Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by PolackTony » Sun Apr 13, 2025 1:58 pm

PolackTony wrote: Wed Oct 19, 2022 12:58 am In April 1928, Cook County fire inspector Ben Newmark, who had previously been Chief Investigator under mafia-connected Cook County States Attorney Robert Crowe (discussed several times in the Toto LoVerde thread) was shot to death. Based in initial intel, CPD detectives raided the Little Sicily grocery store of Giuseppe Nicolosi, where they arrested Antonino Ferrara, of Corleone. Detectives also questioned Antonino’s father Arcangelo Ferrara and Nicolosi, described as the younger man’s “uncle” (I believe that Arcangelo’s wife Maria Colletti was a cousin of the Nicolosis on their mother’s side, the Sapataforas; when Arcangelo arrived in Chicago in 1905, he listed the Nicolosi brothers as his contacts). None of the men were charged for the crime; as with almost all other underworld murders in Chicago, police were stymied by a lack of witnesses. Another suspect was Santo “Sam” Gemelli, born in 1882 in Messina, who had arrived in Chicago from New Orleans (it should be noted that already back in Sicily, one of Gemelli’s brothers had married a Tornabene from Lascari, and there were a number of Tornabenes from Lascari connected to the mafia in Chicago). Gemelli (given as “Jamalli” in the press, though I doubt that he was Muslim) had only been released from a stint in Leavenworth on counterfeiting charges two weeks before the Newmark murder, and Newmark had been charged in the same counterfeiting operation. In 1924, Newmark was busted along with several Italians including Gemelli and Antonio “Mops” Volpe in a huge $1,000,000 counterfeit war stamp ring in Chicago. Newmark had successfully gotten himself acquitted under a separate trial while the Italians were convicted and rumor had it that Newmark had co-operated with the authorities; thus, CPD believed that he had been killed in retribution, though they also noted that Newmark had numerous connections to gangsters and criminal rackets. Sam Gemelli was also never charged due to lack of evidence, and in later years moved to St Joseph County, MI, where he resumed a construction contracting business that he had started in Chicago in the 1910s.
As noted above, Benjamin Newmark was closely tied to Cook County States Attorney Robert Crowe, a man who made no attempt to hide his open support from and social connections with leading Chicago mafiosi such as the Gennas.

In this light, it’s interesting to note that Newmark was also the brother-in-law of attorney Stefano Malato, a very prominent and influential social and political leader in Chicago’s early 20th century Sicilian/Italian community, as a leader of the Unione Siciliana, Trinacria Fratellanza, and Società Croce Bianca di Termini Imerese. I’ve discussed Malato a number of times previously, as I very much suspect that he may well have been a mafia member himself. Malato, a native of Termini Imerese (where the mafia was deeply embedded in local patronage politics in the same way that it would become in Chicago), was the former 17th Ward Alderman (the Grand Ave neighborhood) and disgraced assistant Cook County States Attorney, forced to step down after a public scandal erupted when he was accused of using investigators to torture witnesses in order to secure the acquittal of a Sicilian murder suspect. Despite this checkered past (or, more likely, because of it lol), Malato was subsequently appointed Special Investigator under SA Crowe, a role that would have been of obvious utility to Malato’s buddies, including Chicago boss Tony D’Andrea.

In 1907, Malato had married Dora Newmark, Benjamin Newmark’s sister — it seems clear that Malato was Ben Newmark’s clout with Robert Crowe and the Cook County political apparatus. In 1926, Malato divorced Dora and subsequently remarried Frances Prignano, a sister of Taylor St Alderman and mob associate Albert Prignano (Prignano — personally associated with mafiosi like “Jack McGurn” Gibaldi and Tony Volpe, was of course murdered in a mob hit in 1935. As I’ve discussed before, Santo Virruso was the suspected shooter in that assassination and the murder conspiracy also pointed to Vincenzo and Ciro Cutaia, worth noting here given B’s recent post on the old ties better the Cutaias and Giuseppe Carlisi’s former brother-in-law). If Malato had been Newmark’s clout, then presumably that tie was severed in 1926, which may be relevant given that Neemark was then murdered in 1928.

