home.social

#britschkowski — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #britschkowski, aggregated by home.social.

  1. From the category of "just because we're not related at all, doesn't mean that you didn't play some tiny role in our family history and don't deserve a #WikiTree profile": Meet Hans #Britschkowski from #SeeheimJugenheim, to whom my great-great grandma and her son Emil #Hercher wrote a letter in 1947, because he was a comrade of their brother/son Wilhelm Hercher during #WW2 and he might have known something about Wilhelm's fate.
    wikitree.com/wiki/Britschkowsk #genealogy

  2. From the category of "just because we're not related at all, doesn't mean that you didn't play some tiny role in our family history and don't deserve a #WikiTree profile": Meet Hans #Britschkowski from #SeeheimJugenheim, to whom my great-great grandma and her son Emil #Hercher wrote a letter in 1947, because he was a comrade of their brother/son Wilhelm Hercher during #WW2 and he might have known something about Wilhelm's fate.
    wikitree.com/wiki/Britschkowsk #genealogy

  3. From the category of "just because we're not related at all, doesn't mean that you didn't play some tiny role in our family history and don't deserve a #WikiTree profile": Meet Hans #Britschkowski from #SeeheimJugenheim, to whom my great-great grandma and her son Emil #Hercher wrote a letter in 1947, because he was a comrade of their brother/son Wilhelm Hercher during #WW2 and he might have known something about Wilhelm's fate.
    wikitree.com/wiki/Britschkowsk #genealogy

  4. From the category of "just because we're not related at all, doesn't mean that you didn't play some tiny role in our family history and don't deserve a #WikiTree profile": Meet Hans #Britschkowski from #SeeheimJugenheim, to whom my great-great grandma and her son Emil #Hercher wrote a letter in 1947, because he was a comrade of their brother/son Wilhelm Hercher during #WW2 and he might have known something about Wilhelm's fate.
    wikitree.com/wiki/Britschkowsk #genealogy

  5. From the category of "just because we're not related at all, doesn't mean that you didn't play some tiny role in our family history and don't deserve a #WikiTree profile": Meet Hans #Britschkowski from #SeeheimJugenheim, to whom my great-great grandma and her son Emil #Hercher wrote a letter in 1947, because he was a comrade of their brother/son Wilhelm Hercher during #WW2 and he might have known something about Wilhelm's fate.
    wikitree.com/wiki/Britschkowsk #genealogy