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Third Generation


6. Photo Antonio [Papa] LAGOS TOLEDO2,4 was born on 25 Sep 1880 in Periana, Málaga, Spain.27,28,29 His full name was Antonio José María de la Santísima Trinidad. Born in his parents' house on "Calle de la Fuente." He was living between 1885 and 1905 in Madrid, Spain.30,31 In a 1950 letter to Antonio DÍAZ TOLEDO he notes that he left Periana when he was 5, which took place in 1885. His brother Francisco was born in Periana in November 1884, but no more family members births or deaths are recorded there except for the deaths of his father and mother, who apparently went home to die, in 1900 and 1903, respectively. We know that his sister Mercedes was born in Madrid in 1891.

He appeared in the census in 1890 in Madrid, Spain.31 He lived at Calle del Toro núm. 5 - principal in Madrid, Spain on 1 Dec 1890.31 He was educated at a seminary and later at a medical school between 1898 and 1903 in Madrid, Spain.32,33 (Dates approximate.) According to the oral family lore, he attended seminary with the intention of becoming a priest; he later attended medical school. It is believed he had a patron, perhaps an uncle (José Ignacio MORENO NÚÑEZ, a cousin of Antonio's grandchildren, notes that is likely that Antonio's father Francisco was the beneficiary of the support of his granduncle Manuel LAGOS ZAPATA, the archpriest of Ronda). Nevertheless, to date (2001) no evidence has surfaced of his atending either a seminary or a medical school, with the exception of a picture of him smoking a cigarette while attending a cadaver. Supposedly he had to leave medical school for financial reasons; again, details are unknown. His mother died in 1903 (his father had died in 1900 and his uncles Manuel and Antonio LAGOS MUÑOZ IN 1901; all of his siblings with the exception of Manuel were either dead or would be before the decade was out).

He was a «escribiente del servicio agronómico» (scribe in the agricultural service) in Zamora province, Spain between 11 Jun 1900 and 30 Apr 1901.34 He was a «amanuense del Censo de la población» (scribe for the Census) in Madrid, Spain between 17 Nov 1903 and 1904.35

He immigrated about 1905 to Havana, Cuba.36,37,38,39 He received a clearance for travel purposes from the "Registro Central de penados y rebeldes" on 19 June 1905. We know from a letter by his sister Mercedes that he was in Havana in February 1906. (When he arrived in New York in 1912, it was indicated on the passenger manifest that he had been in New York City before, in 1905, and from this it seems he visited NYC on the way to Havana, as has been documented for his brother Manuel. There is, however, no equivalent documentation for an Antonio visit in 1905.) He was a professor of Spanish and French languages and literature in Havana, Cuba between 1905 and 1912.40 He lived at Inquisidor, 14 in Havana, Cuba in 1907.36 He was registered with the Spanish Consulate in Havana as a resident of Havana at this address on 11 January 1907. He lived at Galiano 125 in Havana, Cuba in 1910/11.11,12,41 Apartado 1292. This was the address at which the family lived when his daughter Carmen was born in October 1910 and baptized in March 1911. [Apt. # from letter written to Adolfo LAGOS MUÑIZ.] He was educated at an unknown medical school in 1911 in Santiago de Compostela, Spain.32 After the birth of their daughter Carmen, Antonio and his wife and daughter returned to Spain so that Antonio could resume the medical studies he had left earlier in the decade (again there is no documentation for this). Because of his wife's ill health (she was suffering from phlebitis), doctors recommended a return to warmer climate. (It is not clear if financial reasons also played a part.) While in Spain, the couple's second child, Manuel, was born, and Victorina was born after their return to Cuba.

He immigrated on 13 Feb 1912 to New York, NY, USA.14,42 Left Havana on the SS Havana on 10 February 1912, arrived in New York on 13 February 1912. He lived in New York, NY, USA between 13 Feb 1912 and 1921.10,15,16,43,44 Carmen LAGOS BESTEIRO (Signes) writes "Our first home, I heard, was on 14th Street near Jane and Union Square. . . Our last home in that city was at 526 East 83rd Street. This was near the East River where there was a park where we went roller skating. . . Uncle Mannie said the house had been torn down to build a highway . . . " On 28 April 1916, their address was recorded as 344 E. 85th Street. Carmen Lagos remembers this to be the house where the two babies died.

