|
From Escalante to the
Railroad: 1776 - 1869
Father Escalante was the first documented European
to visit Utah, in 1776.
We can include Father Escalante in our Italian
heritage because, although he was a Spaniard, he was a Franciscan friar, which
is the order founded by St Francis of Assisi. The headquarters of the Order were
and are in Rome.
 
Father Eusebio Kino, the Jesuit who built the
first mission in Arizona in 1687, was born in Italy near Trento.
Also, many Jesuit Fathers who started their
missions in the West in the late 1700, were Italians.
Therefore,
the relevant Italian influence in the history of the West, prior to the Mormon
colonization, is well documented.
The Peak Of Immigration: 1870
- 1915
UTAH
PECULIARITY 
The Italian
immigrants who settled in Utah faced a strange, nebulous environment. Their
numbers were relatively small, yet they settled in four major counties and
contributed to the life and labor that characterizes Utah history. These
immigrants, almost all of them confined to mining and railroad centers, brought
with them language, religion, beliefs, and customs, products of cultural
distinctiveness.
WHEN, WHO,
AND WHY THEY IMMIGRATED
The
primary forces motivating Italian migration at its height from 1880 to 1920 were
overpopulation, agricultural depressions, and discontent among the contadini,
the "peasants." The United States was in a position to receive the
newcomers. Technological advances in the country, railroad expansion, and new
demands for coal and ores created a need for unskilled labor. These conditions
in Italy and in the United States led to the emigration of millions of Italians
to America.
The great
exodus of emigrants is one of the most striking features of Italy's modem
history.

THE FIRST AND
SECOND WAVE OF IMMIGRANTS
The northern
Italians for long time
had adapted themselves to seasonal migrations but had
mostly
returned to Italy. The early emigrants who left the country permanently in the
early 1800 were
businessmen, intellectuals, skilled laborers and artists,
casual wanderers or political refugees, mainly from the North.
Instead, the second, much
bigger wave of immigrants from Italy (1880-1920), involved mostly people from
the South.
The
Risorgimento, Italy's national revival, culminated in the unification of
the country in 1870. Despite the term "unification," a political and cultural
divisiveness continued to exist between the industrial-prosperous North and the
agrarian-poor South. The distinction between northerners and southerners found
its way to the United States. Until restrictive legislation was passed in the
early twenties, the Immigration Bureau issued separate statistics for each
group. The mass migration consisted mainly of southern Italians and began in the
late 1880s and early 1890s.3
From the
middle of the 1800 and extending into the early 1900, Italy's population
increased markedly. At the same time, an agricultural depression occurred;
foreign markets for grapes and citrus fruits were lost to southern Italian
farmers. Thousands were left destitute.
The South,
Mezzogiorno, was the neglected portion of Italy. The lack of industry and
the dependence upon agriculture confined the southern contadini to a
harsh life. Further, an "agricultural backwardness" existed in the South. This
backwardness, resulted from "climate, water scarcity, seismic phenomena, floods,
deforestation, depleted soil fertility, lack of roads, archaic methods of
cultivation, the latifondi ("large estates"), taxation, usury, bondage,
and corrupt administration of civic affairs.
The
contadini, left poor and desperate, were attracted by emigration posters
and agents and looked to new lands. These people, mostly from the Abruzzi,
Calabria, and Sicily, in contrast to northerners, had never traveled beyond
their village.5
WHY UNITED
STATES
Northern
Italians wandered to European countries and to South America, mainly Argentina
and Brazil, mostly
for seasonal work. However, from 1860 to 1870, Argentina was beset with
political disturbances, a financial crisis, and war with Paraguay; consequently,
southern Italians wanting to emigrate looked away from South America toward the
United States.6
Another
decisive factor in turning their attention to the United States was the "myth of
America." The myth embodied fact, fable, romance, and imagination, and
culminated in the Horatio Alger dream of "rags to riches." This myth of America
has always been one of the principal incentives for emigration; and the myth, in
turn, has been perpetuated and modified by the experiences of the immigrants in
their actual contact with the New World.7
WHY THEY
IMMIGRATED
Once
the tide of immigration began, the momentum continued. Additional factors added
fuel to the fire. From 1884 to 1887 a cholera epidemic in southern Italy forced
many people to evacuate the area. The Italian government had been inconsistent
toward the exodus from the country, at times indifferent, at times deploring it.8
By 1888 it recognized the benefits of relieving the population pressure and
passed a law that not only allowed Italians to migrate but actually encouraged
it.
The United
States became the major magnet to attract the Italians. Ellis Island in New
York, the main immigration station, received as many as fifteen thousand
Italians a day. Steamships, whose steerage rate from Naples to the United States
rose from fifteen dollars in 1880 to twenty-eight dollars in 1900,9
brought in thousands of individuals, packed in compact areas of the vessels.