From a previous discussion of Malato on the Totò LoVerde thread, just as a reminder:
PolackTony wrote: Thu Sep 29, 2022 2:36 pm
Another name in this pro-Crowe “club” [the Italian Club formed to re-elect Crowe as SA in the 1920s] was Stefano “Stephen” Malato, a longtime and highly prominent Chicago attorney and politician from Tèrmini Imerese. Malato hasn’t really gotten his due inspection to date, but he was almost certainly closely connected to the mafia if not a member himself. Malato, said to have a university degree in linguistics from Italy (Tony D’Andrea was a prominent language teacher in Chicago), was involved in Chicago politics as early as 1893, when he became IL State Rep. in 1911, he became Assistant Cook County States Attorney; he had also been the attorney for and a founder of the White Hand Society, organized by prominent Italians to combat “black hand” extortionists (but very likely controlled by the mafia itself, which I suspect may have weaponized the organization to control independent extortionists). In 1914, there was a scandal where Malato was accused of improper conduct for allegedly roughing up witnesses in a case to secure the acquittal of a Pietro Saitta (likely from Piana dei Greci) on a murder charge. It seems that Malato then left the SA’s office and became Alderman for the 17th Ward (Grand Ave). In 1900, Malato lived by the intersection of Grand, Halsted, and Milwaukee (the photo in my avatar, BTW). That same year, Giuseppe Morici, who may have been an early leader of the Chicago mafia, was based at the same intersection at a tavern owned by him and his brothers; the Moricis were also from Tèrmini. Early Chicago mafioso Pasquale “Charles Calta” Caltabellota, of neighboring Trabìa, was based there as well, operating a barber shop on Grand Ave; Caltabellota was a close associate of Tony D’Andrea. Malato went on to marry a Prignano woman from Ricigliano, Salerno, who was a relative of notoriously mobbed-up politician Daniel Serritella. With Malatao, we’re likely seeing one of the primary actors involved in the interpenetration of mafia power with official politics in Chicago. It should be clear that this process was already underway very early on. One imagines that a guy like Malato was quite familiar with the figure of Raffaele Palizzolo, a notorious mafioso-politician in the late 19th century from Malato’s hometown of Tèrmini Imerese. Transplanting the mafia from Tèrmini, where mafia involvement with political patronage networks was already developed and sophisticated, to a floridly corrupt city like Chicago had predictable results, as we know well from the following decades.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by B. » Sat Apr 12, 2025 12:51 am

I've since learned there was a colony from Piana dei Greci in Sacramento which explains why Petrotta moved/fled there. There's an active Arberesh of Sacramento society still today made up mainly of people whose families descend from PdG. Also seeing towns like San Cipirello, Trabia, Balestrate, Monreale show up in Sacramento here and there.

I was looking into the 1914 underworld saloon owner Francesco Cuccia because the famous mayor and PdG Family boss was also named Francesco Cuccia. Francesco was the name of the Chicago Cuccia's grandfather so he had other cousins named Francesco Cuccia but I noticed there is one listed as born 1876, the same year as the mafia boss. Not enough info to confirm if it's him. I did see the Chicago Cuccia was distantly related to early LA boss Giuseppe Ardizzone through the Cuccia name.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by B. » Fri Apr 11, 2025 9:37 pm

I just looked through the thread for Cutaia and see you mentioned him even in connection to Emanuele Cammarata. Looks to be someone of significant stature, no question.

So even though a Carlisi marital feud may have played a role, the 1918 attempt on Petrotta possibly stemming from that, there were some bigger names and events going on at this time that also could have factored into Petrotta's 1922 murder. That Petrotta had some kind of falling out with his Carlisi in-laws then was building a lucrative partnership with an influential Chicago mafia figure could have presented any number of issues too, especially if he was in poor standing with the Carlisis.

This is roughly a year after the murders of D'Andrea, LaSpisa, and Paolinello Torino (the latter came to the US with Rosario DiSpenza's brother) which were all likely related to each other. Any number of other issues could be going on in 1922.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by PolackTony » Fri Apr 11, 2025 9:11 pm

Oh whoa. I’ve discussed the Cutaia family quite a bit here on this thread, you might recall. Vincenzo Cutaia was by all appearances a significant mafia figure in Little Sicily for decades. The Cutaias were indeed from Campofelice di Fitalia and related to later Chicago members Joe DiVarco and Tony and Frank DeMonte. Local police and the press also believed Vincenzo Cutaia to have been a “cousin” of Rosario DiSpenza. I didn’t find anything to support that specific relation, but Ciminna and CdF are neighboring comuni of course so they were at the least close compaesani.

