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Sixth Generation
154.
Manuel (Manny) LAGOS BESTEIRO121 was born on 15 Aug 1911 in Valdemoro, Madrid, Spain.160 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.137 Sailed on the S.S. Saratoga. He lived for 3 years
as a child between 1916 and 1919 in Havana, Cuba.54,96,98,143 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 October 1919, when he returned, via Balitmore, with his Uncle
Manuel. 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 1925.161
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..157
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."
Manuel (Manny) LAGOS BESTEIRO and Eileen Marie QUIGLEY were married on 15
Aug 1935 in Suffern, NY, USA. This "north of the border"
marriage was secret; so secret that virtually no one knew about it for more than
a year after the recorded date.
Eileen Marie
QUIGLEY121,162 (daughter of Matthew Francis (Pop) QUIGLEY and Rose
Ann (Muzzy) HUGHES) was born on 22 May 1913 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA.
She was educated at St. Bonaventure High School and graduated about 1931 in
Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA. She was educated at the Packard School
about 1933 in New York, NY, USA.163
She was an accountant in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA in 1936.163 She died on 14 Feb 1998 in Paterson, Passaic, NJ,
USA. White Birch Nursery Home.
Dolores BALL (Carr) wrote in 1992 that Eileen "survived a household with
five men with her wonderful sense of humor. Sitting at the piano, she was always
the life of the party. . . Aunt Eileen served her family healthy foods long before
the rest of the world caught on." Manuel (Manny) LAGOS BESTEIRO and Eileen
Marie QUIGLEY had the following children:
294 | i. | Richard LAGOS ** was born on 28 Aug 1937
in Paterson, Passaic, NJ, USA. He died on 28 Aug 1937 in Paterson,
Passaic, NJ, USA.164 Per
Tony LAGOS, died about 9 hours after his birth. According to Carmen LAGOS BESTEIRO
[m. Signes], he died due to immunity problems.
He was delivered by Dr. Cosmo Riccobono; during the next 35 years, the majority
of Lagos descendants will be delivered by "Dr. Ricky". Specifically:
Richard LAGOS (1937), Anthony LAGOS (1938), John LAGOS (1940), Emil SIGNES (1940),
Geraldine LAGOS (1943), Charles LAGOS (1944), Manuel LAGOS (1944), Gerard LAGOS
(1946), Carmen SIGNES (1946), Katherine BALL (1947), Joseph GOETZ (1947), Richard
SIGNES (1947), Marjorie GOETZ (1950), Mercedes BARON (1951), Patricia BALL (1954),
Jeff LAGOS (1966), Tracey VREELAND (1966), Tammy VREELAND (1967), Greg VREELAND
(1969), Stephanie VREELAND (1970). | +295 | ii. | Anthony
Kevin (Tony) LAGOS. | +296 | iii. | John Manuel (Jack) LAGOS. | +297 | iv. | Manuel Gerard (Buzz) LAGOS. | +298 | v. | Gerard
Matthew (Jerry) LAGOS. |
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