Showing posts with label Helen Francos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Helen Francos. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Celebrating Leo Francos on his 90th Birthday

Text (c) Robert Barry Francos, 2011
Photos credited where known
Photos can be made larger by clicking on them


If he had not passed away in 2006, my dad would have celebrated his 90th birthday on January 12, 2011. This blog is dedicated to him.

This little picture is from one of those Times Square kind of photo booths, just around the time he was enlisted into the army for Dubbya Dubbya Two. He would have been in his very early 20s. Funny thing is as time went on, he refused to smile for these kinds of pictures, especially official ones. Here, his amazing hair at the time

While my dad never had to go overseas during the war, he still had to go through basic training like anyone else. Despite the smile, this was not a happy period for him, being picked on by others because of his height (5'5"), weight (very thin), and his Jewish ethnicity. The other person in the photo is unknown.
Soon after the war, Leo I(right) ran into an old friend he used to know in the Bronx neighborhood in which he grew up, Ralph Schwartzmann (center), and they remained close friends for the rest of their lives (Ralph, who we called Uncle, passed on in the late 70s). The person on the left is unknown.
Leo, with his father (my grandfather), Benjamin Francos, who was fluent in many languages. He was born in Hungary and came to the States in 1910, and passed away in 1963 at age 80.
Leo and Helen Rosen's wedding picture from September 19, 1948.
My dad doing the dishes at their Brooklyn apartment in the very early '50s. [pic: Helen Francos]
Leo Francos, his elder sister Lillian, her then-tyke Stanley, and their dad, Benjamin Francos. I believe this was taken near Benjamin's apartment in the Bronx.
Ralph Schwartmann married Audrey, and they produced a daughter named Karin. During one Seder when the Schwartzmann's were over in the mid-'70s, Karin and I walked about a mile down to White Castle for a very inappropriate cheeseburger.
Leo was an auditor for Sperry Rand company in the government section, and he occasionally had the opportunity to travel, including to some bases.
Could be either one of Leo's sons giving him a hug, either Richard or Robert. [photo: Helen Francos]
Helen and Leo loved to throw (and attend) parties through the '50s and early '60s. Here Leo is in the living room dressed as a beatnik for a Halloween get-together. [photo: Helen Francos]
The parties were toned down by the mid-'60s, but they still happened. Here Leo helps two of the upstairs neighbors (Sandra was from one flight up, Joe from two). Her daughter Elise, and his step-daughter Julie Ann, were in my class [pic: Helen Francos]
At yet another living room gathering.
In 1962, older brother Richard attended sleepaway camp, and on family day was visited by Robert, Helen, Leo and Benjamin (sitting). [pic: Richard Francos]
For a while Robert and Richard attended camp at the same time. Again on a family visiting day, is Leo, Robert (wearing the camp's shirt), and Richard, who had a recent growth spurt. [pic: Helen Francos]
The day of Robert's Bar Mitzvah in 1968, Leo, Robert, Helen and a stylish Richard wait in the living room for everyone to show up. [pic: Audrey Schwartzmann]
Leo shakes Roberts hand after junior high school graduation, held at Brooklyn College. [pic: Helen Francos]
Leo and Helen at Robert's JHS grad. Helen wears her favorite beehive-style haircut. [pic: RBF]
Helen and Leo on vacation at Niagara Fall (Canadian side) in 1970. The Skylon tower can be see behind Leo. [pic: RBF]
Taken during the early '00s at Ken Laffer's house, more than 20 years after Helen's passing in 1981, Helen's sister Elsie Laffer relaxes with her brother-in-law. [pic: RBF]
This is the last photo of Leo with his sister, Lillian Weiner. She passed away about a year after this was taken.
Leo died on December 11, 2006, and was laid to rest beside my mom, who he never got over missing through the more than 25 years they were apart.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Leo Francos, 1921-2006

Text (c) Robert Barry Francos

Growing up, I had a somewhat tempestuous relationship with my father, Leo Francos, but as he got older, we became closer, and in the last few years of his life, I would travel the 40 miles to his house nearly every weekend, and we would go out for lunch at the Mineola Diner (which no longer exists), and then go grocery shopping.

My dad passed away on Dec 11, 2006, shortly after a fall. I wrote this eulogy for him the day after he died, and the eve of his funeral, on my brother Richard and sister-in-law Bernadette's computer.


My dad was a fighter from the start. Born Isadore Leopold Francos on January 12, 1921, from early on he so strongly did not like his first name he refused to be called by it, choosing his middle name as his first, enough so that every document of legal age he was simply Leopold Francos. That was so typical of dad, stubborn to the end.

