1946 Engagement Photo: George Paul Morfogen and Georgia Pappas

This photo has been hiding in a drawer in my grandparents’ home for over 70 years. When my cousin found it, he snapped a picture with his cell phone and sent it to me in a text:  I don’t think we digitized this one [during our cousin scanfest in 2015] and he was correct. What a treasure!

1946 Engagement Party, George Paul Morfogen and Georgia Pappas, held at Michel’s Restaurant, Brooklyn, New York

This photo has captured my heart and kindled my fascination. It evokes memories of the stories my mother shared about the galas, dances, and special events that were the hallmark of that time. People dressed in their finest with hats and gloves as de rigueur. Extended families gathered and new “matches” of young couples were forged by enterprising relatives. The magical combination of live music, fine dining and spirited conversations produced many an “enchanged evening.” Truly, I feel like I am missing something very special.

But I especially love looking at all these beautiful faces (and truly they are lovely!). The joy they express reveals a familial happiess that lies in connections which stretch back generations. Starting in Agios Ioannis (Pappas) and Anavryti (Morfogen) and now rekindled in Brooklyn, these immigrants settled themselves and their families in close-knit neighborhoods. They started successful businesses and helped each other become established in a new land.

This union of Pappas (Papagiannakos) and Morfogen (Morfogenis) shows how the intermarriages of immigrant Greek families expanded and drew the family circles tighter together. In this example, the families of both my father (Kostakos) and my mother (Papagiannakos) and thus, all of their cousins, now became linked with the Morfogen family and the circle ever widens. Both of my parents are in this photo, as are their siblings and their parents!

This family continuity is my foundation and fortitude.These are the generations on whose shoulders I stand and whose strength I carry.

My deepest gratitide and sincerest thanks to members of the Morfogen family who have identified almost all of the people. Below is the same picture with people numbered, and a chart with the people identified. [click on either of the photos to expand them]

If any additional people can be identified, or any corrections should be made, please let me know by sending an email to spartanroots1 at gmail.com. Thank you!

1Mrs. Zaharia Chahalis
2Pauline Morfogen Kokines
3First name?  Pavlounis
4William Kokines 
5Vivian Kokines Parlamis 
6Ethel Pavlounis Chahalis
7George Chahalis
8John Andrew Kostakos
9Georgia Kostakos Doukas
10Angelo John (Al) Doukas
11Andrew John Kostakos
12Catherine Pappas
13Angelina Eftaxia Pappas
14Nicholas Louis Pappas
15unidentified
16Calliope P. Coutros
17Peter Spyridon Coutros
18Stavroula (Stella) Kostakos Coutros
19Aphrodite (Frieda) Kostakos
20Panagiota (Bertha) Pappas
21unidentified
22Mary Coutros,(later married George Karagis)
23Peter Coutros 
24unidentified
25unidentified
26unidentified
27unidentified
28unidentified
29unidentified
30business associate: Mrs. Vassilaros 
31business associate: Irene Vassilaros 
32business associate wife 
33business associate: Mr. Chios
34business associate: Mr. Vassilaros Sr.
35Andrew Spyros Marinos
36Mary Marinos Neckles
37Petros Neckles
38George Spyros Marinos
39Helen Marinos (later married George Diakomis)
40unidentified
41unidentified
42unidentified
43unidentified
44Nicholas Spyros Pappas
45unidentified
46Father Eugene Pappas and next to him, his father, Leon
47unidentified
48Nicholas Christopher Pappas
49unidentified
50unidentified
51unidentified
52unidentified
53Christina Morfogen Marinos
54Anthony Spyros Marinos
55unidentified
56John Lambrinos 
57Areti Kostakos Lambrinos
58unidentified
59unidentified
60Lucretia Leakakos Pappas
61Pauline Drivas Pappas
62unidentified
63Effie Landis Pappas
64Stella Geaneas 
65George Geaneas 
66Mary Landis 
67Wife of James Landis
68James Landis 
69unidentified
70unidentified
71unidentified
72unidentified
73unidentified
74unidentified
75unidentified
76unidentified
77Catherine DeSimone Pappas
78Peter James Pappas
79John Salatas
80Catherine Pappas Salatas
81Christina Christakos Morfogen 
82James George Morfogen 
83Wilhemina Pappas
84Athanasia Morfogen Pappas
85Diamond Stavracos Morfogen 
86Sam George Morfogen 
87Vivian Morfogen Brauman 
88George Sam Morfogen 
89unidentified
90unidentified
91Paul George Morfogen 
92Anna Landis Morfogen  
93George Paul Morfogen   
94Georgia Pappas Morfogen 
95Calliope Kostakos Pappas 
96James Nicholas Pappas 
97Father Michalopoulos, Priest from Three Hierarchs
98Lily Landis Nikas  
99James  Nikas 
100Marie Nikas Combias 
101unidentified
102Vivian Morfogen Geaneas
103unidentified
104unidentified

