[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] EWZ/BDC Research
Jerry Frank
jkfrank at home.com
Sat Nov 10 07:47:10 PST 2001
For those of you researching family that was forced out of eastern regions
back to Germany during WW II, these microfilms can be a major source of
information. I know personally of one woman whose father died during this
resettlement. She had no photo of her father until she found one on the
card file from the EWZ/BDC records. Many of these cards include pedigrees
that go back 4 or 5 generations.
A general description of the content of this material can be found
at http://pixel.cs.vt.edu/library/berlin.html
It is significant that the report on that page fails to include the fact
that many Volhynian and Russian Poland Germans are also included in these
files.
Tom Stangl, who has done a great deal of research on these microfilms,
recently updated and clarified some of that information in a recent posting
to another mail service. He has kindly agreed to allow me to repost that
message.
----------------Start Tom Stangl message--------------------------------------
There are over 8,400 rolls of 16mm microfilm in the EWZ collection, which
is part of a 70,000 roll collection from the former Berlin Document Center
[BDC], which housed the German government documents captured in WW II. Of
these, 3,210 rolls are Antraege files--applications for naturalization
1939-1945, which are organized by Region [e.g., "Russia", "Poland",
"Rumania", etc.], and alphabetized by surname within Region. There are 843
rolls which cover the Antraege of the German ethnics who came from "Russia"
[including Ukrainian Volhynia]--these films are the EWZ50 series. Another
701 rolls cover "Rumania" [Bessarabia, Dubrodscha, Bukovina]--these are the
EWZ51 series. In addition to these series of films, there are groups of
Antraege films for "Poland" [EWZ52--701 rolls, including Polish Volhynia],
the "Baltics" [EWZ53--587 rolls], as well as several other regions
[Yugoslavia, France, Bulgaria--379 rolls].
Besides the Antraege files, there were card files kept on each applicant
for naturalization. These were the "E" cards [EWZ card--for everyone over
age 15, and unaccompanied children younger than 15], and the "G" card
["Gesundheitskarte"--Health card--for everyone over age 6; photos are often
attached], which were combined into one alphabetical file covering all of
the regions [Russia, Rumania, Poland, etc.], and were filmed as the EWZ57
series. There are 1,964 rolls of film in the E/G Kartei [EWZ57] series. A
separate set of files called the Stammblaetter [EWZ58] contains copies of
the Personalblatt from the Antraege file, plus a photograph of the
applicant. There are 740 rolls of EWZ58 films. These files are arranged in
EWZ number order [2 to 1,046,998].
Any of these films can be purchased from our Archives for $34 per roll
postpaid to US addresses, or $39 US per roll postpaid to international
addresses. They can be ordered by telephone by calling toll free in the US
at 1-800-234-8861, or toll at 301-713-6800 during working hours at the
Archives [Monday-Friday 8:30 am to 4:30 pm EST]. However, you must know the
film number of the film you wish to purchase, and there is no catalog
available from which to order. The films cannot be rented or loaned from
our Archives. The Archives has rudimentary indexes of these films [first
and last name only on each roll of film], but has not made the indexes
available outside the Microfilm Reading Room at Archives II. I am telling
you these details so that you may fully understand the difficulties you
would have to obtain these
films from our Archives.
The Mormon Church [LDS] has purchased a full set of the EWZ57 and EWZ58
series of films. The LDS renumbered their copies of the films, so that it
is not possible to use the LDS numbers to ask our Archives for assistance
in obtaining an individual applicant's records on other series of films. A
cross reference between the Archives film numbers for the EWZ58 series and
the LDS numbers for this series has been posted on the Internet by Dave
Obee <daveobee at home.com>. I am not aware of any cross reference being
available for the EWZ57 series. The LDS has these films available for
rental in North America at their local Family History Centers. I do not
know whether or not
these films would be available in any of the LDS libraries in Europe. A
few years ago, the American government returned the hardcopy EWZ documents
to the Bundesarchiv in Germany. A full set of the microfilms are in both
our National Archives and the Bundesarchiv. I do not know the policies of
the Bundesarchiv in regards to anyone in Germany accessing or purchasing
these microfilms.
Researchers in the US and Canada, who are members of GRHS and AHSGR, have
been purchasing rolls of EWZ film to do research on their families. Upon
completion of their research, they have been donating the films to GRHS or
AHSGR. The donated films are stored in the headquarters of each
organization. Volunteers from GRHS have been indexing these donated films
and posting the extractions on the Internet [Odessa Digital Library]. If
your surname is among those posted on the Internet, much of your research
has already been done; and it can provide you information about which
records you might wish to obtain from either the Archives [by ordering your
own copy of the film] or by requesting hard copies from the GR headquarters
which has custody of the donated film.
---------------End Tom Stangl message------------------------------
Websites for the 2 organizations mentioned in the last paragraph
are: http://www.grhs.org and http://www.ahsgr.org
Please do not contact me personally for any further information about this
resource as I do not have anything more. Please use the links included
throughout the above message along with those at the Pixel webpage to
access more information.
Jerry Frank - Calgary, Alberta
jkfrank at home.com
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