Stanley and Katherine Rajkowicz

Stanley and Katherine Rajkowicz
Stanley and Katherine (Kras) Rajkowicz and family (circa 1905)

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Out of the Blue: More Geffert Photos


I began this blog in 2013. 
 
I was rehabbing/recuperating @ home from injuries sustained in a fall on 13 January 13 while cleaning out my mother's family (Raykovitz) homestead in the Mayflower section of Wilkes-Barre. 
 
Over those 6 months, mostly while sitting in a wheelchair, I went through dozens of boxes and containers taken from the Kent Lane property and sorted through hundreds of family photos and documents.
 
Over the almost three years that have passed, mostly through Statcounter, I've seen evidence of people from all over the world visiting this blog. It was my hope that, eventually, family & friends that I've never met would stumble across it and add to the Raykovitz/Geffert - Kras/Maslyk family history with photos, documents and anything else they wished to share.  
 
Turns out another descendant of John Geffert ( my matrilineal grandmother's father ) lives in southeastern PA less than 30 minutes away. He sent the pics below, and I'm hoping there are more to follow from other members of the extended Geffert/Adamczyk family.
 
This is just way too cool.
 
Thanks, Jeff.
 
 
Above: (Aunt) Josie Geffert-Gutkowski
Below: Mary Barbara Geffert-Raykovitz and Josie


 
Above: Mary Barbara Geffert-Raykovitz
Below: Nellie Geffert-Dotzel and Sally Geffert-Adamczyk & others
 



Above: Sally Geffert-John Adamczyk Wedding
Below: (L-R) Unknown, Mary Geffert Raykovitz and Sally Geffert Adamczyk


 
Above: Sally Geffert-Adamczyk & unknown
Below: Sally Geffert Adamczyk

 
All photos above courtesy of Jeff Kascsak - great-grandson of Sally Geffert-Adamczyk.
 
More to follow...
  

Friday, September 4, 2015

They called him "Slick"

In the past two weeks, I have received more pictures from family members than I have in the past two years. I hope to receive more, and I will post them here with any additional information received.
 
The pics below are of Frank "Slick" Raykovitz (1896-1986), my maternal grandfather's brother.
 
Thanks, Damian.
 
 
Above: Damian Raykovitz & his Grandpa Frank "Slick" Raykovitz in 1950.
Below: Frank and Margaret (Oleniak) Raykovitz circa ~1970.

 
"I think 'Slick' got the nickname as a result of his being a slick pitcher for the Blackman's Athletic Club baseball team in 1917"

 
More to follow.
     

Thursday, September 3, 2015

The Search for Karol Rajkowicz


I sent a search request and a check for $30.00 off to the Luzerne County Register of Wills office this morning. They have birth and death records for Luzerne County from 1893 to 1905. 
 
As I'm 99.99% sure Karol died before 1909, I only have to search four years of online data for the period between 1905 and 1909 if they find nothing in their database.
 
Off we go.

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

And Here They Rest

Below you will find the burial locations of my maternal great-grandparents, Stanley & Kathryn (Kras) Rajkowicz, and seven of their children and spouses.
 
Per my prior post, there is one more gravesite I have to find, that of Karol Rajkowicz. I believe he may be buried in an old cemetery in Wilkes-Barre Township, but based upon a call placed to the parish church, no records exist of the burials there. My next step is to search the records kept by the Luzerne County Courthouse.
 
I will post updates as my efforts progress.
 
I hope current and future descendants of Stanley & Kathryn Rajkowicz not only find this useful, but will take the time at some point in their lives to visit the graves of their ancestors. From start to finish, it can be accomplished in less than three hours.
 
May they all rest in peace.

  
 

Monday, August 24, 2015

In Search of Karol

 
I've now located the gravesites of the seven children of my maternal grandparents listed on the Certificate of Naturalization below.
 
Today I will start the process of trying to locate their eighth child, Karol, who died in his youth due to severe burns suffered in an accident at home.
 
More in a few.
 
