Friday, March 20, 2015

Rev J Skerstonas

I heard from a lovely lady in Lithuania who is researching the family of the 2nd President of Lithuania, Alex Stulginskis.   (Of course neither of us speaks the others language).   As of her last count, Mr Stulginskis had 12 brothers and sisters so she was trying to determine which of these may have been the father of Bruce Stulginskis, who had married a Skerstonas cousin.   I was able to locate their marriage certificate from New York in 1926:


Something interesting on the certificate - the ceremony was officiated by "Rev J Skerstonas."  And, who is this cousin?  The church appears to be Our Lady of Vilnus in New York City which closed in 2007.   I now need to add this to things I need to research.   A quick google search shows:

http://www.nycago.org/Organs/NYC/html/OurLadyVilnius.html

570 Broome Street at Varick Street
New York, N.Y. 10013

Organ Specifications:
II/10 Aeolian Company – from unknown residence
II/17 George W. Earle (1868) – inst. as Möller, Op. 1186 (c.1909)
The Church of Our Lady of Vilnius was established in 1909 as a national parish church to serve Lithuanian Catholics in New York City. Harry G. Wiseman designed the yellow-brick church that was built in 1910. Located on Broome Street near Varick, the parish became a center fostering not only religious belief but also Lithuanian culture and national identity. People rallied around their church to maintain community bonds and remain close to their homeland. Our Lady of Vilnius was for many years home for a local chapter of the Knights of Columbus, a Catholic fraternal order.

In the 1920s, construction of the nearby Hudson Tunnel and its access roads uprooted the community, and by the time the tunnel opened in November, 1927, many one-family homes belonging to Lithuanian parishioners had been destroyed. Over the years, however, the Lithuanians continued to return to the church for social activities and for Masses in their native language.

By the late 1990s, the church roof had become unstable and services were moved to the basement. Despite valiant efforts to repair and save the church, the Archdiocese closed the parish on February 27, 2007.

 I'll need to do some digging to see if I can find any church history.   I know in other church's they have anniversary books which list the various priests they have had through the years.  Wonder if this church had one and if there is any information on Father Skerstonas.   Hmm...

******UPDATE******
I heard back from a woman who still maintains a blog on Our Lady of Vilnius.   She set me straight:

I think that the priest was most likely Father Sestokas.  In many instances his name has been spelled “Shestokas” in English, as it is pronounced.  You can probably verify the name against the parish record.  Various parish histories have been prepared for parish anniversaries.  If I can lay hands on them, I can scan and send.
So, upon a second look with this new information, I think she is right.   The priest is likely Rev Shestokas not Rev Skerstonas!   I believe we have a mystery solved...  


Saturday, November 22, 2014

Joseph Tamosaitis

Spent most of my night working on my maternal genealogy.   But was poking around on a couple of Skerstonas records before shutting down and I found the 1922 passport application for Joseph Tamosaitis.  Then, I also found his WWI Draft Registration card from 1918 and his WWII Draft Registration Card from 1942

Joseph would be my second cousin once removed as my great grand-father, Peter Skerstonas, was also his grand-father. He was born in Feb 1897 in Waterbury, CT and died in Nov 1968 in Brooklyn, NY.

His WWI Draft Registration card from 1918 shows that he was a student at La Salette College in Hartford, CT.  La Salette was a seminary.  According to their website:

       "The first La Salette Seminary High School was established in Hartford, CT, the founding city of the La Salette’s North American Mission. The property was purchased in 1894 the La Salettes purchased 10 acres on New Park Avenue where it built a seminary.
         The La Salette Missionary College, as it was called, was first occupied in 1895. The La Salette Missionaries accepted their first students on Sept. 16, 1896. Due to the increasing numbers of prospective students, two additional wings were constructed during 1906-1907. The building originally provided all levels of study, from entry to ordination.
         In 1917 the Novitiate was moved to Bloomfield, CT.
         In March of 1957, due to the increasing number of students in the Hartford Seminary, the Province purchased land in Cheshire, CT, for the construction of a new larger seminary. Construction on the new seminary building was begun in the summer of 1959.
        The last graduating class from the Hartford Seminary was in June of 1961. The new seminary in Cheshire was dedicated in September of 1961.
         The Hartford building is now used as one of the retirement houses for La Salettes. About 40 people live there."



