I have to pull out my copy of “Crucified by the FCC”. Howard Stern was having an anti-FCC/ pro-free speech in public and live on the air. I’ll repeat that. Live on the air. He had several speakers come up, then it was Grandpa’s turn. He gets the microphone and starts chanting “Fuck the FCC” over and over until the mic is wrestled from his hand. Live on the air. He was unique.
Two months from now, he’ll appear in the latest release of the Social Security Death Index, with dates of birth and death. I assume under his real name, Albert Meister.
Update: The Reuters obituary says that he was raised in the heavily Jewish Brownsville neighborhood of Brooklyn. The AP obituary says that his real name was Alexander Meister.
In the U.S. census taken on January 1, 1920, I do find an “Alex Meister”, age 8 (hence, born 1911). He was living with his parents, Yiddish-speaking immigrants, at 39 Watkins St., which is indeed in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn.
There were only five people named Alex— Meister in the 1920 U.S. census, and the others were living in Kansas (born 1903); Michigan (1893); Lancaster, New York (1918); and Wisconsin (1891).
Would someone who reads the paper edition of The New York Times please check the paid death notices (not the news articles) for Al Lewis? Does it list any surviving siblings? If so, what are their names? This would help me find him in the 1920 and/or 1930 U.S. censuses.
Being in Chicago it is the National Edition, if that makes a difference, but it does not list any siblings. Even his parents names are absent. It does say he was born upstate in Wolcott before the family moved to Brooklyn if that is any help.
Walloon, are these sources online? I’d like to look up my grandma’s family in Harlem; she said in later life she’d lost two sisters to diptheria around 1908 and I’d like to find out more.
Mehitabel, many libraries subscribe to Ancestry.com, which has all of the existing U.S. population censuses online from 1790 to 1930. (Almost all of the 1890 census was destroyed by a fire in 1921.) Ancestry.com also has every-name indexes of the 1850-1930 censuses, except 1910, for which there is a head-of-household index (they’re working on an every-name index for that too).
The 1910 U.S. census asks every married or widowed woman how many children she has given birth to, and how many are still living.
Back in the 1980s or thereabouts he recorded intros to some reaslly bad films, under the heading of “Grandpa’s Foavorites” (Or something like that) – stuff like Monster from Green Hell. He dressed up in his old Munster’s Garb and spoke glowingly and vaguely about the movie to come (the name and other particulars were supposed to be filled in by another voice, but on the version I had not even that appeared, it was so cheap). Interesting to see. Even 20 years ago I couldn’t help but think “I thought he was dead!”. I’m kinda surprised they didn’t get him to do the horror show host from Gremlins 2 He would’ve been perfect.