As a youth growing up in the Bronx, dad lost two people to whom he was very close: his half-brother Max, whom dad looked up to, was taken as a teenager by cancer when dad was just a small boy. His mom, Sadie Grossman, died of a stroke. Dad found her in the kitchen of their apartment. Both of these events were both very traumatic and influencial in his life.

During World War II, dad served as a private first class in the Army, but did not leave the east coast, instead working in hospitals and psychiatric facilities in the Bronx and Long Island. He even learned some basic sign language.

After the war, dad bought his first piece of what he felt was true independence: a car. For most of his life, owning a car was a symbol of importance and status.

One day on the subway after the war, dad ran into an old elementary school pal he hadn’t seen in years, Ralph Schwartzman, and they remained close friends from then on.

Dad went on a blind date with an army buddy, and he was paired with a brunette, while his chum with a blonde. When they walked into the room, my dad turned to his friend and said, “I’m taking the blonde.” That is how he met Helen Rosen, my mom.

They were married in 1948, and moved into the Rosen family apartment in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. The rest of the Rosens promptly moved out.

My brother Richard was born in 1951, and I followed in 1955.

In their early married days, my parents knew how to party, and would host wild evenings of drink and laughter, and we have many photos to back it up. This came to an end, and they cut their partying ways sharply when my toddler-aged brother was found literally under the table with a bottle of booze in his hand. Still, they loved to gather with friends like Ralph and Audrey Schwartzman, and Phyllis and Carmine Sodano, and I remember nights laying in bed as they all convened in the living room, and I could hear them laughing.

When we were children and our parents wanted to talk without us understanding, they would speak in Yiddish, especially around the dinner table, but they almost never argued around us.

One language of dad’s that we all knew loud and clear was that he was a snorer to the nth degree. He could literally be heard from beyond the confines of any wall. One time at a motel while on a vacation with Ralph and Audrey, Ralph pounded on the door in the middle of the night complaining that dad was keeping him awake from two rooms down. Of course, dad’s response to this, as it always was, was simply, “What are you talking about, it didn’t wake me up so I don’t snore.”

Dad’s father, Benjamin, spent his last few years confined to a bed at a hospital in the Bronx. In today’s world a pacemaker probably would have cured this, but meanwhile we trekked up there nearly every weekend until Benjamin’s passing in 1963. This also had a major impact on dad’s life in that he knew he did not want to end up confined in any kind of hospital or nursing home. This became a core belief for the rest of his life.

While we were growing up, dad worked as an Auditor for the Defense Department at Sperry, at Lake Success on Long Island. Every day he would drive back and forth, sometimes with a car pool. One time when I was in fourth grade, I was hanging out with a friend of mine whose father was a cab driver. He said to me, “So, is your dad still driving a cab?” Basically I said, what are you talking about, my dad is an auditor, not a cabbie. I asked my mom about it, and sure enough, Dad drove a cab on weekends to make ends meet. We kids didn’t know it. The irony was, whenever we were all in the car, my dad used to curse at cab drivers, much like he would complain about “old man” drivers, even as he himself aged, and they were eventually younger than him.

Whenever the family would go to visit anyone, be it a relative or a friend, shortly after the meal he would stretch and say, “Okay, it’s time to go.” The Rosen family knew him affectionately as “Uncle Eat and Leave.” Sometimes my mom and dad’s older sister Lillian used to conspire ways to keep dad occupied so they could have one more cup of coffee and talk before heading out.

While highly opinionated and vocal about those thoughts, Dad also had a way of zoning out, smoking his pipe in the living room in front of the television. The two of us were watching a murder mystery one time and the phone rang five minutes before the end. I ran to the kitchen and told the other person that I would call them back, and then ran back to the show in time to see the credits roll. “Dad! Who did it?!” I asked. My dad’s answer was, “Ahh, I wasn’t paying attention.”

My parent’s plan for their senior years was that Ralph would retire, then my dad, then my mom, and then with Audrey they would travel together, as they often did on short vacations as a group. Shortly after Ralph retired, he passed on, and then too quickly after my dad retired, my mom passed away, on June 25, 1981. The story we all agreed on was that Helen and Ralph were sitting at the bar at some resort in heaven, just waiting for the rest and passing the time and laughing.

After a lively retirement party from Sperry and then my mother’s passing, dad mellowed significantly, and he became more of a cuddly bear. He endeared himself to all he met, including his new daughters-in-law, Bernadette and Marie , whom he took into his heart like they were his own.

In the mid-1990s, Dad moved out of his apartment in Brooklyn, and into his new home in Mineola, where he made himself comfortable, within walking distance of King Kullen where he could pick up small grocery items and the paper, and from the Entenmanns’s Bakery Outlet, so he could indulge himself in his chocolate fetish.

As he became older and slowed down, as one must, he eventually had to give up his car, which at first pained him for what it symbolized, but he also knew it was the right thing to do, as he learned to make use of Able Ride, and would always point to them on the street and say, “There’s my bus.”