His 1922 passport application shows that Joseph was then in Switzerland for his theological studies and was requesting to stay until his studies were completed.   The description on the second page is interesting - the usual height, hair color and eye color but also includes description of mouth, chin and face....   And, a great find, his passport photo!! 

There's also a handwritten note on the second page noting "held for Lithuanian travel."



 
Other findings - in 1928 he married Veronica Kankaustkarte in New York.   I can also find a 1933 city directory for NYC which reports that he is a music teacher. 
 
Here is the WWII Draft Registration Card from 1942.  I cannot save the 2nd page, but it notes that he is 5'7", brown hair and blue eyes.   Seems he is now a couple of inches shorter than back in his youth when he was traveling through Europe. 
 
 

Sunday, November 9, 2014

120th Anniversary of Oldest Lithuanian Parish in New England

Today was the celebration of 120 years of service of St. Joseph's Parish in Waterbury, CT.  St. Joseph's is the oldest Lithuanian parish in New England and the second oldest in the United States.  At first I decided to go because the menu promised some Lithuanian treats that I had not had in a very, very long time:  kugelis, home made sauerkraut and Lithaunian sauage were on the menu!  OK, I'm now officially one of those crazy people that takes picture of their food.  But I had to send a picture to my half-sister so she would be jealous that I was having kugelis!

A very nice gentleman at our table said they also have it at the annual summer picnic.   Both non-Lithuanian spouses at the table didn't look too excited about having it more than once a year :)

Before I went I did some research.  First, there had to be family members that attended this church.  And it didn't take long to find a list of marriages in the church.  I'm sure there were more - but these were the ones that I could easily find in Martha's family history:

Charles Skerstonas & Rose Tamosaitis m. May 30, 1916 (my grandparents)
Della Skerstonas & Isador Sniekus m. July 19, 1952 (my aunt)
Al Skerstonas & Frances Stamm m in 1963 (my uncle)

Barbara Skerstonas & Louis Alexander m January 27, 1914 (my great aunt) (note Alexander is a shortened version of the correct Lithuanian surname, Alexsandravicius.  I had already known it had been shortened but a very kind gentleman gave me the proper Lithuanian pronunciation today - I would be unable to say it myself).

Martha Skerstonas & Joseph Vaicekauskas m February 27, 1905 (1st cousin twice removed)
Anna Urban & Karl Dineberg m August 2, 1917 (3rd cousin)
Magdalene Tamosaitis & Peter Palapis m June 14, 1921 (2nd cousin once removed)
Charles Gloudenis & Joan Vitkus m June 24, 1929 (3rd cousin)
Thomas Gloudenis & Mary Kaslauskas m September 4, 1965 (3rd cousin once removed)

I did some other research in advance.   There was the location - in a section of Waterbury called Brooklyn.   I remember my father going to Brooklyn Bakery at the holiday's to get special treats.   It has since moved, but the old location still had the sign up and was right across the street from the church.


Found this article about the history of the Brooklyn area dated January 1995.

http://www.greaterwaterbury.com/waterbury_brooklyn.php.  [Note:  Silas Bronson is the Waterbury library.] 

Like most of Waterbury's neighborhoods, Brooklyn was virtually a self-sustaining community with its own stores, soda fountains, Silas Bronson branch, YMCA branch, two churches, taverns, bakeries, movie houses, factories, fine restaurants and schools.

As early as the 1860s, Irish immigrants began settling in Brooklyn, followed by the Polish and Lithuanians in the 1890s. It is home to 114-year-old St. Patrick's Church, the 100-year-old St. Joseph's Church, 90-year-old St. Joseph's School, St. Mary's School of Nursing, Duggan School, Barnard School, and the historic Riverside Cemetery.

