Tsintzinian Families: Origins and Histories

  • Andreou

    A relatively small family from Goritsa. Members from one branch settled in such diverse towns as Columbus, Ohio, Erie and Wesleyville, Pennsylvania and Hot Springs, Arkansas. Name usually changed to Andrew or Andrews. Best known Andreou was George I. Andreou who made a fortune (about $70,000) with the Camarinos brothers in Hawaii in the 1880s and 1890s. He lost much of this fortune after returning to Greece but did serve as mayor of Goritsa before his death in the 1920s.

  • Andritsakis

    A huge family from Goritsa that according to oral tradition came from Crete and perhaps before that from the island of Malta. Other branches of this family settled in Monemvasia and at Tolos near Nauplion in addition to Tsintzina before 1800. During the nineteenth century, the Andritsakis family in Tsintzina shrank in size due to death (malaria) and substantial migration to Egypt where several members became quite wealthy as cotton merchants. A few migrated to America primarily after 1900, settling in Dayton, Ohio, Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Butler, Pennsylvania. Some of the descendants of these American Andritsakis adopted the name Anderson and are now hard to locate due to intermarriage and assimilation.

  • Atsalas

    A small family from Zoupena. One named John Atsalas settled in Ypsilanti, Michigan and died there without descendants. His first cousin, Peter G. Atsalas, was extremely well-known as an active participant in the Jamestown conventions of the 1920s and 1930s. Peter, born in 1871, started in Glen Falls, New York, and settled in New York City in 1917 after dabbling in the movie theater business in Youngstown, Ohio. Successful as a supplier of equipment for restaurants and candy stores, Peter’s two sons now deceased, George and Theodore, graduated from Columbia University in the 1930s but they never married. Their sister, Maude Atsalas, is still living in New York City and is the last to carry the family name in this country.

  • Benekos

    An old Tsintzinian family dating back at least to 1638. Family name can be found in both Zoupena and Goritsa although those from the former village are more numerous. Elias I. Benekos and his brother Nicholas from Goritsa settled in Oneonta, New York, in the 1920s. Other large clusters from Zoupena settled in Chicago, Illinois, Franklin, Pennsylvania, and the Cambridge and Barnesville area in Ohio. The earliest Zoupenean in America with the family name was Nikolaos Benekos, most likely a brother-in-law to Barba Christos Tsakonas. Benekos was one of the first five Tsintzinians Tsakonas brought to America in September 1875.

  • Camarinos

    A small family from Goritsa that founded the Greek colony in the Hawaiian Islands in the early 1880s and the first Greek society in San Francisco in 1888. The founders, Demitrios and Panayiotis, were sons of George Kamarinos, operator of a grain mill in Goritsa in the mid-1800s. Another brother, Ioannis, was a well-known mathematics teacher for years in the Sparta high school. Demitrios and Panayiotis died as bachelors. Three sisters married in the Andreou, Chronis, and Roumanis familes and bore sons who went to work for their two uncles in Honolulu, Hawaii. The Camarinos name, which is of Spanish origin, survives today with close relatives who settled in Williamsport and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

  • Canellos

    Originally from Chios which probably explains the Italian sound to this family name since this island was ruled by the Genoese for centuries. Arrival in Tsintzina is not certain but a Konstantine and Stamatis Kanellos fought in the GreeI~ Revolution of 1821 under the leadership of Nikolaos Gerasimos the Tsintzinian captain. Another Konstantine Kanellos, probably a grandson, left Goritsa for America in 1882. He in turn brought six sons to this country and several lived in Syracuse and Coney Island, New York, for many years.

  • Caravasos

    The name sometimes appears in America as Caravasios. Many Greek family names begin with Kara which is the Turkish word for black. Another possible link might be to the Italian family name Caravaggio. The Caravasos name among the Tsintzinians is found only in the village of Zoupena. It is a sizable family with three branches in America. The Morgantown, West Virginia group is from Konstantine Karavasos (1867-1919) who married a niece of the famous Barba Christos Tsakonas. Another branch of three brothers with the paratsoukli Petroulias settled in Wheeling, West Virginia, and Cambridge, Ohio. This group and a third branch in Morgantown, West Virginia, intermarried with the Georgitsos family The Caravasos family is spread out today with several in Florida and Washington, D.C.

  • Chronis

    An old Tsintzinian family that dates back to at least the early 1900s. All the Chronis in America evidently are descended from two brothers, Nikolaos and Konstantine, who fought in the Greek Revolution of 1821. After the conflict, Konstantine settled in Zoupena and his paratsoukli (nickname) Tsouturas became a new family name. Nikolaos died in the tarnous battle against the Turks at Dervenaki in 1823. Several of Nikolaus grandsons from Goritsa were the first Greeks in Los Angeles, California, in the 1880s. Other descendants, primarily great-grandsons, settled in Honolulu, Hawaii, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and Syracuse, New York. Dr. Leonidas Chronis, a president of the Tsintzinian Society for many years, was from this family. The Tsouturas name appears to have died out in America although there were a few men with this name living in upstate New York in the 1920s and 1930s.

