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C'mon....Pennsylvania had to be Western Lithuania at one point. Schuylkill County, Luzerne, the Pittsburgh area...I do remember in the 1980s reading a statistic that Schuylkill County had the largest percentage of Lithuanians outside Lithuania. Coal miner or no coal miner, hash out your PA Lithuanian ancestors here.

Schuylkill County
For those whose ancestors went to Schuylkill County, PA, the Marriage License Search on the county website may be very helpful. You can search by partial names (good for those messed up spellings) or even search just by first name. The search will give you the docket number, and from there, you can order a copy of the record for little money.
Schuylkill County Genealogy message board at RootsWeb.

The Library in Pottsville has a whole host of genealogy resources and will look up obituaries for a very nominal fee.
Index of Obituaries in the Pottsville Republican.
The Frackville Library website.
The Schuylkill County Historical Society.
The Greater Shenandoah Area Historical Society.
Schuylkill County Genealogy Ties on Rootsweb.

Diocese: Diocese of Allentown
Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, 7 South Broad Mountain Avenue
Frackville, PA 17931-1800 (570) 874-0842. No website.

St. Vincent de Paul Lithuanian Catholic Church, Girardville. Merged. See St. Joseph's, Girardville.
St. Joseph's Lithuanian Catholic Church, Mahanoy City
Our Lady of Siluva (formerly St. Louis), Maizeville. Closed.
St. Francis of Assisi, Minersville
Sacred Heart, New Philadelphia

St. George's Lithuanian Catholic Church, Shenandoah CLOSED.  Per the Diocese, the records are at:  Annunciation BVM, 218 W. Cherry St., Shenandoah, PA 17976   phone: 570-462-1916

Saints Peter & Paul Lithuanian Catholic Church, Tamaqua.  307 Pine Street, Tamaqua, PA 18252

Rev. William J. Linkchorst 570-668-1150



Allegheny County
Official website of the county.
The Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh website.
Website for the Lithuanian Citizens' Society of Pittsburgh.
Allegheny County page of PAGenWeb project.
Diocese: Diocese of Pittsburgh Parish records are located at the Archives & Record
Center located at Synod Hall, Pittsburgh Diocese
125 North Craig Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
Phone: (412) 621-6217


St. Casimir's Parish (founded 1891)
2114 Sarah Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15203
(412) 431-1212
(412) 881-2983
Some cemetery inscriptions from St. Casimir's cemetery, Whitehall, PA.

St. Vincent Lithuanian Catholic Church, Pittsburgh. Closed. See St. John of God, McKees Rocks.

SS. Peter & Paul, Homestead
St. Isadore's, Braddock
St. Anthony's, Bridgeville
Ascension Church, Manchester
St. Valentine's, Bethel Park
St. Joseph's, Donora
St. Luke's, Bentleyville
St. Francis Academy, Whitehall (1929-1991) had a Lithuanian Library.  If it survives, it might be with the Sisters of St. Francis: website

Luzerne County
Government:   Homepage for Luzerne County.

Libraries:
Back Mountain Memorial Library, Dallas
Hazleton Area Library
(Four branches, including Freeland)
The library has the Hazleton Standard Speaker newspaper online, from 1999-present.  However, you need to enter a library card #.
Hoyt Library, Kingston
Kirby Library, Mountaintop
Mill Library, Nanticoke
Osterhout Public Library, Wilkesbarre
Pittston Memorial Library, Pittston
Plymouth Public Library, Plymouth
W. Pittston Library, W. Pittston
Wyoming Free Library, Wyoming

Churches:
 Diocese of Scranton

St. Casimir (Polish & Lithuanian), Freeland. Closed. All four Catholic churches in Freeland are being merged into one new church to be housed at St. Ann's, to be known as Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception.  Brief histories of the component churches is given here.  I've read that getting records from any Freeland churches is hopeless;  you'll be told the records are 'lost', or to contact the diocese.  The Diocese, in turn, is said to respond tersely, if at all, saying that they 'don't have time' for such things, or that the church should have the records.  St. Ann's, 
898 Centre Street, Freeland PA 18224  Tel 570 - 636 - 3035, Fax 570 - 636 - 1743

Saints Peter & Paul Lithuanian Catholic Church, Hazleton. Merged. Records at Transfiguration Church, W. Hazleton.  213 Green Street, West Hazelton PA
18201

Tel 570 - 454 - 3933, Fax 570 - 454 - 8326

Holy Trinity, Wilkes Barre

Other Luzerne Links:
Luzerne County Historical Society
Luzerne County GenWeb page

Northumberland County
Government:  Homepage for Northumberland County

LIbraries:
Mt. Carmel Public Library
Shamokin-Coal Township Public Library

Churches:
Diocese: Diocese of Harrisburg
Holy Cross, Mt. Carmel. Closed. See:  Divine Redeemer, 438 West. Avenue, Mount Carmel PA 17851    Tel 570 - 339 - 4350, Fax 570 - 339 - 5759
St. Stanislaus Kosta (Polish-Lithuanian), Shamokin.  CLOSED.  Records at: Mother Cabrini, 214 North Shamokin Street, Shamokin PA 17872   Tel 717 - 648 - 4512, Fax 717 - 648 - 1209

Other Northumberland links:
PA GenWeb page for Northumberland County

Philadelphia County
Pre-1920 Roman Catholic Church Records are archived at the Philadelphia Archdiocesan Historical Research Center.  From the main page of the site, click the Genealogy tab to find what records they have/do not have, and how to order them.  If only all dioceses were this well-organized.  The early Archdiocese of Philadelphia also included Bucks, Chester, Delaware & Montgomery Counties.

