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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Living

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Living

    Living married Living [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Living
    Children:
    1. Living
    2. Living
    3. Living
    4. Living
    5. 1. Living


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Eugene Morris Schoenfeld was born on 18 Apr 1908 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 8 Jun 1993 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.

    Notes:

    Eugene Morris Schoenfeld, Sr., on Tuesday, June 8, 1993 at 6:00 AM. Husband of Vivian Morlas Schoenfeld. Father of Robert Morlas Schoenfeld, Noel Douglas Schoenfeld, Kathleen S. Casey, Vivian S. Solares, and the late Eugene Morris Schoenfeld Jr. Son of the late Otto B. Schoenfeld Sr. and Clara Walet Schoenfeld. Brother of Mrs. Clara Watters, Lawrence Schoenfeld and the late Otto B. Schoenfeld Jr. Also survived by 14 grandchildren and 7 great grandchildren. Age 85 years, a native of New Orleans, LA and a resident of Metairie, LA for the past 21 years.

    Relatives, friends officers and member of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers No. 130 are invited to attend a Funeral Mass at LAKE LAWN METAIRIE FUNERAL HOME CHAPEL, 5100 Pontchartrain Blve (in Metairie Cemetery) on Thursday, June 10, 1993 at 12:00 noon. Interment in Metairie Cemetery. Visitation from 6:00 PM until 10 PM on Wednesday and after 10:00 AM until service time on Thursday.

    Undated, unfererenced clipping from Keith McGuire Jr.

    Eugene married Vivian Anna Morlas on 11 Apr 1936 in Gretna, Jefferson Parish, Louisiana. Vivian (daughter of John Dominic Morlas and Lucine Roquevert) was born on 22 Mar 1909 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 29 May 2000 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Vivian Anna MorlasVivian Anna Morlas was born on 22 Mar 1909 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana (daughter of John Dominic Morlas and Lucine Roquevert); died on 29 May 2000 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.

    Notes:

    Vivian Morlas Schoenfeld, a homemaker, died Monday of a stroke at Life Care Hospital, Memorial Baptist Campus on Monday, May 29, 2000 At 7:30 P.M. She was 91.

    Mrs. Schoenfeld was born in New Orleans and lived In either New Orleans or Metairie all her life. She was the daughter of the late John Dominic and Lucine (Roquevert) Morlas and was preceded In death by four brothers and eight sisters.

    She was the beloved wife of the late Eugene Morris Schoenfeld, Sr. and the mother of Kathleen S. Casey, of Daytona Beach, Fl; Vivian S. Solares, of Harahan; Robert Morlas Schoenfeld and Noel Douglas Schoenfeld both of New Orleans, and the Late Eugene Morris Schoenfeld, Jr., of Austin, Tx. She is also survived by 13 grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren. Relatives and friends are Invited to attend the Funeral Mass at Lake Lawn Metairie Funeral Home Chapel, 5100 Pontchartrain Blvd. (In Metairie Cemetery) on Thursday, June 1, 2000 at 11:00 A.M. Interment will follow in Metairie Cemetery. Visitation on Wednesday from 6:00 P.M.until 9:00 P.M. And on Thursday after 9:00 A.M. until Service Time. In lieu of flowers, the family prefers donations to Sisters Of Mercy, Holy Name Of Jesus Convent, 6028 Freret St., New Orleans 70118.

    Obituary Source:

    (1) two undated unreferenced clippings provided by Keith McGuire Jr.

    (2) http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/la/orleans/obits/1/s-06.txt



    E U L O G Y VIVIAN MORLAS SCHOENFELD 1909 - 2000
    WRITTEN BY: KATHLEEN S. CASEY--June 1, 2000


    This is indeed the end of an era. Mama is the last of her immediate Morlas family. Eight sisters and four brothers have gone before her. And I have lost the best friend I ever had.

    For Mama, life was a long journey, and in her 91 years she had many side trips and outings along the way. She loved reminiscing about them.

    With great relish she used to tell about her first plane ride. She was not quite 14, and her father, who died in 1923, was still alive. Someone was selling plane rides over New Orleans for about $15 apiece. Mama's mother arranged for Mama and some of her sisters to take a ride. While they were flying overhead, Mama's parents were sitting in their yard. When Mama's father saw the plane, he said to Grandma, "I wonder what fools are in that plane." Grandma spared him the truth.

    In 1926 and 1929, Mama, her mother and unmarried sisters toured Europe. Mama got more mileage out of those trips than anybody else, I know. She loved telling how she was followed after an evening out in Amsterdam by a big crowd because the people thought she, in her long evening gown, was a movie star. She regaled us with stories of officers and college students on the ships who were madly in love with her. I never doubted her for a moment.

    Then there was the flight to Detroit in 193l with Grandma and Aunt Eleanor to buy the Hupmobile and drive it home. In 1938 there was the sad journey by train from Corpus Christi, Texas, to New Orleans when Mama learned her sister Clothilde was dying.