  • Constantakis

    Only two old Tsintzinian pioneers in this country carried this name, the brothers, James and John, who operated a confectionary in Gouverneur, New York, during the 1920s. The family name proba

  • Constas

    A Goritsa family with three or four branches in this country. Three brothers, Harry, John, and Constantine (C.N.), were in the candy business in Syracuse, New York, in the mid-1920s. A few distant cousins could be found in Chicago, Illinois, Youngstown, Ohio, and Ann Arbor, Michigan during the same period. Not much is known about this family though a Konstantis Konstas did fight in the Greek Revolution in 1821.

  • Costiannis

    Often as Costianes in America. A sizable family found in both Goritsa and Zoupena. Origins unknown but genealogical research suggests that in the mid-1800s there were two sets of four brothers in each village. Their fathers were probably brothers or first cousins. The Costianes were among the earliest Tsintzinians in America. Demitrios I. Costianis from Zoupena, arrived in Chicago in 1882, along with more than 80 other Tsintzinians that year. Costianes in the 1920s could be found in Philadelphia, Greenville and Chester, Pennsylvania, Chicago, Illinois, Albion, Michigan, Batavia, Middletown and Port Jervis, New York, Cambridge, Ohio, and Okema, Oklahoma. John D. Costianes of Batavia was president of the Tsintzinian Society in 1929-30.

  • Coumuntzis

    Several variations on the spelling of this family name which was sometimes changed to Cummings in America. A huge family from Zoupena that dates back to at least 1500. Among the earliest to follow Christos Tsakonas to Chicago in the 1880s. The most famous, Christoforos Coumountzis, helped found the first Greek society in America, the Therapnean Society in Chicago, Illinois, in 1887. There were at least eleven branches of this large family in this country and the Jamestown yearbooks from the mid-1920s list nearly 25 males with this last name: they could be found in Chicago, Illinois, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and assorted small town in Ohio and other parts of Pennsylvania.

  • Dikaios

    A small family in Goritsa which, according to tradition, originally came from the Messinian family that produced Papaflessas, a major hero in the Greek Revolution of 1821. The first Dikaios in Goritsa was Panaylotis N. Dikaios who was for a time a fugitive after killing a Turkish tax collector near Kalamata before 1821. He used the tax money to become a very rich landholder after marrying a woman from a Tsintzinian family (Liakos). Three of his grandsons followed Tsakonas to America Miltiades to Chicago, Illinois, Demetrios to California and Nikolaos to Phoenix, Arizona. None of these brothers had families or were active in the Tsintzinian Society, though their nephew George Dickson who lived in Mount Vernon, Ohio, was involved for many years.

  • Doskas

    A relatively small family from Goritsa. This family's name goes back to Albanian mercenaries who were hired by the Turks to suppress a rebellion in southern Greece in 1770-1771. These Albanians were known as tosk or toskas, which eventually became the family name Doskas in Greek. There were three distinct branches to the family in the late 1800s. Ioannis Paraskevas Doskas (1867) migrated to Australia in the 1880s and raised a distinguished family there. Six brothers, Gus, Nick, John, Peter, Paul, and Spiros, settled in various American towns such as Watertown, New York, Cambridge Springs, Ohio, Erie and Titusville, Pennsylvania, and Jackson Mississippi. Their first cousins, Basilios and George, also settled in the Watertown and Canton, New York area.

  • Economikis

    Sometimes as Conomikcs in America. Members of this family fought in the 1821 Revolution as Tsintzinians but the original family name was Economakis which suggests the family roots are in Crete. Genealogical research suggests that there were several brothers and close cousins with this last name in Goritsa in the mid-1800s. Thus, all who came to America in the late 1800s were fairly close relatives. They could be found in the 1920s in such towns as Franklin, Pennsylvania, Glen Falls, Ithaca, Marathon, and Canastota, New York and larger cities such as Washington, D.C. where a Nick Conomikes had a flower shop at the old Union Depot. Marcos Economikes of Franklin, Pennsylvania, was president of the Tsintzinian Society from 1931-35.

  • Economou

    Another small Goritsa family hard to trace in this country. One old-timer, Nicholas I. Economis, came to America about 1888, at the tender age of 10-11. He lived for a time in Utica, New York. He and perhaps a brother, George, migrated down to Roanoke, Virginia, in the 1930s. Nothing further known.