The 1914 list of saloon owners that you note from the papers included a number of names that I’ve touched on previously, but I don’t have time ATM to go into them again. These were of course all in Little Sicily. Francesco Cuccia was from PDG, for example.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by B. » Fri Apr 11, 2025 8:29 pm

PolackTony wrote: Fri Apr 11, 2025 6:05 pm
B. wrote: Fri Apr 11, 2025 5:33 pm Didn't see this come up when I did a search.

- Tommaso Petrotta of Piana dei Greci married Rosa Carlisi from Canicatti, sister of Giuseppe and aunt of Roy and Sam, in Chicago in 1913. They split up approximately four years later and sometime after 1917 Petrotta moved to Sacramento where he lived with a second wife. He was killed during a return visit to Chicago in July of 1922 and authorities suspected his former in-laws the Carlisis were responsible. Petrotta's second wife told authorities that his first wife's relatives were "members of the mafia in Sicily" and she too believed the Carlisis killed him as an act of vengeance.

- Petrotta may have first arrived to NY before heading to Chicago. No idea what led to his split with Rosa Carlisi but that he moved to California and was killed during a return visit could point to him having fled Chicago after they split. No idea if Petrotta himself was a mafioso but the Carlisis were a clan in which a seeming majority of immediate relatives, extended relatives, and in-laws were mafia affiliates, Petrotta himself coming from a village that produced important formative mafiosi. Interesting too that Petrotta's second wife noted that the Carlisis were mafia members "in Sicily" which adds to our existing suspicion that the Carlisis were an established mafia clan back in Canicatti.

- I glanced at an online family tree for the Carlisis and noticed a relation to the Stincone name, Pietro Stincone being a Gambino captain from that Family's significant Canicattese element. Pietro's father was Diego Stincone and Diego was one of the names connected to the Carlisi-related Stincones although I didn't see a direct link and the records weren't very well fleshed out (I didn't dig in too deeply either). We know there were connections to the NYC mafia's Salvatore Tornabe/Tornabene from Canicatti (who attended Apalachin, as did Roy Carlisi) so it wouldn't be surprising if the Carlisis had a degree of relation to Pietro Stincone.
Really excellent find regarding Petrotta's murder. I wasn't aware of this. As we've discussed before, we already have indicators strongly pointing (IMO) to the Carlisi-Tornabene clan as having been involved with the mafia going back to Canicatti, so the statement from Petrotta's second wife further suggests this longstanding connection.

Good question regarding Pietro Stincone also. Giuseppe Carlisi's paternal grandmother was Anna Stincone. I haven't verified her parents, but as you note, she may well have been a relative of some degree of Pietro's father, Diego Stincone. Note also that Giuseppe Carlisi had a brother named Diego, who died in childhood back in Canicatti. As I am not aware that this name otherwise appeared among the Carlisi line, I would suspect that it may well have come from Anna Stincone's family. If so, that could certainly further suggest a relation. As with Tornabene, Stincone is not a super common surname in Canicatti, further strengthening the suspicion of some meaningful degree of relation.
- Petrotta was said to be a wealthy broker connected to a $200,000 contract with a SoCal vineyard and a two million dollar fruit importing project. He managed the Swastika Fruit Company (yes, Swastika) in Sacramento. Wounded with him was alleged Chicago bootlegger Vincenzo, the two planning to go into business with one another in the aforementioned projects. One of those arrested was Cutaia's partner George Candiotta. Cutaia's brother Tony had been murdered a month previous. Petrotta had been previously shot in Chicago in September of 1918, which would coincide with the split from Rosa Carlisi and his move to California.

- After Petrotta was murdered, they found a photograph of a young woman named "Rose" on him along with correspondence from the woman where the business plans with Cutaia were discussed. Note that Petrotta's first wife in Chicago was Rosa/Rose Carlisi but they believed "Rose" was a non-Italian cabaret dancer who worked at a club Petrotta owned in Sacramento. A business partner of Petrotta in Sacramento was Armando Bondi, a native of Tuscany.