Shifting Gears

My last post about our family reunion caused me to reconsider my perspective on family history research. I write a monthly genealogy column, “Turning Hearts” for Meridian Magazine online, and used my last post as the basis for an article published October 18, 2013, which is reproduced below.

Last weekend, my “East Coast” cousins gathered for a joyous occasion – the baptism of the newest member of our family, Megan Ryan, at St. Andrews Catholic Church in Westwood, New Jersey. We are the grandchildren of Louis Pappas (Ilias Papagiannakos) and Angelina Eftaxias Pappas.

Family gatherings were central to the lives of our grandparents. As immigrants from Sparta in the early 1900’s, they settled in Hoboken, New Jersey. They traveled regularly to Brooklyn, New York, to be with family and friends from their homeland. These associations  brought them a sense of comfort and security in their new and very different country.

Our parents – Catherine, Bertha, William, and Nicholas – also treasured “family time.” All four families lived in neighboring towns in northern New Jersey. We cousins grew up together until the scattering began. Job opportunities took our fathers to Long Island, California, and Maryland. Only Uncle Bill remained in Westwood. There were occasional visits, but as cousins married and children arrived, we spun into differing orbits.

Except for Aunt Pauline, Bill’s wife who just turned 90, our parents have passed into a new realm of family relationships in the spirit world, unencumbered by worldly travails and earthly distances. This has engendered a new realization into all of us: We are now our parents’ generation; we are the ones to keep family traditions and maintain family ties. Our first reunion in July 2012 reinforced our longings to be together. The more we meet, the more precious these events become. We miss our  four “West Coast” cousins in California, the children of Nick, and we hope to be together with them soon.

Our renewed cousin reunions have changed my perspective on family history work. I have spent untold hours reading obscure documents from Greece with the hopes of finding one of my surnames. Although I now have a spreadsheet with several hundred names, I can’t go back far enough to find a common ancestor and to determine how these people are related to me (I know they are, as they hail from my grandparents’ ancestral villages). At times I become frustrated and am tempted to “throw in the towel” and wait for the Millenium to continue my research. But in my heart, I know that is not right. I must do what I can with what I have.

Our cousins reunions have caused me to pause and reconsider that I should reallocate some of my time from searching for the dead to reconnecting with the living. There are photos of my living relatives to be obtained and attached to our online tree. There are stories to gather from my cousins, so our collective family memories can be memorialized for future generations. There is research to be done on our parents’ cousins who came to the U.S., but whom we never had the opportunity to meet.

Shifting gears is not easy, as I am driven to probe deeper into my pedigree line. But it is essential to do so:  someday, our children will be us. If we do not capture our own family stories – and those of our parents and grandparents – we will leave them an empty legacy.

 

 

 

Pappas Cousins Reunion

Pappas Cousins Reunion July 2012

Grandchildren of Louis Pappas (Papagiannakos) and Angelina Eftaxias gather on July 21, 2012 for our first cousins reunion.

On July 21, the grandchildren of Louis Pappas (Papagiannakos) & Angelina Eftaxias gathered for our very first “cousins reunion” in New Jersey. Louis & Angelina had four children: Catherine (my mother), Bertha, Nick & Bill. Except for Nick’s four children who live in California, all of us East Coast cousins were there with our spouses and some our children. We spent a delightful summer afternoon just as our parents and grandparents used to do:  eating traditional Greek food, talking politics and business, and catching up on family news. We were especially happy to have a baby shower for one of our cousins who will have a new baby girl in early August.

As I watched the younger children playing on the lawn, I was struck by the shift in generations. It didn’t seem that long ago that my cousins and I were the ones running through the house or exploring the yard. All of our parents are gone; only my uncle’s wife remains at age 89. My cousins and I are now the older generation.

I spent hours scanning many of my mother and grandmother’s old photos which were shared on CDs. I also compiled notebooks of Eftaxias family history. Passing these out to my cousins gave me a sense of joy and continuity. With today’s technology, sharing family history is easy. Making it a priority to do so is the big challenge!