.
In 2016 I wrote:
As you’ll have
seen in my previous family posts on this blog, there are a couple of nasty
lacunae in my otherwise pretty well covered family-tree.
The biggest and
most disappointing one is the failure to find out anything concerning
great-grandfather Adolf Gánsl before he turned up in Vienna in the 1870s with
his new wife, Julianna. He is said on his death registration to have been born
1844 in Mór, Hungary. And that’s all I know of his early life.
The other mystery
is ‘whatever happened to Max’. Max was the middle one of the three sons of Adolf.
Pepi, my grandfather, Max, Fritz. So he really was my great-uncle. But it was a
long time before we even knew of his existence. Because, what had happened in
Vienna stayed in Vienna as far as father was concerned. He had wiped Austria
and Hungary from, if not his mind, certainly from his children’s. As he had
wiped our Jewish heritage. When my mother related to 12 year-old me how a local
social climber had hissed at her ‘Nancy how does it feel being married to a
Jew’, I thought how silly, how would she know?
Anyway, Pepi died
in 1936, and father left Austria for England and ultimately New Zealand soon
after. He was an only child, with one cousin, Tom Stern (not Jewish?) who, with
his parents, ended up in Australia. I don’t know when he died* (2021: I do now), but John and I
were told that we were the only live twigs on the family tree. Humph! The only
offspring of those three Gánsl sons.
Onkel Fritz. He
married a ‘less than charming’ lady called Berta and they lived their lives in London childless. But Max? I asked. Oh he moved to Hungary and worked in the wine
business… Never anything more. I began to suspect I might have had a gay uncle.
Well, I found out that I didn’t. Another Gánsl, Petra, from Toronto, got in touch, through
the Jewish Genealogy Portal, thinking she might have found the missing Adolf.
Alas, the name was right, the area was right, but he was twenty years too young.
Shame.
But Petra pursued
her Hungarian Adolfing and came up with … a wedding certificate for a Miksa Gánsl.
It was Max. 1911 Budapest. Terezia Fuchs.
And Lord love me,
a third. 1937 Budapest. Erzsébet Brody.
He was 54 by that
stage. And do you know what? I reckon he survived the war and into old age.
Because one day, when I was in my twenties, I distinctly heard my grandmother
say, à propos of goodness knows what, ‘Oh I must tell Max’. Max, if he were alive,
would have been by this stage in his eighties. There was a hush round the room
… had nana gone gaga, I thought? I think not. Just a little more garrulous with
age (‘of course you have Jewish blood, my husband was a Jew’).
So do John and I
have more, close family we weren’t allowed to know about? Anyone have a father
or grandfather in Budapest named Miksa Gánsl with a wife called Terezia,
Gizella or Erzsébet?
Anyway, Petra and
I are convinced we are related and she even speaks Hungarian so … go for it,
girl!
And then Adolf. Watch this space!
****
****
Postscriptum; Well, its not Adolf. Its Miksa again. Ive just found a grave for Giza Miksane Waldmann Gansl 1884-1937 at the Kozma Street Jewish Cemetery, Budapest. I wonder if her husband (who remarried pretty smartly!) is buried there too!
January 2018. The mystery largely solved, thanks to the Jewish Genealogy Portal and Karesz Vandor of Budapest. He discovered that not only was Max's second wife buried at Kozma Street, but also, in 1945, his third wife. And on the record of her death, Max is described as 'néhaí' .. 'the late'. So Nana was having a senior moment, and great-uncle Max was already dead when I was born. I wonder why he isn't in Kozma Street as well.
January 2021. More mystery? Rudi's diary. Christmas 1925. .. die ganze Familie .. Onkel Max und Tante Margit waren her, in Puchenstuben ... Tante Margit?
Max Hecher didn't die in 1914. He was sent, in 1915, to a Russian PoW camp in Siberia. And documentary evidence survives. Unfortunately for his family (of which my brother and I are the only living survivors) that evidence is in the "sold" listings of something called German Postal History ... so the actual papers are lost to us ...
Eduard Stojetz, is of course, my nana Rudi's father. And Max Hecher is the son of his stepmother ... they were very close all their lives ..
I think I have to rewrite my Onkel Max stories; (1) onkel Max Gánsl (2) Onkel Max Hecher ...
Latest spotting: Onkel Max Gánsl in Budapest in 1928 I am sure. A wine commission agent. Yes, that'll be him. Remete-utca? That sounds familiar. But is that Jozsef one of mine, too ....
Gansl József, czégb. Gansl József, férfiszabó, TV, Károlykörút 4.
Ganzl Miksa, borbizományos, czégb. Ganzl Miksa, borbizományi iparüzlettulajdonos, IX, remete-u. 5.
So my ggf, Adolf Gansl was born in 1868 in
ReplyDeleteLovasberény (Lauschbrünn), Fejér County, Hungary. His profile is posted on geni as well. Thinking there is a connection?
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DeleteHi Miriam, I suspect if so distantly
ReplyDeleteIt seems to belong to the family of Petra Gansl-Gombos ...
We haven't yet established a verifiable connection
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ReplyDelete