From 1900 to 1910, during a high point of industrial expansion, 2,104,309
Italians arrived in the country.10
WHY UTAH
The first
waves of Italians settled in the industrial centers of the East, but as
immigrants continued to arrive, congestion resulted. Opportunities became
scarce; consequently, new arrivals often looked to the American West, and many
to the state of Utah.
The West in
the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was an area of expansion.
Railroad and mining industries were growing at such a rate that demand was high
for unskilled laborers. Italian immigrants came to fill that demand.
The
environment in Utah was also changing at the turn of the century. Population
growth, increasing urbanization, the importance of mining and manufacturing, as
well as an expansion in trade and transportation, all contributed to change the
economic and social life of Utah during the first decade of 1900. Utah did not
attract a great number of Italians; yet, they were one of the largest
foreign-born groups of southern and eastern European stock in the state. They
settled, for the most part, in Carbon, Salt Lake, Weber, and Tooele counties.
THE FIRST
ITALIANS IN UTAH
WALDESIANS
The
first noticeable number of foreign-born Italians in Utah appeared in 1870 and
totaled seventy-four.13 These early immigrants, Protestant Vaudois of
the Waldensian persuasion from northwest Italy, were the result of Mormon
missionary activity in Italy from 1849 to 1861. Almost all settled in the
fertile areas of Ogden where they began to farm.
TORONTO
Joseph
Toronto, who had given Brigham Young $2,500 of his savings to help build the
Mormon
temple
in Nauvoo, Illinois, assisted Lorenzo Snow in the founding of the Italian
Mission in 1849.14 A Latter-day Saints publication stated that
Emigration was a factor keeping the membership of the Italian mission and
its successors small. At the time of its amalgamation with the Swiss Mission in
1854 there were three branches, sixty-four members, and records of fifty
emigrations to Utah.15
THE SECOND
WAVE ON ITALIANS IN UTAH
However,
the majority of Italian immigrants were attracted to Utah for its labor
opportunities in mining and railroading.
The first
Italian laborers, predominantly from the North, began arriving in Utah in the
late 1890s in response to the opening of the Carbon County coalfields. The
development and expansion of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad into Utah in the
1880s was a catalyst to the state's coal mining industry. Four major camps
emerged: Clear Creek (1882), Winter Quarters (1882), Castle Gate (1888), and
Sunnyside (1900)16 Many of these early laborers were lured to Utah by
agents representing coal companies.17 A newspaper article concerning
the camp at Castle Gate reported that Italian miners came in groups as contract
laborers did. It read: "About fifty Italians have arrived in town, presumably to
work in the mines here or at Sunnyside."18
Throughout
the United States early Italian labor was furnished by a padrone, a boss
who would exact tribute from an immigrant in return for employment. The system
was nationwide.19 Although Greeks in Utah were subjected to a Greek
padrone, the Italian experience remains unclear.20 The
possibility that a single Italian padrone existed is remote; rather, it
is possible that various padroni of limited influence might have existed
at one time or another. Later arrivals, however, were "called" by friends and
relatives to come to Utah where employment was readily available. A paucity of
source material may forever preclude a definitive study of the padrone
system in Utah.
WHERE IN UTAH
& QUALITY OF LIFE
Upon
their arrival in Carbon County, the immigrants settled in one of the four main
camps, usually Castle Gate or Sunnyside. The coal companies (Pleasant Valley
Coal and Utah Fuel) furnished a few of the workers with company-owned houses on
company-owned property and compelled the laborer to trade at the company-owned
stores.21 Trading at company stores was inevitable, since miners were
issued scrip instead of currency. The company town became a prominent feature of
western mining life. These towns have been glorified and condemned, but
immigrants who lived in them were subjected to horrible living conditions. For
example, the rent charged by Utah Fuel Company depended on the number of rooms
in a house. In one boxcar on company property a cloth curtain was used to divide
it into two quarters. When company inspectors approached, a family member would
tear down the partition in order to be charged for one room instead of two.22
In describing the camp at Sunnyside, a writer has stated:
“many put up tents in the southern part of the
canyon, and this section became known as "Rag Town" by local residents.
Company-owned houses were hastily erected framed structures, not plastered
inside, but about 1915 the company began a program of building better homes and
modernizing the town.”23
The majority of the residents of Rag Town were
Italian immigrants.
SALT LAKE
COUNTY
The mining
and railroad opportunities in Salt Lake County also attracted Italian immigrants
at the turn of the century. Italian laborers funneled into the mining town of
Bingham. As early as 1880 there were thirty-five in the camp, mostly
Piedmontese, who were called "Short Towns" because of their stocky builds.24
Bingham was a bustling community of many diverse nationalities, described
as "a town of 22 saloons and 600 sporting girls."25 Like Carbon
County, Bingham was susceptible to labor strife. The Utah Copper Company,
incorporated in June 1903, became the foremost employer of residents of Bingham
Canyon.26
Towns that
were dependent upon mining and smelting companies developed in Magna, Garfield,
and Murray. Northwest of present-day Magna, a Little Italy grew west of Jap Town
and Greek Town. According to long-time residents of the town, in 1914 there were
approximately twenty-five families and a few single men living in the area.