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Replies to This Discussion

This is an area where I'm so weak, but as I always tell other people (without them asking me for advice!), this is where it's really important to know the history, occupations, etc., even though I can't recite all that info myself. From this map, you can see that that area was Prussian going back to the year 1200. And from 1867 to 1914, Pavistytis maybe bordered on the Kingdom of Prussia, hard to tell.

So it makes sense, even if the name "August" wasn't a big clue(!), that your g-grandparents were German speaking. But I think you do yourself a disservice focusing on "Germany" vs. "Prussia". I think you have to be flexible.

There are some films from the Mormon's that you might want to order through your closest Family History learning center here and here. However, as the records will be in German, Russian and Polish, they'll be challenging. Another option might be to contact the Polish Archives in Suwalki at zluksza@suwalki.ap.gov.pl. When I've written to Archives in Poland, I've had a friend write my email for me in Polish. You could probably piece together a short somewhat coherent email using Google Translator.

An estimated birthyear of 1877 for Helena Myszkus together with her parents' names seems like it'd give you a pretty good chance of the Archives finding her baptism, or you finding it on the microfilms...assuming the records survived war and fires.

As far as August is concerned, the "-ski" in his name is a Polonization of Dombrow (or maybe even Dombrau, I dunno). So if I were searching in Prussia, I'd go with August Dombrow. How would you find out where in Prussia August came from? I dunno. FamilySearch.org lists a bunch with different towns (one of them is Schurow, Pommern, Preussen). But Dombrow was also the name of the coal basin that included present-day Katowice, Poland.

You have your work cut out for you, but there's always some new search to try!
Wow, thank you! I'm going to digest some of this and see what I come up with. Thanks again!
I'm looking for information on my great-grandfather Peter Deltuva/Dalto. He was came from Lithuania in 1913 and married my great-grandmother Mamie Bell/Baltitski in 1918. I have their 1920 census in Coaldale and then their 1930 census in Detroit. I have their marriage docket number but I'm not sure how to order the record. However, what I'm really interested in are his parents names, naturalization info and I would LOVE to eventually be able to request any records from Lithuania. Any help or advice you can offer would be wonderful! Thanks
Marcie,
I couldn't find the 1920 & 1930 Censuses. What spelling did you find them under? Because of that, other records I found, I don't know if it's your Peter. To get to the point of requesting records from Lithuania, you'll have to know birthdate and village of origin, at a minimum. Find the village seems to be one of the toughest hurdles. You might find this info on Draft Cards, Naturalization paperwork, or through family history.

There's a WW I draft card for a Peter Deltova, born 26 June 1893, from Detroit. It lists his birthplace as Suwalki, Russia, which is a big gubernia in southwestern Lithuania and neighboring Poland. The city of Suwalki is actually in Poland today. But, if this is your Peter, where in Suwalki is he from? You'd hope to find his ship manifest which might tell you. Where did you get 1913 as the year of immigration? I've found that dates taken from the census are ofter off by a year or two. There is a Petras Deltuwa, born 1893, who arrived in Phila. in 1911. He was from Zugowauki/Zugowanki. His father is also listed as Petras, and he was headed to Scranton, PA to be with a Felix Deltuwa. I'm guessing this is the Suwalki one, and this village is somewhere in Suwalki.

Also, there was a Petras Deltuwas arriving in New York in 191, born 1889. This one was from Pataszyny (Patašinė). There are two villages with this name, one near Marijampole (which would have been in Suwalki) and one halfway between Marijampole and Kaunas, near Kazlu Ruda. This one listed Andras Deltuwas as his nearest relative, and this Petras was headed to Rumford Falls, Maine, where his step-brother, Josas Degutis, lived.

Then there could be others with badly misspelled names that didn't come up on the radar screen.

The marriage record, if you're talking about a Schuylkill county marriage, can be ordered from the courthouse in Pottsville. They're cheap (like a dollar, I think) and you just send the money after you receive it. A 1918 marriage record might have the parents' names on it. Earlier ones (circa 1900) wouldn't. So, I'd start with getting that marriage certificate. Then try to find immigration and naturalization info (see main page of group regarding naturalizations). Hopefully from that, you can discover the village, and then you can make the jump to Lithuania.
Off Topic: Just thought I'd post the details for Schuylkill County's annual "Lithuanian Days":
Aug 14, 2010 (Sat) - Aug 15, 2010 (Sun)

:: 96th ANNUAL LITHUANIAN DAY Location: SCHUYLKILL MALL FRACKVILLE PA

THEME: MUSIC, LANGUAGE & DANCE

SPONSORED BY: KNIGHTS OF LITHUANIA C-144 ANTHRACITE COUNCIL SCHUYLKILL COUNTY

SATURDAY 11:00 AM TO 6:00 PM SUNDAY 12:00 TO 5:00 PM

FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: 570-874-2311 (9:00 AM - 5:00 PM)

570-874-4092 ( AFTER 6:00 PM )
My grandparents immigrated to Allentown/Emmaus, Pa. My mother, who was born in Emmaus, knew this but she never knew "Why" they picked that area or if they knew someone there. However, I found some helpful information on the ship manifests that my grandparents names are listed when they arrived at Ellis Island in 1907. Information is noted on where they are going, address, name of person at destination.
My name is Ian Singer...my family emigrated to Shenandoah from Lithuania in the late 1800's and early 1900's. My family has come together and created a foundation to memorialize the Jewish population of Schuylkill County. As the webmaster/archivist for the foundation (dedicated to the Kehillat Israel Synagogue which no longer exists) please see me website at www.kehillatisraelcemetery.com for jewish genealogy in Shenandoah, Pa!

Ian Singer

ianpsinger@gmail.com

Hope I can learn something from others here!

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