    Mama's family and friends meant more to her than anything else. I was brought up in a home where I felt secure and loved. Vivian, Jim, Bob, Noel and I knew we were blessed.

    We and other family members have talked a lot lately about things we did together, places we went: a trip to Sturgis, Mississippi, when I was about 15 to visit Aunt Lucille and family, weekend excursions to Mississippi in a car loaded with cement and tools so Daddy could work on his swimming pool. Mama and Daddy named their place at Beneshewaah KAVIJIBONO, using the first two letters of each of their five children's names. We enjoyed many happy gatherings there with family and friends.

    Mama and Aunt Eleanor went by train to California to see Jim who was there in the Navy. They also visited Uncle John. Aunt Leontine had sent Mama and Aunt Eleanor off with a big box lunch. The travelers laughed all the way to California and back.

    Mama and Daddy went to Colorado in 1972 with Jim and Dee and Aunt Dora and Uncle Larry. Just recently in the hospital Mama said they had a "wonderful time." Noel reminded me night before last that on that trip after eating at a roadside park, Mama threw a paper cup over her shoulder and it landed in a trash receptacle. Jim said, "I bet you can't do that again." He gave her another cup and once again she made a goal. Mama was always on target no matter what she was doing.

    When Mama and Daddy stayed at a dude ranch once with Bob and Genie and their children, Mama got to ride horseback again for the first time in many years since she had ridden regularly along the levee. She took great pleasure telling how as a young woman, she was thrown over a horse's head and had to lead the horse to a lamp post and climb up the post to remount and gallop away uninjured.

    On trips to St. Martinville, Mama and Daddy relaxed and enjoyed "happy hour" on Bob and Genie's front porch.

    There were trips with Vivian and Sig and their children to Austin and to Daytona Beach and later with Vivian to Daytona Beach, Disney, World and Key West.

    And, Mama never missed a grandchild's wedding even if it meant traveling to Daytona Beach and later to San Antonio while nursing a broken pelvis.

    Over the years, Mama and I reminisced about life when Vivian, Jim, Bob, Noel and I were children. Visiting was a big part of our entertainment. I remember a family reunion at Grandma's on South Tonti Street. On Sundays we went to see Uncles Louis, Leon and Paul and Aunts Leontine, Stella, Lucille, Jennie, Juliet and Eleanor. When Aunt Josephine came to town from Oklahoma, we had get-togethers on a large scale.

    When I was a child, my brothers, Vivian and I took rides to the lakefront and Audubon Park where we'd run up and down Monkey Hill, look at the seals and visit the zoo. Daddy would take us swimming.

    Every Easter we'd pick clover in the park for our baskets, and at Christmastime we'd take rides to see the lights and then go to Canal Street to see Santa Claus waving from the balcony at D. H. Holmes.

    Noel tells about going downtown with Mama to shop and eat at Kress or McCrory's. On one occasion when he was about five, Mama bought him a little rubber mouse which he left on the streetcar. When they discovered his loss, he was heartbroken. Mama, carrying him, ran after the streetcar but couldn't get it to stop. She even called NOPSI to see if anyone had turned in Noel's lost treasure. No such luck. On their next trip downtown, Mama bought Noel another rubber mouse. Life was simple, and it was good.

    For years Vivian was Mama's wheels-running her errands and taking her to her doctors and to visit family and friends.

    In recent years, Mama didn't go out much, but her radios and telephone took her where she wanted to go. She looked forward to talking to her children, grandchildren, nieces, nephews, cousins and friends. They were very good to her, and Mama was good to everybody. She was thrifty and generous, a happy combination which benefited many of us.

    Family and friends played a vital part in Mama's life to the end, and they kept dropping in and phoning her at the hospital. One day I counted 20 visitors. She seemed happy being surrounded by those who love her. Mama knew she was dying, and she accepted death with prayers and peace. And there was laughter, too. Only a few days before she died Noel had Mama smiling over a hilarious story about Linda's dog Promise.

    I owe all that I am and all that I have to my parents, and my life will be very different without Mama.

    It is awfully hard to say goodbye, and I won't. Instead, for Mama-our dear, sweet Mangie-on her final journey, I wish her Godspeed.

    Notes:

    Married:
    They were remarried in a religious ceremony on 13 Sep 1936 at St. John Church in Thibodaux, LA.

    Children:
    1. 3. Living
    2. Vivian Clara Schoenfeld was born on 11 Mar 1940 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 15 Jun 2022 in Harahan, Jefferson Parish, Louisiana.
    3. Eugene "Jim" Morris Schoenfeld, Jr. was born on 4 Jul 1942 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 10 Oct 1983 in Austin, Travis County, Texas; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.
    4. Robert Morlas Schoenfeld was born on 10 Apr 1943 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 16 Jul 2017 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.
    5. Living


Generation: 4

  1. 14.  John Dominic MorlasJohn Dominic Morlas was born on 25 Aug 1865 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana (son of Jean-Marie Morlas and Caroline Maria Holmes); died on 14 Feb 1923 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.

