23 August 2007

Germaine Cazenave (1902-1983)

Germaine Cazenave was born February 8, 1902, in New Orleans, LA, to Arnaud Leon Cazenave and Irma Lamothe.
Germaine married Barkley Wells and they had a daughter, Arnaud Cazenave ().
From the Arnaud's website:
Only New Orleans could produce a Germaine Cazenave Wells. She was lusty, dramatic, loud and headstrong. Her taste and capacity for alcohol, celebration and men were extreme, even by the standards of today. She worshiped her father; the pair were certainly kindred spirits. Everywhere she went, newspaper stories followed, always including accolades for Arnaud's. In New Orleans, a city full of characters, she achieved one-name status. During the Fifties and Sixties (and still, among people of a certain age), if you referred to "Germaine," everyone knew who you were talking about. She took to the mock-royal rituals of Mardi Gras like a fish to water. She ruled over 22 Carnival balls, an over achievement unlikely to be equaled. She instituted a parade of her own on Easter Sunday to show off her latest hats, with her friends following in horse-drawn buggies. That pageant continued after Germaine's death and persists to this day.
Germaine passed away in New Orleans on December 14, 1983, at the age of 81.

Arnaud's Restaurant

The talk you overhear in New Orleans restaurants is usually about restaurants. It tends to center on the hot new place of the moment, and whether one will be able to try it while it's still hot - or at least before it closes. Less often, you hear New Orleanians conversing about a restaurant that's been around a few years. If the talk is good, pay close attention. Because not many older restaurants manage to hold the interest of the dining public. It has to be not merely delicious and hospitable, but somehow timeless. In 1918, a colorful French wine salesman named Arnaud Cazenave opened the grand restaurant that bears his name. Count Arnaud (as he came to be called, without any bona fide claim to the title) practiced a brilliant new approach to the serving of food and drink. He became so influential in his business that it can be said that the entire New Orleans restaurant community reflects, to one degree or another, his ideas. And the style he set inspires everything we do to this day at Arnaud's.
Arnaud believed, quite simply, that the pursuit of the pleasures of the table is as worthy as anything else one does in life.For him, a meal that was only a meal was a shamefully wasted opportunity for enhancing one's life. This concept played very well to celebration - minded New Orleans, which took Count Arnaud to its heart instantly.
Located at 813 Bienville St, Arnaud's was the undisputed leading restaurant of New Orleans in the Thirties and Forties. Arnaud's was where one went for any occasion that demanded celebration. It was the prime rendezvous for businessmen from Canal Street, who occupied their regular tables with conversations of great pith and moment over Arnaud's special lunches. The menu created by the Count was vast. Listing (for example) nine oyster appetizers, 51 seafood entrees, and 40 vegetables (among them potatoes prepared 16 ways), it defined French-Creole cuisine for decades. This menu was not just for showing off; the Count chose it to appeal to the entire range of eaters, from the gourmet to the casual diner.
Arnaud's was a very profitable restaurant, and the Count channeled much of its fortune into expansion. He bought up one adjoining property after another until Arnaud's 13 buildings (some of which had previously housed reputed opium dens and houses of prostitution) covered most of the block. He constructed an enormous, well-equipped kitchen - still the largest of any free-standing New Orleans restaurant. He built subsidiary dining rooms throughout the complex, ranging in size from the grand second-floor ballroom with its parquet dance floor to small chambers suitable for sub-rosa assignations. The buzzers used to summon a waiter to the locked rooms are kept in working order. Guests took full advantage of the serpentine network of passageways through the various buildings as a means of maintaining absolute discretion.
Arnaud's was still in its prime after World War II, when New Orleans became one of the great travel destinations of the Western world. With Europe destroyed and most American cities starkly boring, the excitement and unique culture of the French Quarter drew the most interesting and sophisticated possible travelers. Dinner at Arnaud's was de rigeur.
Just before Count Arnaud died, he let it be known that his successor was not to be the sheltered Lady Irma, but his anything-but-sheltered daughter Germaine. But the Count - and all other observers - doubted her ability to run a restaurant as large and complicated as Arnaud's. But, fueled by a passionate imperative to maintain the reputation of her father's masterpiece, she learned the business inside and out. And, even though her management style was somewhat Byzantine, she ran the restaurant with a strong hand for many years. Germaine had a way of attracting attention, and she adored the spotlight. She defined the restaurant business as theater. "It's a play in two acts," she said, "lunch and dinner."
The choice of Archie Casbarian as the man to keep Arnaud's alive turned on a set of odd coincidences that appealed to Germaine's sense of drama. Archie Casbarian had the same initials as her father.Both men loved good cigars, handsome clothes, fine wines, Cognac and telling an amusing story. Both were born overseas, and both spoke French fluently. They were about the same height. In fact, Germaine thought that Archie looked a lot like her father. As immaterial as those rationales were, they resulted in a decision that could hardly have been better for the future of Arnaud's. In December 1978, Germaine agreed to lease the property and name of Arnaud's Restaurant to Casbarian. On February 28, 1979, the renovated dining room reopened and a long renaissance of Arnaud's began.