Little Italy was:
...just a bunch of shacks that they built
themselves. I mean, you built your own shack, and the copper company let you
build your shack there...No bathrooms, of course, we had to use the number three
tub...It was usually a single-boarded shack, you know. Some of them had sheet
iron roof on them, and then covered with tarpaper, you know. And single board,
that's pretty rough, you know, in those winters.27
Garfield, a
town of the American Smelting and Refining Company, was remembered by one
immigrant as follows:
He [his brother] was working Garfield. They went
over there and never had no houses, they had a boxcar. Him and his brother was
to live on a boxcar over there. In the morning they never had no dishes, they
had coffee can. And they fill up the coffee can with milk, coffee, and eat some
bread, and that is all the breakfast they had.28
In Murray,
Italians were also employed by the American Smelting and Refining Company.
A later
center of Italian settlement was Salt Lake City, with a residential and
boardinghouse district on the west side of the city. By 1900, 102 of the 170
Italians who resided in the county lived in Salt Lake.29 Immigrants
were employed by the Union Pacific and the Denver & Rio Grande Western
railroads; but Italians also owned saloons, grocery stores, and tailor shops.
The lack of a mining town atmosphere with its potentially explosive character
differentiated Salt Lake City and Ogden from other Italian localities. In Salt
Lake, Italians took part in celebrations and parades that promoted good will
between the Italian and non-Italian communities.
TOOELE
In Tooele
County, which began as a Mormon farming community but later developed mining and
smelting industries, immigrant labor was in demand. The three main mining areas
were Stockton, Ophir, and Mercur. The largest settlement of Italians was in
Mercur, according to an article in Il Minatore, a Salt Lake Italian
newspaper. In 1904 a Catholic church was erected in the town.30 At
the Tooele smelter later arrivals found employment; and immigrants, mostly
southern and eastern Europeans, who eventually settled in Tooele established a
section of the town known as New Town.
OGDEN
Italian
converts to the Mormon church had arrived in Ogden in the 1850s and 1860s, many
of them in handcart companies. The greater number of Italians, however, lived in
the Ogden area to work on section gangs for the Union Pacific, Oregon Short
Line, and the Lucin to Corinne route of the Southern Pacific. There were also
Italian farmers working the fertile lands in north Ogden; several owned dairies.
Italian
involvement in labor is significant since immigrants were the core of Utah's
labor force.
LABOR
DISPUTES
Utah's
first important experience with labor strife occurred in the 1903 Carbon County
strike that involved, predominantly, Italian miners. The strike was called by
the United Mine Workers in connection with the coal mining strike in Colorado.
Pleasant Valley Coal Company Vice-President G. W. Kramer, speaking of the
Italians, said:
The Castle Gate mine is what we might call an
Italian mine because of the large number of Italians there to the number of
other miners. At Castle Gate there are 356 Italians, 108 English speaking,
Austrians 10.
This is not true, however, at the other mines. At
Sunnyside there are 358 English, 246 Italians, 222 Austrians;
at Clear Creek, 128 Finns, 172 Italians, 95
English speaking;
at Winter Quarters, 181 English speaking, 126
Finns, 74 Italians and a few others.31
In addition,
Kramer asserted that he wanted to make the Castle Gate mine an English-speaking
mine. The Italian miners were the initially dissatisfied group.
The strike
received wide press coverage and left readers with a more intensified,
stereotyped image of the Italian immigrant as a bloodthirsty, nonwhite,
stiletto-in-hand villain. In reference to non-foreign miners who wanted work, an
editorial in the Deseret Evening News stated:
And if English speaking men come forward in
sufficient numbers, they will not be required to labor in company with
foreigners of the class that has become obnoxious and objectionable.32
The News
revealed the fears of radical influence prevalent in the country:
The fact is indisputable that among the strikers
are many red-handed anarchists who respect no law and feel it a sort of
religious duty to exterminate and destroy all opponents...So long as this class
has a respected voice in the strikers councils the presence of the militia will
be necessary to prevent a reign of terror.33
CARLO DEMOLLI
Much of the
above editorial was leveled against Charles (Carlo) Demolli, who was sent by the
UMW from Colorado to Utah and put in charge of organizing the Italian miners.
