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Book: Search for Roots Takes Kent Author on a Remarkable Journey

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  • Book: Search for Roots Takes Kent Author on a Remarkable Journey

    Litchfield County Times, CT
    Jan 4 2007

    Search for Roots Takes Kent Author on a Remarkable Journey
    By: Kathryn Boughton 01/04/2007

    KENT-When Georgianne Ensign Kent opened the e-mail from her publisher
    and saw the completed cover of her new book, "Vartanoosh," she wept
    with emotion. It represented the end of a task begun nearly four
    decades earlier in an effort to capture the immigrant experience of
    her dynamic Armenian grandmother.
    The story of Vartanoosh-"Sweet Rose" in Armenian-is the tale of
    America in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when floods of
    immigrants from Eastern Europe and Asia swept into the country. It is
    a story of struggle against the odds and of the ultimate success of
    men and women who had little to work with other than their
    determination for a better life.
    Ms. Kent, who makes her home in Kent, began her research on the book
    in 1970 when she visited her grandmother in Florida. "I stayed with
    her for a month and taped her, and she was absolutely wonderful,
    candid and frank," said Ms. Kent this week. "Then all that had to be
    transcribed-which took a lot of time-and researched."
    In addition to work in American archives, Ms. Kent's search for her
    grandmother's and her own background led her to twice visit the
    Middle East, traveling to Turkey, Syria, Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon,
    as well as Greece. It also resulted in a fascination with T.E.
    Lawrence, "Lawrence of Arabia," introducing her to a number of people
    who had known him, and a correspondence with English poet Robert
    Graves, a friend and early biographer of Lawrence.
    Her work on Lawrence and his contemporaries led to more than two
    years of residence in England and interviews with Borys Conrad, son
    of Joseph Conrad; Dame Sybil Thorndike, Bernard Shaw's original "St.
    Joan"; Maura Budberg, H.G. Wells' last companion; Mrs. George
    Bambridge, Rudyard Kipling's daughter; Nicholas Davies, one of the
    surviving "adopted" boys for whom James Barrie had written "Peter
    Pan" and Angela DuMaurier, the sister of Daphne and daughter of famed
    actor Gerald DuMaurier, among others.
    Ms. Kent, a 1961 graduate of Northwestern University's Medill School
    of Journalism, was often sidetracked during the years she researched
    her grandmother's past and wrote three other books in the interim.
    Her first, a young adults' book, "The Hunt for the Mastodon," is the
    true story of the excavation of a mastodon in Hackensack, N.J., by
    the American Museum of Natural History. "Great Beginnings: Opening
    Lines of Great Novels," and "Great Endings: Closing Lines of Great
    Novels" followed. Most recently she revisited her Lawrence research
    and presented a paper on his relationship with Robert Graves at a
    Graves conference in Majorca last summer.
    In between, she has delved into her grandmother's past, verifying the
    stories she told and learning more about the experience of the poor,
    illiterate but stalwart people who established her family in America.
    "I began working on it for real four years ago," she said. "When I
    had finished transcribing the tapes I had about 275 pages, which I
    used as the backbone of the book. Then I did a lot of research."
    She learned that Vartanoosh had come to this country as a young child
    in 1903. Her family escaped in the late 1890s from Turkish massacres
    in their province of Erzeroum, Armenia, to Beirut, with the little
    girl and her brother riding in saddlebags on a camel. She was left in
    Syria in the care of a bachelor uncle while her mother emigrated to
    America and her father traveled to England before finally rejoining
    her mother in New York City.
    The missionaries working with the Armenian refugees had sent her
    great-grandfather, who had eye problems, to Manchester, England, for
    treatment, but her great-grandmother had "decided the streets of
    America were paved with gold," according to Ms. Kent.
    "She left her daughter and an older son in Syria and came to New York
    with a nursing baby on her knee," said Ms. Kent with admiration. "She
    couldn't read or write and didn't speak the language, but in a matter
    of years she owned a lot of apartment houses. I went to Newark to the