From passenger lists, the following addresses were recorded. On 18 September 1912, when Josefa arrived with Carmen, Manuel and Victorina: 290 W. 12th Street. On 2 April 1917, when Josefa arrived with Carmen, Victorina and Lola: 12 E. 46th Street. On August 15, 1917, when Joaquina Lorenzo arrived, and on 24 April 1920 when Victorina and children visited, the address was 526 E. 83rd Street. He was a chief instructor and manager of the Cortina Academy of Languages in New York, NY, USA before 1919.11 He was a high school teacher of Spanish and Italian in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA between Sep 1919 and 1947.45 Llegó a ser catedrático. He was educated at Columbia University and received a Master of Arts on 23 Feb 1921 in New York, NY, USA.46 He lived in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA between 1921 and 1952.10,32,47 Carmen LAGOS BESTEIRO de Signes writes "Our first home was at 321 Market Street, on the second floor, over a store. From there we moved to 307 Park Avenue, also over a store, then to a house I like best of all the houses in which I've ever lived: 315 Park Avenue. . . Our next two homes were on 22nd Street, across from School 24 [per Jo and Dee LAGOS BESTEIRO the 22nd St. house nos. were 922, then 924] . . . Then we finally were able to purchase a house at 129 Lenox Avenue."

922 E. 22nd Street was the residence shown on the 1930 census, where he paid $55 per month rent.

He was naturalized on 18 Jun 1925 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA.48 He was living at 307 Park Avenue at the time. He got his first car and his driver's license about 1933 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA.49 Family story: Shortly after getting his driver's license, he bought a brand new 1933 Chevy (for about $600). Not long thereafter, he was in an accident. "A little bit of damage", he said. His son Manny commented, however, that the only thing left working was the horn.

He visited Cuba after his brother Manuel shot himself in a failed suicide attempt between Aug 1934 and Sep 1934 in Havana, Cuba.32 When he left on this particular voyage, his children remember that the band was playing "For all you know, we may never meet again." Scheduled to arrive September 8 on the Morro Castle, he moved his trip up a few days. The Morro Castle -- on his origiinally scheduled voyage -- caught fire off the shore of Asbury Park, and 134 people were killed. (Antonio's report on the reason for Manuel's misfortune: "She looked like Betty Boop.") He retired in 1947 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA.30 He spent several weeks being treated for lung cancer between 8 Jul 1952 and 20 Sep 1952 in London, Ontario, Canada.50,51 He was treated with cobalt therapy, which was a cutting edge technology at the time. When he returned home, the cancer seemed to have been cured, but it returned weeks later. He died on 15 Nov 1952 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA. He was a heavy smoker and died of lung cancer. He was buried on 18 Nov 1952 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA. Holy Sepulcher Cemetery.

Dolores BALL (Carr) in 1992: "[His] character kept him in a position of esteem with everyone who knew him and whose caring keeps him warmly in the hearts of those of us fortunate enough to remember him."

Antonio [Papa] LAGOS TOLEDO and Josefa (Pepita) [Maina] BESTEIRO GRACIANI were married on 20 Dec 1909 in Havana, Cuba.52 They were married at 2 PM at the Iglesia de Monserrate de la Habana. Family story: Josefa's mother Victorina did not attend the wedding, because she was forbidden by her husband Manuel, who was Antonio's brother, and angry at the fact that his brother was marrying his stepdaughter. Victorina's cousin Joaquina LORENZO GÓMEZ, however, who had been brought up as her sister, did so surreptitiously. When Manuel asked where she'd been that evening, she responded "Where your wife should have been -- if she'd had the courage." [Note of 2001: it has not yet been shown that Joaquina was in Havana in 1909.]