 

 
  
 

Sunday, August 16, 2015

March 3, 1949


First and foremost, thanks to my "long lost" cousin Damian Raykovitz for writing an email providing details regarding the location of his grandfather Frank "Slick" Raykovitz's grave. I hope to be able to post the GPS locations of all of the sons and one daughter of my/our great-grandparents Stanley & Kathryn Rajkowicz here within the next few weeks.
 
Last weekend, we finally emptied out the storage unit that we've rented for the past 4+ years. Yesterday, I started the slow process of going through boxes and sorting out the various items I removed from my grandparents' home in the Mayflower section of Wilkes-Barre, PA. 
 
The first small pic below is of my uncle Stanley Raykovitz, who will be turning 88 (?) later this year. As I always eventually do, I took the back off the picture frame and found there were two more photos behind it. The age of the young boy in the third pic below is about right to be my Uncle Stan, but I'll have to get some independent verification next weekend to be sure.


 
 
 
One of the other framed pictures I found was one that I had seen many times, that of my uncle Raymond Raykovitz and his brother Stanley in his Navy garb. 
 
 
When I took the back off both pics, I did find some additional photos, and I also discovered this written on the back of Raymond's photo: 
 
 
I called my Mom @ 7:30 this morning to verify a few things, and can confidently add this tidbit to our family's history; Raymond M. Raykovitz (1922-1944) was buried in Arlington National Cemetery on Thursday, March 3rd 1949 - almost 5 years after he was killed on an island in the South Pacific in WWII. 
 
 
 
This our family history. Please keep the cards & letters coming.
 
To Damian: Aunt Soph had two small dogs over the years; Scotty - which was Stanley's ( the W-B Police Officer's ) dog, & Lucky ( Aunt Soph's ).
 
 
 
 

Friday, July 31, 2015

Found: Karol (Carl) Raykowicz


I set out last weekend with a goal of finding my great Uncle Carl Raykowicz's gravesite. I knew which cemetery he was buried in and, fortunately, I also knew his wife's family name - Ney.

Mission Accomplished.

I am now down to locating/visiting the gravesites of two of my grandfather's siblings, Mike and Frank, a/k/a "Slick". I know where Mike is buried, and I will be visiting that location soon.

If any of my visitors can tell me which cemetery Frank (Slick) is buried in, please send an email to djw444@gmail.com

Once I find that grave, I will post the location of all of the children of Stanley & Kathryn Rajkowicz.

Below: Rajkowicz Family plot in West Wyoming, PA.
In addition to their parents, John, Stanley (Jr.) and Sophia are buried here.



Below: St. Nicholas Cemetery is in Shavertown, PA.

 
 
 
 
 
Later.
 

Sunday, May 24, 2015

CA Cousin comes to PA


We hosted a small gathering @ our home yesterday for my CA cousin John Galanti ( Rita's son ). He's been in for the past two weeks traveling from Philadelphia to Wilkes-Barre to Buffalo to Gettysburg and back.
 
He brought along these two pics.
 
From 50+ years ago...my sister and I are in front, and the Galanti brothers in the back.
 
From L to R: John, Frank, Bob and Chuck.
 
 
The pic below is of Frank and his family.
 
Put glasses on him and he could pass as another cousin's twin.
 
 
Glad we made the effort to get together.
 
Until we meet again. 
  

Sunday, April 12, 2015

For now...it lives


 
Before we sold the family homestead on Kent Lane in the Mayflower section of Wilkes-Barre, my sister and I dug up the "Seven Sisters" rose bush that had been on the property for, at minimum, 50 years. To be honest, as careful as I was keeping as much of the root system intact, based upon what came out of the ground once we cut through one of the largest roots...I did not hold out much hope.
 
There are several versions of who gave the rose bush to my grandparents and when. Some say my late Uncle John, others say my Uncle Stanley and his wife Jean. Somewhere I have a pic of a very young Stan & Jean standing by it, so if I had to take my best guess...who knows? The timeframe of it being planted was anywhere from the late 1940's to the ~mid 1950's.
 
