Nardi Family – Recollections

Phone conversation with Jean (Turco) Walko recorded by  Joe Ragucci

Over the last week we have been talking as a result of Aunt Ann Kusklyk death.  Several items worth recording about the Nardi Family came up and are recorded here (to be moved to a more complete post later).

  1. Aunt Ann Kusklyk died Jan 19th after getting pneumonia last week.  She  was one month shy of her 94th birthday.  For the last 10 years she was not really alive suffering from alzheimer.  This started to be noticed when her husband Michael died.  We moved her into a Assisted Living home in Edison for several years until she got so bad that she was moved closer to Jean in Toms River.  Over the last 4 years she didn’t even talk any more.  Her body was healthy which is why she lived so long. 
  2. We talked about this family history BLOG and Jean mentioned that she has very few photos of her family.  She didn’t even know what our grandmothers maiden name was.  We agreed to get together when it gets warmer to share what we have.
  3. She remembers that our grandfather was adopted.  In looking at the Ellis Island record it appears that he came to the US with someone who was his brother but had a different last name.
  4. She remembers that our grandmother was from a wealthy family that disowned her when she married our grandfather.  She also remembers her being a poor cook.
  5. She said that her father (Yonce) worked on a ship and he jumped ship in NY which is how he ended up here.  She remembers him talking about be amazed at banana’s which he had never seen.  She also remembers his talking about being ashamed of how much he ate so he actually ate at mulitple places so no one knew.

Ragucci, Rose & Joe – “water ceiling lamp”

Recorded by Joe Ragucci.

When I began dating Rose, she lived with her parents at 2 Village Green in Colonia.  Before I met her, her Uncle Jack lived with them for a while and had the upstairs finished into 2 rooms and a bathroom.  After he moved out Rose claimed the upstairs as her own – with a bedroom and a living room.    

In the center of the upstairs living room was a ceiling lamp in the shape of a upside-down bowl.   One day when I was there, she said that the light wasn’t working.  So, I decided to open it up and see what I could do.  The bowl shaped light was held on with a nut in the center.  Unknown to me, the ceiling leaked water.  So as I finished unscrewing the nut, the light bowl quickly came down and spilled water all over the place.  It was filled with lots of water!  Once the lamp dryed up, the light worked again.  From that day on I would check the light and empty any water that it collected.  Obviously the roof was leaking and that’s where it would accumulate.

Cook Family Heritage – Eustace Family

Eustace Family

One ancestor of the Cook family is the Eustace family that originated in Germany.  A great deal of information has been obtained through the assistance of Carol Haszto, a former co-worker of Joe Ragucci, who was searching her ancestors and came across Sophia Bartels and Charles Eustace as best man and maid of honor at her great grandparents wedding in 1888.  Specific documentation includes:

  • 1880 New York City census listing for the Sophia Bartels Eustace family
  • 1882 Marriage record for Charles Eustace and Sophia Bartels
  • 1900 New York City census listing for the Sophia Bartels Eustace family

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Cook Family Heritage – Bartels Family

Bartels Family

One ancestor of the Cook family is the Bartel family that originated in Germany.  A great deal of information has been obtained through the assistance of Carol Haszto, a former co-worker of Joe Ragucci, who was searching her ancestors and came across Sophia Bartels and Charles Eustace as best man and maid of honor at her great grandparents wedding in 1888.  Specific documentation includes:

  • 1880 New York City census listing for the Sophia Bartels Eustace family
  • 1882 Marriage record for Charles Eustace and Sophia Bartels
  • 1900 New York City census listing for the Sophia Bartels Eustace Collins family
  • Genealogy records from Oldenburg,Germany

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DiGiovani, Ignatius (Nat) – “AUTOM”

The following biography is taken from the Autom Religious Articles website (www.autom.com) founded by Nat DiGiovanni.

In late October of 1946, young Ignatius DiGiovanni was admitted to St. Vincent’s Hospital in Brooklyn, New York. A childhood injury had left the 25-year old man with a misaligned jaw that needed to be broken and reset.  Surgery in 1946 was crude by today’s standards, and Ignatius lay in bed, out of work for six months, while his wired jaw healed.

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