  • Farmakis

    The -akis ending suggests that this family name has its roots in Crete. The name is found in a variety of places on the Greek mainland but in Tsintzina it may go back into the early 16th century. The Farmakis came from Zoupena and Goritsa. The family tree in the 1800s seems to go back to one man, Ioannis M. Farmakis, who fought in the Greek Revolution. One group of his grandsons, five brothers, came to America and settled in Clarksburg, West Virginia and Portsmouth, Virginia. Another group of grandsons settled in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and later Oneonta, New York. Lastly, a third grandson was John D. Farmakis (1866-1939) who became extremely rich in the candy store and hotel business in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He and his first cousin, John F Farmikis, were the founders of the Greek community in Philadelphia in the1880s and 1890s.

  • Gazetos

    A small family from Goritsa whose historkal origins are unclear. In America, there were two branches to family. Four brothers, Evangelos, Athanasios, Basilios, and loannis, came early to this country and were living in Philadeip Pennsylvania, in the mid-1920s. A Nick Gazetos (a cousin) also came early in 1891 and settled in Butler, Pennsylvania. married into the Andritsakis family that had also settled in Butler. Little is known about descendants of this. family.

  • Georgitsos

    A large family that may have originally been from another village north of Sparta called Georgitsi. Branc of this family found in both Goritsa and Zoupena. Two distinct families from Goritsa changed the name to Georgets and settled in Olean, New York, Port Alleghey and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The Georgitsos from Zoupena were lark clustered in Oneonta, New York and Cambridge and Cleveland, Ohio. The Georgitsos were among the first to follow Chri Tsakonas to Chicago, Illinois, in the 1880s. Indeed, the first Greek woman in Chicago appears to have been Ioanna Ma Georgitsos in 1882. We all owe a great debt to George Georgetson, Olean, New York, who as editor of the old Tsintzina convention yearbooks helped to record the historical achievements of these Greek Pilgrims.

  • Gerasimos

    Certainly the most prominent family during the Greek Revolution because Nikolaos Gerasimos was the leader of those from Tsintzina who fought against the Turks. Origin of the family name is not clear though Gerasimos is the patron saint of the island of Cephallonia. A large family with one small branch in Zoupena and several more in Goritsa. Those from Zoupena settled primarily in Chicago, Illinois and Washington, Pennsylvania. One large group from Goritsa settled in Warren, Pennsylvania, where Barba Georgi Gerasimos operated and later owned one of the original stores in Christos Tsako chain of stores. Barba Georgi was one of the leaders behind the decision to hold Tsintzinian conventions on an annual basis.

  • Gianios

    A small family from Goritsa that is hard to trace. Only two men with this name appear in the Tsintzinian convention yearbooks from the 1920s. Konstantine I. Gianios was living in Youngstown, Ohio, at that time and a (first cousin?) Nick Gianios was in Chicago, Illinois. Research in the ship registers suggest that it was Nick’s father, George, who was among the more than 80 Tsintzinians who migrated to Chicago, Illinois, in 1882. Living descendants are hard to find though apparently some attended the 1988 Jamestown convention.

  • Gianoukos

    A small family from Zoupena that appears to go back to one man named Demitrakis Gianoukos who fought the Greek Revolution in 1821. This man had two grandsons Demitrios (1864) and Stavros (1870). It is not clear that either came to America but Stavros’ son, John, settled in Potsdam, New York. Demitrios’ son, Peter, was the famous King of Apple in Chicago where he made a fortune in the wholesale fruit business. Peter was also a nephew of Chris Coumountzis who along with John Procos helped the early Greeks in Chicago, Illinois, in the 1890s take over the fruit business from Italians.

  • Gregoris

    Not a great deal is known about this fairly large family from Goritsa though a Konstantis Grergoris fought inGreek Revolution in 1821. The family tree is complete with many branches. Gregoris in the 1920s could be found in Chicago, Illinois, New York City, Olean, New York, Trenton and Princeton, New Jersey, Shelby, Ohio, Warren and State College, Pennsylvania, and Okema, Oklahoma. George J. Gregory, from State College, Pennsylvania, was probably the best known as a Tsintzinian activist who served as president in 1935-36.

  • Heos

    See Chios, the island from which this family came.

  • Kapetenakos

    This family name is a nickname (paratsoukli) for one branch of the Gerasimos family in Goritsa. Konstan Gerasimos, one of the sons of the famous leader of the Tsintzinians in 1821, carried this nickname because it pin-pointed him as a son of the Captain. Konstantine had three sons but it is not certain if they came to America in the early years with Christos Tsakonas. However, four of Konstantine’s grandsons were established in Erie, Pennsylvania, by the early 1920s. This small family was concentrated in this one town at that time. Some descendants have shortened the name to Kapetan.