7. Photo Josefa (Pepita) [Maina] BESTEIRO GRACIANI2,4 was born on 6 Aug 1884 in Madrid, Spain.53 Full name: Josefa Justa. She was born at Príncipe de Anglona uno, piso 1º. (Principe de Anglona: desde la Costanilla de San Andrés á la de San Andrés. . . En el (plano) de Espinosa lleva el nombre . . . de calle Sin Puertas . . . ) She lived at Plaza de la Cebada 10 in Madrid, Spain between 1889 and 1906.54,55,56 The family was living at this address when her brother Jorge was born in 1889 and still living here during the 1905 census.

When Richard SIGNES was in Madrid looking for family information in August 1997, he wrote "When I was in Madrid, strolling through the neighborhood in which Maina and family grew up, I realized that Plaza de la Cebada, diez, was just about fifty yards from the well known "Teatro de La Latina". All sorts of images of the Gracciani actors/actresses came to mind. " She appeared in the census in 1895 in Madrid, Spain.57 She lived at Plaza de la Cebada, 10, entresuelo derecha in Madrid, Spain on 1 Dec 1895. She received first communion on 4 Jun 1897 in Madrid, Spain.58 Carmen SIGNES (Beaton) has a prayerbook of Pepita's, with the inscription "Libro con el que hice mi Primera Comunion en la Iglesia de Santa Maria la Real de la Almudena de Madrid el dia 4 de junio 1897. Pepita Besteiro Grazziani" (note the "zz" spelling). She was educated at a conservatory about 1900 in Madrid, Spain.32

She lived c/Madera Alta, 28-3° dcha in Madrid, Spain between 14 Nov 1906 and Mar 1907.56 She immigrated on 2 Apr 1907 to Havana, Cuba.59,60,61 There is a document dated 9 March 1907 that gives Josefa permission to leave Spain. Isabel BESTEIRO GRACCIANI notes that the travellers consisted of Victorina GRACCIANI and three of her children (Domingo had gone earlier and Emilio never went). She lived in various places between 1907 and 1921. Here is an attempt at a summary: 1884-1907: Madrid / 1907-1908: Havana / 1908-1909: Madrid / 1909-1911: Havana / 1911: Spain (Valdemoro in August; Santiago?) / 1912: Havana / 1912-1916: New York / 1916-1917: Havana / 1917-1921: New York / 1921-1953: Paterson, NJ / 1953-1968 Totowa Borough, NJ.

She was living on 28 Aug 1908 in Madrid, Spain.32,60 Isabel BESTEIRO GRACCIANI notes that Josefa returned to Spain with her grandmother Joaquina (who had visited Cuba, according to this story, in an unsuccesful effort to get her pregnant 45-year old daughter Victorina to return to Spain with her). There is a photo of Josefa, inscribed by herself, that reads as follows: "Mamá, para que vea estoy más gruesa y mande por mí. La dedico este postal con mucho cariño. Su hija Pepita 28-8-1908 Madrid" (Mother, so you see I'm getting heavier; send for me. . . ") (Note -- address on the card was "A Dª Victorina Gracciani / Consulado - 104 y 106 / "Isla de Cuba" / Habana.)

She returned to Havana on 1 Jun 1909.62 Arrived in Havana on the Reina María Cristina. She returned to Spain in 1911.32 After the birth of their daughter Carmen, Josefa and her husband and daughter returned to Spain where Antonio briefly resumed his medical studies in Santiago de Compostela. Because of Pepita's ill health, however, the doctors recommended warmer climate, and they returned to Cuba. While in Spain, the couple's second child, Manuel, was born, and Victoria was born after their return to Cuba. She immigrated on 18 Sep 1912 to New York, NY, USA.14,15,32 She sailed on the S.S. Saratoga with children Carmen, Manuel and Victorina. She was preceded in the immigration to the US by her husband, who continued to urge her to wait to join him until he had found a job. Her mother, however, offered her two pieces of advice: "don't leave a man alone that long" and "as long as you don't show up with the kids he won't find a job." (Victorina was 5 weeks old when they left.)

