In the Society Page!

I am thrilled with the Fulton History website — a gem of a resource where Tom Tryniski has single-handedly digitized thousands of pages of New York newspapers! My favorite, of course, is the Brooklyn Daily Eagle because I am finding fascinating tidbits of my Brooklyn-based family. I did a random search on “Kostakos” and was stunned when the following article popped up:

Aphrodite Semetis Honored at Shower, April 5, 1946, Brooklyn Daily Eagle, page 14

Isn’t this a gem? I have spent a couple of days trying to identify the women who attended this shower. The bride-to-be, Aphrodite, is my father’s first cousin. So, I was quite surprised to see the names of my mother, her sister and their mother as this wedding took place seven months before my Mom and Dad married (November 14, 1946): Katherine Pappas is my Mom, her sister is Bertha Pappas, and their mother is my yiayia, Mrs. Louis Pappas.

The rest of the guests are either relatives or friends of the Semetis family: my father’s sisters, (Georgia Kostakos who married Al Doukas and Alice Kostakos); my father’s cousins (Frieda or Aphrodite Semetis, Fofo or Mrs. George Semetis, Harriet Semetis, Aspasia Aridas Semetis). I also identified Mrs. Nicholas Aridas as Helen Londis; Mrs. Chris Aridas as Katherine Caputo. Irene and Helen Doukas are sisters and daughters of James & Bessie Doukas of Brookhaven, Long Island; Stella Zakas is also from Brookhaven (I don’t know if she is a relative or a friend); Mrs. Nicholas Kasivardas is the next-door neighbor of Constance Doukas. I could not identify the rest of the women, who may be friends or relatives of the Doukas family.

I used the 1940 Census as a starting point to find who these people might be, and the Fulton History website to look for newspaper articles for further information. One clue led to another, and it was great fun to track these folks down! I wish my mother was still alive so I could show her that she made the Society page of the newspaper, a fact that would have brought her much laughter and disbelief!

Learning about my collateral lines and extended family brings me a lot of joy. I also see quite clearly that I am part of a much bigger picture — a family that extends beyond what I knew growing up. Most of the people in this article are now in heaven together, associating as they did here on earth. I wonder if there is a Society page in the Heavenly Times?

 

Kostakos in the 1940 Census

The release of the 1940 U.S. Census yesterday is a huge boost for genealogy research. I am very excited to be able to learn more about my family by finding my grandparents and extended family members. Over the years, I’ve heard my parents talk about cousins, aunts and uncles with whom they had lost touch and whom I never had the opportunity to meet. I know that I as I find them in the census, I will come to love them and feel the special ties that they had with my parents. This the joy of genealogy research — an extension of love and family.

Because there is no name index for this census yet, I cannot go to a website, type in a name, and have my ancestors’ names pop up. In a few months, I will be able to do so. But for now, I need to have an Enumeration District (ED) number, which I obtained by getting my family’s address on April 1, 1940, then using an online tool developed by Steve Morse (found here) to obtain the ED.

Dad had told me that his parents lived 292 Broadway, Brooklyn, New York. I found Papou’s World War II Draft Registration card which verified that was his address.

John Kostakos, World War II Draft Registration Card

John Kostakos, World War II Draft Registration Card

Using Steve Morse’s tool, I learned that the ED for yiayia and papou’s address was 24-551. I then went to http://1940census.archives.gov, looked up the ED and found their census record:

1940 US Census, John Kostakos & Family

1940 US Census, John Kostakos & Family

My grandparents are found on lines 65-71, and on line 72 is my grandfather’s brother, Bill, whom Dad fondly called “Uncle Bill.” Living two houses away on lines 56-57 is the Semetis family. Aspasia, wife of Peter, is my grandmother’s sister. If you look at the very bottom of the census page, you will see that Dad’s sister, Pauline, answered some additional questions as did her cousin, Harry Semetis.

As I look through more census records in the weeks ahead, I will use the 1940 New York Telephone Directory to help me locate specific addresses. I was elated to see this link on a blogpost today.

Wishing you much success as you hunt for your family treasure in the 1940 Census!