Charles
Demolli, born in Brussels, Belgium, in 1870 of Italian parents, was educated at
the Institute of Milan, served three years in the Italian army, and later worked
in the silk mills of Como. While at Como, he was involved in the 1895 strike and
revolution there and was exiled from Italy. He then emigrated to the United
States, wrote for Italian-language newspapers in the East on Socialist topics,
and worked in the coalmines of Pennsylvania. Demolli made his way to Colorado
where he founded Il Lavoratore Italiano that became the organ of the UMW
among the Italians. The Salt Lake Herald characterized Demolli as a
"silver-tongued" speaker "whose influence with his fellow countrymen is so
feared by the Utah Fuel Company officials...with his level head, shrewd
judgment, college education, suave manner and great magnetism, he is regarded as
one of the strongest men affiliated with the United Mine Workers and he is
idolized by his followers".34
Demolli
indeed proved to be an influential factor in leading the Italian strikers. The
following are excerpts from an interview conducted with an old-time resident of
Helper, Utah:
PN What in your opinion, what was the main
grievance between the miners and the company?
JD The main grievance was the miners wanted a
union. That was, they weren't fighting for wages or anything, they wanted the
right to organize. And, of course, the companies refused it, see. There was
another one by the name
of. . .one of the best organizers that the union had.
PN An Italian organizer?
JD Yeah.
PN Charles Demolli?
JD Demolli. Charles Demolli stayed with my mother
and dad.
PN Really!
JD Yeah. Charlie Demolli when he was here boarded
with mother and dad.
PN Did your father ever tell you what kind of man
Charles Demolli was?
JD ...Both mother and dad thought he was a hell of
a swell guy. He was more or less a little bit on the radical side. He was kind
of an anarchist. Charlie Demolli was a real fine person and... everybody, all
the old timers, knew him. In fact, my dad said he had more guts than all,
anybody he ever saw. When he went to Scofield...he was suppose to go up there
and talk to the miners up there. And they [company guards] told him when he got
up there they were going to throw him in jail. You know how he got into
Scofield? He got into Scofield in a breadbox.35
Demolli,
while dodging company guards and becoming involved with much litigation in the
courts, was able to articulate his prolabor views most effectively to his
paesani by addressing them in Italian. The lack of more complete source
material dealing with Demolli's activities in Utah is unfortunate, since his
leadership among the state's Italians in 1903-4 might very well parallel that of
Italian organizers who labored in the East. The placing of Demolli in the state
by the UMW is evidence of union efforts to organize the Italian population.
Nevertheless, the strike and unionization were lost.
LABOR
MOVEMENTS - BONACCI
The majority
of Italians involved in the Utah labor movement were northern Italians who had
an industrial and social base for unionization. However, reports and articles
concerning the strikes in Murray (1908), at Doyle and Schwartz Company (1910),
Utah Fire Clay Company (1910), and Utah Copper Company in Bingham Canyon (1912),
and in Carbon County (1922 and 1933), attest to continued activity in labor by
Italians.36 The leading figure in the long fight for unionization of
the Carbon County coal mines was Frank Bonacci, an immigrant from southern
Italy.
Strike
participation is typical of other southern and eastern European groups because
these immigrants were the unskilled labor force necessary for the development of
Utah's railroading and mining industries.
REASONS FOR
DISSATISFACTION OF MINERS
Immigrant
laborers, then, became susceptible to union organizing and were embroiled in the
strife that accompanied demands for workers' rights. Leaders such as Demolli had
only to point out coal company abuses, such as the underweighing of coal taken
from the mines. In addition, miners were issued tags that they would tie on cars
filled with the coal they had mined. When many of these cars were raised to the
surface of the mine, "American" miners would remove the immigrants' tags and
replace them with their own, thus perplexing the immigrant laborer as to why he
was not receiving his full pay. Such abuses, often supported by the companies,
added credence to the rhetoric of organizers and strike leaders. Italian women,
especially in the 1903 strike, supported their men by marching in parades of
protest against the company, an incredible sight to non-Italians.37
BECOMING
FARMERS
Labor
violence and abuses led many Italians to leave mining and start businesses of
their own or turn to farming. After the 1903 strike, Italians left Castle Gate,
a number of them settling in farms along the Price River and many more starting
anew in the town of Helper. This group of Italians broke from the labor ranks by
utilizing business as a means of social mobility. Numerous immigrants had been
apprenticed in various trades in the old country, and once an economic base had
been achieved, they left the mines or railroads and embarked upon their craft.
This was particularly evident in Salt Lake City and Ogden where shoe shops and
tailor shops, as well as grocery stores and taverns, sprang up in Italian
residential areas.
A 1913 guide
for Italian immigrants mentions Italian farmers in Utah enjoying good success in
the fertile valleys near the Great Salt Lake. Farmers in areas of Carbon County,38
Ogden, and Salt Lake City engaged in growing many varieties of fruits and
vegetables. In Salt Lake this produce was often trucked to the Grower's Market
on West Temple and Fifth South.
RANCHERS
Italian goat
ranchers in Carbon, Tooele, and Salt Lake counties found Utah adaptable for
herding their
animals. As early as 1902, a Utah newspaper reported an Italian starting a
goat-raising business in Castle Gate.39 A rancher in Salt Lake County
shipped most of his cheese and meat products outside the state, but also
traveled to Bingham with his wagon affollato ("crowded"), shouting
"ricotta, formaggio, crapa !"40 This goat milk curd, cheese, and goat
meat were eagerly purchased by Italian and Greek miners?foods that were
reminders of their southern European cultures.