Arnaud Leon Cazenave (1876-1948)

"Americans are prone to forget, in the ultra-rapidity and super-activity of modern life, trying to crowd eighty seconds of toil into a minute's time, that eating should be a pleasure, not a task to get over with in a hurry. A dinner chosen according to one's needs, tastes, and moods, well prepared and well served, is a joy to all senses and an impelling incentive to sound sleep, good health, and long life. Therefore, at least once a day, preferably in the quiet cool of the evening, one should throw all care to the winds, relax completely, and dine leisurely and well."
Born in Bosdarros, France on June 27, 1876, Arnaud Leon Cazenave was the first son born to Daniel C. Cazenave and Leontine Marie Lamothe. He grew up in France and immigrated to the United States in 1892 at the age of 16, settling in New Orleans, LA. According to his WWI draft registration card, Arnaud was tall with a medium build, black hair and brown eyes.
Arnaud married Irma Lamothe on April 25, 1901, in New Orleans. They had a daughter, Germaine (1902).
Arnaud worked as a waiter in various restaurants around New Orleans before opening his own restaurant, Arnauds, in ? with his brother Julian. It was Arnaud's misfortune to have opened a restaurant the year before the Volstead Act went through. Arnaud, like most Orleanians, believed that wine and spirits are natural companions of good food and good living. The fact that they were illegal seemed a detail. Nevertheless, the law finally caught up with the Count. He was imprisoned and the restaurant padlocked for a time. Ultimately, he won the jury over with a convincing explanation of his philosophy. He was acquitted in time for the end of Prohibition.
Arnaud died on May 29, 1948, just two months shy of his seventy-second birthday. He continues to look down on his main dining room in Arnaud's from a large oil painting mounted there. It is flanked by portraits of his wife Irma and her sister, Marie Lamothe. Rumor has it that the Count never could make up his mind between the two sisters.

Daniel C. Cazenave (-) and Leontine Marie Lamothe (-)

Daniel C. Cazenave was born in France.
Leontine Marie Lamothe was born in France.
Daniel and Marie were married and had three sons: Adolph, Arnaud Leon (1876), and Julian Leon (1884).

13 July 2007

Juanita C Cieutat (1905-?)

The tenth and final child born to Victor Cieutat and Josephine Spitzfaden, Juanita C. Cieutat was born in Louisiana in 1905. She grew up in St. Bernard Parish.
Juanita married a man named Fred Staub, who was actually her cousin. He left her (supposedly because she was Catholic), though they never officially divorced. In her later years, Juanita lived with a man her nieces and nephews called "Paddy."

Victor Sylvan Cieutat (1900-1978)

Born in Louisiana on February 17, 1900, Victor Sylvan Cieutat was the sixth and final son born to Victor Cieutat and Josephine Spitzfaden. He grew up in St. Bernard Parish. Like his brothers, he was of medium build and height, with brown hair and brown eyes. He worked as a stenographer, first for a stockyard and then for a life insurance co.
Victor married Alfreda Retif and they had a daughter, Janet Ann (1950).
Victor died in New Orleans, LA, in May of 1978 at the age of 78.