Frank Perrella, an Italian-American, attends St. Patrick's Church. The church, founded as Waterbury's second Catholic church on Feb. 1, 1880, is an off-shoot of the Immaculate Conception Church. It was built in this neighborhood where Waterbury's new Irish immigrants lived. Perrella grew up on Charles Street, and his mother, Elida Perrella, still lives in the family homestead. The aroma of food filtering through the air or music clamoring from the homes gave passersby a hint who lived in the home.
"You could tell if you were by a Lithuanian house by the sound of the music coming from the radio," said Butkevicius, a Bucks Hill resident. "I was the only Italian girl attending St. Joseph's School." Butkevicius lived next door to the St. Joseph's Orphanage which closed in July of 1952 after 34 years. It was established in 1918 as a shelter for children of St. Joseph's parish who were made homeless as a result of World War I or by the influenza epidemic during that period. Originally started for children of Lithuanian parentage, it expanded and eventually provided shelter to any child in need, regardless of national origin or religion. Supported by the community and run by the Sisters of the Holy Ghost, the home cared for some 500 children and provided a day nursery for countless other children.
A center of the neighborhood was the former Begnal School which closed in the late 1930s. It re-opened after World War II as the first Waterbury branch of the University of Connecticut. When the college moved to its present site in the 1950s, the building was taken over by the Park Department and turned into the Begnal Recreation Center. The center was leveled during the highway project.

Two years after arriving in Waterbury, the Lithuanian Club formed in 1892 as immigrants who first stopped off in the Pennsylvania coal fields found their way to Waterbury. There were 20,000 Lithuanians in Brooklyn in the years between the world wars. They formed their own parish, St. Joseph Catholic Church and even operated an orphanage. For a time, the Lithuanians had their own bank, the Kazemekas Bank, that failed during the Depression. It became the first branch bank office in the state when it was absorbed into Waterbury Savings Bank.

There was also a short parish history on the Archdiocese of Hartford website:

http://www.archdioceseofhartford.org/cgi-bin/history.pl?textdata=283

St. Joseph Church
Lithuanian
Established 1894
300 households
Lithuanian immigrants in Waterbury usually attended Mass at St. Patrick Church, but they were also visited by two Brooklyn, New York, priests, Fathers Antanas Varnagiris and Matthew Juodysius. On March 28, 1894, Bishop Michael A. Tierney appointed Father Joseph Zebris as pastor of the new St. Joseph parish in response to local Lithuanian petitions on his behalf. Father Zebris offered Mass for his new congregation on April 1, 1894, in the Mitchell block on Bank Street. On December 25, the pastor blessed a new frame church at the corner of Congress and John Streets. In 1904 a new brick church was built and dedicated in 1905 on the site of the original one. On January 6, 1906, three refugee French Daughters of the Holy Ghost joined the parish, learned Lithuanian, and soon staffed the burgeoning parish school, which operated in the former church building that had been moved to John Street. An additional school building was constructed in 1912-13. Father Joseph J. Valantiejus founded an orphanage to care for victims of the 1918 influenza epidemic and built a new school in 1925. St. Joseph holds the distinction of being the first Lithuanian worshiping community in Connecticut.


So I bought my two tickets and decided to have a go...   The actual dinner was held at St. Patrick's Church hall - which is about two blocks from St. Joseph's.  Due to the small size of the parish, the two parishes now share a priest.  And I don't think there would be a room large enough for the dinner at St. Joseph's itself.    Because we went just for the luncheon/dinner we were unable to go into the church.   There had been a mass earlier in the morning with a tour of the church and the community center - we didn't realize that and wouldn't have been able to make it.  But everyone was so nice I'm sure if we came by again they would show us around!   After lunch and a few quick speakers they had some traditional Lithuanian dances and dessert.   They had out pictures of the church throughout the years.  So we learned: The altar was very ornate but now it is very simple.  They had a fife & drum corp.  They had an active CYO basketball team.   There is a bowling alley in the community center.  

It is a very small parish - it seems no one lives near the church anymore- which means the older parishioners come for mass but families are not returning to bring their children.   They were hoping to see everyone again for the 125 anniversary.  

 
You can see in front of the church there is a wooden structure with a cross on top.   It is noted this "Lithuanian Wayside Cross was presented to St. Joseph Church by Joseph Ambrozaitis in Memory of his Mother."  We were told during lunch that in Lithuania there are many of these crosses across the hills and that, over the years, the Russians would take them down.  Lithuanians would put them back up.   I found this website that provides more information on the Lithuanian tradition of the Wayside Cross.
 



They had the Centennial book (1894-1994) book for purchase with a supplement.  I bought a copy and tried to find any references to family members.  I think I found the following:

"We remember Frank and Ursula Gluodenis.  Parents, Grandparents, Great Grandparents.  Parishioners 1898 - 1937"  I have an Ursula Gluodenis that is my 2nd cousin once removed.  They then list many family members of the Gluodenis faimly that I also have listed in our family tree. 