DISCRIMINATION - NATIVISM
Life
in Utah was indeed a new experience, but Italian immigrants, maintaining
continuity with the past yet accommodating to the new environment, discovered,
in the words of Alexander De Conde, that it was mezzo amara, mezzo dolce
("half bitter, half sweet''). The bitterness commenced from the outset as
Italians met antiforeign sentiment?nativism .41
Nativism in
Utah began with an ignorance of Italian culture and was compounded by Italian
participation in the 1903 strike and stereotyped images presented in numerous
press reports, both nationally and locally. A typical example was a newspaper
article entitled: "Whisky, Knives, and Bad Blood."42 As early as
1893, the Building Trades Congress reported at their meeting of June 10 that the
Culmer Jennings Paving Company o f
Salt Lake City was employing "dagoes" and passed a motion to communicate to the
city council, asking them to remedy the "dago" situation by insisting that the
company abide by their contract to employ "white men."43 The above
factors were combined with a Mormon genealogical doctrine that classed peoples
as either of the House of Israel (Mormons believed they were from the lineage of
Ephraim) or Gentiles. England, Germany, Norway, Switzerland, Denmark, Sweden,
Holland, and Belgium were said to be the countries containing "a considerable
number of the blood of Israel amongst their people which must be gathered."44
Although some Protestant Italians did convert to Mormonism and emigrate to Utah,
southern Europeans were classified as Gentiles.
Newspaper
reports and editorials of the early quarter of the century are replete with
anti-Italian, antiforeign sentiments. In Lucile Richens's "Social History of
Sunnyside," she states:
I was raised with a whole hearted contempt for
Greeks, Italians, and other southern Europeans who lived there...Intermarriage
with foreigners was considered almost as bad as death. If they had become
Americanized it was not so bad.45
Thus,
children instilled with hatreds and prejudices for "foreigners" grew to
perpetuate further the notion of the inferiority of southern and eastern
European immigrants.
A
1914-15 thesis, entitled "On the Housing Problem in Salt Lake City," was
submitted and approved by the Sociology Department of the University of Utah.
The study began as an investigation of housing on Salt Lake's west side but
ended as an undocumented degradation of southern and eastern Europeans,
primarily Italians and Greeks:
The Greeks and Italians are perhaps the most
careless and shiftless people found...Comfort to them is unknown unless it is in
the form of a smoke by the fire or a drink. Not only is this true of the
hundreds of men who rent a house for themselves...but of the families as
well...The standard of living among them [Italians] is lower than of any other
nationality.46
The author
also noted:
Of all people that do not have sufficient
recreation, the Italians are by far the worst off. They seem to have no
initiative or resources of their own...They lack a fighting and persevering
spirit that might lead them to a better life. Even the children attending school
are tortured and left out of the play of other children.47
The writer
failed to recognize the initiative needed to emigrate from one's mother country.
Oral interviews have substantiated her assertion concerning Italian children.
JL We had to fight in our schools. When we went to
school, they just had us in there, because I don't know why, but the kids.., if
you ever wanted to talk to one of the girls why you thought.
MLSome punk
would come along and tell you you couldn't...black men couldn't talk to that
girl. .
JL They wouldn't dance with you.
ML Couldn't even play ring-around-the-rosey...the
girl would [n't] drop the beanbag. Christ, you never had the beanbag dropped
behind you...
JL Never got a Valentine in my life at school.
ML Neither did I.
JL Never one Valentine. Yes, that's right.48
Another
Italian related that as a child, he was ashamed to admit to his friends that he
ate spaghetti.49
From
WW1 to WW2 - 1915-1945
TORN BETWEEN
TWO CULTURES
Parents and
children were torn between two cultures. American society demanded the adoption
of "American" customs (and the English language), but the home was centered
about Italian customs, food, language, religion, and the teachings of parents.
Compulsory education laws after World War I made Italians feel that their
language and backgrounds were viewed as inferior. This proved contradictory
because immigrants were told that America was the land of many peoples;
therefore, they often wondered, under these pressures to Americanize,50
just what constituted the ideal prototype of an American? The prejudices
and discrimination they experienced provided negative examples.
Antiforeign
sentiment reached a peak in the 1920s. In regard to the 1922 strike in Carbon
County, one newspaper article asked, "Is Carbon County a Part of the State of
Utah or is It a South European Dependency?" It continued: "Hundreds of
Red-Blooded American Men with Families want to Know why they Have to Submit to
the Blatant Lawlessness Effrontry of South European Domination."51
These attitudes led to the formation of the Ku Klux Klan in Utah. Klan activity,
at a peak in 1924 and 1925, manifested itself in parades, demonstrations, and
threats. A fiery cross was burned at Helper in September 1924, with hooded
Klansmen seen in the vicinity of the Mormon church.52 In 1925
articles of incorporation of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan were filed in Salt
Lake City by W. M. Cortner, Harry B. Sawyer, and L. W. Taverner.