My brother and I would go see him often, to help him with shopping needs, or the occasional family dinner to celebrate birthdays and anniversaries. He enjoyed these very much, as did we, sometimes getting together with Bernadette’s mother and father, Dottie and Hank.

One time we were set to go out, and Richie and Bernadette got to dad’s apartment first, when he fell ill. In fact, he died three times that day, but each time was brought back, fighting to accept the invitation modern medicine offered. After a stay in rehab, he was back on his own. In fact, when he suffered a mild stroke last year, after another a short stint in rehab, he was literally back on his feet within weeks, walking to King Kullen for his paper and rolls. He was determined through sheer force of will that he would not be in a home, and would stay independent.

On this past Saturday, while visiting a friend, dad fell and hit his head. When I arrived at the hospital, he was still coherent, but soon after fell unconscious due to what the neurosurgeon called a catastrophic brain hemorrhage. He passed away two days later, with family by his side.

Even at the end, he was stubborn, coming back for one more breath before he finally let go.

Somewhere at that cabana, Leo, Helen, Ralph, and Bernadette’s mom, Dottie – who would have fit into that group so well – are sitting and laughing, waiting for whomever is next, to join their happy group, celebrating the lives they have lived, as we celebrate yours today, dad.

Post-script: Dad's official passing was after 5:00 PM, but I saw him let go at 4:44 PM. Since then, Bernadette's dad, Hank, has passed away just a few short months ago, and I'm sure he's there, at that cabana, as well.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

For my mom...

Text (c) Robert Barry Francos, 2010
Photos from the RBF archive; credit given where known
Photos can be enlarged by clicking on them


October 19 is my mom's 84th birthday, being born in 1926, but she never made it past June 25, 1981. In fact, I'm older now than she had ever been.

This blog is to celebrate Helen Rosen Francos by showing her and her family that she loved so dearly, the Rosens. Some have since fallen out of favor with those that remain; as with any family there are squabbles, but while my mother was alive, she loved them all. The Rosen siblings are, in order of age from eldest to youngest, Miriam, Elsie, Eli and Helen. Elsie is the last remaining sibling. I used to love going to her house, and would spend a couple of weeks there every summer. She made the best noodle kugel in the world, and would cook me up a ton of bacon, as my parents kept their apartment kosher (at my dad's insistence). Elsie has a wild sense of humor that would fit in well in the Borscht Belt.

Caveat: My apologies for anyone left out, as I have not scanned everything I have yet, and there are definite gaps; photos that had been used in recent blogs, such as the Laffer celebration at the beginning of this month, have not been included. There are a lot of names and dates I'm not sure of, and I am certain I will have some wrong information on who is who, so those Rosens out there, please feel free to let me know, and I will make the corrections and update as I get the info. Email me at rbf55@msn.com to let me know, and give me the picture number so I can made the changes; or leave comments on the blog.

1. That's Helen as a young girl, helping to push the swing. The older gentleman is Helen's uncle, Lewis Rosen , who was married to Celia, and the child is Arthur Rosen. This is probably in the early 1930s.


2. The big party: That is my great grandfather, Koppel with the beard on the far right. The rest of this branch of the family are Arthur (with his back turned), Celia Rosen, baby Seymour, and Louis Rosen (my grandmother's brother). This was taken at Bensonhurst Park, near Cropsy Ave and Bay Parkway, in Brooklyn.

3. Left to right: Great Aunt Celia Rosen, Great Grandpa Koppel (seated), sons Seymour (on lap) and Arthur (standing), and Aunt Celia's husband Louis Rosen. Celia and her husband lived along 2oth Avenue in Brooklyn by the subway el, just a few blocks away from us, and we'd often have Passover at their house. In fact, the first time I was ever drunk was at a Seder in their apartment after I had downed a glass of Concord Grape wine, thinking it grape juice. I was 5 years old.

4. During WWII, teenage Helen (far left) and her friends at Coney Island beach. The one next to her was "Chickee" Dolce, who lived on Bay 22th Street (where the Rosens also lived for a brief time before moving to 8109 20 Ave.). She died quite young, and my mom and her mother, Rose, remained close over the years. The names of the other two friends are unknown.

5-6. My mother's eldest sister, Miriam, who died in 1951. She is sitting in front of the apartment my family lived in from 1938 until 2009. Because my grandfather was a furrier, all the Rosen girls had full length fur coats throughout their youth.



7. My uncle Eli in Miami Beach, just after the end of the war.

8. Helen, sitting on the stoop of the Rosen apartment on Bay 22nd St in Bensonhurst, where she became friends two others; all of her friends had nicknames. My mom was "Blondie" and another pal, "Lefty," married the brother of Mel Brooks. Helen's sister, Elsie Rosen, was married to Albert Laffer in that apartment on Dec 5, 1942.
9. Miriam Rosen at age 19. She shares a birthday with her sister Elsie on Oct.27. Elsie is two years younger.

