BARBAROWA Neighborhood
and POLISH Family Trees

This site is devoted to the families and history of the west side neighborhood near St. Barbara Church on Denison Avenue in Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio. Formerly a part of Brooklyn Village before being absorbed by the City of Cleveland.

The area lies in the eastern half of the original Brooklyn Township Lot #74.

Barbarowa is a Polish word and is pronounced
using a "V" in place of the "W", thus "Barba-roVa".

EVOLUTION OF A NEIGHBORHOOD

PHASE 1 -- First Residents

[From the Cleveland Memory Project -- Chapter 10 of
"A History of the City of Cleveland"
]

"Exactly when and where the first white resident of Brooklyn made his appearance is not known. Most of the glimpses we have had of the forerunners of civilization upon the West Side, were caught down near the lake and about that part now known as Main and Detroit streets. There was, however, out near the present Riverside Cemetery, a grassy slope running up from the Cuyahoga River, which, even in late years, was known as "Granger’s Hill." Here came, from Canada, one Granger, who became a "squatter," but at what date is not certainly known. He was there when James FISH, in May, 1812, became the first permanent settler of the Brooklyn Township of the later days. The stay of the squatter, however, was not long, as he migrated, in 1815, to the Maumee country.

James FISH came from Groton, Connecticut, having purchased land of Messrs. Lord and Barber. He left home, in the summer of 1811, with his family stored away in a wagon drawn by oxen. He was accompanied by quite a company of pioneers, and spent forty-seven days upon the road. He passed the winter in Newburg; early in the spring of 1812, he crossed over to Brooklyn, erected a log-house at a cost of eighteen dollars, and in May took his family over and commenced house-keeping. In the same year came Moses and Ebenezer FISH, the last named serving as one of the militiamen guarding the Indian murderer, whose execution in 1812 has been elsewhere recorded.

In 1813, came Ozias BRAINARD, of Connecticut, with his family; while in 1814, six families arrived as settlers within one week—those of Isaac HINCKLEY, Asa BRAINARD, Elijah YOUNG, Stephen BRAINERD, Enos BRAINARD, and Warren BRAINARD, all of whom had been residents of Chatham, Middlesex county, Conn. They had all exchanged their farm lands at home for those placed upon the market in this section of the New West. Their journey and reception has been described thus—with what warrant of exact truth we are not prepared to say: "All set out on the same day. The train consisted of six wagons, drawn by ten horses and six oxen, and all journeyed together until Euclid was reached (forty days after leaving Chatham), where Isaac Hinckley and his family rested, leaving the others to push on to Brooklyn, whither he followed them within a week. "

Phase 2 -- Ownership by Foster Family

Prior to 1874, Ebenezer FOSTER purchased the area bounded by the Cuyahoga River on the East, Newburgh Street (Denison Ave.) on the South, and about West 16th on the West. His home was probably located in the vicinity of the north corner of what became Denison Ave. and West 14th. If you look at the image in the previous Phase description, you will see several other Fosters as property owners. All those north of Denison were Ebenezer's sons. Daniel FOSTER, who owned the property south of Denison, was his brother. The exact site of his home is uncertain, but it was probably roughly where Slabe's Shoe Store was at the corner of West 14th and old Denison Ave.

Ebenezer was a farmer but we don't know what sort of crops he raised. Since there were a multitude of stables in the area and a couple of glue factories, he may have grown hay and corn for the horses.

Earliest recorded addresses for the Fosters:
280 Newburgh St. (1406 Denison) - Frank and Ethel
284 Newburgh St. (1412 Denison) - George and Julia


Now!

Read Ebenezer's own words about his family, their migration into this area, the FISH family, and what life was like in the early part of the 19th century.

Early Days of the Pioneers

Phase 3 -- Development and German influx

By 1892, the Foster Family began to sub-divide their property with the construction of several streets. The first street developed was Gertie Street (later known as West 15th). Mohawk Street (named sometime between 1892 and 1897, later became Redman Avenue) ran along the northern boundary of the Foster properties. Foster Street ran parallel with Gertie and later became known as West 14th Street. Lookout Street (West 13th) appears by 1898 on a Real Estate Atlas of Cleveland.

Just prior to the Harvard Viaduct Bridge being built in 1910 at 3,232 feet in length, the area around West 14th and Denison looked quite different from anything anyone living can recall. Denison Avenue was a straight shot right down to and past Jennings Avenue. Several houses stretched from the corner southwards. These were razed to make room for the approach to the Harvard-Denison Bridge.

CLICK HERE for an Excel spreadsheet detailing property transfers (deeds) for the neighborhood.

A free Excel viewer, for the above file, is available here: Microsoft Downloads

Property map (Brooklyn, Ohio - 1889) Area south of Newburgh Street (now Denison Ave. at the west end of the Harvard-Denison Bridge) Consolidate Oyster Packing Company obtained the large tract of land in 1889 and began development. No housing existed yet.

