I know back to my 4 times great grandparents in Poland. My gr-grandfather, Martin von Klopotek Glowczewski and gr-grandmother, Victoria von Cisewska, came to the US in 1868 through Canada and then into Portage County, WI. They originated in Glowczewice, Poland, were married there in 1854; had several children there, then 3 more in the US. My grandfather, was the youngest of that family. My mother is the youngest of his family of 12 children. I am in the process of validating who Martin's parents were because the parish records for his birth year were so damaged that they are nearly indecipherable. However, all records point to his parents as Martin von Klopotek Glowczewski and Katarina von Styp Rekowska.
My great grandmother, Victoria's parents, were Jozef von Cisewski and Magdelena von Lesczynska, daughter of Piotr von Lesczynski and his wife Agnes.
We come from a long line of musicians and artists, and still continue with those traditions. My g-grandfather brought his violin over with him from Poland. My grandfather used to play it at weddings and parties in Wisconsin. I have played it at bluegrass festivals in Wyoming and Colorado, and now my nephew is learning to play it. So four generations have kept the musical thread from Glowczewice to today, via that violin. Very cool, I think. :)
What is very cool for me is to trace the fathers/grandfathers and also the mothers/grandmothers and to be able to say that I am Jane, daughter of Rosalie, granddaughter of Veronica, gr-granddaughter of Victoria, gr-gr-grandaughter of Magdelena, gr-gr-gr-granddaughter of Agnes. (pardon the anglicized spellings). Six generations of women, and seven when I add my daughter Kat and niece Betsy, and eight when I add my great niece in September, Emmry. Therein for me lies the joy in genealogy -- to be able to know their names, to know where they lived, to know the children they had, the children they grieved for, the husbands they married, the husbands they followed, etc. Same for the grandads only with their women.
Wow -- loooooooooong answer to short question :)
My friends tease me about all the time I spend with "dead people" as I spend hours researching in the old microfilms of parish records. Several members of my extended family and I have a joint website that together houses information for literally thousands of Polish ancestors and their descendants.
You're welcome to visit any time. The main site is:
bigalke.biz
My little corner of it is:
bigalke.biz/klopotekproject/
of course, you will need to add the complete beginning of the www to the web address. :)
Cheers, Jane
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