we don't know when this uid arrived or if he was born in the us.... nor do we know where he/his family was settled. but, the serbian population in cleveland has a long history.... and that's really my only point regarding cleveland... which is supported by the link below.
on another note, i suppose i am not alone in noticing serbian residents living in cincinnati ohio with the last name Ljubisavljevic... with z ljubisavljevic passing in 2011 and had children born in the us in the late 50's. but, i can't find any solid links to a missing person within the family. however, i haven't searched for info regarding the grandchildren mentioned in his obit.
As children were born to the immigrants, other organizations were needed. In 1909 St. Sava Lodge organized St. Sava Church so that Cleveland Serbs could observe their religious and ethnic customs. A succession of houses served as churches until 1919, when the community purchased a German Lutheran church on E. 36th St.
The migration immediately following World War II was markedly different from the earlier one. Nearly all the immigrants were displaced persons, people who had been prisoners of war in Germany and did not want to return to a Communist Yugoslavia, or political refugees such as Chetniks who fled Yugoslavia after their military defeat. Many were from Serbia proper and were schooled professionals from urban backgrounds. With their strong commitment to Serbian culture and their large numbers (over 700 came to Cleveland between 1949-52), they instilled new life into Cleveland's Serbian community. They formed new organizations, cultural, fraternal, and political, and strengthened the St. Sava Serbian Orthodox parish.
From the 1960s through the mid-1980s a large number of Serbs immigrated to Cleveland from Yugoslavia, as Yugoslav emigration policy was liberalized
SERBS. Although the Serbs are not one of Cleveland's largest ethnic groups, they have made themselves widely known throughout the city. Serbian immigr...
case.edu
jmo