  • Kapsalis

    Evidence suggests that this family migrated to Tsintzina from the island of Kithera where there is both a town and cape on the coastline called Kapsali. A Georgios Kapsalis fought in 1821 with other Tsintzinians, and all the succeeding people with this family name are his descendants. In America in the 1920s, there were three branches. Polychronis Kapsalis was in Chicago, Illinois. John D. Kapsalis was in San Francisco and his brother, Peter, was in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The third branch were the children of a George Kapsalis. Speros living in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Peter, who eventually settled in the Wheeling, West Virginia area, and their sister who married A.D. Chacona of Oil City, Pennsylvania.

  • Katsaros

    This is a very small family from Goritsa that may have died out at least in America. A George Katsaros born in 1854 was part of the large Tsintzinian exodus to Chicago, Illinois, in 1882. A Peter Katsaros who was working in the 1920s at a florist shop at Union Depot may have been George’s son. A James J. Katsaros (George’s nephew?) was also living in Chicago, Illinois, at this same time. Both men were last listed in the 1939 Jamestown Convention yearbook.

  • Kostolambros

    A small family from Goritsa. Four brothers, Konstantine, Nicholas, Marinos, and George, all came to Chicago in the 1880s. Nick opened a fruit store there in 1888 but returned to Greece to raise a family. George married a sister to A.D. Chacona, of Oil City, Pennsylvania, and was well-known as the operator of the first Tsintzinian fruit and candy store in Franklin, Pennsylvania. George had no family and Marinos does not appear to have had one either. Konstantine’s two sons, Peter and George, stayed in Chicago, Illinois, but had no families.

  • Lambros

    A family with two branches from Zoupena and one from Goritsa. Three brothers, Bill, John, and Anastasios (Harry), started out in Chicago, Illinois, before 1900. Harry moved to Oneonta, New York in the 1920s and had four children. John D. Lambros from Zoupena, possibly a first cousin, settled in Jamestown, New York, after 1900 and took over the first Tsintzinian fruit and candy store originally established there in the early 1890s. The Lambros from Goritsa consist of four brothers, Peter, Nick, Konstantine, and John, could he found in the mid-1920s in three western Pennsylvania towns: Union City, Waynesboro, and Vandergrift. Peter Lambros, who lived in Jamestown, New York, near the Tsintzinian clubhouse is the son of Nick Lambros of Union City, Pennsylvania.

  • Lascaris

    An old name that has deep roots in the Sparta region dating back to the late Byzantine period. Found both as a family and as a Christian (first) name as evidenced in the famous House of Lascaris at Mistra where a Byzantine noble lived. The Lascaris were present in Tsintiina as early as 1530 and could he found in both Goritsa and Zoupena after the move to the Evrotas Valley in the 1820s. A large number came to America, with the 1925 Jamestown yearbook listing 22 with the Lascaris name. Virtually all of them by this time had settled in small towns in Pennsylvania and upstate New York. Those from the Goritsa branch were concentrated in Albany and Syracuse, New York, with some using the nickname Prites. The more numerous Lascaris from Zoupena could he found in Union City, Oil City, and Lewistown, Pennsylvania, Wilmington, Delaware, and Elmira and Oneonta, New York.

  • Limberakis

    A sizable family found in both Goritsa and Zoupena. Ending of the name clearly suggests family roots are in Crete as is the case with several other Tsintzinian families (Andritsakis and Vournakis). Difficult to trace this family even though a Ioannis and Limberis Limberakis were part of the large Tsintzinian group that arrived in Chicago in 1882. These men were apparently from Zoupena. Those listed in the Jamestown yearbooks in the 1920s seem to be from Goritsa living in such towns as Austin, Texas, Fort Edward, New York and Dubois and Kitanning, Pennsylvania.

  • Lourpas

    A small family from Zoupena that may have been a branch of the Nikolaides family. Three men with this name, John, Bill, and George, appear in the Jamestown convention yearbooks from the early 1920s. They do not appear to have been brothers. They moved around a great deal during this period among the towns of Fairmont, West Virginia and Oil City and Bloomsberg, Pennsylvania. The family name of Lourpas is no longer found in the Jametown yearbooks after 1949.

  • Manos

    See Voulomanos which is the full Greek family name.

  • Marinos

    The original name was Marinakos which suggests that this family came from the Mani region south of Sparta. According to tradition, the original village was Gorani, a small village on the slopes of the Taygetus mountains between Sparta and Githion. There seem to be two branches to this family. Two brothers, John and Speros, and their first cousin, Christos, were in Sunbury, Pennsylvania, in the 1920s. Another more distant (second?) counsin was Anastasios (Harry) who was associated with the Candyland in Ithaca, New York, in the 1920s and 30s.