 
In late October, I chose the best spot available at my home, dug a fairly wide & deep hole, amended the soil to give the roots that remained the best chance of growing quickly in our heavy clay soil, surrounded the base of the bush with 3 or four inches of finely mulched leaves...and hoped for the best.
 
Yesterday, as I was watering the plant and filling the birdbath next to it, I noticed a good amount of new growth emerging on some of the outer stems.
 
To some, it's just a scraggly old bush.
 
To me, it's a living connection to the past, and as the new owners of the Kent Lane property have removed everything in the second pic above - the front hedges that were at least 80 years old, the Dogwood tree I planted for my Mom on Mother's Day in ~1980, the arborvitae planted by my Dad, ...and the old clothes line pole erected by my Grandfather - I have no doubt the rose bush would have been ripped out as well.
 
For now...it lives on.
 

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Bicycle Boy: Easter Monday 1944


I've been wanting to write this post for a long time, and decided to get it done this weekend.
 
In 1944, Easter Monday fell on the 10th of April. As all of my mother's siblings went to Marymount Catholic School, they were all off that day, and in a rare move according to my mother, her father ( a coal miner who worked at the Empire Street Mine ) decided to take the day off to be with his family.  
 
As the story goes, my mother's Aunt Sophia, who lived in the family homestead a block away on South Meade Street, was the first to see the Western Union messenger boy on his bicycle pedaling down Meade Street toward Moyallen.
 
And then he turned left...
 
"During World War II, families of sons in the military service dreaded the Western Union "boy on his bicycle" to arrive at their home with a telegram from the War Department or the Navy Department. The message began: The Secretary of War (for soldiers and airmen) or Secretary of Navy (for sailors and marines), regrets to inform you that [name, rank and serial number of the man in the military service] was killed in action (or missing in action)."
 
There were several homes blocking her view as he made his way down Moyallen Street (behind the present day Stanton Bowling Lanes), but she did catch a glimpse of him as he turned from Moyallen Street on to Kent Lane. She had a clear view of her brother John's home on Kent Lane, as well as the several empty lots just past that house. In a few seconds, Sophia realized the bicycle boy had stopped somewhere short of those lots, and as it was an extremely close neighborhood in those days, she knew there was only one family with boys overseas from the homes at that end of Kent Lane.
 
Sophia grabbed her shawl and headed for her brother's home. By the time she arrived, her bother ( John T. Raykovitz ) and his wife ( Mary (Geffert) Raykovitz ) had already received the news that their son, Raymond M. Raykovitz, a 1941 graduate of GAR Memorial High School, had been killed in action in the South Pacific.
 
As my mother tells the story, her mother passed out immediately, and as can be seen in the last picture in this post, never forgot the pain of losing her son.
 
All five Raykovitz boys served: two in the Marines ( Raymond & Bernard ), two in the Navy ( John & Stanley ) and one in the Air Force ( Frank ).
 
Below are but a few of the pictures and other pieces of family history I found over the past few years at the home on Kent Lane.

Below:

Ray Raykovitz on the South Street Bridge - July 1941



 
 
 



My Uncle Raymond Raykovitz is in the center of the pic below.
His USMC buddies Joe Sheridan and Dan Ugran are on his right and left.

 
Ray partially shielded Joe Sheridan from the mortar blast that killed him. Joe had multiple injuries and spent almost a year in the hospital recovering.
 
Joe Sheridan is on the left in the picture below.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
If you didn't catch it in the letter above from Ray to his brother John, written a month before he was killed: 
 
"Buddy boy, I was so close one night on the 'Canal ( Guadalcanal ) that I swore I heard the Angels singing."
 
The GAR Class of 1941 held a Mass for Ray after learning of his death.
 

 
Below: Ray & his USMC pals.
 
 
Below: Ray's burial at Arlington.
 
 
Below: My mother at her brother Raymond's gravesite @ Arlington in June 1950 ( Marymount High School senior class trip ) and again 57 years later. 
 
 
When I found this pic, I could not stop staring.
That's Raymond's mother looking at the flag in ~1965.
 
 
  
More to follow.
 
Thanks for stopping by.