She lived in New York, NY, USA between 18 Sep 1912 and 1921. See Antonio LAGOS TOLEDO entry for details. She travelled to Cuba just prior to the birth of her fourth daughter, the second Lolita, about Nov 1916.32 With her infant children Dolores and Antonio having died within three weeks of each other in New York City, she was afraid to bear yet another child there. Leaving her husband Antonio in NY, she travelled to Cuba with her children Carmen, Manuel and Victoria. She returned to the US after the birth of her daughter Dolores on 2 Apr 1917 in Havana, Cuba.32,44 In March 1917, her husband had written her in Cuba advising her and the children to return home: according to his information, the US was about to declare war on Germany, which would likely make it impossible for them to return during its duration. When she and her children (Carmen, Manuel, Victoria and the baby Dolores) prepared to depart from Havana, it was discovered that Manuel had pink eye and he was forbidden to accompany them. Fearful because of her husband's admonition, she boarded the boat and left Manuel in the care of his grandmother and Aunt Betty (Isabel BESTEIRO GRACCIANI) for approximately 2 years. The boat, the S.S. Mexico, left Havana at 29 March 1917 and arrived in New York on 2 April. The US declared war on Germany on 6 April.

She lived in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA between 1921 and 1953. See Antonio Lagos Toledo entry for details. She was naturalized on 18 Nov 1943. She lived 299 East 31st Street in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA in 1952/53. When her husband Antonio died in November 1952 her daughter Carmen won the right for her to move to their house. After the sudden 1953 death of Joe Baron, however, she moved to Totowa Borough where she helped care for her granddaughter Mercedes Baron while Mercedes' mother Josephine worked. She lived 100 Greene Avenue in Totowa, Passaic, NJ, USA between 1953 and 1968.

She visited Madrid for the first time in 56 years in Aug 1965. She first traveled to Germany for the wedding of her grandson Emil SIGNES. (Two interesting stories about this trip: 1. In Gata de Gorgos, the home town of her son-in-law Emilio SIGNES MONFORT, which followed the Spanish tradition of widows wearing black for the remainder of their lives, Pepita astounded everyone by wearing a pink dress. 2. When in a Madrid hotel, she demanded to know why the desk clerk spoke to her in English. "But you spoke to me in English" he stammered. "Oh", said Maina, who despite speaking very little English, probably had.

She died on 4 Feb 1968 in Totowa, Passaic, NJ, USA. Cause of death was cancer. She was also known as GRACCIANI. On her birth certificate she is listed - as are Domingo and Emilio - as BESTEIRO GRACIANI. Jorge and Isabel, however, are listed as BESTEIRO GRACCIANI, and GRACCIANI was the spelling that was more common among all the siblings - as well as their mother and uncle Joaquín - from Jorge's birth until their deaths. Played the piano and the castanets. Per her daughter Carmen, her special interests were family, sewing, embroidering, reciting poetry, cooking, reading, theatre, playing the piano.

Dolores BALL (Carr) in 1992, honored: "Maina, who was pure love, who always gave completely of herself and never expected anything in return, who would do anything to avoid hurting anyone's feelings. While Papa was always aware of everything that went on in their home, Maina always understood everything."

Children were:

3

i.

Carmen LAGOS BESTEIRO.

ii.

Photo Manuel (Manny) LAGOS BESTEIRO2 was born on 15 Aug 1911 in Valdemoro, Madrid, Spain.63 Full name: Manuel Francisco Ricardo Napoleón LAGOS BESTEIRO. Born at Plaza del Esparto, 3, which was temporarily the home of Joaquín GRACIANI LORENZO, brother of his grandmother Victorina. ([Joaquín . . . domiciliado en esta localidad accidentalmente, Plaza del Esparto número tres.] He travelled from Spain to Cuba with his parents and older sister Carmen in 1912. While on board ship, he became very sick and his mother was told by the ship's doctor that he was unlikely to survive the journey. Somehow, she found a wetnurse (nodriza) on board the ship, and this wet nurse (whose photograph is in this database) suckled Manolo back to health, to the point where it was noted that he had a ruddy complexion by the time the boat arrived in Cuba.

