William (“Bill”) and Eftyhia (“Effie”) Geatros


Bill and Effie Geatros (1946)
Source:  Family Photograph

 

Bill (Vasilis) and Effie (Eftyhia) Geatros (Iatridis) were born in the village of Agios Nikolaos (now known as Kastri) in the Peloponnese of Greece.  Bill was born in 1890 and emigrated to the United States in 1912.  Effie (née Pontikes) was born in 1906 and emigrated to the United States, via Cuba, in 1929.  When they emigrated to Canada, Bill (in 1913) and Effie (in 1930, after marrying Bill) settled in Weyburn where Bill, his brother Aristotle (Ted) Geatros, and his cousins, Anthony Geatros and Louis Chrones, operated a successful family-owned café (Commercial Café) and commercial/apartment building (Geatros Block).

Bill and Effie Geatros moved to Saskatoon in 1931.  For half a century, Bill and others owned the Ritz Block at 118 – 21st Street East in Saskatoon.   By the early 1950s and following Bill’s death, the ownership and operation of the Ritz Block was assumed by Effie and her three daughters.

Over many decades of operation, these businesses nurtured the commercial interests and skills of many members of Saskatoon’s Greek community.  Many former employees later established their own restaurant dynasties in Saskatoon’s downtown and nearby business areas.

The Ritz Block

The Ritz Block initially included separate businesses that operated a hotel on the second floor, a 300-seat movie theatre on the main floor, and a basement pool hall.  At that time, the Geatros family operated the Ritz Café and later a social (poker) club in the basement.

Ritz Hotel and Cafe, Bijou Theatre on the Right (ca 1930)
Source: Saskatoon’s Greek Community: The Pioneers (1901-1949)

 With the end of prohibition, the Ritz Cafe was closed in 1935 and the space was renovated to create among Saskatoon’s first provincially licensed hotel beer parlours.   The Saskatoon Star-Phoenix described the Ritz beer parlour as “one of the most artistically decorated in Saskatoon”.  The food service was provided by a seven-stool luncheonette which also sold magazines and tobacco products.

A fire in 1948 destroyed the Ritz Theatre after almost forty years of operation.  In 1950, the theatre-space and the basement were repurposed.  The Ritz Café was re-established in the renovated space previously occupied by the main floor movie theatre.  Two banquet rooms were constructed in the basement.  Barber shops, a dance studio, and music school were also accommodated in the basement at various times.

Exterior of the Ritz Block (1950):  Café on the right; Hotel entrance in the middle, and Beer Parlour on the left
Source: Saskatoon Public Library, Local History Room (A-2113)

By 1970, the beer parlour had become licensed as a beverage room.  To compete within the city’s downtown “bar scene”, it was renamed as the Apollo Room and redecorated with an outer space theme, featuring large mural photographs of the Apollo 15 landing on the moon that occurred in 1969.

The Apollo Room, Ritz Hotel (1974)
Source: Creative Professional Photographers Collection, Saskatoon Public Library, Local History Room

In 1973, Effie was recognized with a life membership in the Hotels Association of Saskatchewan.  She continued to work at the Ritz until her death in 1984.  The building, as well as property owned around the corner on First Avenue, were subsequently sold in 1985 to the Royal Bank of Canada and the Ritz Block was demolished in 1987.

The Apollo Room continued to be remembered with several comedy shows and “reunions” between 1985 and 1994.  They featured memorabilia and “personalities” from the beverage room.

Trap Shooting

Bill served as president of the Saskatoon Gun Club.  He was an avid hunter and spent much of the fall months hunting for ducks with his dog, Pat.

Geatros Family and Pat (ca 1938)
Left to Right with Pat:  Mary, Bill, Diane, Effie, and Helen
Source: Saskatoon Public Library, Local History Room

Bill was also a provincial and national trap-shooting champion. Following his death, the Saskatoon Star-Phoenix recognized Bill “for his great trap-shooting prowess that made him one of the top shots in the continent in the late 20s and early 30s”.

Source:  Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, March 21, 1941, p. 19.

 In 1941, he along with Jim Girgulis, Jack Evans, Paul Schwager, and Don Hyman were team winners at the Dominion (Canadian) Trapshooting Team Championship, with a score of 493/500.   This was the team’s second national clay-pigeon shooting championship, having previously won in 1939. The team was inducted into the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame in 1974.

1941 Saskatoon Gun Club Trapshooting Team: Winners of the Dominion Trapshooting Team Championship)
Left to Right: Jim Girgulis, Eddie Nagle, Bill Geatros, Paul Schwager, Jack Evans
Source: Family Photo Collection

Saskatoon’s Official Pigeon Exterminator

Bill’s trapshooting skills did not go unnoticed. In 1946, firing a gun within Saskatoon’s city limits was illegal, except under special permit from the police department.  In that year, Saskatoon had been overrun by pigeons. Mayor Angus Macpherson asked Saskatoon’s police chief, George Donald, to assign a member of the police force to shoot the pigeons at City Hall.  Chief Donald recommended that instead of a police officer, Bill Geatros should be asked to do the job.  When Bill agreed (at no cost to the city), he was issued a special permit.   He not only killed pigeons at City Hall, but also at the Canadian Pacific Railway freight yards and the Exhibition grandstand.  Henceforth, “Shotgun Bill” came to be known as Saskatoon’s official pigeon exterminator.