Leon Joseph Cieutat (1897-1969)

Leon Joseph Cieutat was born on June 1, 1897, to Victor Cieutat and Josephine Spitzfaden. The eighth of ten children and the fifth son, Leon grew up in St. Bernard Parish in Louisiana. He was of medium height with a stout build, light brown hair and dark brown eyes.
Leon worked for American Sugar Refinery Co. in Arabi, LA, first as a clerk and later as a weigher. He was still living with his mother and siblings in Arabi in 1930 (at the age of 33).
Leon died in May of 1961 in New Orleans, LA, at the age of 71.

Frederic Noel Cieutat (1896-?)

Frederic Noel Cieutat, born in January of 1896, was the seventh child and fourth son born to Vicotr Cieutat and Josephine Spitzfaden. He grew up in St. Bernard Parish and worked as a laborer at a Plumbing Co. in New Orleans during his twenties.
Noel married Anna in New Orleans, LA, in 1924 and they had 2 children, Noel (1928) and Patricia (1929). He opened his own plumbing store in Arabi (Cieutat's Plumbing and Heating). His nieces and nephews called him Uncle Mutt.
Noel died in June of 1939 when he was just 43 years old.

Virona Marie Cieutat (1894-1966)

Born November 14, 1894, Virona Marie Cieutat was the sixth child and third daughter born to Victor Cieutat and Josephine Spitzfaden. She grew up in St. Bernard Parish in Louisiana.
Marie worked as a sales lady in a department store in her 30s.
Marie ("Nanan" to her nieces and nephews) died in August of 1966 at the age of 71.

Roland Ernest Cieutat (1893-?)

Roland Ernest Cieutat was born on September 28, 1893, to Victor Cieutat and Josephine Spitzfaden. He grew up in St. Bernard Parish in Louisiana and was of medium height with a stout build, with brown eyes and brown hair. At the age of 16, Ernest was working as a clerk at a slaughter house. He had transferred to Cresent City Stockyard Co. by 1917.
Ernest married Marie Weinnig in 1922 and they had two children, Roland Ernest Jr. (1923) and Gertrude (1927). He went back to work for the slaughterhouse and the family lived in Arabi, LA.

12 July 2007

John Frank Cieutat (1891-1944)

Born April 12, 1891, John Frank Cieutat was the third child and second son born to Victor Cieutat and Josephine Spitzfaden. He grew up in St. Bernard Parish, LA.
John was working as a salesman (at a wood factory) by the age of 19. He had taken a job in a paper factory by the age of 29. He was still living with his mother and several siblings in 1930 (at the age of 39), working as a wholesale salesman.
John died in May of 1944 at the age of 53.

Pierre Rene Cieutat (1890-1974)

A New Year's baby, Pierre Rene Cieutat was the second child and first son born to Victor Cieutat and Josephine Spitzfaden, on January 1, 1890, in Arabi, LA. He grew up in St. Bernard Parish and had a medium build with brown hair and brown eyes.
Pierre married Mabel Anna (maiden name unknown) in 1910 and they had two daughters: Aline Tarber (1913) & Mabel Clotilde (1920). Pierre worked as a Clerk in the finance department at an sugar refinery.
Pierre ("Uncle Pete" to his nieces and nephews) died in March of 1974 in Baton Rouge, LA, at the age of 84.

Jeanne Vivienne Cieutat (1888-1972)

Born on August 25, 1888, in Louisiana, Jeanne Vivienne Cieutat was the first child born to Victor Cieutat and Josephine Spitzfaden. She grew up in St. Bernard Parish in New Orleans, LA.
Vivienne married Gaston Joseph Dauterive on June 10, 1908, in New Orleans and they had 9 children: Gaston Joseph Jr. (1909), Neville (1911), Janette (1914), Dorothy (1915), Getrude (1917), Victor (1918), Roberta Ruth (1919), Rene C. (1923), and Lucille.
Gaston died on March 30, 1948, and Vivienne did not remarry. She died in September of 1972 in Arabi, LA, at the age of 84.

