George Vergis
Georgios arrived in America in September 1916 at the Port of New York and was processed through Ellis Island. There was another Greek immigrant, 'Andrea Vergetakis' who lived in New York City and had immigrated in 1908. It is very possible that he was a relative and Georgios stayed with him in NYC for a couple of months before being sent to Brackinridge, Pa. to work in the steel mill there.
He found work at the Allegheny Steel Mill in Brackenridge, Allegheny County, Pa. near Pittsburgh. A cousin, 'John Humas', was already working at the steel mill. John Humas, his wife 'Pelagia', and two children ('Michael' and 'Nicholas'), lived in Brackenridge and George probably lived with them. George worked in the steel mill for two or three years before moving to New Philadelphia, Ohio where he worked for another Greek immigrant, 'George Polis', who owned a shoeshine and hat cleaning business. George lived and worked in New Philadelphia for three or four years, before returning to Tarentum, Pa. to start his own shoeshine business. Sometime, during the Great Depression, he had a shoeshine concession at the Train Station in Butler, Pa. He was also the Ticketing Agent at the train station. It was here that he met his future wife, Ruth Mabel Wilson, who worked at the train station as a clerk selling train tickets, newspapers, cigars, candy, and other items that are typically sold at a concession stand. Ruth’s family lived on a farm near Slippery Rock, Pa., which was nearby to Butler.
Ruth’s family moved to a farm in Nickelville, Pa. in 1929, which was near Oil City, Pa. Oil City, as the name implies, was a major oil refining boom town during the Great Depression era. Sometime later George sold his concession business in Butler moved to Oil City to work at the train station in Oil City as the Ticket Agent. George and Ruth were married in January 1935. They had four children, all born in Oil City, Pa.
At some point Giorgios Dimitris Vergetakis shortened & anglicized his name to George James Vergis. This was a gradual process, as some insurance receipts list his wife Ruth as "Ruth Vergetakis". They moved to Franklin, Pa. in 1945, and opened a shoeshine, hat-cleaning business, concession stand, arcade, and billiard pool parlor. Gradually, the business evolved into a restaurant with the family living in an apartment above. In January 1963 a fire started in an adjacent store and cause some damage to the restaurant and to the apartment. Many family papers and pictures were lost. George reopened the restaurant. George died in 1974, and is buried in the Franklin Cemetery at Franklin/Rocky Grove, Pa.
(These biographical notes provided Jan. 2015, updated June 2019, & ongoing by Michael Vergis, son of George and Ruth Wilson Vergis. Please see Source Notes section below regarding naming customs and assumptions.)
Date | Location | Notes | Sources | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Birth | 20 July 1900 | near Iraklion, Crete | [14] | |
Marriage | license 15 Nov. 1934, New Castle PA | marriage, West Virginia | To Ruth M. Wilson (divorced ~1951)) | [11] |
Death | 26 Feb 1974 | [12,14,15] | ||
Burial | Franklin Cemetery, Franklin, PA | [14,15] |
Ancestry chart segment
Generation 2 Generation 3 +-- Dimitris Vergetakis | (dates unkn) Georgios Dimitris Vergetakis + (1900-1974) | +-- Maria Unkn (dates unkn)
Sources: [14]
Children
(children with George J. Vergis)
Name | Gender | Date of Birth | Birthplace | Spouse | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
living Vergis | M | ~1936 | [8,14] | |||
John Vergis | M | 31 Oct 1937 | Oil City, Venango Co., PA | unmarried | [8,14] | |
living Vergis | F | ~Jan, 1940 | [8,14] | |||
living Vergis | M | [8,14] |
Places of Residence
Location | Dates | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|
farm near Iraklion, Crete, Greece | 1900-1914 | born & raised | [14] |
Philadelphia, PA | 1914 | Port of entry, US immigration | [14] |
S. Canal St., Brackenridge, Allegheny Co., PA | 12 Sept 1918 | works in steel mill | [3] |
4th Ave., Tarentum, Allegheny Co., PA | April 1930 | merchant, clothing store | [5] |
Oil City, Venango Co. PA | Jan. 1935 | marriage to Ruth M. Wilson | [7] |
Lancaster St., Oil City, Venango Co., PA | Apr. 1940 | with wife, 3 children | [9 ] |
310 13th St.,Franklin, Venango Co., PA | 1944-1974 | own/live above Arcade Restaurant & billiards hall, 13th St. | [10,14,15] |
Photos
At home on a farm near Iraklion, Crete, Mary Vergetakis and three daughters (mother and sisters of George Vergis).The children of Ruth and George were born in Oil City, PA. In this photo ca. 1942-43, the youngest child is visiting the home of maternal grandparents Bert and Clara Wimer Wilson in Nickleville, where Ruth's brother Ed either still resides or is visiting.
