Ahhh...this one I've researched for over a year!
Lemish is the Americanization of Lemiesz. It comes from the metal blade on an old-fashioned plough that cuts the earth. There's an old saying of turning plowshares into swords and that's from where the name was adapted.
You'll find the name in the Ruthenian areas of the former Congress of Poland. That land is now broken up, primarily into parts of Ukraine, Lithuania, Byelorussia, eastern Poland. It's around the Carpathian mountains. You'll also see people in that area referred to as "Karpatska Rus". If you pull immigration records or census records, they'll often declare their nationality as Russian or Russian Pole. They emigrated later than the German and Austrian Poles, many not coming to the US until after WWI.
That name could belong to a Ruthenian Catholic, Roman Catholic, Russian or Ukranian Orthodox or Jew. My client was a Roman Catholic from the Detroit area. His family ended up being from an area now in Lithuania, but it was considered Poland when they left. The fickle winds of geopolitics!
2007-05-09 11:48:15
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answer #1
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answered by GenevievesMom 7
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Elis island web site has records for The "Lemish" but they are all Romanian or polish. Also they have no " Lemiesz" listed?
Part of my family heritage is LEMKO which is part of the Carpatho-Rusyn formerly call Rutherians.
Good Luck.
2007-05-10 15:07:25
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answer #2
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answered by jon_mac_usa_007 7
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Last names don't have meanings like first do. They have in the past been given form your occupation. Like Smith would have been a black smith or Miller may have actually been their job. Most last names lead you to your ethnic back round not a meaning That's my very unprofessional opinion
2007-05-09 18:46:19
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answer #3
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answered by bindaredundat 1
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that name is hebrew and their is a web site that gives you one free name it is a teaching Hebrew web site.
they will tell you and say it so you know how it is supose to be pronounced.
2007-05-09 19:48:34
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answer #4
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answered by Vanessa 6
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