Victor Cieutat (1862-1914) and Josephine Spitzfaden (1868-1931)

Victor Cieutat was born in Louisiana in November of 1862 to Jean M. Cieutat and Jeanne Marie Cazeaux. He grew up in St. Bernard Parish and worked as a Bar Keeper.
Josephine Spitzfaden was born on March 5, 1868, in New Orleans, LA, to Henry Spitzfaden and Marie Petrie. She also grew up in New Orleans, but in Orleans Parish.
Victor and Josephine were married on November 10, 1887, in New Orleans. The couple remained in St. Bernard Parish and had 10 children: Jeanne Vivianne (1888), Peter Rene (1890), John Frank (1891), Gertrude J. (1892), Roland Ernest (1893), Virona Marie (1894), Frederic Noel (1896), Leon Joseph (1897), Victor Sylvan (1900), and Juanita C. (1905).
Victor died on May 19, 1914, at the age of 51. Josephine passed away on May 26, 1931, in St. Bernard Parish, at the age of 63.

27 June 2007

Frank Johnson Hopper (1888-1979)

Frank Johnson Hopper was born January 17, 1888, in Raymond, Illinois. He spent his twenties and thirties living in Houston, TX, where he worked as a railroad clerk for Southern Pacific Railroad. On June 5, 1917, Frank entered the WWI draft, but claimed exemption because he was the sole supporter of his parents (Garnett and Sophia Hopper). He was a short, slender man with light blue eyes and dark brown hair.
Later, Frank moved to Louisiana to do clerical work for an automobile factory. He married widower Gertrude J Cieutat in 1930 and became stepfather to her three children by her previous husband. They lived in St. Bernard Parish.
Frank died in October of 1979 in Arabi (St. Bernard Parish), LA, at the age of 91.

Camille Cazenave (1921-)

Born January 19, 1921, Camille Cazenave was the second daughter (and third and final child) born to Julian Leon Cazenave and Gertrude Josephine Cieutat. She grew up in Arabi (St. Bernard Parish), LA, but lost her father when she was just four years old. Her mother remarried a few years later and her stepfather, Frank Hopper, was the only father she ever really knew.
Camille married Benjamin Carl Crisler and they had two sons: Daniel C. and William L. Carl owned and operated Carl Crisler Motors in New Orleans, LA. The family lived in Metairie, LA.
Carl died on March 17, 1989. Camille ("Aunt Tabby") still lives in Metarie near her eldest son and his family.

Juliet Cazenave (1919-1991)

Juliet Cazenave was born on August 14, 1919. The second child and first daughter born to Julian Leon Cazenave and Gertrude J. Cieutat, Juliet grew up in Arabi (St. Bernard Parish), LA. Her father died when she was just six years old, and her stepfather, Frank Hopper, was the only father she ever really knew.
Juliet married Herbert Sheila Cutler and they had three daughters: Camille, Judy, and Mary Elizabeth. Herbert worked as a Land Abstractor in New Orleans, LA.
Herb died at the age of 59 in October of 1971 after falling out an eight story window (on his youngest daughter's birthday). Juliet ("Aunt Sassa") died on August 11, 1991, just three days before her 72nd birthday. She and Herb were both laid to rest at Hope Mausoleum on Canal Blvd. in New Orleans.

26 June 2007

Julian Leon Cazenave (1884-1925) and Gertrude Josephine Cieutat (1892-1975)

Julian Leon Cazenave was born in France on October 7, 1884, to Daniel C. Cazenave and Leontine Marie Lamothe. He arrived in the United States in 1906 at the age of 22 and settled in New Orleans, LA. He was of medium height with a stout build and light blue eyes. Julian worked as the manager of the Jefferson Parish Gardens and then as a checker in a restaurant.
Gertrude Josephine Cieutat was born August 12, 1892, in Louisiana to Victor Cieutat and Josephine Spitzfaden. She grew up in Arabi (St. Bernard Parish) and resided there throughout her life (on Angela St., Mehle Ave., Aycock St., and Friscoville Ave.).
Julian and Gertrude married on August 12, 1913, in New Orleans. They lived in St. Bernard Parish in Arabi, LA, and had 3 children: Daniel Victor (1914-1956), Juliet (1919-1991), and Camille (1921-). In 1918, Julian opened a restaurant with his brother in downtown New Orleans. From then until his death, he worked as a proprietor of Arnaud's.
Julian died on January 6, 1925, in New Orleans at the age of 40. Gertrude remarried to Frank Johnson Hopper in 1930 in New Orleans.
Gertrude died in February of 1975 in St. Bernard Parish. She was laid to rest in Hope Mausoleum on Canal Blvd. in New Orleans.

