Dorschke Familie von Ratibor, Oberschlesien

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  • briankaess22
    Benutzer
    • 08.02.2016
    • 37

    Dorschke Familie von Ratibor, Oberschlesien

    Mein Urgroßvater Viktor Dorschke (1889-1969) stammte aus Ratibor, Oberschlesien. Er war mit Marie Kokot (1897-1948) verheiratet und hatte sechs Kinder zusammen: Eduard, Maria, Angelika (Gela), Dorothea (Doris), Rudolf (Rudi), und Arnold. Eduard, Rudi und Arnold bedient alle im Militär des Dritten Reiches. Arnold Dorschke wurde gegen Ende des Krieges getötet 1945. Viktor und Adresse des Marie Dorschke während der Kriegszeit war Memel str. 13 in Ratibor.
    Ich glaube, Viktor Dorschke und Marie Dorschke kann in Ratibor irgendwann um WWI verheiratet gewesen.
    Weiß jemand, wo sie die Ehe Datensätze für Ratibor für diesen Zeitraum gehalten. Ich vermute stark, dass sie katholisch waren.
  • briankaess22
    Benutzer
    • 08.02.2016
    • 37

    #2
    Victor Dorschke marriage entry

    Marriage entry for Viktor Dorschke and Marie Kokot in a Catholic church in Markowitz, Upper Silesia:
    10 Nov 1914: Viktor DROZDZIOK (from Hohenbirken, age 25) with Marie KOKOTT (from Adamowitz, age 18). Witness: Peter Halama and Igna[t]z Pannek, both from Raschütz. Viktor Dorschke appears to have changed his Polish name Drozdziok to Dorschke after the marriage.

    Kommentar

    • ponschonovi
      Erfahrener Benutzer
      • 10.01.2010
      • 330

      #3
      Hallo briankaess,

      wahrscheinlich Off-Topic, aber in dem Ort in dem Ich arbeite gibt es einen
      Zahnarzt KOKOT, evtl. Verwandtschaft?

      Internette Forschergrüsse
      Mick
      Unsere Ahnen mit Orten & Namen aus NRW ··· Unsere Homepage ··· Daten bei Gedbas

      Polen , Oberschlesien : Ratibor ; Ratiborhammer ; Breslau ;
      Brandenburg , Osthavelland , Gemeinde Wustermark : Dyrotz ;
      Yugoslawien , Serbien : Šabac ; Sovljak ; Ruma ; Zasavica ;
      USA : FN WUTTKE - KNAUER - ELEGANCZYK

      Kommentar

      • pehts
        Neuer Benutzer
        • 27.07.2016
        • 1

        #4
        Ich suche das Wohnhaus von Wilhelm und Franziska (geb. Baumgart) Kokot in Kunzendorf, Krs. Gross Wartenberg. Wo kann ich Ortspläne finden? In den Adressbüchern auf adressbuecher.genealogy.net findet sich nichts - gibt es weitere Seiten oder Archive dafür?

        @briankaess und @ponschonovi: Gibt es Verbindungen zu den von ihnen genannten Kokots?

        Gruß

        Kommentar

        • msm761
          Erfahrener Benutzer
          • 09.06.2012
          • 158

          #5
          Hallo pehts & ponschonovi,

          der FN Kokot ist in Schlesien ein Allerweltsname.

          msm
          Niederschlesien: Kreis Namslau, Kreis Groß-Wartenberg, Kreis Sprottau
          Oberschlesien: Nedza (Buchenau), Ratibor
          Frankreich: Corrèze (19), Saumur (49), Paris

          Kommentar

          • briankaess22
            Benutzer
            • 08.02.2016
            • 37

            #6
            The parents of Marie Kokott/Kokot (1897-1948) were Karl Kokott and Marianna (last name unknown), from Adamowitz, Upper Silesia. The parents of Viktor Dorschke/Drozdzok (1889-1969) were Franz Drozdzok and Marianna Mandrisch, from Hohenbirken, Upper Silesia. Franz was a retired farmer living on the land. Marie Kokott was a factory worker. Karl Kokott may have been a forestry worker.
            What I am looking for is more info on Franz Drozdzok and Marianna Mandrisch, and Karl Kokott and Marianna (last name unknown).
            Marianna was a very common first name for Polish women in the 19th century, so it is not strange that both Marianna's were named thus.

            Kommentar

            • Weltenwanderer
              Moderator
              • 10.05.2016
              • 4357

              #7
              Hello Briankaess,

              let's assume they were Catholics:

              The registrar's office's files of Hohenbirken can be found here:
              In the state archive of Kattowitz, branch archive Ratibor:
              births 1874-1907, 1909-1912;
              marriages 1874-1910;
              deaths 1874-1884, 1886-1910.
              Supplementary files for the following years can also be found in the State Archive:
              1881, 1883, 1885-1886, 1888-1891, 1893-1901, 1906-1907, 1909-1912, 1914-1922, 1925, 1927-1930, 1935-1936, 1939-1941, 1943.
              In the registrar's office (USC) of Ratibor:
              births 1913-1945;
              marriages 1911-1945;
              deaths 1911-1945.

              In terms of a Catholic church, Hohenbirken seems to have had an own church starting from around 1877, but there is no mention on my source site where these records are stored.
              Before that, the place belonged to Pogrzebin. The records still seem to be stored in Porgzebin's Catholic church.