He immigrated in Sep 1912 to New York, NY, USA.15 Sailed on the S.S. Saratoga. He lived for 2 to 3 years as a child. between 1917 and 1920 in Havana, Cuba.32,49,52 Explanation: after the death of his two siblings, Antonio and Dolores, who had been born in New York, his mother -- accompanied by Manuel and his sisters Carmen and Victoria -- returned to Cuba where she felt safer with child. His sister Dolores Emilia Manuela was born here in 1917. On their return, he was diagnosed with pink eye and was not allowed on the boat with the rest of his family. His mother, heeding the warnings of her husband that the US was about to declare war (World War I was raging in Europe) and that she would not be allowed to return if that happened, took the other three children and left Manuel. (They arrived in the US on 2 April and the US declared war on Germany 4 days later.)

He stayed, therefore, in Havana, where he lived with his grandmother, and went to school, until 1919 or 1920 (no record of his return has been found). It was there that he became acquainted with Oscar (Oscarito) GONZÁLEZ, who was later to visit the US and attend school in Paterson.

He was naturalized on 18 Jun 1925.64 This did not keep him from the attempted clutches of Spain. A 10 Sept 1925 letter from the Spanish Consulate in NY reads " . . . no hay lugar a la mas leve duda. Usted es hijo de padres españoles y ademas ha nacido Vd. en España, y por lo tanto, aun cuando su padre se haya hecho ciudadano americano, ello no le exime a Vd de tener que cumplir sus deberes militares en su Patria que es España". (There is not a shadow of a doubt: you are the son of Spanish parents and were born in Spain, and therefore, although your father has become an American citizen, this does not exempt you from having to complete your duties in your fatherland which is Spain) . . . which of course he never did.

He was an employee of Bright Star Battery Company in Clifton, Passaic County, NJ, USA between 1936 and 1977. He joined Bright Star as a clerk in the export department, and worked his way up to assistant office manager, office manager, and comptroller. He retired in 1977 in Clifton, Passaic County, NJ, USA.

He died on 2 Oct 2000 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA. He was active in community affairs throughout his life..5 At various times over the years he served as athletic director of St. Mary's High School; treasurer of the Paterson Catholic Conference; president of the Clifton Chamber of Commerce; treasurer of Paterson-Hawthorne CYO; president of Totowa Borough PAL. He was a member of the Bergen-Passaic Health Services Agency, and served a chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Passaic County Community College. He was president of the Passaic County Community College Foundation and trustee of St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center, St. John's Cathedral and Holy Sepulcher Cemetery. He was on the board of the Boys' Club of Paterson, the Liceo Cubano, and the New Jersey State Organization of Cystic Fibrosis. He was a member of the Knights of Columbus, and was on the Hispanic Commission of the Diocese of Paterson and a committee of the Paterson Community Support Fund.

"When I think of Mr. Lagos, I remember the stirring words employed by the ancient Romans to characterize their most illustrious Caesar, 'If you want to see his monuments -- look around.' Look around my friends; not even the blind could fail to see the enormous contributions of this good and decent man." -- Gustavo A. Mellander, President, Passaic County Community College.

Dolores BALL [m. Carr] in 1992, wrote of "Uncle Mannie, who was always there for anyone who needed him, often before they knew they needed him . . . Whatever the problem, it was always expected that Uncle Mannie would solve it -- and he always did."

iii.

