"Lena" Enlarged and Hand Colored.

Monday, February 21, 2011

How is it that we can become so interested in a person just by seeing their face? 
This is a photo of a little girl from Cincinnati Ohio .
I took a section and enlarged it and hand colored it.
This photo of Lena  LoSchiavo taken in August of 1908, intrigued me.

11 years old, a bit of my own little darling  reflected in her face, she sits smiling in a torn and tattered dress.
Shorpy's site did not have too much information on her except for a caption.
The person taking the photos, Lewis Wickes Hine was doing so for the sake of research on child labor at the turn of the previous century. Hines was a photographer and sociologist.
Child labor laws were nothing in those days.
Lena LoSchiavo





I enlarged a bit of the photo   and then hand colored this portion of her photo to bring her to life a bit again. She is not finished yet.
Those old photos do very little to show a person's "light" and soul.
From a close up I took from  another photo of her, her eyes appeared light, not dark.
So using the coloring of my 'famous anonymous kid', I gave Lena coloring.
Her eyes may have been blue, I used a dark brownish green with violet rings, as per the "kid" . Her skin and lips are also  from the "kid".
This is not done with photoshop tricks but by hand and needs more work, but I was anxious to put it up.     I spent some time on it Friday and will do more as time allows. As you can see the hands are far from done.

At the Shorpy website, which features old photographs, people were discussing how old Lena looked. Well, not now I think.
It was late at night according to the information known about the photo and the poor kid was over tired. 
Also, they were wondering what had become of her. This lovely  eager faced child demands attention  as there is , to me at least , something intriguing about her.
When I find old photos like this I just have to color them.
To see the original photo in high definition you will need to see it on the website. I took this from a smaller photo and enlarged it myself.

It can be hard tracking people down because spellings vary from site to site. Immigrants were often misunderstood when telling their names to officials and so there are various spellings used in documents and records.
A name like LoSchiavo can become variously Loshavo, Lochiavo, Lochavo , depending on who heard it and how they wrote it down. Since different languages say the letters of the alphabet differently, asking someone to spell it was not always an option.

If I am correct in my research, Lena was born in 1898 in America to Italian immigrants Charles Loschiavo and his wife Mary Gentile Loschiavo. There were 4 children, Giusippi who died 9 days old, an unnamed infant who died at birth , another girl, Petrina who was a few years older than Lena and passed way in 1962 at the age of 67.
Petrina Loschiavo seems to have  married John Mercurio.

Charles Loschiavo, Lena's father,  passed away at age 34, when Lena was 10 or 11. This may well be why she was selling on the corner to add to  the family income. Mrs. Mary LoSchiavo had lost a son  in February at 9 days old and her husband in July of the same year.

Lena seems to have married Charles Mercurio at age 16 or 17(?) and had a little girl , Terita, who passed away at age 84 in 1999, 11 years after her mother.
Lena, passed away in 1988 at the age of 90.

She and some of her family are buried in the  St Joseph New Cemetery in Cincinnati. I found all this in their interment records.

I also 'Googled'  the site of the  corner where Lena sold pretzels and baskets from 11:00 AM  in the morning til Midnight in front of the 6th Street Market 'saloon' entrance  at 209 West Sixth Street in Cincinnati.
You can compare it with the corner that you see in the photo of Lena in the previous post.

I  dubbed it
"Lena's Corner"

“Honor your father and your mother, so that your days may be long in the land the LORD your God is giving you.” 


Lena worked hard to  help support her mother....
Rest peacefully Lena.




5 comments:

  1. Ironically, the name LoSchiavo means "the slave."

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yes because people with that name are usually descended from Slavic peoples who were taken forcibly into Italy. :)
    I have a fondness for Lena as she resembles a relative of mine, a little girl and I thought about her and how much better she has it life as a child.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Yes, the parts of Italy from which most Americans of Italian descent (and Sicilian descent - they don't like to be lumped in with the rest of Italy) came were actually very multi-ethnic. Invaders constantly came and went in Southern Italy, Sicily and Sardinia.

    The people who really lived through the greatest changes in history are mostly in their eighth and ninth decades now. Their memories are priceless, no matter where they grew up.

    ReplyDelete
  4. My wife's grandma is Petrina Mercurio, daughter of Petrina Loschiavo. Thanks for posting. Petrina Mercurio is still alive and well in Cincinnati

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It is wonderful to hear from a family member.
      I am so glad to hear she is doing well.
      I wish you and your family all the very best.

      Delete