28 May 2007

Chicago, Illinois

Chicago is the largest city in the state of Illinois and also the largest in the Midwest. Chicago is located along the southwestern shore of Lake Michigan and is a major center of transportation, industry, politics, culture, finance, medicine and higher education. Chicago's monikers include the "Windy City," "Chi-Town," the "Second City," and the "City of the Big Shoulders" (from Carl Sandburg's poem Chicago).

Chicago is the financial, business, and cultural capital of the Midwest. Founded in 1833 at the site of a portage between the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River watershed, it soon became a transportation hub of North America. By the Chicago World's Fair of 1893, it was one of the ten most influential world cities, a distinction it continues to hold.

During the mid-18th century the Chicago area was inhabited primarily by Potawatomis, who took the place of the Miami and Sauk and Fox people. The first non-native settler in Chicago, the Haitian Jean Baptiste Pointe du Sable, arrived in the 1770s, married a Potawatomi woman, and founded the area's first trading post. In 1803, the United States Army built Fort Dearborn, which was destroyed in 1812 in the Fort Dearborn Massacre. The Ottawa, Ojibwa, and Potawatomi later ceded the land to the United States in the Treaty of St. Louis of 1816. On August 12, 1833, the Town of Chicago was organized with a population of 350, and within seven years it grew to a population of over 4,000. The City of Chicago was incorporated on March 4, 1837.
Chicago in its first century was one of the fastest growing cities in the world, heavily promoted by Yankee entrepreneurs and land speculators. Its population reached 1 million by 1890.
Starting in 1848, the city became an important transportation link between the eastern and western United States with the opening of the Galena & Chicago Union Railroad, Chicago's first railway, and the Illinois and Michigan Canal, which allowed steamboats and sailing ships on the Great Lakes to connect through Chicago to the Mississippi River. With a flourishing economy that brought many new residents from rural communities and Irish American, Polish American, Swedish American, German American and numerous other immigrants, Chicago grew from a city of 299,000 to nearly 1.7 million between 1880 and 1900. The city's manufacturing and retail sectors dominated the Midwest and greatly influenced the American economy, with the Union Stock Yards dominating the meat packing trade.

Although the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, destroyed a third of the city, including the entire business district, Chicago experienced rapid rebuilding and growth.[3] During Chicago's rebuilding period, the first skyscraper was constructed in 1885 using steel-skeleton construction. In 1893, Chicago hosted the World's Columbian Exposition on former marshland at the present location of Jackson Park. The Exposition drew 27.5 million visitors, and is considered among the most influential world's fairs in history.[4] The University of Chicago was founded one year earlier in 1892 on the same location. The term "midway" for a fair or carnival referred originally to the Midway Plaisance, a strip of park land that still runs through the University of Chicago campus and connects Washington and Jackson Parks.
The city was the site of labor conflicts and unrest during this period, which included the Haymarket Riot on May 4, 1886. Concern for social problems among Chicago's lower classes led to the founding of Hull House in 1889, of which Jane Addams was a co-founder. The city also invested in many large, well-landscaped municipal parks, which also included public sanitation facilities.

Beginning in 1855, Chicago constructed the first comprehensive sewer system in the U.S., requiring the level of downtown streets to be raised as much as 10 feet (3 meters). However, the untreated sewage and industrial waste flowed from the Chicago River into Lake Michigan, polluting the primary source of fresh water for the city. The city responded by tunneling two miles (3 km) below Lake Michigan to newly built water cribs. Nonetheless, spring rains continued to carry polluted water as far out as the water intakes. In 1900, the problem of sewage was largely solved by definitively reversing the direction of the river's flow with the construction of the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal leading to the Illinois River.