  • Nestopoulos

    Origin of this small Goritsa family is not clear but the name means probably the son of Nestor. Two brothers, John (1873) and Nicholas (1883) probably came to America before 1900 and were living together in Philadelphia until the mid-1930s. However, the only person with this family name in the Jamestown yearbooks after 1940 was Gus Nestopoulos (1897-1989) who lived in Auburn, New York, for years. His nephews Demos and Nick of Ithaca, New York, and Pavlos of Auburn, New York carry the family name.

  • Nikolaides

    Not an old or large Tsintzinian family but certainly among the most interesting. The -ides ending signifies that this family originated in Asia Minor or from an Aegean island. In fact, the first Nikolaides in Tsintzina was a soldier named George who had fought with Kolokotronis in the Greek Revolution of 1821. He was either from Crete or Myteline (formerly Lesbos) and after the revolution he settled in Zoupena where he had three sons, John, Demitrios, and Panayiotis in the 1840s. John’s descendants in America settled in Cambridge and Barnesville, Ohio, and Middletown, New York. One daughter married George P. Chacona of Erie, Pennsylvania. Panayiotis had six sons some of whom started out in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in the 1890s. Demetrios had at least two sons, Harry and George, who came to this country. All these men changed their name to Nickles.

  • Nikolakis

    Another family that probably came from Crete. There was a Panayiotis Nikolakis who fought with the Tsintzinians in the Greek Revolution of 1821. All the Nikolakis probably go back to this one man since the family was quite small. In America, this family was only to be found in Cambridge, Ohio. John and James were brothers and the former came to America in 1891. Their first cousin, Peter, also settled in Cambridge, Ohio. Jim Nikolakis was the largest contributor to help build the beautiful church in Zoupena in the early 1950s.

  • Nohos

    A very old Tsintzinian family that dates back to at least 1636. A large family that settled in Goritsa, it had many branches in the early 1800s. For some mysterious reason, only one person with this last name appears in the old Jamestown yearbooks, Peter Nohos working as a florist in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. This man was probably closely related to the Tsakonas (Chaconas) from Goritsa who claim that their original name was actually Nohos. The small Tsakonas family from Zoupena (Barba Christos’ family) do not claim this. Tsakonas as a last name is not uncommon in the Sparta region. It refers to the area around Tsintzina, the Parnon mountain range, which historically is called Tsakonia.

  • Papadopoulos

    Probably the most common name in Greece because it means simply son of the priest. Those among the Tsintzinians in America with this name go back to a Panayiotis Papadopoulos who had four sons, Georgios, Ioannis, Konstantine, and Demitrios, in the 1840s and 1850s. The sons of Konstantine (Peter, James, and Leonidas) settled in Greenville, Pennsylvania and changed their name to Poolos. The sons of Georgios, James, Peter, and John, were all old-timers in Chicago, Illinois, and changed their name to Bullat for some reason. The Papadopoulos family as a whole is quite large and intermarried with many other Tsintzinian families in both Greece and America.

  • Papageorgiou

    A name found in Tsintzina as early as 1503. The earliest person from this family in America was Konstan tine Papageorge who apparently opened a saloon in Chicago, Illinois, in the 1880s on North Dearborn Street across from John Procos wholesale fruit business. Konstantine returned to Greece in 1912 but his sons John, George, and Peter came to America. They shortened the name to Pappas which is not unusual. Peter Papas who lived in Ithaca, New York, was the best known. George lived in Oneonta, New York, and was killed in action during World War II. A few other Tsintzinians with the name Pappas appear in the Jamestown convention yearbooks from the 1920s but it is not certain they are all from the Papageorge family.

  • Papapoulos

    A small family from Goritsa that evidently took its name from Panayiotis Papapoulos (1832-1907) who was himself a priest in the village for many years. His three sons, Socrates, Pericles, and Leonidas, founded the first Tsintzinian fruit store in Sharon, Pennsylvania, about 1891. They shortened their name to Poulos. Their sister, Hariklia, was the wife of Konstantine Papadopoulos, the father of the three Poolos brothers who settled in Greenville, Pennsylvania. Confusing, isn’t it? One son, Leonidas K. Poolos of Greenville, Pennsylvania, was among the most highly regarded Tsintzinians for decades.

  • Papayanakos

    Literally, this name means son of Papa Yanni. This small Zoupenean family probably came originally from the Mani region given the -akos ending. In America, the family is heavily concentrated in upstate New York. Three brothers, Peter, Louis, and John, settled in Ithaca, New York, in the mid-1920s. John appears to have come the earliest in the late 1880s. Other men with this family name were James, of Watertown and Governeur, New York and Harry of Potsdam and Governeur, New York.