Photo Victorina (Vicky) LAGOS BESTEIRO2,65 was born on 9 Aug 1912 in Havana, Cuba.65,66 Full name: Victorina Marcelina. Born at the following address: San Nicolás uno. She was baptized on 7 Sep 1912 in Havana, Cuba.65 Baptized at "Nuestra Señora de Monserrate." She immigrated on 18 Sep 1912 to New York, NY, USA.15 Sailed on the S.S. Saratoga. She was naturalized on 18 Jun 1925. She was educated at St. Joseph's School of Nursing and graduated as a Registered Nurse in Jun 1935 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA. She was a head nurse and supervisor at St. Vincent's Medical Hospital in Montclair, Essex County, NJ, USA between 1936 and 1941. She was educated in a post-grad course in physiotherapy in 1938.67

She served in the military between 15 Oct 1942 and 24 May 1945 in Camp Hood, TX, USA.67 Her military service began as a 2nd Lieutenant, Army Nurse Corps, at Tilton General Hospital, Fort Dix, NJ on 15 Oct 1942. Transferred to McCloskey General Hospital, Camp Hood, TX, on November 7, 1942. Put in charge of the mess (date unknown). On 8 Feb 1944 became Chief Nurse at McCloskey with rank of 1st Lieutenant. She met Lt. Raymond J. Goetz at Camp Hood in July 1944. On 26 Oct 1944 became member of the Morale Council at McCloskey General Hospital, Temple, TX. Became Captain in March 1945 and separated from the service 24 May 1945 with this rank. She died on 4 Jun 1996 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA.

Dolores BALL (Carr) in 1992, wrote about "Aunt Vickie, who had the strength to maintain her rigid standards in a world trying to eliminate them. [She] stayed overnight at my home during a snowstorm shortly after I was married. From the moment she arrived she was in charge. She cleaned, cooked dinner and then - honest - ironed. When she left, she thanked me!"

iv.

Dolores LAGOS ** was born on 31 Jul 1913 in New York, NY, USA. She died on 18 Jan 1915 in New York, NY, USA.4,10 Carmen LAGOS BESTEIRO de Signes: "Lolita died of whooping cough. Fortunately Aunt Betty (Isabel BESTEIRO GRACCIANI) was staying with us at the time, which made it possible for Maina to stay with us children while she accompanied Papa to each of the funerals [of Dolores and her brother Antonio]." Nicknamed Lolita.

v.

Antonio LAGOS ** was born on 31 Oct 1914 in New York, NY, USA. He died on 30 Dec 1914 in New York, NY, USA.4,10 Per Carmen LAGOS BESTEIRO de Signes, died of an infection in his navel which may have been caused by a coin the midwife put over it to flatten it. "Fortunately Aunt Betty (Isabel BESTEIRO GRACCIANI) was staying with us at the time, which made it possible for Maina to stay with us children while she accompanied Papa to each of the funerals [of Antonio and his sister Dolores]."

vi.

Photo Dolores (Lolita, D, DD, Gee) LAGOS BESTEIRO2 was born on 1 Jan 1917 in Havana, Cuba.68 Full name on birth certificate is "Maria de los Dolores Emilia Manuela Lagos y Besteiro". Born at 7 AM. She was baptized on 20 Jan 1917 in Havana, Cuba.69 Godparents: Emilio BESTEIRO GRACCIANI and Dolores VERA SANZ. She immigrated in Apr 1917 to New York, NY, USA.14 She was naturalized on 18 Jun 1925. She almost burned down the family residence in 1927 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA.49 Family story: In the attic there was a tablecloth with a fringe. She occasionally would light a thread, watch it burn and go out. One evening she could not get the fire out and, not knowing what else to do, went downstairs to join the family at dinner. When a neighbor alerted her father to the fire, they called the fire department, and the fire was extinguished with only minor damage. The fire was blamed on embers from the train, whose tracks were only a few yards away at the corner of 22nd Street. She finally confessed to this 40 years later, in 1967, a year before her mother's death.

She was educated at St. Mary's High School and graduated in Jun 1935 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA. She was educated at St. Joseph's School of Nursing and graduated as a Registered Nurse in Jun 1938 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA. She died on 13 Feb 2003 in Totowa, Passaic, NJ, USA. She was buried on 19 Feb 2003 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA. Holy Sepulchre Cemetery.

Dolores BALL (Carr) wrote of her mother in 1992, "She was always "one of the kids" when I had my friends over. How many other parents enjoyed Elvis Presley? To my children, a trip to Towaco was a must every Sunday."

vii.

