You Live As Long As You Are Remembered
Remembering our Scolaro, Giunta, Guinta, Guinte, Ganta, Petorella, Pedorella and Szczudlo ancestors.

Thursday, March 15, 2018

Some Photos Explained


Letter to Sue Schlueter from cousin Gloria Klir dated March 26, 2000

[I have added the bracketed text.]



Dear Sue:


Antonino Scolaro b1879 d 1929

You asked for an explanation of the pictures, so I’ll start with the Horse and Wagon one of Great Uncle Tony [Antonino] Scolaro. He was your Great Grandmother Salvatora Scolaro (married name Giunta) [brother] He [Tony] was born in 1879 and died in 1929. He had 10 children –one of which is the picture of Laura Scolaro (Laura would be a 2nd cousin to your mother and a 3rd cousin to you.) Laura was born in 1903 and died in 1987. Although the picture is called Great Uncle Tony, he would be your Great, Great Uncle.
Lauretta Scolaro b1903
daughter of Antonino Scolaro b 1879





Mike Ganta (Giunta) b1898
The picture of Mike Ganta (Giunta) is also your great uncle and he was the son of Salvatora nee Scolaro and James Ganta (Giunta).



Jenny Ganta (Giunta) b1897
The picture of Jenny Ganta (Giunta) would also be your great aunt and she was the daughter of Salvatora and James Ganta (Giunta) and would make her sister to Mike Ganta (Giunta).



Mary Ganta (Giunta) Marchese b1894
and Fred Marchese b1890
Francesco (Frank) Ganta (Giunta) b1867
and daughter Mary Ganta (Giunta)
Marchese b1894

The picture of Mary and Dave Marchese is a picture when Mary was married to Dave Marchese. She was also your great aunt and a daughter of Salvatora and James Ganta (Giunta) and Mike and Jenny were her brother and sister.



Emily Ganta (Giunta) with her Aunt Pearl
Prudentia Giunta Amadeo b 1868 and her
Uncle Captain Jack Amadeo b1862.
1st Holy Communion




Emily Ganta (Giunta) b1895




















The picture of Emily [Giunta] Cozzi alone is also your great aunt and she in turn was a sister to Mike and Jenny Ganta (Giunta) and Mary Marchese nee Ganta (Giunta. Cozzi is her married name as you can see from the wedding picture (I don’t know who the attendants were in that picture). Emily Cozzi’s husband’s name was Jack.



The picture of great, great aunt and great, great uncle with great aunt Emily (Cozzi) is this: The great, great aunt’s name is Pearl [Prudentia] and she was a sister to your great grandfather James Ganta (Giunta). Her husband was called Captain Jack and he would be your great, great uncle (Don’t know what he did or how he got the title Captain and also I really don’t remember his last name but I think it was Tantillo. [Amadeo].)

The girl in the photo is Emily Ganta (Giunta) who married Jackie Cozzi. You have her communion picture and her wedding picture. [Emily went to live with Pearl and Jack Amadeo. Emily was the third child of Salvatora and James. I don’t know at what point Emily went to live with her Aunt and Uncle, but she was living with them in 1910 according to the U.S. Census. By 1910, Salvatora and James had nine children. Story has it that was the reason Emily went to live with the Amadeos.]


Emily Ganta (Giunta) b 1895

Wedding of Emily Ganta (Giunta) b 1895
and Fred Cozzi b1890, on 15 Aug 1912.

Jennie, Josephine and Marie Ganta
born 20 Oct 1918
Now for the triplets they belong to your great, great uncle Joseph Ganta (Giunta) who was a brother to your great grandfather James Ganta (Giunta). So we have on your great grandfather’s side, his brother Joseph and his sister Pearl. Getting back to the triplets, they would be your 3rd cousins. There is also a brother Joseph Jr. (I know he is married but no further information). The triplets [are] all married but don’t know to who and if any of them are still alive.



Now for the picture of the bride and groom you have question marked, I don’t know who they are—I know they belong in the family, as there is a resemblance to Jenny Ganta in the bride. The other picture of the man alone, again I don’t recognize but I think it might be great, great uncle Tony Scolaro. [A long time has passed since this correspondence took place. Unfortunately, I do not recall which picture these were.]



I hope this is of some help to you and lets you know where they all fit into the family. If you have any questions, let me know and if I get around to it, I’m going to try and contact some distant relative who are still living before they are gone too.



Gloria

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Mom's 100th Birthday Part 2


In a letter to me from Gloria Klir, dated March 6, 2000, she describes what she remembers about Grandma Pearl and my mom Julia.

NOTE: Gloria (b1932) is the daughter of Rose (b1904) Giunta Kolodjiez. Rose was my Grandmother, Pearl’s (Prudentia) (b1892) Giunta Petorella sister. Julia Petorella (b1916) was my mother. [I have added the bracketed text]


Rose Giunta Kolodjiez and daughter Gloria (Klir)

Dear Sue:
Received your packet with the copies of the photos—I’ll get to that part in another letter. Going from your Christmas card where you asked about some remembrances of your mother, I’ll start there and explain the photos (2nd letter).