“Shotgun Bill” Geatros goes to work on the pigeons at the City Hall as a group of admiring youngsters look on. In a few minutes, Monday night, Bill knocked down more than a score of the nuisance birds. He told the Star-Phoenix he was not sure that he liked the story about his prowess at shooting, as he had immediately been bothered by many others, including some university officials, who wanted him to undertake to get rid of their pigeons. Nor did he relish one lady’s inquiry as to whether he included rat extermination in his activities.  (Source: Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, May 8, 1946, p. 3.)

Effie’s Gardens

Effie was recognized by the Saskatoon Horticultural Society for her gardening skills and creativity. She won several horticultural awards in each of the four years between 1945 and 1949 for her flowers, vegetable garden, and landscaping around her home at 804 Lorne Avenue (now Idylwyld Crescent).  In 1943, the Saskatoon Star-Phoenix reported that she was the first gardener to successfully grow grapes in Saskatoon

The Canadian National railway-line to the downtown train terminal, approaching from the south, passed by her vegetable garden.  The large wooden barrel that served as tool shed was a prominent and memorable landmark.

Effie Geatros preparing her garden for planting, May 1951
Source:  Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, May 9, 1951, p. 3 

Effie had a close relationship with the staff of the City of Saskatoon’s parks department.  In return for wintering several of her plants in the City’s greenhouse, Effie supplied the city with seeds and cuttings which would populate Saskatoon’s public flower beds.

Source: Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, August 25, 1942, p. 3.

Family

Bill and Effie had three daughters whom they raised in Saskatoon.  Their daughters – Helen Lucas, Diane Stratas, and Mary Geatros – lived as adults in Ontario.

Helen became an internationally recognized feminist artist whose paintings have been acquired by private and public collections.  In 1991, she received an Honorary Doctorate of Letters from York University.

Diane studied hotel resort administration at the Ryerson Institute of Technology (Toronto) and then returned to Saskatoon to serve as manager of the Ritz Hotel and Café.  She was also Saskatchewan’s regional coordinator for the Canadian Restaurant Association and served as secretary-treasurer for the national organization.  She moved to Toronto following her marriage.  In 1979, she was elected to the House of Commons as the Member of Parliament for Scarborough Centre.  During that term, she served as the Parliamentary Secretary to the Secretary of State.

Mary also moved to Toronto where she was an art curator for many years.  Later, she co-owned a highly successful home furnishings store, located in Toronto’s historic Yorkville area.

Bill and Effie Geatros in their garden, with their daughters: (left to right) Helen, Mary, and Diane (c. 1948)
Source: Family Photo Collection

Memorials and Recognition

Bill is remembered by two memorials donated by Effie and their three daughters.  The memorials are a stain-glass window (“Christ Blessing the Children”) at the west end and behind the baptismal font at St. John’s Cathedral in Saskatoon and a clock within a municipal landmark in Kastri, the village in Greece where Bill and Effie were born.

“Christ Blessing the Children”, St. John’s Cathedral, Saskatoon
Donated in Memory of Bill Geatros
Source: St. John’s Cathedral, Saskatoon


Agios Nikolaos Greek Orthodox Church with Geatros-donated clock in the tower on the right, Kastri, Greece
Source: Family Photo Collection

In 1984, Effie was one of five individuals who were recognized by Saskatoon’s Greek Community as “living pioneers”.   The recognition was part of an exhibit and celebration of the history of this city’s Greek community that was hosted by the Ukrainian Museum of Canada.

In 2021, Bill and Effie were recognized by Saskatoon’s Downtown Business Improvement District as “legends” who contributed to the historic vibrancy of Downtown Saskatoon.  A plaque was installed on a wall located where the former Ritz Hotel and Café stood.

Community Involvement

Besides being among the first generation of Greeks to settle in Saskatoon, Bill and Effie were active members and volunteers within the community.  They participated in activities which promoted and preserved Greek culture, assisted subsequent Greek immigrants to settle in the community, and supported fund-raising and other benevolent acts to support families and communities in Greece that had been devasted during World War II.  For example, Effie served as president of the Daughters of Penelope (Telemachus Chapter), a fraternal Greek women’s organization operating in Saskatoon.

Conclusion:


Bill Geatros (1946)
Source: W. L. West Photography Regina

Daughter Mary Geatros remembers Bill as a “people person” who often helped people in need.  He had many friends and many referred to him as “the unofficial Mayor of Saskatoon”.  He had no interest in running for political office.  He died too early in 1949.


Effie at the Ritz
Source: Family Photo Collection

Meanwhile, Effie began her life in Saskatoon by focusing on raising her daughters, managing her home, and creating gardens which attracted many admirers.  Her husband’s death forced her to redefine her life and take on the management of the family business where she worked until the day before she died.  Mary once asked Effie if she would consider retiring and moving to Toronto to be with her daughters and grandchildren.  Her reply was: “Why? These are my roots”.  With these words, Effie expressed her love for Saskatoon and its people who had given her and her family so much support and love.

This biography was researched and written by Bill and Effie’s nephew, Ken P. Pontikes.  Additional research material was provided by their daughter, Mary Geatros.  We thank their niece, Diane Pontikes, for her comments on the initial draft.

Sources: Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, March 21, 1941, p. 19; September 15, 1943, p. 3;  and July 12, 1949, p. 12; Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame, “Trap Shooting Archive”, https://sasksportshalloffame.com/sports/trap-shooting/.

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