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South Bend Area Genealogical Society
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"Serving South Bend, Mishawaka and Surrounding Areas"
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P.O. Box 11
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Notre Dame, IN 46556
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Andreas BIELASKI
[N18455]
1812 - ____
- BIRTH: 1812, Chomętowo, Szubin, PL
Family 1
: Victoria CIężKA
- MARRIAGE: JUL 1849, Chomętowo, PL
INDEX
[N18455]
Catholic parish Catholic Chomętowo, entry 7/1849
Andreas Bielaski (37 years old, widower) 95%
father: Joseph Bielaski, mother: Theresia
Victoria Ciężka (25 years old)
father: Joannes Ciężki, mother: Marianna
in the deaths of Szubin 1848 I found the death of Agnes Bielawski wife Andreas Bielawski-it's probably1 wife Andreas had in 1848 33 years / p157 deaths Szubin akta Mormon /
2
I also found death there Stanisław Bielski / Żołnież Polski / aged
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Chomętowo is located in the area of the Gniezno Lake District , on the northern edge of the Wielkopolska Lake District , elevated an average of 95-120 m above sea level. The relief is the result of the last glaciation. A large area is covered with moraine , with frontal moraine . In the area around Chomętów there are gutter lakes with elongated, narrow shapes and steep banks. These lakes are located in the zone of the Żędów Lakes Landscape Area.
The village of Chomętowo was established in the 12th century as a gentry manor and took its name from the name Chomętowski. Initially, there was a manor here, of which the so-called the remaining part - a palace , a former granary , barns and cowsheds , which have now been rebuilt into individual farms. After the partition of Poland, the village adopted the name Hedwigchorst , the same name was used during the occupation ( 1939 - 1945 ). The name was established by the German colonist from the name of daughter Hedwig and son Chorst. Since the establishment of the estate, the Poles have settled here as a wage force. There was a forge and a windmill , which was dismantled only in the interwar period. It should be assumed that Chomętowo was an island , because from the north there is the Chomętowskie lake, the Sobiejuskie lake from the west, and meadow lowlands connected with the dikes by west and south . These meadows are rich in peat , exploited by local farmers during the inter-war period . These are the traces of old lakes or wetlands where shrubs and tall grasses grew. At the beginning of our century, assets were divided between German colonists. There were 36 individual farms with an area of ​​5 to 25 ha. In 1920 , the German colonists left the farms, which were occupied by Poles deserved in the Greater Poland Uprising . The village has become exclusively Polish. Families fighting in the uprising have been living it to this day.
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