ITALIANS
IN EVANSVILLE 1863 - 1918
This section is about
Italians in Evansville who were not related to my family.
Based on the
City Directories, which began in 1863 (City Directory
1863-1900), the first Italian names in Evansville were Cassinelli, Cerasola,
Cipello (Copello, Copelles), Lagomarsini, Benelli, and Moni. The details known
about these people can be seen at the links at the bottom of this page (OTHER
ITALIAN DETAILS and ROOTSWEB DATABASE). The first
family which we could trace was Urso; the port of entry was New Orleans, and
they came from Sicily. A Vincent Urso arrived in
Evansville in 1874 (there is evidence that he immigrated in 1854), and he is listed as a
sewing machine operator. That seems strange for a man from Italy,
and perhaps this is a hint to a more complex story. In the
following year, his mother Anna Domenica arrived, and Vincent
opened a business shown as "Dealer in Foreign & Domestic Fruits,
Confectioners, cigars, tobacco & c.; also Oyster Saloon, 25
Main". In 1876 a
Genaro Marsicanno arrived with his wife Pauline Urso, whose mother
was Anna Urso. (CENSUS 1880) Genaro and his brother-in-law
Vincent opened a business - Urso & Marsicano" - at the
corner of Main and Water Street. This business would survive
until at least 1918, although at different locations.
In the period 1873 - 1885 seven other Italian names
-Solimano, Gazelli, Bellise, Gazzolo, Celvini, Giorgio, Pirovino - show
up in Evansville, stay for one or two years, then disappear,
perhaps returning to Italy (as about 25% did) or finding economic opportunities elsewhere.
In 1885 the number of Italians
in Evansville began to accelerate; several names would appear in
the next few years and stay in Evansville for years (Amoroso,
Bechelli, Mancini, Toranelli), and others that would soon disappear -
Spugnardi, Bergamini, Liberatore. A descendant
of the Spugnardi family (from the state of Maine) recently contacted me
with a great deal of information about this family going back to the early 1800's
in Frosolone (Molise). Descendants of a quartet of Spugnardi brothers born in the
1830 -1840's ended up in Evansville, St. Joseph, Missouri, Louisville, Kentucky and
Connecticut in the 1890's. One of these brothers - Giuseppe - and his wife
Angela Liberatore arrived in the USA in 1882, showing up in Indianapolis,
Indiana. (There is some evidence that Giuseppe had first arrived in 1878, then
returned to Frosolone). The two moved to Brazil, Indiana in 1883, where
they apparently stayed until they moved to Evansville in 1887 along with others
in the Spugnardi and Liberatore families. In 1895 Giuseppe and Angela returned
to Brazil, Indiana, and the other Spugnardi and Liberatore families also left
Evansville. The Spugnardi lady that contacted me told me that she
has always had a "thing" about peanut brittle. Recently she discovered
that her great uncle and her great grandfather's brother's son had a recipe (in the original handwritten
format) for peanut brittle that was sold in a Spugnardi confectionary store in
St. Joseph, Missouri and Bowling Green, Kentucky in 1892.
In 1888-89 the first people known to be from Termini Immerese, Sicily (near Palermo) arrived: Bisessi and LaMantia, followed a
few years later by Farino and Florentino. (City Directory
1863-1900) (A Don Bisesi was, until
recently, the
golf pro at the Helfrich golf course in Evansville.) The LaRocca
family began to arrive in 1899 (Rocca and LaRocca in the
Directory). Joseph LaRocca arrived in 1889 and in the year 1900 lived in the same apartment
(25 John St.) as one of the Mancini family; a year later several of the LaMantia
family also moved into 25 John St. In 1904 Mary Miniello (my great aunt ) was a
bookkeeper for Joseph LaRocca & Bros. We tracked several of these Sicilian families - Dattilo and
LaRocca - (including families named Bova,
Cira, Scaletta, Panzica, Mascari, Lazzara, Cammarata) to show how much
some of these early immigrants moved around to find a place where
they could survive. Some of the Dattilo family moved to California; one of the children of these people (Bryan Dattilo) is currently a actor on one of the
well known soap operas. One of the early Dattilo children named Angelina married
a Mr. Seibert and one of her daughters - Judy - attended Mater Dei high school
at the same time I did (I did not know that Judy had an Italian background until
very recently). This Angelina Dattilo today lives near Sacred Heart; she has
been a font of knowledge about the Italians in Evansville in the early 1900's.