It's kind of hard to do the cross-referencing.  I'm sure there were more cousins!   I know I felt I was among relatives seeing so many folks with those Lithuanian sky blue eyes!!

So it was a nice afternoon.  But I have my homework to do.  Will need to come back to visit the community center to see if I can take a look through the records.   They also recommended that I talk to the president of the Lithuanian Association that runs the Lithuanian Cemetery to see if I can find any family members that may have been buried there.   I guess I would start there versus St. Joe's cemetery.   So looks like I'll have another field trip out to Waterbury again to do some more family history research!   

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Truck Overturns, Leaves Milky Way

Thought I'd share this small piece from the February 18, 1958 Bridgeport Post.   This is about my Uncle Al:

 
TRUCK OVERTURNS, LEAVES MILKY WAY

CANAAN. Feb. I8_(UP) The
milky way came out of the sky
and down to a section of Route 8
yesterday.

That was the result of an acci-
dent. A truck carrying a load of
milk overturned and its load was
thrown over the road.
 
Truck driver Albert Skerstonas,
37, of Thomaston, was not injur-
ed.

Saturday, October 4, 2014

Tragedy - Kleen Energy Power Plant Explosion

In February 2010 we were in the kitchen when suddenly the screen door slammed shut.  That was odd - it was winter and the doors were closed so why would the screen door have shut - like a gust of wind had opened and shut it...   We found out later that day that a couple of miles from our house the Kleen Energy power plant had an explosion which killed six workers. 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_Connecticut_power_plant_explosion

The 2010 Connecticut power plant explosion occurred at the Kleen Energy Systems power station in Middletown, Connecticut, United States at 11:17 am EST on February 7, 2010. The plant had been under construction from February 2008,[2] and was scheduled to start supplying energy in June 2010.[3] The initial blast killed five and injured at least fifty; one of the injured later died in hospital, bringing the total death toll to six.

The blast at the 620-megawatt, Siemens combined cycle gas- and oil- fired power plant[5][6] occurred at 11:17 am,[7] and was reported at 11:25 am EST.[2] The plant's manager, Gordon Holk, said that contractors and other workers from O & G Industries, Ducci Electric, and Keystone Construction and Maintenance Services were at the site when the blast occurred.[8] The explosion occurred at the rear of the largest building, the turbine hall, which was destroyed.[9] Some residents reported "earthquake-like tremors"[2][10] from at least 10 miles (16 km) away,[9] although the blast proved not to be seismically detectable.[11] Another resident of the area felt that it was more like a sonic boom.


The plant was under construction and was not yet on-line.  On that day they were cleaning out the lines by blowing them with natural gas.  This is the story I remember hearing - the Wikipedia page doesn't really commit to that exact cause...   I found this US Chemical Saftey report on the explosion which does note that the cause was blowing the line with natural gas which then found an ignition source.  

http://www.csb.gov/kleen-energy-natural-gas-explosion/

Six workers were fatally injured during a planned work activity to clean debris from natural gas pipes at Kleen Energy in Middletown, CT. To remove the debris, workers used natural gas at a high pressure of approximately 650 pounds per square inch. The high velocity of the natural gas flow was intended to remove any debris in the new piping. During this process, the natural gas found an ignition source and exploded. 
      
So, it appears memory serves me correctly.  Either way, as the local channels were covering the blast, it was probably two days later when they released the names of those killed.   One of them was Peter Chepulis of Thomaston, CT.   It took a minute for me to realize that this was my first cousin.  My father was not on speaking terms with his sister for much (most?) of his life so I never had met my cousins - but I recognized the name and knew this was one of those cousins that I had never met.  He was only 48 years old - much too young - as were all of those that were killed that day. 

 
THOMASTON -- Peter "Pete" C. Chepulis, 48, died Sunday in the explosion at the Kleen Energy Power Plant in Middletown. He was the husband of Dyann "De" (Beveridge) Chepulis. Pete was born May 3, 1961 in Waterbury son of Mildred (Skerstonas) Chepulis of Thomaston and the late George B. Chepulis.
Raised in the Brooklyn section of Waterbury he was a graduate of St. Joseph's Grammar School and Kaynor Technical High School. He was a member of the Pipefitters and Plumbers Union Local # 777, the Thomaston Fish and Game Club and the NRA. His passions were bird hunting with his Springer Spaniels Preacher and Rancey, riding his Harleys, competing in wood chopping competitions at the local fairs, good food, cooking and traveling.
In addition to his wife and mother he is survived by his step-daughter, Alicia G. Beveridge of Southington; one brother, James T. Chepulis and his wife Pam of Thomaston; one nephew, Stephen J. Chepulis and one great nephew Jason S. Chepulis.