- There was a Vincenzo Cutaia from Canicatti and the Cutaia name in general tends to be found in Agrigento and nearby parts of Caltanissetta. There was an Antonino Cutaia from Campofelice Fitalia, Palermo, in Chicago who died in 1923 who would have been in his late 50s but I'm not sure the COD and if 1923 is actually the DOD and not internment, it would be a year after Vincenzo's brother "Tony" was allegedly killed; I also don't see any indications he was related to a Vincent. Still not positive who Cutaia was but all signs point to someone with the background we'd expect and there was one living in Chicago at this time. There was a Giorgio/George Candiotta in Chicago who was from Piana dei Greci so his name surfacing makes sense as it means Cutaia was partnered with a paesan of Petrotta. Cutaia's injury reportedly came from a bullet that passed through Petrotta so he may not have been a target.

- In 1914, the mayor sent letters to a group of saloon owners and warned them about the suspicious characters they allowed to frequent their establishments, especially due to frequent murders in the area. Among the names were Vincenzo, Tony, and Charles Cutaia as well as Joe Enea, "Tony Anzalonis", Tony Gullo, Mike Coniglio, Frank Cuccia, Stefano Tortorici, Giuseppe LoMonaco, "Nick Bucar", Calogero Bongiovanni, Agostino Giovenzo, "SD Ross", and "Biggio Mannings". The alleged killers ("Joseph Mama" and "Genana Sorimenti") of Rosario DiSpenza and Anthony Puccio were arrested in Tony Cutaia's saloon and also suspected of a Kansas City murder.

- Petrotta's shooter in the 1918 attempt was reportedly a "Peter Ordilano" who was shot dead moments later by Petrotta's nephew "Peter Cornale".

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by PolackTony » Fri Apr 11, 2025 6:05 pm

B. wrote: Fri Apr 11, 2025 5:33 pm Didn't see this come up when I did a search.

- Tommaso Petrotta of Piana dei Greci married Rosa Carlisi from Canicatti, sister of Giuseppe and aunt of Roy and Sam, in Chicago in 1913. They split up approximately four years later and sometime after 1917 Petrotta moved to Sacramento where he lived with a second wife. He was killed during a return visit to Chicago in July of 1922 and authorities suspected his former in-laws the Carlisis were responsible. Petrotta's second wife told authorities that his first wife's relatives were "members of the mafia in Sicily" and she too believed the Carlisis killed him as an act of vengeance.

- Petrotta may have first arrived to NY before heading to Chicago. No idea what led to his split with Rosa Carlisi but that he moved to California and was killed during a return visit could point to him having fled Chicago after they split. No idea if Petrotta himself was a mafioso but the Carlisis were a clan in which a seeming majority of immediate relatives, extended relatives, and in-laws were mafia affiliates, Petrotta himself coming from a village that produced important formative mafiosi. Interesting too that Petrotta's second wife noted that the Carlisis were mafia members "in Sicily" which adds to our existing suspicion that the Carlisis were an established mafia clan back in Canicatti.

- I glanced at an online family tree for the Carlisis and noticed a relation to the Stincone name, Pietro Stincone being a Gambino captain from that Family's significant Canicattese element. Pietro's father was Diego Stincone and Diego was one of the names connected to the Carlisi-related Stincones although I didn't see a direct link and the records weren't very well fleshed out (I didn't dig in too deeply either). We know there were connections to the NYC mafia's Salvatore Tornabe/Tornabene from Canicatti (who attended Apalachin, as did Roy Carlisi) so it wouldn't be surprising if the Carlisis had a degree of relation to Pietro Stincone.
Really excellent find regarding Petrotta's murder. I wasn't aware of this. As we've discussed before, we already have indicators strongly pointing (IMO) to the Carlisi-Tornabene clan as having been involved with the mafia going back to Canicatti, so the statement from Petrotta's second wife further suggests this longstanding connection.

Good question regarding Pietro Stincone also. Giuseppe Carlisi's paternal grandmother was Anna Stincone. I haven't verified her parents, but as you note, she may well have been a relative of some degree of Pietro's father, Diego Stincone. Note also that Giuseppe Carlisi had a brother named Diego, who died in childhood back in Canicatti. As I am not aware that this name otherwise appeared among the Carlisi line, I would suspect that it may well have come from Anna Stincone's family. If so, that could certainly further suggest a relation. As with Tornabene, Stincone is not a super common surname in Canicatti, further strengthening the suspicion of some meaningful degree of relation.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by B. » Fri Apr 11, 2025 5:33 pm

Didn't see this come up when I did a search.