KKK
The doctrines
of the Utah Klan were similar to those of other branches, "...to uphold
Americanism, advance Protestant Christianity, and eternally maintain white
supremacy."53
Klan activity
reached a high point in Salt Lake City in 1925. In retaliation to a municipal
antimask law, the Klan instigated a measure that resulted in the banning of
false whiskers worn by Santa Clauses during Christmas time. The first state
convention in 1925 was held at Ensign Peak, north of the city, with burning
crosses illuminating the area.54 In that same year the Klan was
active in Magna, Bingham, and Provo, as well as in areas of Carbon County.
The Ku Klux
Klan of Utah created tension, anger, and fear. Many immigrants lived in a state
of uncertainty. They became concerned at the possibility of Klan lynchings and
violence, such as existed in the neighboring state of Colorado. In response to
these tensions, nationalities banded together for mutual aid. Individuals were
unsure of what the Klan was trying to achieve; their impulse was to steer clear.
When asked who the Klan members were, one immigrant replied, "Well if he tell
you this is a Ku Klan you say goodbye, you never talk to him any more. That is
it."55
In Magna,
children, many of them Greek and Italian, watched a Klan parade down Main Street
en route to the Gem theatre for a meeting. As the robed and hooded order passed,
the children recognized a local resident who walked with a distinguishable limp.
The children shouted "You can't fool us! There goes old Joe Ferris."56
The tensions created in Utah by the Klan culminated in the lynching of Robert
Marshall, a Negro "accused" of murder in Carbon County.57
1920 LAW
The
immigration legislation of the I 920s greatly reduced the number of Italians
coming into the United States.58 With the passage of such laws the
intense nativism of earlier years began to ebb. Immigrant life seemed to proceed
on a route to accommodation with other residents of the state. Children were
learning English and American customs, as well as being educated in American
schools.
KEEPING
TRADITIONS - MUSIC
Yet
life for Italian immigrants was not one of total alienation from their
traditional life in Italy. Values, customs, beliefs, and practices endemic to
Italians were carried from the old country to Utah. The "sweetness" in Italian
life was best exemplified in the love of music and musical instruments, a value
taught to Italian children in their villages. This affinity for music was
carried to Utah. Leonetto Cipriani, an Italian aristocrat journeying through
Salt Lake in 1853, befriended a Neapolitan music teacher, Gennaro Capone. Also,
Capt. Domenico Ballo directed an instrumental band that came to Salt Lake after
traveling across the Plains.59
In the 1903
strike, parades held at Castle Gate and Helper were led by an Italian brass
band. Dr. Joseph Dalpiaz of Helper recalled:
The majority of the band members were
Italians...they organized a band years and years ago... Before the
strike...Yeah, they had a band in Castle Gate. That is the one that played when
they built the bowery up there and had the celebration [July 4].60
Italian
strikers, locked in bullpens by company guards, cooked spaghetti in coffee cans,
sang songs, and danced the tarantella to relieve tensions.
The Sunnyside
Italian band received considerable acclaim for its excellence and repertoire. It
was "one of the best anywhere."61 The hand, originally organized in
the mid-1910s, was upgraded in the latter portion of 1917 by the talents of
Prof. Giovanni D. Colistro from Grimaldi, Italy, as the group's director.62
The band first performed at it funeral in Sunnyside and thereafter on Sundays
during the summer months using the handstand in front of the amusement hall in
Sunnyside. Antonio Guadagnoli, a member, said, "Oh, we played operas and...Oh
yes, we played a lot of operas?"63 Verdi operas, La Traviata., Ii
Trovatore, and Rigoletto, were often played by the band in front of
the courthouse in Price. The musicians were invited to perform in a parade in
Salt Lake City on May 24, 1918, in honor of the third anniversary of the
entrance of Italy into World War I and also on October 13, 1 919, at the first
celebration of Columbus Day as a legal state holiday,64 occasions
with which both Italians and non-Italians could identify.
In the early
1920s an Italian fraternal organization, Societa' Cristoforo Colombo, organized
a marching band in Salt Lake City. The brass band, in ornate uniforms, played in
parades and dances that were held at the Odd Fellows Hall in Salt Lake. The Vito
Carone orchestra, a six-man group composed of mandolins, guitars, banjos, and a
bass fiddle, also played at lodge functions in the city.
