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Q: Searching for German relatives fathered by my American Grandfather/Soldier WW2 ( Answered 5 out of 5 stars,   0 Comments )
Question  
Subject: Searching for German relatives fathered by my American Grandfather/Soldier WW2
Category: Miscellaneous
Asked by: cooee-ga
List Price: $20.00
Posted: 01 Oct 2002 11:25 PDT
Expires: 31 Oct 2002 10:25 PST
Question ID: 71250
I am trying to find a German website dedicated to world WW2 German
offspring of American soldiers searching for their fathers,  ( my
Grandfather lived in Germany for 10 years at the end of WW2 and
started a family) The web site must be a posting site with translation
capabilities.
Answer  
Subject: Re: Searching for German relatives fathered by my American Grandfather/Soldier WW2
Answered By: justaskscott-ga on 01 Oct 2002 13:44 PDT
Rated:5 out of 5 stars
 
Here are a set of web pages that I think will meet your needs.  They
are part of an "Austro-Hungarian" genealogy web site, but in this
instance relate also to Germany.  I presume that the webmaster will
help if you need translation; please post a request for clarification
if you need translation assistance from me.  (I will be away from home
for several days, so I apologize if I do not respond to any follow-ups
immediately.)

"Deutsche und österreichische Besatzungskinder suchen ihre
amerikanischen Väter", by Felix G. Game (modified Sept. 9, 2002)
Austro-Hungarian Web Site
http://www.felix-game.ca/html_files/besatzungskinder.html

"Germans and Austrians looking for their American Fathers", by Felix
G. Game (last changed Sept. 9, 2002)
Austro-Hungarian Web Site
http://www.felix-game.ca/html_files/occupationbabies.html

"Europeans looking for Americans" / "Amerikaner suchen Europäer"
Austro-Hungarian Web Site
http://www.felix-game.ca/html_files/ads.html

- justaskscott-ga


Search terms used on Google:

besatzungskinder "amerikanischen väter" (or "amerikanische väter")

[I tried other English and German search terms relating to German
children of American soldiers during or after World War II, but these
were the most successful.]
cooee-ga rated this answer:5 out of 5 stars
Too justaskscott; thank you so much, I never would have dreamed that
the term was "occupation babies"

Sincerely,   Lane

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