A lot of six manuscript diaries running uninterrupted from 1949-1954 kept by a woman living in Ridgewood, Queens, New York.

Her name is written in the front of a couple as "Elizabeth Witherell."

These are written in a very neat cursive, but it is in Hungarian and I cannot read it. I've tried to convert the text using google translate, which makes a word jumble, so I cannot transcribe entire passages, but I get the impression it's all fairly standard diary fare: what she did, who with, family stuff, etc...

From a bit of sleuthing, I believe she was previously Elizabeth Szigeti (another married name, I am not sure what her birth name was), born in 1897 and immigrated to The United States from Yugoslavia. 

I can't find a firm date of immigration. On ancestry.com I see a naturalization record (like a green card or something) from 1947 and other info. that suggests she first came to The U.S. in 1921 and made a return trip back to bring over a relative (a father-in-law) in 1928. That relative seems to have cited his home as a majority-ethnic Hungarian village known today as Stara Moravica in Ellis Island paperwork. She seems to note her hometown as a place called "Sekic Backa" in 1935 paperwork from crossing over the US-Canadian border.

Her husband when these diaries are written, a Hollis "Van" Witherell, seems to have been born in Maryland in 1892. He died in February of 1954 and the days surrounding his death are some of the most dense entries of all six volumes. 

She was a dedicated diarist and wrote every day. Not all pages are completely full, but many are and this is an extensive primary source record of the Yugoslavian diaspora in America. 

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