  • Peliouras

    A small family from Zoupena whose origins are unknown. Basically, there were three old-timers from this family. Athanasios, who lived in Peekskill, New York, and had a son, Agamemnon. Athanasios’ brother, Panayiotis, who owned Peliouras Brothers in Birmingham, Alabama, in the 1920s. And lastly, a George Peliouras living in Youngstown, Ohio, during the same period. George seems to have had a son named James who worked at a place called the Sugar Bowl in the same town in the late 1920s. In the late 1930s, there was a fourth Peliouras (another Athanasios?) in Memphis, Tennessee.

  • Politis

    An old and possibly the largest Tsintzinian family. The name in Greek means citizen, or member of the polis (city). In Tsintzina, this family goes back to at least the year 1500. Politis are found in large numbers in both Goritsa and Zoupena, The family tree is so large and complex. The first Jamestown convention yearbook in 1923 lists 29 men with this last name in America. They were among the first to come with Christos Tsakonas. A Nikolaos Politis, from Zoupena, came with Barba Christos to Chicago in September 1875. Furthermore, George J. Politis also from Zoupena, was a dynamo behind the creation of the chain of candy stores in the 1880s from Jamestown, New York to Washington, Pennsylvania.

  • Poulos

    This is another Goritsa family that must not be confused with the Papadopoulos brothers from Greenville, Pennsylvania, who shortened their name to Poolos. The Poulos family was always just Poulos which usually is a suffix meaning son of. In Auburn, New York there were three brothers, Demetrios, Nick, and George K., who came in the late 1880s. The Poulos family in Ithaca, New York, is another branch descended from a John J. Poulos who came before 1913.

  • Prokos

    A very well-known family from Goritsa whose name became famous in the early years of Greek-American history given the success of John Procos with his nationwide wholesale fruit business. Procos started his enterprise in 1889 in Chicago where he arrived with other Tsintzinians in the early 1880s. Procos with others such as Christoforos Coumountzis formed the first exclusively Greek society the Eteria Therapnon in America in 1887. Procos who died on ship while returning to Greece in 1919 was a grandson of Ioannis Prokos who fought in the 1821 Revolution. All those from this family appear to go back to this one soldier even the family dates back in Tsintzina to at least 1684. John Procos of Chicago fame had a large family niany members of which took an active interest in the events in Jamestown.

  • Psychoyios

    A small Goritsa family carrying a name that is also found in neighboring villages such as Hrisifa. Sometimes rendered as Psichogios or Peterson in America. Leonidas Elias Psychoyios was virtually the only one present in America before 1900. He was born in 1887 and attended the first large Tsintzinian gathering in Franklin, Pennsylvania, in 1905. He had four children, Markos, Helen, Leo, and George. Leonidas appears to have had a cousin named Nikolaos (1893) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and later Santa Cruz, California, who is hard to trace now.

  • Roumanis

    A Goritsa family interesting because of its connection to Hawaiian colony established by the Camarinos brothers in the 1880s. John P. Roumanis (1876) arid his brother Panayiotis (1890) migrated to Honolulu because their mother was sister to the Camarinos brothers. John never married but Konstantine’s wife, Ekaterini Economou, is still living in Honolulu. There was also a first cousin, Paul Rounianis, who settled and died in Oneonta, New York, in 1952. Paul fought in France in World War I. Paul was quite a gambler but usually lost. According to tradition, he once won $5,000 at cards hut had a hard time sleeping after winning. He promptly returned to the table where he soon lost it all for the peace of mind. Paul had no children and only one nephew, loannis Panos Rounianis, a lawyer in Athens, who is the last to carry the family name.

  • Seferlis

    The origins of this family are not clear hut it is a sizable family from Goritsa that pre-dates the Revolution of 1821. Almost all those who came to America at the turn of the century had settled in small towns in upstate New York such as Cortland, Plattsburg, and Granville by the mid-1920s. However, their names begin to disappear from the Jamestown convention yearbooks in the late 1930s, making it extremely difficult to trace their descendants. There is a Seferlis family living in Syracuse, New York.

  • Serafis

    A family name from Zoupena that has died out but which is extremely important in historical terms because of the close connection to Barba Christos Tsakonas. Tsakonas’ sister, Antonia, married Demitrios Serafis. Their son, Christos Serafis, was one of the five original Tsintzinians that Tsakonas brought to America in September 1875. Barba Christos put his little nine year old nephew in the Chicago public schools from which he graduated as an excellent English speaker. Later, the young man made nine round trips across the Atlantic to assist other Tsintzinians on their journey. Serafis in turn had three daughters and his only brother never married so the name has disappeared in both America and Greece.

  • Sperides

    A Goritsa family that may have originated many years earlier in Asia Minor where the -ides ending is common. There were several branches to the family in Goritsa prior to 1840. Two men, Nikolaos and Spiridon Sperides, were part of the large exodus of Tsintzinians to Chicago in 1882. However, the Jamestown convention yearbooks after 1920 rarely refer to any one with this family name except for three brothers, John, Harry, and Nick, who lived in Erie, Pennsylvania, through the 1940s. Nick’s son is still living there.