The story became even more sad a couple of years later when, as noted in this article in the Hartford Courant, Peter's wife passed away in 2012. 

http://articles.courant.com/2012-12-12/news/hc-kleenenergy-settlement1212-20121212_1_kenneth-haskell-kleen-energy-peter-chepulis.  Article as follows:

"Dyann Chepulis never saw the $1.7 million the owners of the Kleen Energy plant paid to settle her lawsuit stemming from the 2010 Middletown natural-gas power plant explosion that killed her husband. Four days after a probate court judge in Litchfield approved Peter Chepulis' final estate on June 1, 2012, she died at age 58.
"It is an incredibly sad story,'' said Hartford Attorney J. Michael Margolis, who handled the Chepulis estate. Dyann Chepulis was one of five widows who earlier this year settled lawsuits against Kleen Energy and its general contractor, O&G Industries of Torrington.
In addition to Peter Chepulis, 48, the others killed on the morning of Feb. 7, 2010 were Ronald Crabb, 42, of Colchester; Chris Walters, 48, of Florissant, Mo.; Kenneth Haskell, 37, of New Durham, N.H.; Raymond Dobratz, 58, of Old Saybrook and Roy Rushton, 36, of Hamilton, Ontario.
All but Dobratz settled their lawsuits last February after several mediation sessions with Superior Court Judge Robert L. Holzberg. Attorneys involved in the settlements would not comment on specific amounts but have said that the totals varied depending on the age of the person who was killed, their job classification and family situation. For example, Crabb's probate records show that his wife, Jodi Thomas, a probate judge at the time of the explosion, received a $2.55 million settlement, of which about $1.2 million went to Crabb's two children. Probate records for the other three men from out of state weren't available. Individuals connected to the case indicated to the Courant that the other settlements were in the range of the Crabb and Chepulis figures.
Neither Chepulis nor Crabb had wills when they died, record show. Under Connecticut law, the spouse is entitled to the first $100,000 from their estate as well as 75 percent of the rest of it, while the other 25 percent goes to the decedent's parents. Chepulis's mother, Mildred, died while the case was still in probate in 2010, records show. Her share of the estate, about $410,000, went to James Chepulis, Peter's lone surviving brother. There were at least 29 lawsuits, involving more than 60 people, against Kleen Energy and O&G. Almost all of them have been settled now except for clients of the StrattonFaxon law firm, which has about 20 cases still pending, including the Dobratz case.
Joel Faxon said the case is proceeding to the discovery stage on the state's complex litigation docket.
"We are very disappointed that O&G and Kleen Energy and other companies involved in this explosion are refusing to take responsibility for their actions that ruined the lives of numerous families,'' Faxon said."

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Where Did All the "Skerstonas' " Go (or Girls Rule Which Stinks for Geneaology!)

In my on-line family tree the count is currently at 368 family members.   I'll take a rough guess that about 300 of these are the descendants of Joseph and Peter Skerstonas.  The majority are descendants within the United States.   But if you Google "Skerstonas" in the US you'll likely get me, my half-brother and his daughter.  And, that's about it....   Where did all the Skerstonas' go?   Thought it might be interesting to try to map out what happened to the surname once these brother's children starting coming stateside.

Couple of notes:  I do not include names of any living relatives as I'm unsure if I have their permission.   And this is based on information I have at this time so - apologize in advance if I am missing any family members or have any errors.   If you have any information to add - please feel free to contact me & let me know)