Bingham,
Magna, Ogden, and Tooele all had Italian bands or orchestras that entertained at
private homes, weddings, and baptisms. In the 1920s Italians of the
Magna area would gather at the goat ranch of Luigi Nicoletti, located at
Bacchus, for Saturday night festivities. Food, comprised of ricotta and various
types of Italian salami (ca pocollo and soppressata), wine, and
song helped ease some of the strain Italians encountered in daily life. An
Italian band comprised of Filippo Notarianni, Tomaso Angotti, and Alfonso Cairo
provided music for the group, who danced the tarantella until the late hours of
the evening. Even in the remote area of Promontory station, Utah, Italian
section hands for the Southern Pacific serenaded the local residents.65
WWII ITALIAN
POWs
In
the mid-1940s Italian war prisoners were interned at Ogden, Fort
Douglas ,
Tooele, Deseret, and other Utah and
Idaho locations. The Ogden camp was particularly proud of its thirty-piece
orchestra, known as the "Camp Ogden Army Service Forces Italian Service Unit
Brass Band."66
Postwar
& Contemporary
CATHOLIC CHURCH - MONS GIOVANNONI
The Catholic church had a varied impact upon
Utah's Italian population. In the words of an Italian Catholic priest, born in
Utah, "...there were those who had the faith that were well versed from the old
country. There were those who were ignorant."67 Among women, both
young and old, Mass attendance was imperative; but the men went to the church
only for special occasions: holidays, baptisms, weddings, Christmas, and Easter.
A major force in the Italian Catholic community of
Utah was Monsignor Alfredo F. Giovannoni, an Italian priest, who brought
Catholicism closer to many Italian families. The dominant personality of the
priest, who not only represented but also embodied the church, cast a tremendous
influence upon the Italian community.68 Numerous oral interviews
attest to Monsignor Giovannoni's success in his forty-four years as a prelate in
Utah.
In southern Italy there existed a dual-faceted
religious system: the official Roman Catholic church and the folk beliefs of the
people. These beliefs in the occult and superstition were continually fed by the
impotence to control natural forces: earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and
floods.69 One such belief shared at one time by many southern Italian
families in Utah was that of human envy; certain men and women had an inborn
power, the mal' occhio ("evil eye"). With a mere glance their envy could
cause sickness and injury.
An account of the mal' occhio was as
follows:
Well they [the women] said
whenever you get a severe headache...aspirin or anything wouldn't help. They
would say that somebody had given you the evil eye...I can't remember just how
they did it, but there was oil and water in some way and they would make the
sign of the cross on your forehead and let the oil drip into the water. Through
some formation that it had they could tell whether it was that or whether it was
just a natural headache which you had.70
Divinities were viewed as protectors from the
evils that might befall one. In southern Italy, the Catholic church gave the
peasant support for these beliefs with church cults of the Madonna and the
saints, as well as in religious festivals. Such feste were sporadically
celebrated in Utah Catholic churches. Accounts range from a procession in honor
of Santa Lucia in Saint Patrick's Church in Salt Lake City to a feast in honor
of La Madonna della Carmine ("Our Lady of Mount Carmel") in Tooele. Statues of
the respective saints were carried on top of a platform, much in the style of
old-country observances.71 These feast-day celebrations, as well as
others, faded away because their importance was attached to local old-country
traditions and had little significance to later generations of Italians in Utah.
Also, the relatively small number of Italians in
the state combined with the multi-ethnic membership of the church largely Irish
who maintained different cultural values, to make their continuance more
difficult.
MASONS
An unusual aspect of immigrant life was the
involvement of numerous Italian men in various Masonic lodges throughout the
state.72 The Roman Catholic church refuses its members participation
in the Freemasons. Italians of Carbon, Salt Lake, and Weber counties, however,
found the Order of Freemasons a means of social mobility and aid, especially
during the 1930s. While there is a paucity of manuscript source material
concerning this area, various oral narratives help in understanding this
development.
PN Were there any social
benefits to be reaped from being a Mason, or economic benefits?
FP Oh, economic, yes, as far
as work goes. And money, yes.
PN How was this?
EP Well, they were helped by
their fellow Masons. They were certainly given jobs. They had preference over
those who did not belong to the Masons. And socially they had their social
activities...73
NORTHERN-SOUTHERN ITALIANS DIVISIONS
Traditional North-South tensions among Italians
were continued in Carbon County. Separate Italian lodges were organized at
Castle Gate: Stella D'America (1898), whose fifty-seven founding members were
from the North, and Principe Di Napoli (1902), whose members came from the
South. In 1903, during the wake of the strike, the following account appeared in
the Salt Lake Herald:
There is no better citizen
than the Italians of the north, nor can there be any more undesirable citizen
than the southern Italian of the ignorant class. Unfortunately the men who have
created the trouble in tbe coal camps of Utah are mostly of this latter class...74
While the above assertion perpetuated North-South
distinctions, the reporter was mistaken in his assumption, since the Italian
strikers were predominantly from the North.75
Newspaper articles not only mentioned nationality
in reporting crimes but also revealed regional distinctions, for example, "Fred
Macmo, a Southern Italian, wanted for murdering a countryman at Sunnyside."76
In 1912 the Eastern Utah Advocate reported a stabbing incident,
maintaining that "The incident seemed to stem from the hatreds of the North and
South in the old' country."77
Old World antagonisms culminated in what Carbon
County residents referred to as Black Hand activity. The Black Hand, associated
with southern Italians, was characterized by threats and extortion directed
against prominent northern Italian bankers, lawyers, and businessmen. The full
extent of such activity is difficult to assess because of a lack of source
materials. One description maintained that it was highly organized, extracting
money from people by force. Threats were often made graphically in the form of a
black hand attached to one's door or window. The late Judge Henry Ruggeri of
Price stated that he received such threats, especially against his family when
he served as Carbon County attorney in the early twenties.78 Another
respondent said:
I will tell you years ago
they had what they call ‘Black Hands'...But they no was the Black Hands. They
was older single men you know. They know that you had a few dollars so they
write you a letter for $1000 or $500 and you had to give it to them. Well, they
wait for you some place. Oh, they kill four or five...in the 1920s.79
Similar Black Hand activity was reported in other
areas of the state, but almost all was confined to Carbon County. Time has
reconciled the factions; present-day Italian life in Utah, while still marked
with some North-South strain, is basically characterized by harmony and
understanding between the Italian people, in the first as well as the second and
third generations.
SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS
Italian fraternal and mutual aid societies were an
important development throughout the state.80 In Carbon County there
were: Stella D'America, Castle Gate (1898), Principe Di Napoli, Castle Gate
(1902), Fratellanza Minatori, Sunnyside (1902), Societa' Cristoforo Colombo,
Castle Gate (ca. early 1910s), and the Italian-Americanization Club (1919); in
Salt Lake County: Societa' Cristoforo Colombo, Salt Lake City (1897), Societa'
Di Beneficenza, Bingham Canyon and Mercur (ca. 1907), Club Dante Allighieri,
Salt Lake City (1908), Figli D'Italia, Salt Lake City (1915), and the
Italian-American Civic League, Salt Lake City (1934); and in Weber County:
Societa' Cristoforo Colombo, Ogden (date unknown) These early organizations
began as a means of mutual aid among single miners and laborers, as well as in
response to the nativism that had developed in the state.
Organizational functions eventually helped in
bettering relationships both within the Italian community and between the
Italian and non-Italian peoples. Mergers took place between societies (bringing
northerners and southerners together); parades and celebrations reflected mutual
interests between Italians and non-Italians; and Italian participations and
contributions in civic affairs, especially through the Italian-American Civic
League, provided ways through which Italian group interests were expressed to
the rest of the community. These interests were often common aspirations of the
public as a whole: providing for orphans at Christmas.
PUBLICATIONS
Early Italian life in Utah was able to maintain a
distinct continuity with the past. This Italianita' ("Italianness") was
wedded to the Italian language. A sporadic Italian press existed in Utah. In
1908-9 Ii Minatore, published by Mose Paggi in Salt Lake City, was a
labor-oriented newspaper that reported news of mining camps in Utah and the
entire Intermountain region. La Gazzetta Italiana was published in Salt
Lake City by G. Milano of the Italian Publishing Company, from approximately
1911 to 1917. In 1926 La Scintilla, printed by Alfonso Russo and Milano,
appeared hut by 1929 had merged with America to form Ii Corriere
D'America. It was published in Salt Lake City by Frank Niccoli and managed
by Alfonso Russo.81 The paper reported local news within the Italian
community in addition to topics of national interest.
Utah's Italian population was not totally isolated
from the Italian-language press that existed in other areas of the United
States. Newspapers from the West, L'Italia (San Francisco), and East,
La Follia di New York and Il Progresso Italo-Americano, were
subscribed to by numerous Italian families.82 However, the Italian
press in Utah was ephemeral. This, combined with the multiethnic character of
the Catholic church and the lack of Italian language schools (such as the Greek
schools) aid in explaining why second, third, and fourth generation Italians
have not preserved the language.
OTHER TRADITIONS
The Italian immigrants, upon their arrival, kept
aspects of life with which they were most familiar. Language, customs, basic
religious beliefs, family life, and food were important. Numerous reports reveal
how customs such as boccie (played on courts in Helper, Bingham, and Salt
Lake); the art of wine-making83 and sausage-making; and nightly
promenades by husband, wife, and family, as well as frequent visits to homes of
friends and relatives characterized early Italian life. The Italian community
also had midwives and folk cures (a panacea for gastric ailments among infants
was chamomile tea).
Much of Italian culture, brought by the early
arrivals, has now disappeared. The smallness of the Italian community within
Utah is a key factor in its failure to preserve a distinctive ethnic character.
Nevertheless, in assessing the history of the Italians in Utah, Italianita'
has added and given significance to the children and descendants of Italian
immigrants in Utah. This is embodied in the immigrant experience itself and
becomes germane to our lives with the understanding that the present in which we
find ourselves is a product of the past encountered by our immigrant forebears,
a past that has produced a future founded on the interaction between the Italian
character and a country replete with opportunities.
|