Resources
Jalowka Resources
- Jalowka photos by Tomek Wisniewski and Ron Killian
- 1905 List of Polish Men: Russo-Japanese war of 1905, by Daniel Paczkowski
- 1906-08 Jalowka residents who married or died in Bialystok
- Jalowka in Bialystok records: 1899, 1909-1010
- Search Jewish Records Indexing - Poland
- Genealogy Indexer Search Results:
Original site
Local Copy
- The Rabbis of Jalowka, from the beginning of the 19th century to 1939
- International Jewish Cemetery Project - IAJGS
- Rabbi Shlomo Feinsilber hy’d (1871–1941), born in Jalowka, son of Rabbi Aaron Yosef Halevi
- Family Tree DNA Project for the Jalowka, Swislocz & Wolkovisk area shtetls
- Geographical Dictionary of the Kingdom of Poland and other Slavic Countries (Polish: Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich) (1880–1902), by Filip Sulimierski, Bronisław Chlebowski, Władysław Walewski and others.
Mirror Site: Page 388 of volume III (1882)
Page 630 of volume XV_cz.1 (supplement, 1900)
Local Copy
- Metrical books, 1797-1818: Roman Catholic Church records (births, marriages, deaths) for I︠A︡lovka, Volkovysk, Grodno, Russia; later Jalówka (Wołkowysk), Białystok, Poland; now Jalówka (Białystok), Białystok, Poland. Text in Latin, Polish and Russian (FamilySearch.org) [Microreproduction of original manuscripts in the Lithuanian State Historical Archives in Vilnius, Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, Record group 604: series 10, file 165; series 11, file 24; series 13, file 91]
- Guide to the Records of the Vaad Hayeshivot (Council of Yeshivot) Vilna, Poland. The Vaad Hayeshivot (Council of Yeshivot) was an organization whose central office was in Vilna, Poland and which was active from 1924 to 1939. It was authorized by the Polish government to provide spiritual and financial support to Orthodox yeshivot in the 5 eastern provinces of Poland, namely, Bialystok, Nowo Gródek, Polesie, Vilna and Wohlynia. During its existence the Vaad Hayeshivot supported a network of about 70 yeshivot which had a total of about 6,000 students. Its supporting membership included the rabbinate and the local populations of over 350 Jewish communities. The records of the Vaad Hayeshivot span the period 1920-1940. They reflect, to different degrees, all activities of the organization.
- Z przeszłości miasteczka Jałówki i okolic ("From the past of the village of Jałówka and its surroundings"), by Józef Makarczyk; Grodno, 2014. Includes a history of the town and its religions, residents' lists for 1623, 1795-1796 and 1900, the 1914 list of draftees of Szymki and some records from the Catholic cemetery. In Polish, with an English summary. Table of contents and Summary.
JewishGen Resources
Other Resources