Dracos was born in New Orleans to Creole educator Jean Baptiste Michael Dracos Dimitry and Sophia Powers. He was their fifth child and his mother Sophia was around 41 years old when he was born. His parents were involved in an interracial marriage and Dracos' grandmother was
Marianne Celeste Dragon. His father was called Michael Dracos Dimitry and finished Georgetown University in 1856. Both his parents had a successful women's school entitled the
Orleans Female Academy (1842-1871) and his uncle
Alexander Dimitry was the first superintendent of education in Louisiana. Dracos' uncle Alexander was also the first
person of color to hold that position and the first person of color to be the United States Ambassador to Costa Rica and Nicaragua. From an early age, Dracos was educated by his parents. Due to their African heritage, the Dimitry family underwent countless hardships of racism during the 19th century. The family chose to pass as white as a legal solution and for their safety specifically during the Jim Crow era. Two major court cases were filed dealing with the family's racial ethnicity entitled
Forstall, f.p.c. v. Dimitry (1833) and
Pandelly v. Wiltz (1854). Dracos' first cousin was
George Pandely. On March 28, 1853, Pandely ran for the position of assistant alderman in New Orleans, a role similar to a city council member. He won the election but he was removed from office when several members of the city of New Orleans presented evidence of his African heritage in a local Newspaper which eventually reached national headlines. It was illegal for people of African descent to hold political office. Pandely sued his accusers soon after and was able to pretend he was descended from a Native American chief's daughter of the Alibamu tribe named Malanta Talla to maintain his social status. The incident became known as the
Pandelly Affair. During the Jim Crow era, the family was further forced to appease the growing pressures of racial segregation. They denounced their African heritage and
passed as white. Most of the notable members of the family fought for the Confederacy including his older brother Theodore John Dimitry,
Alexander Dimitry,
Charles Patton Dimitry,
John Bull Smith Dimitry, and
George Pandely. Alexander's wife's first cousin
Robert Mills Lusher was a proponent of racial segregation in schools. During the final year of Republican occupation in the South in 1877, Dracos was listed as a private in the
Louisiana National Guard Company C of the First Crescent City Regiment which was formerly known as the
White League. The painting entitled
Marianne Celeste Dragon Dimitry completed between 1790 and 1800 by
José Francisco Xavier de Salazar y Mendoza was donated by Dracos' sister Mary Celeste to the
Louisiana State Museum regrettably the subject their grandmother was whitened. Luckily historians were able to recompose the original image and show her true characteristics and complexion. Dracos married his first cousin
Virginia Ruth Dimitry's daughter Lizzie D. Ruth who was his second cousin. His first cousin George Pandely also married his first cousin. Pandelly was also the superintendent of the
Pontchartrain Railroad and by the 1880s Dracos was listed as the railroad station agent for Carencro and eventually also managed the stations at Jeanerette, and New Iberia, he was a station agent for most of his life. His older brother Theodore John Dimitry was also affiliated with railroad companies. ==Later life==