This workshop will be devoted to Edelmann living outside the USA. Did any migrate to Australia, Canada, South Africa, or other Countries? On the internet we see Edelmann current live in Sweden, Finland, Austria, Switzerland.
Subject: Re: Australia Phone Book? Date: 5 Jan 98 20:12:38 -0500 From: Michael.Bouy@osa.com.au To: Indbio
Hi Harold -
Here I have been thinking I would not be able to assist anyone, and I am thrilled to be able to respond to your request.
The Australian white pages can be found on the site http://www.whitepages.com.au
You must select a state, then choose either the capital city of the state (e.g. Victoria = Melbourne, New South Wales = Sydney, Queensland = Brisbane, South Australia = Adelaide, Western Australia = Perth, Tasmania = Hobart) or the country areas.
I quickly did a search of Edelmann and Eddleman in all the capital cities with the following results:
EDELMANN R 93 MACQUARIE ST CHIFLEY, NSW 2036 Australia Phone (02) 9311-7660 (from the USA dial 011-61-2-9311-7660)
EDELMANN S 117 HOUSTON RD KINGSFORD, NSW 2032 Australia Phone (02) 9663-2752 (from the USA dial 011-61-2-9663-2752)
EDELMANN E & C 159 GLOSTER ST SUBIACO, WA 6008 Australia Phone (08) 9388-1504 (from the USA dial 011-61-8-9388-1504)
Other international phone books can be found via http://www.contractjobs.com/tel/
Best regards -
Michael C. Bouy Melbourne,
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ubject: Re: Alsace Emigration Book -- Lookup? Date: 26 Oct 97 09:53:18 -0500 From: frfg@worldnet.att.net To: Indbio
Dear Harold, The surname EDELMAN is noted in the first column of "the ALSACE IMMIGRATION BOOK" VOL.1. page 62. the page is laid out in columns last name, first, name, birth year, birthplace, date of emigration,, Port of debarkation, occupation and the source of information with one word, source. EDELMAN, HENRY, BD. 1826, MULHOUSE, 6/5/1848, PH, tinmaker? ( hard to read) film EDELMAN, MARTIN, 1826, BERGHEIM, 1/4/1854, NY, WINEMAKER, FILM EDELMAN MN KNAB JEANNE, 1823, BERGHEIM, 7/20/1854, NY, BAKER, FILM Book one does not have the second surname, I will get back to you in another message.
==== ALSACE-LORRAINE Mailing List ==== Lower Alsace (Haut-Rhin): CDHF http://www.telmat-net.fr/~cdhf Cover only the southern portion of Alsace
Harold,
The Alsace Emigration Book has:
Henry Edelmann, from Mulhouse, with passport dated 5 Jun 1848 Martin Edelmann, from Bergheim, 4 Jan 1854 Jeanne Edelmann (nee Knab), from Bergheim, 20 Jul 1854 Hans Adam Edelman, from Rott, who left sometime about 1731
No Baussers. Depending on how certain you are of the spelling you might consider these other possibilities:
Baushard, Bossard, Bossart, Bossert, Bosshardt, Bosshart
Robert Behra
bject: RE: - Edelman/mann Date: 28 Oct 97 15:18:58 -0500 From: EDDLEMAN-L@rootsweb.com To: Indbio
> Harold Eddleman, Ph.D. wrote: > > Dear EDL > Robert Behra just sent the same info with some additional info. > Notice > he found the names were Edelmann not Edelman as someone else reported > [jfe] I would tend to concur here. In authentic German, I can't imagine there would ever be a "man" ending on any name, "Edelmann" or otherwise. [For those new to the list] my wife Ute, the German native, agrees that given the form of the old German manuscript "N", it would be very easy to missread it as a single "N" if you weren't aware of the underlying linguistic facts. I believe (and it is Ute's experience in researching such matters) that you would find that every surname in German that has a -mann type suffix, e.g.., Hermann, Reichmann, etc., will always be 2 n's in the original. However, misspellings, translations, and most certainly Anglicization in the America, would have resulted in dropping the extra "N" since in English, "man" (the masculine or the politically incorrect version as a collective noun) is spelled with 1 N.
In other words, I'd be very skeptical of any record that surfaced indicating that an EDELMAN in Germany, Switzerland, and or Austria had only one N. Other countries might certainly differ.
Having said that, I now expect someone somewhere will find one. :-)
john.
==== EDDLEMAN Mailing List ==== Thanks for being a part of the Eddleman Discussion List. Have you introduced yourself? Iwill move this to the Edelmann surname page