The 1920s brought international notoriety to Chicago as gangsters such as Al Capone battled each other and the law during the Prohibition era. Nevertheless, the 1920s also saw a large increase in Chicago industry as well as the first arrivals of the Great Migration that would lead thousands of mostly Southern blacks to Chicago and other Northern cities. On December 2, 1942, the world's first controlled nuclear reaction was conducted at the University of Chicago as part of the top secret Manhattan Project.

Mayor Richard J. Daley was elected in 1955, in the era of so-called machine politics. Starting in the 1950s, many upper and middle-class citizens left the inner-city of Chicago for the suburbs and left many impoverished neighborhoods in their wake. Nevertheless, the city hosted the 1968 Democratic National Convention and saw the construction of the Sears Tower (which in 1974 became the world's tallest building), McCormick Place, and O'Hare Airport. When long time mayor Richard J. Daley, died, Michael Bilandic was mayor for three years. His loss in a primary election has been attributed to the city's poor performance during a heavy snow storm. In 1979 Jane Byrne, the city's first female mayor, was elected. She popularized the city as a movie location and tourist destination, but also failed to manage its finances well.

In 1983 Harold Washington became the first African American to be elected to the office of mayor in one of the closest mayoral elections in Chicago. Republican candidate Bernard Epton ran on the slogan "Before it's too late," viewed by critics as a veiled appeal to racial politics.[5]
Washington's term in office saw new attention given to poor and minority neighborhoods, and reduced the longtime dominance of city contracts and employment by ethnic whites. Current mayor Richard M. Daley, son of Richard J. Daley, was first elected in 1989. New projects during the younger Daley's administration have made Chicago larger, more environmentally friendly, and more accessible.

Since the early 1990s, Chicago has seen a turnaround with increased ethnic diversity and many formerly abandoned neighborhoods starting to show new life. Several of these neighborhoods, such as the South Loop, West Loop, Wicker Park/Bucktown, Uptown, and others, have attracted middle-class and younger residents. The city has also made considerable investment in infrastructure, revitalizing downtown theaters and retail districts, and improving lakefront and riverfront cityscapes.

06 May 2007

Helen Pyzik (1931-)


Helen Pyzik was born March 21, 1931, in Chicago, Illinois, the second daughter and third child of Joseph Pyzik and Mary Wegrzyn. She grew up in Chicago.

Helen married Peter Gillis on May 24, 1952. Helen and Peter had two children: Sharon (1954) and James (1956).

03 May 2007

Chester Joseph Pyzik (1922-2005)


Chester Joseph Pyzik was born on December 29, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois, to Joseph Pyzik and Mary Wegrzyn. He grew up in Chicago (4224 W. 31st St.) and served in the United States Army during World War II.

After the war, Chester worked as a railroad supervisor in Chicago. He married Eleanor Wilhelmina Emily ("Suzie") Konemann on October 5, 1946, in Lyons, Illinois. They had 4 children: Barbara Ruth, Bonnie Dorothy, Daniel Chester and David Charles.

Chester died in Villa Park, Illinois, on March 9, 2005, and was buried at Chapel Hill Gardens West Cemetery. Suzie now lives in Wisconsin near her son Dan and his family.

02 May 2007

Joseph Pyzik (1896-1941) and Marya Wegrzyn (1900-1993)

Joseph (Josef) Pyzik was born March 25, 1896, in Yaslo, Poland, to Fransiscus Pyzik and Marianna Stanula. He arrived in the United States in June of 1914 aboard the Vaderland, at the age of 19. Joseph registered for the World War I Draft in 1917 and served as a private in the U.S. Army (pictured here on far left), stationed at Camp Lee in Prince George, Virginia, in 1920. He was naturalized as a U.S. Citizen in 1918. After Joseph left the Army, he worked as a pipefitter on railroads in Chicago, IL.