  • Stratakos

    The name means son of the soldier and the -akos ending is common for families from the Mani region. The family is small and in Goritsa in the mid-1800s we find only one man named loannis Stratakos with four chidren, Kyriakoulis, Panayiotis, Helen, and Konstantine. Kyriakoulis (1885) is an interesting figure because he was quite an aviator, reputedly the first Greek in America to own his own airplane. He lived in Meadville, Pennsylvania, where he dabbled in local politics and took the name Frank Murphy. Konstantine and Helen followed their brother to America.

  • Treiris

    A Goritsa family that may have been descended from one man named Ioannis Treiris. Though it is not yet proven, five men, Diamantis, Elias, Georgios, Nikolaos, and Antonios, born in Goritsa in the mid-1880s, may all be the sons of this Ioannis. Elias’ son, Loannis, came to America and settled in South Fork, Pennsylvania. Georgios’ son also named Ioannis settled in Lock Haven, Pennsylvania. Lastly, a son of Nikolaos named Diamantis lived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He sometimes was called Diamond or Diamond Jim and had the paratsoukli Karnavis. He had no family but his close relatives in South Fork and Lock Haven, Pennsylvania, did and they still carry the original family name.

  • Tsakonas

    Without a doubt the most celebrated name in Greek American history in view of the central role Christos isakonas played in luring nearly 1000 young Spartans to Chicago, Illinois, between 1875-1891. An almost mythical figure, he and his young band laid the foundations for the Greek Community in Hawaii, Chicago, Illinois, and the Ohio River Valley. The family name among Tsintzinians is of relatively recent origin and is found in other villages in the region of Tsakonia. The Tsakonas from Goritsa say their original name was Nohos and those that came to America in the late 1800s were all close relatives, brothers and first cousins. They settled in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Erie and Sayre, Pennsylvania, and Ithaca and Syracuse, New York. The Tsakonas from Zoupena are a much smaller branch presumably from the same family though this is not absolutely certain. Barba Christos was from this Zoupena branch and his nephews and nieces came to America and settled in Oil City and Franklin, Pennsylvania, Morgantown, West Virginia, and Topeka, Kansas. The name �Chacona� survived in the Oil City branch whose patriarch was A.D. Chacona, nephew of Barba Christos.

  • Tselekis

    Among the oldest Tsintzinian families dating back to at least 1506, the Tselekis or Chelekis are primarily from Zoupena. A Nikolaos Tselekis was one of the first five young men Tsakonas brought to America in 1875. Two Tselekis brothers, Vasilios and Demitrios, got their start in Tsakonas’ first store in Youngstown, Ohio in the 1880s. In addition to the large Chelekis group in Youngstown, Ohio, there were other related families in Cambridge, Ohio, Ithaca and Watertown, New York, by the 1920s. Vasilios Chelekis from the Youngstown branch was a major figure in launching the annual Tsintzinian conventions in 1915.

  • Tsetseris

    A Zoupena family whose origins are not known but whose members were among the first to follow Christos Tsakonas to Chicago in the late 1870s and early 1880s. In fact, some Tsetseris were close cousins to Barba Christos. loannis D. Tsetseris accompanied him in 1875 to America and was a life long business partner in their chain or candy stores called the Greek-American Fruit Company. Ioannis N. Tsetseris donated about $200,000 to improve the life in Zoupena in the 1920s. A tall clock tower was built with his money during this period. In America, the Tsetseris name was changed to Chechery and in the 1920s could be found in such diverse places as Chicago, Illinois, Detroit, Michigan, Meadville and Bloomsberg, Pennsylvania, Oneonta and Jamestown, New York. The family is now hard to trace due to assimilation and intermarriage.

  • Tsoumos

    Originally was Tsoumouris and dates back in Tsintzina to at least 1632. Konstantine Tsoumos (1869) married Maria Tsakonas, a niece of Barba Christos, and settled in Topeka, Kansas. They had one or two sons and this was the extent of this family in America and though no descendants are known the name may still survive in Goritsa.

  • Tsuturas/Soutouras

    A nickname (paratsoukli) for Chronis from Zoupena. Two brothers, James and Nicholas, immigrated to New York about 1910. Nicholas settled first in Ashtabula, Ohio, and moved to Westfield, New York, in the early 1920s. He left New York in 1924 and returned to Greece where he died. James settled in Youngstown, Ohio.

  • Vamvalis

    An old Tsintzinian family name that dates back to at least 1632. Mike Vamvalis (1857-1928) from Goritsa settled in Hawaii where he worked for the Lycourgos and Roumanis familes for many years. He apparently had one son, Demosthenes. Mike also had three (nephews?) Nick, Anastasios (Harry), and George, who lived in Erie, Pennsylvania, and later Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Only Nick had a family in this country in the town of Hudson Falls, New York.