              Cheers!
              Weltenwanderer
              Kreis Militsch: Latzel, Gaertner, Meißner, Drupke, Mager, Stiller
              Kreis Tarnowitz / Beuthen: Gebauer, Parusel, Michalski, Wilk, Olesch, Majer, Blondzik, Kretschmer, Wistal, Skrzypczyk, von Ziemietzky, von Manowsky
              Brieg: Parusel, Latzel, Wuttke, Königer, Franke
              Trebnitz: Stahr, Willenberg, Oelberg, Zimmermann, Bittermann, Meißner, Latzel
              Kreis Grünberg / Freystadt: Meißner, Hummel

              Mein Stammbaum bei GEDBAS

              Kommentar

              • Anke Adler
                Benutzer
                • 08.01.2013
                • 44

                #8
                Dorschke

                Hello Briankaess,

                I knew a student in Ratibor, who is able to search for you in the Archiv from Ratibor. But no churchbooks only Standesamt from time :
                births 1874-1907, 1909-1912;
                marriages 1874-1910;
                deaths 1874-1884, 1886-1910.
                Supplementary files for the following years can also be found in the State Archive:
                1881, 1883, 1885-1886, 1888-1891, 1893-1901, 1906-1907, 1909-1912, 1914-1922, 1925, 1927-1930, 1935-1936, 1939-1941, 1943.
                If you are interested send me a message, then I will ask her.

                Kind regards

                Anke

                Kommentar

                • briankaess22
                  Benutzer
                  • 08.02.2016
                  • 37

                  #9
                  To gain a perspective of what the Dorschke's might have exerienced after WWII, see the following work: A Terrible Revenge: The Ethnic Cleansing of the East European Germans, 1944–1950 , by Alfred-Maurice de Zayas, St. Martin's Press, New York, 2006.

                  Kommentar

                  • briankaess22
                    Benutzer
                    • 08.02.2016
                    • 37

                    #10
                    The town history book for Ratibor is Ratibor- Stadt und Land and der oberen Oder. Ein Heimatbuch. Author is Alois Kosler, pub. 1980.

                    Kommentar

                    • briankaess22
                      Benutzer
                      • 08.02.2016
                      • 37

                      #11
                      Viktor Dorschke in Ratibor

                      The following are from a 1938 address book for Ratibor, Germany.
                      1) page 38, listing Viktor Dorschke (Arbeiter) , Marie Dorschke (Arbeiterin) on Memel str. 13, and Eduard Dorschke, on Melfenweg 11.
                      2) page 198, listing residents of Memel str. 13, including Victor Dorschke.

                      Memel str. may also have been known as Bosatzer str. , which is located on the North side of Ratibor, North of the Oder River. This latter info comes from a book about Ratibor, called 'Ratibor, einst und jetzt', by Paul J. Newerla, pub. 1998.


                      The former "Bosatzer Straße" was renamed "Memelstrasse" in 1938. That's why you cannot find this street on the 1933 map. Memel str. shows up on a 1942 map of Ratibor.
                      Memelstraße was certainly in Ratibor - in the district OSTROG (since 1938 Raciborz-North) - not in Hohenbirken.

                      "Brzezie" - since about 1907 "Hohenbirken" - belonged to the district Ratibor. After the vote of 1921 Hohenbirken was separated in 1922 from Ratibor County and awarded to Poland (Rybnik). The village was again called "Brzezie" after 1926 - "Brzezie nad Odrą" (Brzezie an der Oder). In September 1939, when Poland was captured by German troops (and Poland was occupied), the name "Hohenbirken" came into being again. In 1945, when Upper Silesia became Polish, "Brzezie nad Odra" came again. In 1976, Brzezie was associated with the city of Racibórz.

                      Kommentar

                      • briankaess22
                        Benutzer
                        • 08.02.2016
                        • 37

                        #12
                        Victor Dorschke (Drozdzok) in WWI

                        Victor Drozdzok (Dorschke), dob listed as 01.12.1889 and hometown as Hohenbirken, Upper Silesia, is mentioned in a newspaper account as Missing (Vermisst) on Apr 2 1919 from his Prussian Regiment. His unit is mentioned as Infanterie-Regiment 395 and the Liste as Preussen 1403.
                        Zuletzt geändert von briankaess22; 17.07.2018, 19:34.

                        Kommentar

                        • briankaess22
                          Benutzer
                          • 08.02.2016
                          • 37

                          #13
                          Victor Drozdzok in WWI

                          Victor Drozdzok (later Dorschke), dob listed as 01.12.1889 and hometown as Hohenbirken, Upper Silesia, is mentioned in a newspaper account as Missing (Vermisst) on 1919-04-02 from his Prussian Regiment. His unit is mentioned as Infanterie-Regiment 395 and the Liste as Preussen 1403. Link to Newspaper: http://des.genealogy.net/search/show/7383489
                          Zuletzt geändert von briankaess22; 17.07.2018, 21:10.

                          Kommentar

                          • Anke Adler
                            Benutzer
                            • 08.01.2013
                            • 44

                            #14
                            [QUOTE=briankaess;900845]Mein Urgroßvater Viktor Dorschke (1889-1969) stammte aus Ratibor, Oberschlesien. Er war mit Marie Kokot (1897-1948) verheiratet und hatte sechs Kinder zusammen: Eduard, Maria, Angelika (Gela), Dorothea (Doris), Rudolf (Rudi), und Arnold. Eduard, Rudi und Arnold

                            Hallo Brian,

                            die Geburtsurkunde kannst du im Archiv Ratibor bei einem Herrn Langer anfordern Standesamt Brzezie Nr.97/1889 Viktor Drozdzok
                            apraciborz@katowice.ap.gov.pl

                            Gruß Anke

                            Kommentar

                            • briankaess22
                              Benutzer
                              • 08.02.2016
                              • 37

                              #15
                              Viktor Dorschke Nazi Party Documents

                              Attached is a document showing a 1934 copy of a Nazi Party name change document for Viktor Dorschke/Drozdzok.

                              Kommentar

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