In fact, she knew my Minielli family very well; she said my great grandmother
and my two great aunts used to visit her mother frequently. Angelina lived on
Bond Street just a block away from the Minielli's on 3rd Avenue. Angelina also
knew the Minielli cousins (Luccitiello) and the Laurienzo's; both families lived
on Clark Street in the same neighborhood just north of downtown Evansville (the
old High Street area) north of Riverside, south of Division, west of Vine
Street, east of Fulton Avenue.
The LaMantia family also moved around - according to Antonio
LaMantia's great
granddaughter, Antonio and Vincent left Evansville in 1906, changed their name to Rinella
(also in Evansville in 1905), and moved to Lima, Ohio City
Directory
1901-1918) The Rinella
family moved with the LaMantia's to Ohio. John LaMantia remained in Evansville
until 1909. I stopped tracing the LaMantia's at that point ( about 1999).
In early 2007, a woman from Kansas City, Missouri named Carolyn contacted me and
said she was helping her nephew Charles trace his LaMantia ancestors. After many
months of digging through Indiana and Missouri Census, birth, baptism, and
immigration data, I discovered that another of the LaMantia's, Joseph, had one
child (Maria) in Evansville in 1988 with his wife Ignazia Bisesi. A
Liboria Bisesse appeared as a godmother to the Lamantia baby. In the early
1890's they disappeared from Evansville. I also discovered that there was a
Salvatore Bisesse who appeared in the City Directory in 1888 and an August
Bisesi in the 1900 Indianapolis Census. I found a Liboria Bisesi who had married
Anthony Sansone and they appeared in the 1900 Census in Kansas City, Missouri. I
also found Joseph LaMantia and Ignazia Bisesi in the 1900 and1910 Census in
Kansas City. After finding and comparing multiple birth and death records, I had
connected Caro's nephew Charles to Joseph LaMantia who was in Evansville. Joseph's father
Antonio LaMantia (wife Maria Aglieri-Rinella) was born in Sicily in 1820. I had not
cleared up the Bisesi side of his family - the August Bisesi in Indianapolis,
the Salvatore Bisesse in the Evansville 1888 City Directory, and where did
Ignazia Bisesi (Charles's grandmother) come from, and who was Liboria Bisesi.
In early 2008, a man named Mark Johnson from South Carolina (a Bisesi descendant) contacted me and wanted to compare Bisesi data. His family had lived in Virgina/Pennsylvania/Ohio, Michigan, and Iowa. After a few weeks I discovered that the Ignazia and Liboria Bisesi that had been in Evansville and Kansas City were in fact sisters and were children of Mark's grandfather's brother, Girolamo Agostino Bisesi, who had died in Kansas City in 1916. Still unidentified were the Salvatore Bisesse who was in the 1888 Evansville City Directory and the August Bisesi who was in the 1900 Indianpolis Census. At this at this writing - 2008, I am fairly sure that this August Bisesi will turn out to be an Girolammo Agostino Bisesi who was a cousin to Mark's great-grandfather, and the Salvatore Bisesse will be Mark's grandfather's brother. Salvatore's appearance in Evansville in 1888 is most likely tied to his cousin, Ignazia Bisesi, and the birth of her first child. Her sister Liboria was the godmother at this child's baptism at Assumption Church.
Another of the Italian families that
exemplifies "moving around" was the Pusateri/Arrigo family. Liborio
Pusateri showed up for the first time in the Evansville City Directory in 1902.
We found two of his children (his wife was Josepha/Giuseppa Arrigo) in the
Assumption Baptism records for 1899 and 1902).