Marya Wegrzyn was born September 19, 1900, in Poland to Henry Andrew Wegrzyn and Julia Brash. She had blonde hair and blue eyes, and immigrated to the United States in November of 1907, aboard the Grosser Kurfurst. After arriving in the U.S., Mary lived at 34 Blue Island Avenue, #64, in Chicago, Illinois.

Joseph and Marya married in 1921. They had Irish twins in 1922, Chester Joseph and Mary Eleanora, and then a third child, Helen, in 1931. The family lived at 4224 W. 31st St. in Chicago.


Joseph died of congestive heart failure in Antioch, IL, in 1941. The family lore was that he had problems as a result of exposure to mustard gas during the war.

Marya died on April 9, 1993, in Villa Park, Illinois.

26 April 2007

New Orleans Pelicans Baseball

The New Orleans Pelicans were a minor league professional baseball team based in New Orleans, Louisiana. Founded in 1887, the Pelicans became part of the Southern Association in 1901. From 1915 through 1957, they played home games at Pelican Stadium (also known as Heinemann Park), formerly located at the downtown river corner of Carrollton Avenue and Tulane Avenue in Mid City New Orleans. After that, they played for 2 years at Tad Gormley Stadium in City Park. The team disbanded at the end of the 1959 season.
Daniel Victor Cazenave played for the team in the late 1930s and early 1940s.
Other notable Pelicans included Shoeless Joe Jackson, Cotton Knaupp, Oyster Joe Martina, and Dixie Walker. The team photo to the right is of the 1910 Pelicans, Southern Association Champions (#12, Shoeless Joe Jackson, was about to go on to fame in the majors).
In the 1950s, the team was associated with the Pittsburgh Pirates and was managed by Danny Murtaugh. Other notable Pelican managers included Larry Gilbert and Abner Powell, the later of whom is credited with introducing the "rain check".
The Pelicans' name briefly resurfaced during the 1977 season when New Orleans acquired a Triple-A minor league team. The Louisiana Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints football team, was home to the team for that season, where they brought in over 200,000 fans (good enough for second in the league). The team moved the next season to Springfield, Illinois, and were re-named the Redbirds. The team subsequently moved to Louisville, Kentucky and then on to Memphis, Tennessee where it continues to operate as the top minor league affiliate of the St. Louis Cardinals.

Arabi Hardware Store

When Daniel Victor Cazenave returned to New Orleans after his Army service and his marriage to Mary Eleanora Pyzik, he opened Arabi Hardware Store in St. Bernard Parish, on the corner of St. Claude Avenue and Lebeau Street. He and his family lived in an apartment above the hardware store.

22 April 2007

Daniel Victor Cazenave (1914-1956) and Mary Eleanora Pyzik (1922-)


Daniel Victor Cazenave was born on May 1, 1914, in New Orleans, Louisiana, to Julian Leon Cazenave and Gertrude Josephine Ceiutat. He grew up in St. Bernard Parish in New Orleans and attended St. Stanislaus School for Boys in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. His father died when he was 11 and his mother remarried Frank Hopper. Daniel played outfield for the minor league New Orleans Pelicans and was even called up to the majors by the Pittsburgh Pirates, but his baseball career was cut short by his service to the United States military.
On December 8, 1941, (just one day after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor and the United States joined World War II) 27-year-old Daniel enlisted in the U.S. Army and was stationed at Jacksonville Army Air Field in Florida. As a battlefield-commissioned Sargeant in the 76th Infantry, he served during the duration of WWII, plus 6 months after. Daniel was awarded a bronze star for meritorious service.

Mary Eleanora Pyzik was born on February 14, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois, to Joseph Pyzik and Marya Wegrzyn, who were both polish immigrants. She grew up in Chicago, attended Catholic school, and served in the Women's Army Corps of the U.S. Army during World War II, where she met Daniel Cazenave.

After Daniel and Eleanor were discharged from the Army, they married and settled in New Orleans to raise a family. Daniel worked as an addressing-embossing machine operator before opening his own hardware store in St. Bernard Parish. They had four children: Daniel Robert (1946), Suzanne Camille (1948), Denise Mary (1950), and Daniel Victor (1953).