  • Varlas

    Another old Goritsa family that dates back in Tsintzina to at least 1518. However, only a few came to America. A George Varlas (Barlas) born in 1865 was in business in Washington, D.C. for 30 years until his death in 1939. His nephews, Peter and Louis, were in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1925. Nothing is known about the fate of this family.

  • Vlahos

    Vlahos is a common name found in many parts of Greece because it is the word for shepherd. The family name could he found in both Zoupena and Goritsa. Three brothers, Peter, Nick and Louie, worked at the Chelekis Lunch Room in Youngstown, Ohio, in the mid-1920s. These three brothers whose father was Ioannis had first cousins in America at this time. These cousins were James Anastasios Vlahos and his brother Peter A. Vlahos. James also worked with the Chelekis in Youngstown, Ohio, while Peter was in business in Rochester, Pennsylvania. Another James Vlachos was in the candy business in Dunkirk, New York, for many years.

  • Vlahothanasis

    Only one Tsintzinian pioneer carried this family name from Zoupena. He was George Nikolaos Vlahothanasis born in 1875 and a long-time resident of Bridgeport, Ohio, on the river bank opposite Wheeling, West Virginia. He married Georgia Caravasos who was a sister to the three Caravasos brothers living in Wheeling, West Virginia. George had several children who have continued to live in the Wheeling area to this day.

  • Voulomanos

    The largest Tsintzinian family with the possible exception of the Politis. The 1923 Jamestown yearbook lists 31 men with the Voulomanos name in America. However, in all cases, the name had already been shortened to Manos. These men were scattered throughout Ohio, Pennsylvania, and upstate New York. They could also be found in Chicago, Illinois, St. Joseph, Missouri, Austin, Texas and Palmeto, Florida, in the 1920s. It would take years to sort out the family tree. However, the most famous Voulomanos is the mysterious Spiros Voulomanos who according to legend was the first Tsintzinian to arrive in America, perhaps as early as 1857. Spiros who used his paratsoukli Bazounos as his last name is credited with opening the first Greek restaurant in America, the Peloponnesos on Roosevelt Street on the lower east side of Manhattan near the Brooklyn Bridge sometime before 1890. All the Voulomanos are from Goritsa. They may have come from some other part of Greece because there is no record of them fighting in the Greek Revolution in 1821 with the other Tsintzinians.

  • Vournakis

    Another Tsintzinian family from Goritsa that probably has its roots in Crete where the -akis ending is common in last names. All the Vournakis appear to be descendants from one or two men who probably settled in Tsintzina in the early 1800s. Several Vournakis came to America as early as 1890-91 and perhaps earlier. There are four main branches to this family and they could be found in diverse locations in America in the 1920s: Albion, Michigan, Bellaire, Ohio, Trenton, New Jersey, Wellsburg, West Virginia, and Wilmington, Delaware.

  • Voutsanessis

    An old Tsintzinian family whose name appears in an old document as Vourizanesis in 1632. Only three brothers from this family, John, James and Nick, came to America in the early years and they all used the anglicized name Vanson. John settled in Chicago, Illinois, where he arrived with other Tsintzinians in the early 1880s. Nick lived in Syracuse, New York in the 1920s and had one son, George, who later became an interpreter at Ellis Island. James had settled in Oneonta, New York, in the 1920s but nothing is known about his fate. The Vansons are last mentioned in the 1948 Jamestown yearbook.

  • Zacharias-Zachariou

    A sizable family from Goritsa that shortened the name to Zaharis. The largest branch in America was composed of five brothers, Michael, Diamantis, Evangelos, Peter, and George. These brothers in the 1920s had settled in Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, and Ogdensburg and Binghamton, New York. Other distant cousins could be found with the Zaharis name in Cortland and Syracuse, New York, and in Rochester, Pennsylvania, during this same period. Last but not least, one distinct branch carried the name Zachariou in Greece and America. The best known was Ioannis L. Zachariou who became famous for operating a catering service in Athens from the 1870s to the late 1920s. The family store located at 19 Stadious Street provided cheese, caviar, and other delicacies for the Royal Palace and Embassies. The Zachariou store was the gathering place for all Tsintzinians passing through Athens on their way to America for over four decades. loannis Zachariou provided invaluable assistance to prepare the Tsintzinian pioneers for their long journey to the New World. He never came to America but two of his sons, Nicholas and Demosthenes, lived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in the 1920s. Nick was talented as a poet and it was his poem in the 1922 Jamestown convention yearbook that praised Barba Christos Chacona as the pivotal figure who laid the foundation for the Greek community.