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[20K]
Ida Orlinsky, age 14, circa
1916
On October 5, 1918, while stationed at
Fort Ethan Allen [47K]
in Vermont, Alex wrote a letter to his friend, Hyman Karp. He encouraged Hyman, who
had been rejected for military service, to support the war effort through the
purchase of Liberty Bonds. The letter also includes a vivid description
of Vermont's fall foliage. The lack of grammatical or spelling errors is
remarkable for a man with only 3-4 years of formal schooling. During the following half-century,
Dr. Hyman Karp was with them and their families through
many trials and tribulations. He was not only their friend but their advisor and
respected physician.
Alex was honorably discharged on April 8, 1919. [50k]
In 1920, he was issued a license to "Hawk, Peddle and Vend
Merchandise, and to sell by auction his own Goods, Wares, etc." [54K]
During the next five years, Alex worked primarily in his parents' store, serving as
the store's technician - laying linoleum floors for their customers. He also became a
postman and delivered US. Mail.
He remained at home and continued to contribute to the support of his family until
his brother and his sisters completed their education. The sisters completed high
school, business school, and some college - and one became a grade school teacher.
Brother Willie studied dentistry, and for more than 40 years Dr. Wolf Wernick conducted
his dental practice at 1707 St. Johns Place, Brooklyn, NY. His first office was located
on the level above the family's store. Years later, after the store was closed, his dental
office was moved to the lower level of the building. It was in "Uncle Willie's"
dental office - in fact, right in the patients' chair - that lessons in algebra,
geometry, and trigonometry were given to his many nieces and nephews.
Renovations created two upstairs apartments where Rochel, her daughter Clara,
son-in-law Harry Bernstein, and grandchildren Audrey and Brenda lived until after
Rochel's death on Nov. 23, 1958. Schmerko (Alter) passed away on January 15, 1947.
By the mid-1920's, Alex was in his early 30's. His parents were economically
self-sufficient and his siblings were educated young adults. It was time for him
to marry and start his own family. On October 10, 1926, 24 year old
Ida Orlinsky and 33 year old Alex Wernick were married at the Rockaway Mansion in
Brooklyn, NY.
Ida and Alex's Ketubbah
[80K] definition of Ketubbah
Ida was the eldest daughter of the five children of
Lippe (Louis) Orlinsky and Malka (Mollie) [19K]
Epstein Orlinsky. In 1910, Lippe left Baranovich, Russia and traveled to the United States.
After working and sending money back to his family in Russia,
Malka and her children,
Benny, Ida, and Phillip, and Sylvia [19K]
(Sofia in Russia) were able to join Lippe in the United
States in 1912. Coincidentally, they too traveled across the Atlantic on the S. S. Ethiopia.
Another daughter, Cynthia, was born in the United States.
The Orlinsky family lived on the lower east side of New York in a tenement on Ludlow
Street. To meet the religious needs of the large influx of Jewish immigrant families
moving to Brooklyn, new synagogues were needed. Lippe obtained employment as a carpenter
for synagogue construction. The Orlinsky family then often lived behind the "shul" and
also served as the caretakers. It was necessary for Ida to leave her formal schooling
at the age of 14 in order to help support her family. With her mathematical ability and
her beautiful handwriting, she became a bookkeeper for Gimbel Brothers Department Store
on 34th St. in Manhattan. Ida loved music, especially operatic arias, and used some of
her first week's wages to purchase a record playing machine. This enraged her father who
wanted her to contribute all her earnings to the family and anything extra was to be
donated to the "shul." Spending money on music, according to Lippe, was wasteful!
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