Joseph Skerstonas
  • Daughter: Barbara (b 1891 in Lithuania, d. 1979 Thomaston, CT) married Louis Alexander
  • Daughter: Patrione married Joseph Sanda
  • Daughter: Anna married George Westone
  • Daughter: Alice married Unknown Voselis
  • Son: Unknown Skerstonas - Died in train/work accident in CT.  Don't know if he was married at the time.
  • Son: Charles Skerstonas (b 1888 in Lithuania, d. 1956 Thomaston, CT) married Rose Tamosaitis
    • Daughter: Della (b 1917 in Waterbury, CT, d ? Thomaston CT) married Isadore Snieckus
    • Daughter: Married
    • Daughter: Mildred (b 1923 in Thomaston, CT, d 2010 Thomaston CT) married George Chepulis
    • Son: Albert Skerstonas (b 1920 in Thomaston CT, d ? Thomaston CT) - married and had no children
    • Son: George Skerstonas (b 1930 in Thomaston, CT, d 1999 in Thomaston CT)
      • Daughter - Married
      • Daughter - Married
      • Daughter - Deb Skerstonas Lagana - Married (me)
      • Son - Skerstonas
        • Daughter - Skerstonas - Married kept her maiden name
Peter Skerstonas
  • Daughter: Lucy Skerstonas (b 1870 in Lithuania, d ? in Lithuania) - never married
  • Daughter: Magdalene (b 1873 in Lithuania, d 1948 in Nebraska) married Isadore Tamosaitis
  • Daughter: Martha (b 1875, d 1944) married Joseph Vaicekauskas
  • Daughter: Mary married Unknown Kidulas
  • Daughter: Anna married Unknown Lisdanis
  • Daughter: Frances married Frances Barnauskas
  • Daughter: Barbara married Unknown Chernauskas
  • Son: Anthony Skerstonas married a teacher in Lithuania
    • Son: Jonas Skerstonas

So, the Skerstonas name dwindled fairly quickly with all these daughters.   Interestingly there was a similar trend on my mother's side of the family tree as well - her grandmother was one of 12 children - 10 girls and 2 boys....  This all can make it very difficult to trace ancestors - but I keep plugging along!

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Waterbury - The Brass City

As I was researching something completely different tonight, I came across some very interesting information on the history of Scovill Manufacturing and Waterbury known in it's prime as "Brass City."   It would seem many Lithuanian families who immigrated to Connecticut may have worked here.   I am told that my grandfather, Charles Skerstonas, worked here for a few years after coming to the US, where he saved money to buy the farm in Thomaston.  Although the family history Martha prepared doesn't specifically mention it, I wonder if others in the family worked there as well?

The piece I found is called "Scovill Brass Works - Written Historical and Descriptive Data.  Historic American Engineering Record.  National Park Service. (HAER No. CT-153)"

memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/ct/.../ct0598data.pdf

It seems the firm that became Scovill Manufacturing was started by four partners in 1802.  They made tin and pewter alloy buttons, cast and stamped brass and copper buttons, and gold finished buttons made from all metals.  At that time there was a high demand for these buttons, which traditionally had been imported from Birmingham, England for military uniforms. 

As years passed the owners formed various subsidiaries throughout the Waterbury area and opened new product lines.   A new photographic process invented in 1839 used silver on copper "daguerreotypes" which were produced by the Scovills.  Between 1850 and 1874 the photography division made as much in profits as the brass business.  They also began rolling "German Silver" and making decorative objects through the mid to late 1800s.  

By 1909, Connecticut manufactured 44.6% of America's output of brass, bronze and their products.  Waterbury alone accounted for 21.3% of America's brass and bronze products.  The early ethnic neighborhoods grew and new ones came into being to house a diversity of immigrants.  Lithuanians first began arriving in Waterbury in the 1890s, as many left their homeland to avoid service in the Russian army as well as to improve their economic circumstances.  Emigration from Lithuania to the United States increased further following the start of the Russo-Japanese war in 1904.
 Lithuanian and Russian Population in Waterbury based on Country of Birth (In 1890, 1900, and 1910 Lithuanians were enumerated as Russians):

1890     Russia:  123
1900:    Russia: 1,265
1910:    Russia: 5,600
1920:    Russia: 3,209     Lithuania: 3,674

(By 1920 the largest ethnic populations:  Italy: 9,232  Ireland 4,507 then Lithuania 3,674)
 
You can also check out this "Scovill Bulletin" from January 1930.   It is fairly amazing just how big and far reaching this company is by 1930.   If you read all the way to the last few pages they lists the branch offices and divisions - which are located in CT, other parts of the US and even in Holland. 

http://www.scovillbulletin.com/30s/Scovill%201930/01%20Jan-1930.pdf