
MRS. E.W. ALLEN CONDUCTED
MISSIONARY WORK IN FOSTORIA
February 2, 1978
PIX #1 - Fakalos Family - 1921
- Front row, left to right, Georgia (Fakalos) Tsantles, Sam Fakalos,
Mrs. Fakalos (holding Jim Tsantles, the first grandson in the family),
Finy (Fakalos) Tellas. Back row, left to right, Pete Tsantles, (husband
of Georgia), Helen Fakalos, Jim Fakalos, Marie (Fakalos) Thompson, Jim
Tellas. The only living members of the family are sisters Georgia and
Marie, both living in Royal Oak, Michigan, and James Tsantles, Fostoria.
PIX #2 - Mrs.
E.W. Allen in her Oklahoma home in 1960
PIX #3 - Marie
(Fakalos) Thompson when she was a girl in front of the Fakalos store,
showing the old pump.
Today's story
is one I started to write a year ago. One aspect of it developed another,
and before I knew it I had written to California in search for a photo...written
to one of the principles in the story now living in Detroit...and interviewed
another also living in Detroit. All this before I was able to bring
together all the data and photos.
The principals
in the story are Mrs. E.W. Allen, known to older Fostorians as Blanche
Crockett, who once was a teacher in Fostoria schools, before her marriage
to E.W. Allen...the Presbyterian church...and the Fakalos family.
Mrs. Allen was
a fine lady, and a devout Christian, who believed in the Great Commission
"Go ye forth into all the world..." as taught in the Christian Bible.
And she put it into practice.
She was active
in missionary society work at the local Presbyterian church, during
the times when Rev. E.C. Pires and Br. F.A. Wilbur were pastors...but
she didn't let it stop there.
She continually
reached out inot the community to bring into the Sunday School and church
those who were unchurched, or anyone who thought or needed the Christian
influence.
Fostoria had a
Chinese laundry in those days, at 309 S. Main...where the Sportsman
Shop is now located. Men had their shirts done there, but especially
their white detachable collars. The two Chinese who operated the laundry
became the subjects of Mrs. Allen's missionary endeavors and soon were
brought to the Presbyterian Sunday School.
The children of
the Sam Fakalos family also fell under the watchful eye of Mrs. Allen.
The family was of Greek origin and belonged to the Greek Orthodix Church
in their native country, but there was none close by. Allen saw to it
that the Fakalos children were enrolled in the Presbyterian Sunday School
too, and they became faithful attendents for many years.
Fifty years or
more, hadn't dimmed my memory of the principals of this story as I started
to prepare it, and as it progessed many fond memories were once again
relived, as I looked at the old photos, and talked to descendents of
the Sam Fakalos family.
Mrs. E.W. Allen
passed away a few years ago in Oklahoms. The accompanying photo was
taken in 1960. Clara (Allen) Swedenborg, sent the photo to be shortly
before her death in 1977.
I remember, vividly
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Fakalos, and daughters Marie, Helen and Georgia. Georgia
later married Pete Tsantles, the parents of James Tsantles who grew
up and still lives in Fostoria.
Pete Tsantles
was a Fostoria business man here for many years. He was associated with
Jim Tellas in the Palm restaurant, and owned the Hays Hotel at the time
it was destroyed by fire.
The accompanying
photos will bring back memories for older Fostorians...and acquaint
younger readers with interesting aspects of by gone days in this city.
I was privileged
to renew acquaintanceship with Georgia (Fakalos) Tsantles, when she
visited in her son's home...Jim. Incidentally, as Jim grew to the proper
age, his aunts Marie and Helen took him to Sunday School too...and today
he continued his membership in the Presbyterian Church and is an elder.
Georgia explained
that her father Sam Fakalos came to the U.S. with his brother from Greece
in 1907, and initially stayed with one of his countrymen who was living
in Tiffin. After two years he returned to see his family and brought
them back with him. The family visited for awhile with friends in Fostoria,
then settled in Tiffin in 1910. In 1918 they moved to Fostoria and bought
the business at the corner of Main and North from another Greek family
who had established it.
Fostorians will
remember is as the frame structure that was attached to the brick building
still in existence; where the ceremics store is now. Perhaps six feet
wide and thirty fee long...mostly enclosed by glass...it provided a
good livihood for the Fakalos family.
Freshly popped
corn...hot peanuts in the shells...a variety of fruit...candy. ..cigars,
were a few of the items dispensed. This seemingly small business provided
an income to raise the family and establish themselved as "well liked"
in our community.
Georgia remembers
she was only seven when her parents brought her to the U.S. and that
she had the flu during the epidemic that swept the country in 1918.
She remembers a Greek wedding party held in the Moose Hall when it was
on the third floor of the Alcott building. "I had a pair of new shoes...and
the dance floor was slick...oh, what fun I had sliding all over it...no
one could catch me", she said. The building referred to was located
where the merchants parking lot is now at Main and Center.
Georgia reminded
me of the old pump that was at the curb in front of the Fakalos business
and shown by one of the accompanying photos.
Initially, the
family lived in the rooms above the present ceramic shop. Access was
gained to the living quarters by an outside, covered stairway; the doorway
is still visible to the second floor entrance.
In later years
the Fakalos family owned and lived in the house on Sandusky Street at
Potter, shown in one of the accompanying photos.
Sam Fakalos sold
his corner business to Pete Dongas in 1936 and they moved to Bellevue
for a few years...then on to Detroit in 1938, where married daughters
then resided.
As I look back
50 years or more years, I am reminded that Fostoria had the ingredients
for an International Club, the same as exists today in many cities.
There were Greeks, Chinese, Syrians, Germans, Belgiums, Italians, and
French all living here, and contributing to the social economic and
religious enviroment of that day.
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