Ruth and George moved to Franklin in 1944. They opened a business at 310 13th St. that at first included hat cleaning (see signs in both windows), shoe shine stand, and billiards. Note cigarette ads of the era in the righthand window, for Camels, Chesterfields, and Philip Morris. The "Call for Philip Morris" boy in bellhop uniform partially appears in upper left of the window.

Sources
Source Notes
NOTES ON GREEK NAMES,SPELLINGS, ANGLICANIZATION
- Greek name "Demitrios" is technically linked etymologically to Jacob, but is often translated to English as James. See Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_%28name%29): "James (and so Jim and Jimmy) are anglicized from the Greek name Dimitri as used by the Greek diaspora in the USA, even though the names are etymologically unrelated."
- Georgios Vergetakis' name is seen in some records as "Georgio". In Greek the final "s" is silent; it was dropped by some record makers. The "s" at the end of the surname "Vergetakis" was also silent, but the name was eventually anglicized to "Vergis" where the "s" is pronounced.
PRIMAGENITURE IN GREEK NAMING: SURNAME & GIVEN NAME
- (Per Mike Vergis): First sons were expected to carry the family name forward, but not only the surname. At least in this family, the given name also goes forward, but reversing the order of first and middle name in alternating generations. It is believed here that Demitrios was the middle name of our 1914 immigrant Giorgios, later changed to James (see source note above). His name appears in some records as Georgios D. Vergetakis; in later records as George J. Vergis. He went by the name George. Extension of this logic back to the previous generation suggests that his father's first name could have been Demitrios. Thus (Demitrios) Georgios Vergetakis' son was named Georgios Dimetrios Vergetakis ; the grandson was James George Vergis, like his grandfather.
NOTES ON THE SOURCES
- Source 3, Draft Reg. - "Cousin John Humas" , A memory of Mike Vergis, son of George Vergis: " I have a memory of someone visiting us, just one time that I know of; my father told me it was Uncle John and he lived in Pittsburgh. I (Mike) was perhaps 7, 8, or 9 years old but I recall that Uncle John gave me a ride on a motorbike that had a sidecar. I sat in the sidecar and he drove around Franklin for a while. It is that motorbike ride that makes me remember him, and how my father acted. He cooked a really big meal for Uncle John, seemed delighted to see him. I don't think I ever saw my Dad so cordial and attentive, waiting on him, all the adjectives, before or after. It left an impression on me for sure. The odd thing is my brothers have no recollection of this Uncle John; only me. It could be why my brother is named John.
- Source 3, Draft Reg. - Birth Date of George Vergis, Source 1, Draft Registration has birth date 20 July, 1900; Source 7, son Mike Vergis has birthday as 3 July, 1900. Mike Vergis: "My memory associates my father's birthday with the day before 4th of July. I've also seen 20 July somewhere, and on his Certification of Death the birth date is 21 July." Note: This site will use the 20 July, 1900 date, as given by George Vergis at age 18, rather than as remembered later by family members.
- Source 5, 1930 census: Census taker has year of naturalization as 1916; Per Mike Vergis the Naturalization paper is dated 18 July 1926. Census lists George as a merchant (could indicate sales staff or owner?) in clothing store. Per Mike Vergis, George at one time owned a hat-cleaning shop, which may or may not be this reference.
- Source 11, Obituary of George Vergis says George was 16 yrs. old at time of entry into the U.S., and that the port of entry was NYC. Mike says that his mother, Ruth Wilson Vergis, would have provided the information in the obituary but that her information would have been a guess at the age George was young at time of arrival, landed in a big city, and almost immediately transferred to western Pennsylvania to work in the steel mills. He was quite young, with limited English. Four years later, on his draft card, he lists the name of a cousin, John Humis, who seems to share the same address. This family may have been his contact when he arrived, and may have seen to his transportation west and finding work in the mills. They may have spoken Greek at home for a time.
- Source 10, City Directory Franklin PA, address 310 13th appears to be for home and a business (billiards). Source 14, son Mike Vergis says of it, that his family lived upstairs over the business at 310 13th Street. He believes the family moved from Oil City to Franklin in 1944. "The Arcade" business included a hat cleaning service, shoe shine stand and six billiard tables. Later, "Arcade Lunch" had a diner, pinball machines and 3 billiard tables. Finally, "Arcade Restaurant" had 12 dining tables, lunch counter, ice cream counter, billiard and pinball machines in back.
Elizabeth Ann Wilson, niece of Ruth Wilson Vergis, remembers visiting the family as a child and teen-ager. The restaurant occupied the front room, the billiards a back room, and the residence was upstairs. George was the cook, and Ruth managed the dining area.