ERIC KRAUSE
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_____________________________________________________________________________________ ERIC KRAUSE GENEALOGY _____________________________________________________________________________________
LYNDA'S CORNER 
Lynda Jean Richards, b. Rimmer, m. Krause
 GENEALOGY 
MATERNAL SIDE 
KLEMENT LINEAGE 
			Nastasia
			
			Klement Married: [?] Children: 
	Serafima Felimonovna Klement [Kleon] 
	 
KLEMENT
 
DESCENDANTS
 SERGEI VLADIMIROVICH LISOVSKAYA? 1990 AUGUST 
	Niagara Falls 
	L to R Elva (Rankin) Chwedchuk  (1919-November 20, 2001), 
	Sergei Vladimirovich Lisovskaya?, Zoya Grigoriev AUGUST Chwedchuk  Residence, Hobson Road L to R Elva (Rankin) Chwedchuk (1919-November 20, 2001)/ Ann (Chwedchuk) 
	Campbell with  Amanda Campbell on her lap /  Zoya Grigoriev/ 
	Sergei Vladimirovich Lisovskaya? ANCESTRAL GENEALOGICAL NOTES Nastasia
			
			
	Klement was the mother 
		of Serafima Felimonovna Klement Zoya Grigoriev and Nickolai Kislitsin ( -1966) lived 
	initially in Beloretsk. Zoya moved post 1966 to Tselinograd, Kazakstan until 
	post 1989. She then moved to a place near Beloretsk. In 1995, she moved from 
	Tselinograd to Omsk. Alexander Nikolaevich (Shurik) Kislitsin (August 25, 
	1945-July 12, 1995) lived in Beloretsk, in the Ural Mountains Victor Nikolaevich (Veetya) Kislitsin (November 23, 1957-) 
	lived in Gubkin, Belgorod Oblast. He and his family moved to Omsk in 1998. Nickolai Nikolaevich (Kolya) Kislitsin (June 7, 1959-) lives 
	in Omsk, just north of central Kazakstan Alexander (Sasha) Mistiukovna worked in Tiumensk Oblast as a 
	geologist in the city of Uray Andrei Nikolaevich Kislitsin (1963-) lived in Eastern 
	Siberia. Was in the army, then in the police force. Valentina Nikolaevna (Valya) Kislitsin (August 25, 1951-) 
	and Vladimir Lisovskaya? separated in the 1970s. She and her new husband 
	Andrei Grigorievich and her son Sergei Vladimirovich Lisovskaya? (September 
	12, 1973-) lived in Uray post 1994. Stara Strelna [Old Strelna]: Later, until 1918, 
			Strelno in German when it was located in Prussia; Afterwards, 
			1918-1939, Strzelno in Polish when it was located in Poland], Volost of Yanovo, Drohichin 
			Region, Belorussia [Strelna in Belarus: СТРЕЛЬНА] - Belarus pre 1918 
			and post 1945, sometimes known as White Russia] Village Strzelna, district of Drohiczynsk Stara Strelna [Stara 
		Strzelna] village, Brest Oblat, Ivanov Region, Belorussia, was 
		near Kobrin, about 120 km east of Brest, and 20 km east of Drogichin [Drahicyn]. Village of Alexandrovka, Volost of Nagat [Nagadat], Sterlitamak 
		Region, Oblast of Ufa, USSR, about 2000 kilometers from Stara Strelna [Strelno, 
			Poland]. SOURCES		
	 Leonard Chwedchuk, From Revolution to Depression 
			(Memoirs of an immigrant family from Eastern Europe arriving in 
			Canada in 1930) (Ottawa, January, 1999)
       
       

	
	
	
	
	
	(September 12, 1973-)