    Notes:

    Owner of La Bella Creole Dairy. Bennie Zahn wrote, in the January 9, 2000 issue of THE TIMES-PICAYUNE (Living, Section E, page 7), that "The property was originally acquired in the late 1800s by John Morlas who made the purchase with silver dollar coins collected from wealthy customers on his milk route. The family legend is, that whenever he was given a silver dollar in payment for milk and cream, he tossed it onto the top of the armoire in his bedroom. When this property which adjoined the Tulane (University) tract was put on the market, he gathered all of the silver coins, counted them and found that he had $8,000, enough to buy the property. After his death in 1923, his wife, Lucine Roquevert Morlas, sold part of the tract, about 3,800 feet long with a depth varying from 100 to 140 feet, for $100,000 for the then proposed St. Vincent Infant Asylum. Within a year, the property was resold for $165,000 to men who had successful experience in local developement and who started immediately to beautify the ground. Today the property is called Versailles Boulevard and extends from Claiborne Avenue to Fontainebleau Drive."

    John married Lucine Roquevert on 28 May 1888 in St. Stephen's Church, New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana. Lucine (daughter of Jean Louis Roquevert and Blazine Pene) was born on 28 Jan 1869 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 16 Feb 1946 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 15.  Lucine RoquevertLucine Roquevert was born on 28 Jan 1869 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana (daughter of Jean Louis Roquevert and Blazine Pene); died on 16 Feb 1946 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.

    Notes:

    (Research):An mtDNA sample supplied a direct female descendant of Lucine (a child of Pat McGuire, the daughter of Josephine Morlas), was analyzed by FamilyTreeDNA in Houston. Their analysis showed the following Haplogroup assignment, along with the following differences from the Cambridge Reference Sequence.

    HVR1 Haplogroup
    K
    HVR1 differences
    from ?u?CRS?/u?
    16224C
    16519C

    The mitochondrial super-haplogroup U encompasses haplogroups U1-U7 and haplogroup K. Haplogroup K is found through Europe, and contains multiple closely related lineages indicating a recent population expansion. The origin of haplogroup K dates to approximately 16,000 years ago, and it has been suggested that individuals with this haplogroup took part in the pre-Neolithic expansion following the Last Glacial Maximum. William Hurst, on his Haplogroup K Website, writes that "Katrine," the founding mother of mitochondrial DNA haplogroup K, was one of the "Seven Daughters of Eve" as listed in the 2001 book of that title by Bryan Sykes. A lot of happened since 2001, but the book is still valuable.

    Katrine lived about 16,000 years ago. Perhaps the oldest known K descendant was Oetzi the Iceman whose frozen body was discovered in the Alps in 1991. Estimated at 5000 years old, the Iceman proved to have the basic mutations for a K: 16224C and 16320C. Every K is a cousin of Oetzi.

    Children:
    1. Leontine Josephine Morlas was born on 19 Jan 1889 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 20 Feb 1972 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.
    2. John Louis "Bebe" Morlas, Sr. was born on 22 Jan 1891 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 27 Nov 1963 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.
    3. Clothilde Marie Morlas was born on 27 Dec 1893 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 2 Oct 1938 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.
    4. Estelle Augustine Morlas was born on 12 Oct 1895 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 6 Jan 1976 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.
    5. Lucine "Lucille" Genevieve Morlas was born on 20 Aug 1897 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 24 Dec 1969 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.
    6. Louis August Morlas was born on 17 Apr 1899 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 27 May 1964 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.
    7. Eugenia "Jenny" Catharine Margaret Morlas was born on 15 Jan 1900 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 28 Dec 1978 in Bay Saint Louis, Hancock County, Mississippi; was buried in Lake Lawn Park Cemetery, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.
    8. Juliet Theresa Morlas was born on 20 Dec 1901 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 4 Feb 1985 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in St. Patricks #3, New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.
    9. Leon Joseph Morlas was born on 19 Oct 1903 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 6 May 1976 in Gulfport, Harrison County, Mississippi; was buried in Live Oak Cemetery, Pass Christian, Harrison County, Mississippi.
    10. Josephine Marguerite Morlas was born on 13 Apr 1905 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 6 Sep 1983 in McAlester, Pittsburg County, Oklahoma; was buried in Camargo (Westside) Cemetery, Camargo, Dewey County, Oklahoma.
    11. Leopold "Paul" Victor Morlas was born on 14 Nov 1907 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 21 Feb 1971 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.
    12. 7. Vivian Anna Morlas was born on 22 Mar 1909 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 29 May 2000 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Metairie Cemetery (Lake Lawn Metairie), New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.
    13. Eleanor Cecelia Morlas was born on 17 Apr 1911 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana; died on 3 Feb 1986 in Jefferson, Jefferson Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Garden Of Memories, Metairie, Jefferson Parish, Louisiana.