Family File for David Saul MITTMAN - Person Sheet
Family File for David Saul MITTMAN - Person Sheet
NameMary MITTMAN [3653], [3682]
Birth25 Jan 1876, Illinois, USA
Death29 Jun 1953, Chicago, IL Age: 77
OccupationTailor, Shop (1900) [3683]
FlagsMITTMAN-14
FatherFrank Joseph MITTMANN (1841-1939)
MotherKathryn KRAMER (~1850-<1900)
Spouses
Birth4 Mar 1875, Indiana, USA [3684], [3665]
Death18 Mar 1911, 1350 N Maplewood Ave, Chicago, IL [3684], [3665] Age: 36
Burial21 Mar 1911, 4901 N Clark St, Chicago, IL [3665]
MemoSaint Boniface Cemetery; Plot: Section AA, Block 22, Lot 26
OccupationShipping Clerk, Wholesale Grocer (1910) [3685], [3665]
FlagsMITTMAN-14, STUB-END
Gemini Pro Sketch
The following biographical sketch was produced using artificial intelligence and may contain mistakes.

Nicholas E. Lustig was born in Indiana, USA, on March 4, 1875. He later settled in Chicago, Illinois, a city then experiencing rapid growth as a national center for commerce and industry. On January 10, 1905, at the age of 29, Lustig married Mary Mittman in Chicago. Mary, born in Illinois in 1876, had worked as a tailor in a shop by 1900. They established their home in Chicago and had three children: Edna Cathleen, born in September 1905; Arthur A., born in May 1908; and Alice Katherine, born in November 1910.

Lustig supported his family as a shipping clerk for a wholesale grocer, an occupation noted in the 1910 census. This work placed him within Chicago's bustling commercial sector, which relied heavily on a robust logistics network to distribute goods across the Midwest and beyond. His family resided at 1350 N Maplewood Avenue in Chicago, a city undergoing significant urban development and social change in the early 20th century.

Nicholas E. Lustig’s life ended prematurely on March 18, 1911, at his home in Chicago; he was 36 years old. His youngest child, Alice Katherine, died just months later, on July 4, 1911, also at the Maplewood Avenue address, at less than a year old. Both Nicholas and Alice were buried in Saint Boniface Cemetery on North Clark Street in Chicago, a Catholic cemetery, with Nicholas interred in Section AA, Block 22, Lot 26.

His widow, Mary, continued to live in Chicago, eventually dying there in 1953. Their surviving children, Edna and Arthur, pursued their own careers in Chicago’s economy; Edna became an auditor by 1930, and Arthur worked as a clerk for railroad supplies. Nicholas E. Lustig’s documented life reflects the experience of a working man building a family in a dynamic American city at the turn of the 20th century.
Marriage10 Jan 1905, Chicago, IL [729]
ChildrenEdna Cathleen (1905-1989)
 Arthur A (1908-1932)
 Alice Katherine (1910-1911)
Last Modified 25 Jan 2026Created 5 Apr 2026 using Reunion for Macintosh
Created on Sun, Apr 5, 2026 AM by David Saul Mittman.
Copyright © 2026 David Saul Mittman. This information is provided for the free use of those engaged in non-commercial genealogical research. Any commercial use is prohibited.