Liborio did not show up in the 1903 Directory. I received a letter
(April 2001) from a Liborio Pusateri Jr. who is currently living in Brugherio, Italy (near Milan). He said that the
Liborio first mentioned above was his grandfather. Apparently Liborio and
Josepha had three children in New York (one of which was Fillipo, the father of
the Liborio Jr. that wrote to me), then moved to Evansville in late
1899. When the elder Liborio died in Evansville in 1903, the entire family
returned to Termini Imerese. Eventually two of the sisters married and returned
to the USA (Cleveland, Ohio and Portland, Oregon), and the rest of the
family (Josepha Arrigo, Fillipo and the other two sisters) moved to Rome.
Liborio Jr. eventually moved to Brugherio in Italy. There were 2-3 Arrigo families in
Evansville at that time, and I do not know how they were related. One of them,
Giuseppe, continues to appear in the City Directory until at least 1915. I do
know that there are still some people named Arrigo in the Evansville Area.
The Mancini family maintained the
fruit store mentioned earlier for many years. The store, initially at 507 Main,
diversified into two stores - one for each brother Michele (504 Main) and Antonio
(715 Main) - then was reduced to one store at 603 Main when Antonio Mancini died. It
eventually ended up at 621 Main Street, where I knew it to be when I was a child
(two doors from Kay Jewelers). During the 1920's and early 1930's, the store was
run by Michele and two of his children - John and Madeline. When Michele died in
1933, John and Madeline maintained the store until 1962 when John died. The
store remained open until 1964, presumably run by Madeline.
One of the people that the Mancini's hired to work at their store was a Dominic
Amoroso. A member of the Amoroso family recently (June, 2002) contacted me from
Connecticut. He told me that Dominic Amoroso (from Petrella Tifernina, Molise) and
his wife, Giovanna Bucci (Luceto, Molise), came to Evansville in 1905 because he
had a promise from the Mancini brothers that he
would have a job at the store. This promise was passed on to him by Vincenzo Amoroso, his uncle, already in
Evansville, married to Teresa Mancini. Within a few months of Dominic's arrival, the
Mancini's gave the job to a recently-arrived Mancini family member, leaving
Dominic without a job. He started a barber shop which apparently didn't prosper,
then went to work for his Uncle Vincenzo. Apparently unable to make a go of it
in Evansville, Dominic and his wife left in 1912 for New Britain, Connecticut,
where other members of the Amoroso family lived.
Speaking of the Mancini family, one of Antonio's daughters - Maria Magdelena - married a Michelangelo Fasciano from New York. They lived in New York for a few years, then returned to Evansville. Michelangelo's son Michael started a restaurant in 1929 named the Venice Cafe at 107 NW 3rd Street. I remember eating there several times when I was young. When Michael died in 1937, his wife Belle ran the restaurant for a while. My aunt Betty Minielli tells me she knew Elizabeth (born Maria Lucia) Fasciano very well since they were both legal secretaries), and that Belle's son Clifford Arden (who was an official of some local union) ran the restaurant. In 2003 a descendant (living in Kansas) of one of the Fasciano children contacted me and we exchanged quite a few E-Mails discussing the Mancini-Fasciano family, the fruit store on Main Street, and the Venice Cafe. He directed me to his uncle who still lives in Evansville; the uncle and I had several phone conversations. He cleared up a few historical questions I had about the Fasciano family and the Venice Cafe.
ROOTSWEB and GENCIRCLES DATABASES: A more complete and searchable view of all data including Birth,
Death, Immigration, Children, Baptisms, Marriage Dates, Other Notes,
Naturalization Data. Return to this Web Site by clicking on the hyperlink
ITALIANS IN EVANVILLE at the bottom of each Rootsweb page.
This data is also available at a GenCircles
database (which I recommend over the Rootsweb database),. which has the
advantage of not automatically inserting the word LIVING for all dates after
1930. To return to this web site from GENCIRCLES, use the Back Button.
05/19/2008
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