    Hall of Records [to research] and ended up spending the whole day.
    Then I had to go back because I found she had more than 21 land
    transactions."
    Vartanoosh did not arrive in this country until she was 7 or 8 years
    old, however. And, when she came, she did not stay with her mother.
    "They were little ragamuffins running around the streets of Beirut
    until they came over with their uncle," said Ms. Kent. "When she got
    here my great-grandmother didn't want her living on that awful
    Washington Street in lower New York, so she was placed in The
    Sheltering Arms, an Episcopal home for 'half-orphans,' children that
    had one parent who had to work to support the family. There she
    learned to speak and read English and was taught American customs and
    hygiene.
    "It was a beautifully run home," Ms. Kent continued. "It had a lot of
    backing from very wealthy New Yorkers from various Episcopal
    churches. She was living in a fabulous place, where she was taught
    English by the superintendent of the school, Miss Sarah Richmond,
    whose father and uncle were rectors of St. Michael's. Grandmother
    thanked God for being sent to Sheltering Arms because she learned
    things that stayed with her for her whole life."
    Returning to her parents' home as a teenager, she got to know Thomas
    Alva Edison while working in her parents' tailor shop in Orange, N.J.
    "Edison would come by in his car," Ms. Kent related, "and would throw
    a wad of clothes at the door. His vests were all covered with wax
    because he was working on wax cylinders for phonographs at that time.
    She'd have to scrape the wax off. When he came to pick up his
    clothes, she'd say, '25 cents,' and he'd say, 'That's too much, 15
    cents.' He spent a lot of money on a house for his second wife and on
    his laboratory and he wasn't much of bookkeeper-he made and lost
    large amounts of money. One of the most amazing things my grandmother
    said was, 'He was a white-headed man and he's in front of my eyes
    right now.' Imagine being able to call up the image of Edison in
    front of your eyes."
    Although Vartanoosh longed to become a nurse, her parents insisted
    that she marry. "My grandfather also came from Armenia, from Harpoot,
    and they met over here in a kind of arranged marriage," Ms. Kent
    said. "They moved to Ridgefield, N.J., where she raised six children.
    It was really was my grandmother who got them through two world wars
    and the Depression. Grandfather was a machinist and had trouble
    getting work. She did everything-sewing, taking in boarders, selling
    vegetables ... .
    In 1945, she moved to Florida on the advice of her doctors. "There
    were a lot of veterans returning from the war and Miami was the hot
    place to live," Ms. Kent said. "She got there at just the right time.
    She discovered the Greyhound Bus Company, and she would just take off
    and tour the country. My grandfather was not adventurous, but she did
    a lot of traveling. Once she got on a bus going through North Dakota
    and she said to the bus driver, 'When you see a nice farmhouse, I
    would like to see what it is like.' She got off the bus in front of a
    house, went up to the door with her little suitcase, knocked and said
    she wanted to stay the night. In those days, you traveled in a suit,
    with a hat and gloves-imagine finding that at your door. They let her
    sleep on the couch over night and wouldn't take any money-maybe 50
    cents."
    On another trip she was in San Francisco in 1951 at the conference
    that signed a treaty between the Allies and Japan. "She was there on
    opening day, third in line behind Andre Gromyko," said Ms. Kent. "She
    wanted to see what a Russian was like. She wasn't pleased."
    Ms. Kent said that she has self-published this fourth book because it
    is meant largely for family members, "and my mother is now 91. I
    didn't want to wait to try to find a publisher." Having distributed
    the book to family members, she is now marketing it to others. It can
    be purchased at the House of Books in Kent and online through
    www.barnes&noble.com, www.amazon.com or www. iUniverse.com and is
    priced at $21.95 in paperback and $31.95 in cloth
    With "Vartanoosh" behind her, Ms. Kent is poised to return to
    writing, this time revising a play she wrote previously. "I will take
    another look at that because I think I know what I can do with it,"
    she said.
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