From Chios to New York: A Family Story of Arrival and Work
A sample oral history about migration from the islands to New York and the work that sustained the first generation.
A Virtual Museum
A virtual museum dedicated to the immigrant experience, from departure and arrival to labor, family, faith, and community formation in the United States.
The Hellenic Heritage Project is a digital museum devoted to the history of Greek immigration to the United States. It is meant to preserve the memory of those who left villages, islands, and towns behind and entered a new world through ports such as Ellis Island, often with little more than a suitcase, a baptismal cross, or an introduction to a cousin already here.
This project centers on the actual experience of migration: the journey, the paperwork, the inspections, the fear of exclusion, the search for work, the first rented room, the first church, the first paycheck, and the difficult work of building a family and a future in America.
Through stories, artifacts, photographs, and historical interpretation, the museum aims to preserve not just official history but lived memory.
A sample oral history about migration from the islands to New York and the work that sustained the first generation.
Artifacts explain what census tables and official records often leave out. A lunch cart, a tool, a photograph, or a prayer book can say more about immigrant life than a stack of statistics.
Browse artifactsA period hot dog cart that reflects the street-level labor and entrepreneurial life of immigrant New York.
Economic and social pressures helped push larger numbers of Greek migrants toward the United States.
Ellis Island became a defining symbol of entry for millions of immigrants, including Greeks.
Restaurants, lunch rooms, and street vending became visible paths of immigrant labor and mobility.