The following is one in a series of student essays published by Hye Sharzhoom. If you have an essay about any aspect of Armenian life or culture that you would like to publish in Hye Sharzhoom, please contact Dr. Kaprielian in Social Science Room 216 or call her at 278-6493 or the Armenian Studies Program office at 278-2669.

By Aaron Carlson
John
Peloian was born in the mountainous village of Moosh and came to America
in 1912. His first destination in the United States was Ellis Island.
"Most of the Armenian farmers in the United States, settled in Fresno County,
for it was the opportunity in agriculture that brought them here." (1)
Armenians had much to do with the development of Fresno's agriculture.
They introduced several crops into the area: the Persian melon, Kassaba
melon, Diarbekir melon, the Turkish melon, and Armenian cucumber. They
also accounted for a large portion of the melon market in California.
After the Peloians settled in Fresno, John wanted to marry somebody from
the old country, so he wrote a letter to Adabazar requesting a bride. He
received a letter from a young lady (my future great-grandmother) by the
name of Stella Yeramian. In October 1920, Yeramian came through Ellis Island
to her final destination in Fresno. In a month Stella and John were married.
Their first residence in Fresno was 431 Van Ness Avenue just south of Ventura
Street. They owned their own home along with the house in the back which
they rented out to family and friends. Many of their neighbors also rented
their homes.
They had a long and loving marriage. The Armenian family was and is still
today an important institution. In most families the male was the dominant
force. In the Peloian marriage it was his mother, Sophia Peloian who was
the head of the family. She made the final decisions and everybody obeyed
her including Stella Peloian. The whole family respected her authority.
The Peloian marriage produced five children, all girls (Roxie, Jessie,
Freda, Louise, and Rebecca) They all lived in a 1,400 square foot house.
Eight persons lived in the house consisting of two bedrooms, a kitchen,
a living room and one bathroom. Two girls had to sleep on the sofa bed.
Growing up, the children were taught to be good and to respect their elders.
Their values have been passed down to their families.
John Peloian was a big man-he stood six feet three inches tall. He was
a well-known member of the Armenian Community in Fresno. He owned two grocery
stores in the downtown area, one on Van Ness Avenue across from the Courthouse
Park and the other at the corner of Van Ness and Fresno Street. They were
known as Parkwood Fruit Store and Company. William Saroyan mentions
going to Big John's grocery store in The Time of Our Life.
John also sold fruit at the Free Market on Fresno St. Each of the girls
would help set up for the freemarket before school and help pick up after
school. Since he had no boys, he made a big deal about his girls working
like boys. He was proud of his girls. During the Great Depression he lost
his stores, but continued selling fruit at the Free Market. Times
were tough for the Peloian family and the rest of the country, but John
Peloian always brought food home to feed his family. As for holidays Christmas
and Easter were big events. Holidays were reserved to be with the family
with plenty of food to eat. This has been carried down to our family gatherings.
There is always enough food to feed another family as well. Holidays are
always a big production with everybody providing a helping hand.
In 1964 the neighborhood changed drastically. The Peloian family was the
last to move from the neighborhood for the building of Freeway 41. About
the same time John Peloian passed away and the girls went off in their
own direction never staying too far from each other. Roxie, the oldest
married and stayed in the Fresno area. Next was Jessie who married and
moved to Visalia. The third daughter Freda (one of my interviewees) chose
not to marry and to live in Fresno. Next was Louise (my other interviewee)
my grandmother, who married and moved to the Cutler-Yettem area. Rebecca
also married and ended up living in Fowler. To this day they are very close.
Louise Peloian married Harry Majarian from Goshen, California, my grandfather.
She married at the young age of eighteen. They moved to the close-knit
Armenian community in Yettem. When a marriage is going to occur, the whole
community is invited. The same applies to graduations, birthdays, and deaths.
The community comes together to celebrate and to mourn. There is a sense
of family in the Armenian Community in Yettem.
There has been a long history of prejudice against Armenians in Fresno.
Many Fresnans felt Armenians were for the most part to be avoided and refused
as prospective neighbors. Armenians were excluded from many social
events. "Since Armenians were the most numerical of foreign-born peoples
and were concentrated in such large numbers relative to the total population
in Fresno, this high degree of prejudice against the Armenian groups developed."
(2) When prejudice against the Armenians was very intense, some Armenians
decided to establish the Triple X Fraternity, which is still active today
in the Armenian Community.
The Armenian church was a dominant force in the establishment of the Armenian
community in Fresno. It was important particularly to the first generation.
The second and third generations decided not to be involved in the church
as much as their parents.
The Armenian Settlement in Fresno is related to the settlement of other
ethnic groups in other cities. The Armenians generally would settle in
a community where other Armenians were already living. Usually in the less
desirable areas near the downtown section of town. In Fresno they entered
into the west side of Fresno in the older neighborhoods, on the southern
edge of the city's central business district. For other ethnic groups as
well as Armenians coming to a new country, it would be difficult. For the
Peloian Family there would be good times and bad times.. The good times
greatly outweighed the bad times.
(1) Minasian,
Armen Don. "Settlement Geography of Armenians in Fresno," The Armenian
Review. Vol. XXV, No. 3-99
(2) Ibid.
Oral interviews with Freda Peloian, Fresno, April 10, 1998 and Louise
Majarian, interviewed by Aaron Carlson.