First of all—do you have that sheet your mother made for Bette Cole? This will help you fit some of the people in the photos into where they belong as to relation to you.

Pearl and Dominick Petorella as you know are your grandparents (you may remember Grandma Pearl). They had three girls and one boy. The girls were Millie (Frankie’s mother), Sylvia, Julia and Jimmy. Pearl was my mother’s sister, therefore my Aunt and Dominick my Uncle. Since your mother was born in 1916 and I in 1932, she was grown up when I was little and consequently my remembrances are from that time (with her as an adult).
Julia and Sheppy at 802 S. Western Avenue, Chicago some time in the 1940's


Location of the Petorella Gas Station at 802 S. Western Avenue c 2018. 

They lived at 802 S. Western Avenue in Chicago (Polk and Western). Their house was a two-story on a corner and on the first level was a gas station that Julia’s father and brother Jimmy ran. The family lived on the second floor and on the back porch Aunt Pearl (your grandmother) had flower boxes in which she planted petunias and basil. They also kept pigeons and had a dog named Nellie. In the summertime Aunt Pearl and Uncle Dominick and my family would get together and go fishing at Maple Lake. (My family being Rose, my mother, John, my father, my sister, Grace and my brother Richard (At that time my younger brother was not yet born.) Rose is Pearl’s sister and Julia’s Aunt.) Uncle Dominick (your Grandfather) would go to the market and buy bushels of tomatoes and pickles [cucumbers] and Aunt Pearl with Julia would “can” them and my mother would do the pickles (she made bread and butter pickles) and they would trade off Tomatoes and pickles.

Your grandmother was a very talented lady—she could crochet, knit, make paper flowers and she also did piece work where she would pick up bodices of dresses and sew the beadwork on them. The family attended Precious Blood Church on Congress and Western—the church is still in existence today. When we would visit your grandmother Pearl she would teach my mother new crochet patterns and my sister Grace but I couldn’t learn it as I was left-handed and she said the I did it backwards. Although we all did stitchery and these were our summertime projects and then Pearl and my mother would crochet the lace on stitched doilies, dresser scarves and pillowcases. Pearl also taught us flower making. I don’t know if your mother crocheted or knitted. I don’t remember her doing so but she did make flowers with us.

Julia worked at Superior Products this photo shows Julia in the
center of the photo. Standing on the far left is my Uncle
Korcz, my father's brother-in-law. 
I don’t know where your mother worked but your mother at that time was a very shy quiet person. (Millie was already married and out of the house as was Sylvia.) Your grandfather Dominick died in 1940. Jimmy as you may or may not know got married shortly before he was drafted. He married Betty (had Bette Cole—never saw her and was killed on D-Day in Normandy. Aunt Pearl showed us his Purple Heart and when the war was over had his body shipped back for burial here. (Mt. Carmel Cemetery). He had a Military funeral. Am enclosing a picture of his headstone.


About 1950 Aunt Pearl had a stoke and Julia, in order to keep her home, bought her a TV (we didn’t have one and Julia asked us to keep her mother company so every Friday we would go to their house where we would watch TV with Aunt Pearl and have coffee and cake or pie. [I believe that Pearl liked to play bingo. Maybe that is why she didn't stay home. I do vaguely remember when we lived with us in Hinsdale, Dad would take her somewhere, drop her off, then go and pick her up. I remember wanting to go with her but Dad said it was only for old ladies.]

About this time Julia went to a beauty school, made some new friends who experimented with glam and would go out on Fridays. She met your father and started dating (as you know your father was divorced). They got married and the house on Western Avenue was sold and your father and mother bought a house on the North side and your grandmother lived with them. We visited there a couple of times. I don’t remember who was born first but at that time she had a baby. [I was the baby.]

Don’t have too many more remembrances because we were growing up, my mother was working and your mother was busy with taking care of her family. Your father and mother bought the house in Darien [first address was Hinsdale, IL, then Clarendon Hills and finally incorporated into Willowbrook] (I believe Grandma Pear lived there for a while.) Grandma Pearl died in 1956 so maybe she didn’t. [Pearl did live with us. She had another stroke while pulling us (sister Sharon and I) around the yard in a wagon. I remember her in a hospital bed in our living room. She showed us how to count on one had as her other arm was paralyzed. I was 5 and Sharon was 3.]

As you know your mother and father grew quite a few vegetables. I believe all three of you went to schools in Darien.

I hope this is some help to you. Now I’ll work on the pictures you sent and tell you how these people fit into our family. I am enclosing some pictures of your mother’s headstone and also your grandparents (mentioned the one of Jimmy’s earlier). When I get a chance I’ll ask my husband to drive to Polk and Western to see if the building is still standing and let you know.

Gloria.