Property map (Brooklyn, Ohio - 1892) Area covered is north and south sides of Newburgh Street (now called Denison Ave.) at what is now the west end of the Harvard-Denison Bridge

Property map (Brooklyn, Ohio - 1900?) Area north of Denison Ave. at the west end of Harvard-Denison Bridge. Covers Ebenezer Foster's property which has become developed with most lots now having houses on them.

Property map (Brooklyn, Ohio - 1900?) Area south of Denison Ave. at the west end of Harvard-Denison Bridge. This property was originally owned and developed by Daniel C. Foster.

Phase 4 -- Polish influx
Phase 5 -- Highway Disruption

In the early 1960's, word came down from the County that a proposed highway would bisect the neighborhood. This was bad news for the people who had bought their homes and planned to live the rest of their lives there. A study of deed transfers shows that a small number of speculators jumped in and bought some houses. They probably knew what sort of price the State of Ohio Dept. of Transporatation was paying for properties acquired for freeways and paid the frantic sellers a lower price, hoping to make a profit from the true value. On the flip side of the coin, the sellers may have wanted to move quickly instead of waiting for the slow wheels of government to move, so jumped at the chance to be out of their property.

After all the property was bought up on the east side of W.15th, the west side of W.14th and the north side of Redman, bulldozers moved in to begin demolition. It was an odd sight to be able to see straight across from the houses that were left on the eastern portion over to the houses that were on the western side.

[Side note: I have a series of slides showing the demolition and if I can find them and have them converted to digital images, I'll make them available here on this site. Some of these are now available in the Barbarowa Neighborhood Photo Album.]

 

FAMILY TREES

The link below will allow you to view family trees for families that settled in the Barbarowa Neighborhood of Cleveland, Ohio.

Denison / Redman / W.13th - W.15th Street area comprising:
Original settlers: Foster/Brainard/Fish
(Middlesex, Connecticut to Brooklyn, Ohio)
Barbarowa Neighborhood ( St. Barbara Church parish)
Jemiola / Jemiolo + Kapusta + Wanicki + Myczkowski

NOTE: Some of the Polish families have trees extending into other Polish neighborhoods around Cleveland such as Warszawa (St. Stanislaus area), Kantowa (Tremont area), Krakowa (South of Harvard), and Poznan (E. 79th Street and Superior Avenue).

NEIGHBORHOOD MAP:

The following link will take you to a map of part of the Barbarowa neighborhood (bounded by Redman to the north, W. 15th to the west, Denison to the south, and W.13th to the east). The map shows every building and when you move your mouse cursor over each property, a small box will open giving details about the address and resident's names (if known).

This is a WORK IN PROGRESS. There is a lot of work involved in setting this map up, so if you check back from time to time, more information will become available.

Go To the Interactive Neighborhood Map


WARD
&
CENSUS ENUMERATION DISTRICT

1900 - Ward 42 - ED #208
1910 - Ward 6 - ED #126
1920 - Ward 6 - ED #95, #96, #97
1930 - Ward 6 - ED #77, #78, #726

Pre-1906 Street Names:
Lookout St. --> W.13th
Foster St. --> W.14th (north and south of Denison)
Elvira Alley --> Foster Court
Mohawk St. --> Redman Ave.
Newburgh St. --> Denison (aka as Dennison.)
Gertie St. --> W.15th (north of Denison)
Petty St. --> W. 15th (south of Denison)
Hapgood St. --> W.16th St.
Highland St. --> Botany Ave.


For those of you who would like to browse the Census for this neighborhood, the following will give you some idea of what pages contain the addresses you might be interested in.

1880 ED68 Sheet 24 - Newburgh St. (aka Denison Ave.)
listing Ebenezer Foster and sons, George, Leonard, and Edward

1900 Ward 42 ED208 Sheet 15A - Denison
1900 Ward 42 ED208 Sheet 15B - Denison
1900 Ward 42 ED208 Sheet 16B - Gertie (W15th)
1900 Ward 42 ED208 Sheet 17A - Redman
1900 Ward 42 ED208 Sheet 17B - Redman
1900 Ward 42 ED208 Sheet 18A - Lookout Ave (W13th)
1900 Ward 42 ED208 Sheet 22A - Denison Ave.bmp
1900 Ward 42 ED208 Sheet 23B - Foster Ave (W14th)
1900 Ward 42 ED208 Sheet 24A - Foster Ave - Denison

1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 2B - Redman (1200-1218)
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 3A - Redman (1218-1324)
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 3B - Redman (1324-1424), Jennings Kroehle Block
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 4A - Jennings Kroehle Block and more (3732-3746)
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 4B - Jennings (3746-3762), W13th (3763)
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 5A - West 13th (3763-3733)
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 5B - West 14th (3725-3755) and Denison (1320)
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 6A - West 14th and Denison
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 6B - West 15th
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 7A - West 15th and Denison
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 7B - Denison
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 8A - Denison
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 21A - Botany, 14th (3810-3826), Denison (1313-1301)
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 21B - Denison (1221-1213)
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 22A - W14th (3777 - 3803)
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 22B - W14th (3777), Beltline, Jennings
1910 Ward 6 ED126 Sheet 23A - Jennings

