Hij heeft/had een relatie met Sosa unknown.
Kind(eren):
This /could/ be their marriage record:
Shaya + Roza Mizrach, Odessa Uezd, 1846-1880, vital records, lipesdatabase.com/about
Querying the Odessa Birth Index for "MIZRACH", returns
* Roza Mizrakh, 1880/Dec
* Leya Mizrakh, 1896
* Khasya Mizrakh, 1897
* Ratsya Mizrakh, 1900/Apr
* Rivka Mizrakh, 1900/Nov
https://www.jewishgen.org
Shaje Mizrach | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sosa unknown | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
* Marriage 07 Jun 1925 at Manhattan, New York (NY)/ FamilySearch
** Sam Siegel, age 43, divorced, born in Odessa (Russia)
*** Morres Siegel
*** Sipa Feigman
** Rosie Mizrach Schulman, age 39, widowed, born in Odessa (Russia)
*** Father: Shaje Mizroch
*** Mother: Branne Weinberg
* Abraham Misroch, born 15 May 1885 in Odessa (Russia), residence at New York City (NY)/ Ancestry
** Father: Israel Misroch, born in Russia, deceased
** Arrived in the US: in abt. Apr 1906 from Antwerp (Belgium)
** Resided in the US: for 16 years, from 1906 to 1922, at 720 Riverside Drive, New York, NY
** Passport Application dated 20 Dec 1922
** Naturalised citizen: since 05 Dec 1912
** Occupation: Dealer in women's apparel
** Plan: depature on 11 Jan 1923 to visit Lavaria (commercial business), Germany (commercial business for A. Misroch (?) - 635 Broad St, Newark, NJ), for 3 months
* Meyer Misrock, age 19, tailor / operator, born 04 Jul 1896 in Dwinsk (Russia), residence at 62 Essex St, NYC (NY)/ FamilySearch
** Naturalization: 16 Sep 1919 in New York (NY)
** Arrived in the USA: 31 Mar 1913 at Ellis Island (NY)
** Departured: Bremen on 27 Mar 1913 on the vessel Prinz Friedrich Wilhelm
** Last foreign residence: Dwinsk (Russia)
** Physical description: dark complexion, 5'4" height, 130 pounds, black hair, brown eyes
** Witnesses:
*** Israel Misrock, real estate
*** Sophia, Israel's wife
* Hersh/Harry Meyerson was an only child.
** His mother was widowed shen she was young and he had no siblings.
** Believe there was a half-brother from a later-in-life second marriage. The half brother Chaim, was left behind in Berezovka, from whence the family came.
** Hersh didn't know what became of his mother, Brayna, and his stepfather, reputedly a nice man. Apparently they just left and never corresponded.
** Barbara Patsy Meyerson was named for her grandfather's mother, Brayna. By the time she was born, he was willing to concede that she must be dead and therefore she could be named in her honor. Her father agreed to his father's request and, for a while, she was known as Barbara Patsy. (Pesha...i.e. Patsy...was one of her mother's relatives.)
* Rubby Malka came from a substantial family. There were six children...five girls and one boy. Her father was, I understand, a man of substance. One of the stories was that he helped to chart the route taken in the building of the Trans Siberian Railroad that connects Moscow with Vladivistok on the Pacific. Along the way he bought and sold the sand that was needed to make the cement that was required...and, as a result, increased his fortunes! He was a contractor or engineer.
** In the early part of the 20th century, the whole family, with the exception of one sister, chaska, moved to America. These were the only relatives on Meyer Meyerson's side. There was some interaction with these people from time to time...but not too much. Rose Mizrach, a widow, came to Chicago for several weeks at a time and stayed with Jack and Bernice Weissman. Jack liked her a lot. There were several visits from Valadmir Weinberg (Voldya), who was a specialist in venereal diseases and had a thriving practice in New York.