tselkay / Celkiai, just south of Rokisik / Roki?kis, a town in an area which today is in the northeastern part of the Republic of Lithuania. In the 1800s, the area was first in the Vilna Gubernya (province) and then in the Kovno Gubernya of the Russian Empire As U.S. census records and vital records related to this family shown places of birth as both Russia, Latvia, or Lithuania, it is assumed Savilevics/Smith family also originated in the Kovno Gubernia area of the Russian empire before their emigration to the United States, likely in Kupiskis, known in Yiddish as Kupishok, was home to 1,444 Jews before World War II. Today no Jews live in Kupiskis.
Phil Shapiro wrote, in reference to the 1897 Rokiskis All-Russian Census that the census list, on page 4, shows a three-person household of Abram and Rella Abramovicz and Zavel Zavelevicz residing on Komaiskaya Street (Kamai Street). The Bnai Abraham and Yehuda Laib Family Society (BAYL), which was founded in Baltimore in 1901, consists of the descendants of the first and second husbands of Rella Krok, the daughter of Laibe Krok. The 1897 census identifies Rella as the daughter of "Leiba," age 64 and married to Abram Abramovicz, whose age is given as 63. According to the BAYL family tradition, Rella's second husband, who was known in the United States as Abraham Abramson, was said to have been a rabbi in Rokiskis for 25 years before coming to America. This appears to be consistent with the translation of the occupation given for Abram in the census of one who "makes Jewish symbolics." The third member of the household, "Zavel Zavelevicz," age 22, appears to be a grandson of Rella. The census states that Zavel was a capmaker who was born in Kupiskis and was the son of "Shloma." Rella's oldest daughter from her first marriage (to Yehuda Laib Romm) was Etta-Devara Romm. Etta-Devara married Shlomo Savilevics and lived in Kupiskis. At least one of Etta's children -- my grandmother Zlata Savilevics (Celia Smith Shapiro) -- often told the family that as a child she frequently stayed with her grandmother Rella.
https://kehilalinks.jewishgen.org/Rokiskis/census.htm
|
Children |
| 1. Rachel Mina "Minnie" Smith, b. Abt 1872, Kovno Gubernia, Russian Empire d. 25 Jan 1955, Baltimore County, Maryland (Age 83 years) |
| 2. Zanvil "Myer" Smith, b. 31 Mar 1876, Kovno Gubernia, Russian Empire d. 6 Jan 1944 (Age 67 years) |
| 3. Celia Smith, b. 15 Mar 1881, Kovno Gubernia, Russian Empire d. 3 Jul 1969 (Age 88 years) |
| 4. Hyman Smith, b. 15 Jul 1885, Kovno Gubernia, Russian Empire d. 18 Apr 1961, Tyler County, Texas (Age 75 years) |
|
Family ID |
F14112 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Last Modified |
26 Aug 2018 |
-
-
Sources |
- [S564] 1930 United States Federal Census [Ancestry.com. database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2002., (Original data: United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Fifteenth Census of the United States, 1930. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1930. T626, 2,667 rolls. Containing records for approximately 123 million Americans, the 1930 United States Federal Census is the largest census released to date and is the most recent census available for public access. The census gives us a glimpse into the lives of Americans in 1930, and contains information about a household?s family members and occupants including: birthplaces, occupations, immigration, citizenship, and military service. The names of those listed in the census are linked to actual images of the 1930 Census.), Year: 1930; Census Place: Baltimore, Baltimore, Maryland; Page: 5B; Enumeration District: 0499; FHL microfilm: 2340594, living with her daughter Rachel, and son-in-law Rubin Levin. Listed as Yetta SCHMIDT. (Reliability: 3).
- [S1945] .
- [S564] 1930 United States Federal Census [Ancestry.com. database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2002., (Original data: United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Fifteenth Census of the United States, 1930. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1930. T626, 2,667 rolls. Containing records for approximately 123 million Americans, the 1930 United States Federal Census is the largest census released to date and is the most recent census available for public access. The census gives us a glimpse into the lives of Americans in 1930, and contains information about a household?s family members and occupants including: birthplaces, occupations, immigration, citizenship, and military service. The names of those listed in the census are linked to actual images of the 1930 Census.), Year: 1930; Census Place: Baltimore, Baltimore, Maryland; Page: 5B; Enumeration District: 0499; FHL microfilm: 2340594, Listed as age 80. (Reliability: 3).
|
|