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  1. Almost all Soviet immigrants to the U.S. (1970's-early 2000's) are Jewish. Cleveland is also home to Jewish owned Russian grocery stores, the largest being Yeleseyevsky Deli, as well as hundreds of FSU-Jewish owned and Russian speaking businesses such as restaurants, retail stores, jewelers, pharmacies, and private warehouses. [26]

  2. 3 wrz 2024 · Ohio Counties. Guide to Cuyahoga County, Ohio ancestry, genealogy and family history, birth records, marriage records, death records, census records, and military records.

  3. 3 cze 2024 · Many Russian and Eastern European Jews came to Central Ohio to escape Russian programs. Below are lists of select archival and library materials related to the Jewish faith, available for research at the Ohio History Connection Archives & Library.

  4. The primary activity of the Cleveland Jewish Archives is to collect print and non-print material that documents the history of the Jewish community of Cleveland and Northeast Ohio. This material is then made available to the public for educational purposes.

  5. The story of Jewish Cleveland is a tale of upward mobility, from a community of fifteen Bavarian Jewish immigrants to a population of over 80,000. The Jewish population of Northeast Ohio grew most dramatically in the first two decades of the twentieth century, reaching a high of 86,540 in the 1920s.

  6. Many Cleveland newspapers published for ethnic groups such as African-American, Czech, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Jewish, Polish, Romanian, Slovak, and Slovenian. Extensive printed and archival ethnic Cleveland history collections.

  7. 22 maj 2024 · Ohio Online Genealogy Records. Links to online databases and indexes that may include vital records, biographies, cemeteries, censuses, histories, immigration records, land records, maps, military records, naturalizations, newspapers, obituaries, or probate records.