Photo Carlos Antonio (Charlie) LAGOS2,70 was born on 16 Jan 1918 in New York, NY, USA. He was baptized about Feb 1918 in New York, NY, USA. Godparents: Carlos from Cortina and ??. He was educated at St. Mary's High School and graduated in Jun 1938 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA. He was educated at St. Bonaventure's College and studied pre-Med (chemistry) between Sep 1938 and 1940 in Olean, NY, USA. He was an instrument technician at Wright Aeronautical Co. in Fair Lawn, Bergen County, NJ, USA between 1940 and 1943. (Although based in Fair Lawn, his work encompassed various facilities at different locations). He served in the US Army between Nov 1943 and Nov 194570 Following basic training at Fort Dix, he moved on to Fort Chaffee, Arkansas. (Interesting story: when his sister Carmen wired him that "the baby is doing fine", referring to his niece Dolores Ball, he used the wire to get a leave to visit home (as there was no name on the wire, he did not discourage the assumption that the baby was his). When his own son Charlie Joe was born 4 ½ months later, eyebrows were raised at the second paternity leave [which he got anyway]).

He went to England in 1944, crossing over to Le Havre, France, later in the year. From there, he was transported to Rohan (sp?), France, in a "40 plus 8" boxcar (named for the fact that it could fit 40 people or 8 horses). Moving on to Luxemburg, he continued East and was part of the liberation of Strakonice, Czechoslovakia (as a card commerating the event says, "from German bestiality".) He returned via Frankfurt, and from there to "Chesterfield", one of the so-called "cigarette camps", before returning home on the Queen Mary in the fall of 1945.

He was a Supervisor, Instrument Maintenance and Installation, at Celanese Corporation in Newark, Essex County, NJ, USA from 1946 to 1965.70 (Final year unknown; sometime in the 1960s.) He was a Boy Scout Leader from 1953 in Glen Rock, Bergen County, NJ, USA.70 (Final date unknown.) He began as a Cub Master when his son became a cub scout in 1953. He became a Scout Master in 1959 (Glen Rock Troop 13). He was the President of the Ridgewood-Glen Rock Boy Scout Council, 1971 to 1973. In 1977 he received the Silver Beaver award, the highest award a civilian Boy Scout leader can get. He was an Instrument Design Engineer at Graver Water Conditioning Division of Ecodyne in Union, NJ, USA between 1965 and 1981.70 (Start year unknown; sometime in the 1960s.)

He was a City Councilman in Glen Rock, Bergen County, NJ, USA between 1969 and 1975.70 He was a Treasurer of the NW Bergen County Sewer Authority in Waldwick, Bergen, NJ, USA between 1971 and 1973.70 He resigned this position to accept his appointment to the Passaic Valley Sewerage Commission. He was a Passaic Valley Sewerage Commissioner in New Jersey between 1973 and 1985.70 He was appointed in 1973 by Gov. Cahill, reappointed in 1977 by Gov. Byrne, and again in 1981 by Gov. Kean. He was a Republican District County Committee Chairman in Bergen County, NJ, USA about 1975. He was the Mayor between 1976 and 1983 in Glen Rock, Bergen County, NJ, USA. He was a Deputy Administrator, Bergen County in Hackensack, Bergen County, NJ, USA between 1981 and 1991. He died on 9 Jul 1998 in Ridgewood, NJ, USA.

Perhaps a fitting description of Charlie Lagos's participation in the life of his community is a caption from a picture on page 2 of the September 10, 1972 Sunday News: "Glen Rock's Councilman Charles Lagos, whose watchword is 'involvement' whether in politics or Boy Scouts, reflects his enjoyment of people and his pleasure in being able to help correct unhappy situations."

From the family perspective, Dolores BALL (Carr) wrote in 1992, "To Uncle Charlie, whose unique brand of humor has had all of us laughing and cringing at the same time. . . Thanks to his scouting, he believes all days start at the crack of dawn, which probably helps to explain how he has been able to accomplish so much."

viii.

Josephine (Jo, Jo Jo, Piti) LAGOS.