1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 4A - Denison (1918-1722)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 4B - Denison (1722-1508)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 5A - Denison (1508-1320), W13th (3763)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 5B - W13th (3763-3747)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 6A - W13th (3747 - 3706)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 6B - W13th (3706 - 3712)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 7A - W13th (3712-3724)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 7B - W13th (3724-3736)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 8A - W13th (3745), W14th (3755-3725)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 8B - W14th (3725-3713)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 9A - W14th (3709-3718)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 9B - W14th (3730-3754)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 10A - W14th (3754), W15th (3705-3690)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 10B - W15th (3694-3702)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 11A - W15th (3708-3748), Redman (1424-1408)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 11B - Redman (1450-1324)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 12A - Redman (1322-1314)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 12B - Redman (1314-1230)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 13A - Redman (1230-1218)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 13B - Redman (1218-1201, 1225)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 14A - Redman (1225-1309), W18th (3745)
1920 Ward 6 ED95 Sheet 14B - W15th (3741-3709)
1920 Ward 6 ED96 Sheet 17B - Botany (1510-1532), W16th (3868-3857)
1920 Ward 6 ED97 Sheet 1A - W14th, Denison (1313-1213)
1920 Ward 6 ED97 Sheet 1B - W14th, Denison (1213-1210)
1920 Ward 6 ED97 Sheet 2A - W14th (3818-3826, 3803), Denison (1409)
1920 Ward 6 ED97 Sheet 2B - W14th, Denison
1920 Ward 6 ED97 Sheet 3A - Botany
1920 Ward 6 ED97 Sheet 3B - Botany

1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 1A - W14th (3722-3746)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 1B - W14th (3750-3758), Denison (1400-1416)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 2A - W15th (3708-3754)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 3A - W14th (3755-3729)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 3B - W14th (3729-3713)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 4A - W14th (3713-3701)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 5A - W13th (3702-3712), Redman (1309)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 5B - W13th (3716-3732)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 6A - W13th (3732-3748)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 6B - 13th (3748), Denison (1311, 1320)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 7A - W13th (3763-3753)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 7B - W13th (3755-3725)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 8A - W13th (3705-3721)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 9A - Jennings (plus Redman)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 16A - W15th (3684-3694)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 16B - W15th (3700-3704)
1930 Ward 6 ED77 Sheet 17A - W15th (3708-3754)
1930 Ward 6 ED78 Sheet 27A - W14th (3805-3803)
1930 Ward 6 ED78 Sheet 28A - W14th (3777), Denison (1313-1213)
1930 Ward 6 ED78 Sheet 29A - Botany
1930 Ward 6 ED78 Sheet 29B - Botany
1930 Ward 6 ED78 Sheet 30A - Botany, W16th
1930 Ward 6 ED78 Sheet 31A - Jennings (4002)
1930 Ward 6 ED726 Sheet 13A - W17th (3303-3275)
1930 Ward 6 ED726 Sheet 13B - W17th (3269-3311)
1930 Ward 6 ED726 Sheet 14A - Redman (1200-1226)
1930 Ward 6 ED726 Sheet 14B - Redman (1230-1310)
1930 Ward 6 ED726 Sheet 15A - Redman (1310-1324)
1930 Ward 6 ED726 Sheet 15B - Redman (1324-1412)
1930 Ward 6 ED726 Sheet 16A - W15th (3684-3694)
1930 Ward 6 ED726 Sheet 16B - W15th (3700-3704)
1930 Ward 6 ED726 Sheet 17A - W15th (3708-3754)
1930 Ward 6 ED726 Sheet 17B - Denison (1518-1722)
1930 Ward 6 ED726 Sheet 18A - Denison (1724-1916)

WANTED!

I'm looking for a copy of the black songbook that we had in church back in the 1950's.

[UPDATE: Many, many thanks to Carole Zanath for locating a copy of this book for me! I was thrilled when it arrived in the mail. Funny how a little nostalgia warms the heart.]

Some of the songs inside were always sung at Christmas....

Click any title to view the lyrics


Sign Our Guestbook
CEMETERY TRANSCRIPTIONS

Polish Clevelanders burial database.


St. Barbara's parishioners and students(1965)
An Excel spreadsheet with various sorted views
Submitted by Clement Ras

NEIGHBORHOOD PHOTO ALBUM

Contains Class portraits and neighborhood snapshots. If you have any to share and would like them posted here or if you have any names for the people that haven't been identified, please contact Sandy


POLISH FOOD RECIPES


EXTERNAL LINKS TO ADDITIONAL READING:

Tremont and Cleveland's Southside
Warszawa
Cleveland Poles
Polish Community of Cleveland

Polish Genealogical Society of Greater Cleveland, Ohio - PGSGC


 
*** DID YOU KNOW? ***

Big Creek used to be named "Countryman's Creek".

Part of the Cuyahoga River near the Harvard Road crossing was called "Catfish Bend".

Redman Avenue was originally meant to extend all the way to Jennings Ave.



Return to Barbarowa Genealogy

Click for Cleveland, OH Forecast
The time and temperature in Cleveland, Ohio

Visits to this site:

E-mail us at barbarowa@yahoo.com