10. Unknown; may not even be a relative?

11. This is the young son of Sara, a neice of Aunt Celia's that was rescued from a concentation camp and she brought to America. We were all at a bungalow colony in South Fallsberg, NY ("the Catskills") when the photo was taken.

12. My great-zayde, Koppel, who a religious man.

13. Eli was a dapper ladies man, and remained so for most of his life. His business was to buy out a bunch of stores that were struggling, consolidate the stock and sell off the now empty shops, and then have a huge sale, and when the merchandise was gone, finally getting rid of the last business. An A-type personality, he overworked himself rather than delegate, and weakened his heart by doing so.

14. Miriam and new husband right after their marriage in 1950. She died 14 months later. He gave Elsie her fur jacket which she sold to buy a bench at her gravesite in New Montifiore Cemetery on Long Island, where Grandma Fannie and Uncle Eli Rosen are buried. Helen and Leo Francos are a few rows back in the same cemetary.
15. Aunt Miriam, once again. The Rosens are an attractive family.
16. Helen in the early 1950s. This was up in the Catskills, at Woodburne, NY. She and Elsie had their own bungalos that year. [pic: probably Leo Francos or Elsie Laffer]

17. The Catskills in the 1950s. [Pic: probably Leo Francos]

18. Helen (standing) looking dressed up for my brother's briss in 1951, with some of her Francos in-laws, including patriarch Benjamin Francos (aka Benjamin Weintraub, aka Benjamin Franczozs), and his wife on the right. He was married a few times, and I'm not sure of the names. The woman to the left is unknown. [Pic: probably Leo Francos]

19. Helen and my older brother, Richard, 1952. [pic: probably Leo Francos]

20. Eli had a close relationship to my brother Richard in the early years. He bought him a full cowboy outfit, as Rich loved westerns. [Pic: probably Leo Francos]

21. I believe this is Eli with me, as I had light hair for a short while.

22. Eli with Elsie's son, Ken, and my brother Rich, in the mid-1950s.

23. Helen and Leo, waiting to go to a party, 1960s.

24: The photo on the left is Helen and Robert in the late 1950s; the one on the right is my Grandma Fannie, holding Robert. The girl to the left is unknown.

25. Helen helping me blow out a birthday candle. I'm guessing this is around 1959. I don't know who is the other youngster.

26. Helen and Richard in the Catskills, early 1950s.

27. Helen and Robert at the 1964 World's Fair in Flushing Meadow, Queens. Note even then I had a camera handy (as my dad was not fond of taking photos, this quickly fell to me). [Pic: Richard Francos]

28. Helen in Washington, DC in 1965 on a family vacation. Richard, who had recently turned 13, is sitting on the far right, trying to get out of camera range. [Pic: RBF]

29. Visiting her kids in sleepaway camp, Helen shows how happy she is to see little Robert. [Pic: Richard Francos]

30. Helen standin' on the dock of the bay...well, Lake Stahahe, in Harriman State Park in the Catskills, anyway, while visiting us in camp. [Pic: RBF]

31. Helen looking very noir and debonair.

32. Helen was head Den Mother when Richard and Robert joined the Cub Scouts. The other woman is unknown.

33. Before Richard's bar mitzvah in 1964, Aunt Celia, Helen, and great cousin Shirley gather in our Bensonshurst living room before we all head up to Spring Valley, NY.

34. On the lawn of the Weiner house in Spring Valley, is Celia, Helen, Robert in front, Richard, Shirley, and Leo's sister, Lillian Weiner. T'was a sunny day as we squint away.

35. Helen sitting at her bedroom window, talking to Robert who was just home from school. [Pic: Richard Francos]

36. 1970 family vacation to Canada to see Niagara Falls. [Pic: RBF]

37. Richard's junior high graduation, held at Brooklyn College. Helen stands with Rose Dolce, our "Italian Grandmother," who was always called Nany. Rose had worked in the garment industry and spoke fluent Yiddish along with Italian, and in her spare time she sewed the nun's habits for the local St. Finbar's Church. Helen, as you may have noticed, was quite fond of the beehive style of haircut.

38. On vacation in the '70s to the Bahamas with her sister Elsie, Helen wears... well, I don't know what the hell that is, truthfully. [Pic: probably Elsie Laffer]

39. Robert's junior high grad, also held at Brooklyn College, around 1970.

40. One of my favorite pictures of Helen. It captures a moment of honesty. I'm always going to miss her. Happy birthday, mom!

Special thanks for their help in naming names, places, and situations: Elsie Rosen Laffer and Sy Rosen.