Daniel passed away from a massive heart attack on May 8, 1956, at only 42 years old. He was remembered for his extensive work in recreation in St. Bernard Parish, and Arabi's "Daniel Cazenave American Veteran's Post #41" was named in his honor.



Eleanor continued to raise their four children after Daniel's death, working for various divisions of St. Bernard Parish (including the Parish Police Jury, the Parish Clerk of Court, and Joseph Davies' administration as Superintendent of Schools for the Parish). She also worked at Boeing's Michaud facility in Chalmette.
Eleanor was still living in St. Bernard Parish when Hurricane Katrina hit in 2004. She weathered the storm in her nursing home there, but had to be rescued by the National Guard when the facility flooded. She lived in Tennessee near her eldest son until November 2008, when she moved back to Louisiana (Marrero) to be cared for by her youngest daughter.

New Orleans, Louisiana

New Orleans is located in Southeastern Louisiana along the Mississippi River. The city is bordered by Lake Pontchartrain to the north and the Gulf of Mexico to the east and is coextensive with Orleans Parish. It is named after Philippe II, Duke of Orleans, Regent of France, and is one of the oldest cities in the United States. New Orleans is known for its multicultural heritage as well as its music and cuisine and is considered the birthplace of jazz. Its status as a world-famous tourist destination is due in part to its architecture, music, cuisine, its annual Mardi Gras, and other celebrations and festivals. It has been called the "most unique city in America."
La Nouvelle-Orléans (New Orleans) was founded in 1718 by the French Mississippi Company, under the direction of Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville. In 1763, the French colony was ceded to the Spanish Empire and remained under Spanish control for 40 years. Most of the surviving architecture of the Vieux Carré (French Quarter) dates from this Spanish period. Louisiana reverted to French control in 1801, but Napoleon sold it to the United States in the Louisiana Purchase two years later. The city grew rapidly with influxes of Americans, French, and Creole French.
During the War of 1812, the British sent a force to conquer the city. The British were defeated by American forces led by Andrew Jackson in the Battle of New Orleans on January 8, 1815. As a principal port, New Orleans had a leading role in the slave trade, while at the same time having the most prosperous community of free persons of color in the South. The population of the city doubled in the 1830s, and, by 1840, New Orleans had become the wealthiest and third most populous city in the nation. The Union captured New Orleans early in the American Civil War. This action spared the city the destruction suffered by many other cities of the American South.
In the early 20th Century, New Orleans was a progressive major city whose most portentous development was a drainage plan devised by engineer and inventor A. Baldwin Wood. Urban development until then was largely limited to higher ground along natural river levees and bayous. Wood's pump system allowed the city to expand into low-lying areas.
Over the 20th century, rapid subsidence, both natural and human-induced, left these newly-populated areas several feet below sea level. New Orleans was vulnerable to flooding even before the age of negative elevation. In the late 20th century, however, scientists and New Orleans residents gradually became aware of the city's increased vulnerability. Hurrican Betsy in 1965 had killed dozens of residents even though the majority of the city remained dry. The rain-induced 1995 Flood demonstrated the weakness of the pumping system.
By the time Hurricane Katrina approached the city at the end of August 2005, most residents had evacuated. Storm surge pushed ashore by the hurricane caused the city to suffer the worst civil engineering disaster in American history. Floodwalls, called "levees," constructed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers failed and 80% of the city flooded. Tens of thousands of remaining residents were rescued by helicopter or otherwise made their way to shelters of last resort at the Louisiana Superdome or the Morial Convention Center. Over 1,500 people died. The city was declared off-limits to residents while clean-up efforts began.
The approach of Hurricane Rita in 2005 caused repopulation efforts to be postponed, and the Lower Ninth Ward was reflooded by Rita's storm surge. By October 1, 2005, parts of the city accounting for about one-third of the population of New Orleans had been reopened. Efforts continue to rebuild infrastructure, pick up hurricane-related debris, and restore a level of normality to the residents of New Orleans.
Daniel Victor Cazenave was born and grew up in St. Bernard Parish in New Orleans; he and Mary Eleanora Pyzik returned to raise their family there after they married.