- Tommaso Petrotta of Piana dei Greci married Rosa Carlisi from Canicatti, sister of Giuseppe and aunt of Roy and Sam, in Chicago in 1913. They split up approximately four years later and sometime after 1917 Petrotta moved to Sacramento where he lived with a second wife. He was killed during a return visit to Chicago in July of 1922 and authorities suspected his former in-laws the Carlisis were responsible. Petrotta's second wife told authorities that his first wife's relatives were "members of the mafia in Sicily" and she too believed the Carlisis killed him as an act of vengeance.

- Petrotta may have first arrived to NY before heading to Chicago. No idea what led to his split with Rosa Carlisi but that he moved to California and was killed during a return visit could point to him having fled Chicago after they split. No idea if Petrotta himself was a mafioso but the Carlisis were a clan in which a seeming majority of immediate relatives, extended relatives, and in-laws were mafia affiliates, Petrotta himself coming from a village that produced important formative mafiosi. Interesting too that Petrotta's second wife noted that the Carlisis were mafia members "in Sicily" which adds to our existing suspicion that the Carlisis were an established mafia clan back in Canicatti.

- I glanced at an online family tree for the Carlisis and noticed a relation to the Stincone name, Pietro Stincone being a Gambino captain from that Family's significant Canicattese element. Pietro's father was Diego Stincone and Diego was one of the names connected to the Carlisi-related Stincones although I didn't see a direct link and the records weren't very well fleshed out (I didn't dig in too deeply either). We know there were connections to the NYC mafia's Salvatore Tornabe/Tornabene from Canicatti (who attended Apalachin, as did Roy Carlisi) so it wouldn't be surprising if the Carlisis had a degree of relation to Pietro Stincone.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by PolackTony » Tue Apr 08, 2025 11:14 am

NorthBuffalo wrote: Tue Apr 08, 2025 10:00 am Polack question for you or others - is James 'Jimmy' Sarno who had owned Club 30 in Cicero related to Mike Sarno? Asking as I notice Club 30 became 'Errico's' after James retired and was frequently used as the spot where Mark Polchan and Mike Sarno's burglary crews would meet and hold court according to court documents.

https://obituaries.mysuburbanlife.com/u ... d=29385347
Longtime Club 30 owner James Thomas Sarno was a paternal uncle of Mike Sarno -- a younger brother of Mike Sarno's dad, Michael John Sarno Sr. Note that the Sarno, Albano (Mike Sarno had Albanaos on both sides of his family), and Amabile families all hail from the comune of Bracigliano, Salerno, also a core hometown in Springfield, MA, where these surnames also recurr in connection to the mob. Additionally, Solly D and Bobby Dominic also have partial ancestry from Bracigliano.

Jimmy's Club 30 was, as you note, renamed Errico's Club 30 after James Sarno retried. I'm not sure offhand who exactly took ownership of the bar, but I'd imagine that the joint remained within the family and that the name references another brother of James Sarno, Enrico "Harry" Sarno. For those unfamiliar with Club 30, it was a longtime mobbed-up bar in Cicero, on Roosevelt, just west of Central and across the street from the Chicago neighborhood known as "The Island", which historically had a large Italian population contiguous with that of the northern part of Cicero. Just down the street is the longstanding Albano's Pizzeria, I believe also owned by Sarno relatives.

From an older post on this thread. Apart from the ancestry from towns like Bracigliano and Acerra (DeLaurentis and Inendino families, along with many others in Chicago), the Rovitos are, of course, "second wave" immigrants from the same part of Cosenza province that Mike Sarno and Solly D also have partial ancestry from. As I've stressed before, most people in the orbit of the current day Chicago mob are relatives and/or compaesani of one degree or another, in addition to ongoing and more recent intermarriages happening in the younger generations.
PolackTony wrote: Sun Apr 24, 2022 11:55 am Eugene Joseph Albano, operator of Albano Bakery on North Ave in Elmwood Park and close associate of Paul Ricca and Guido DeChiaro, was born in 1929 in Chicago to Giuseppe Albano and Emilia Sarno. Giuseppe was from Bracigliano, Salerno, while Emilia was born in Chicago to parents from Bracigliano. Her mother was an Amabile, and the parents of Joe Shine Amabile were also from Ricigliano; very likely they were related. The Albanos lived near Oakley and Harrison in the Western part of the Taylor St Patch. The Albanos operated the original Albano Bakery at Taylor and Western for decades and opened the second location in Elmwood Park in the 1950s. Eugene Albano's sister Fortuna/Frieda Albano married Anthony Bombacino, brother of Louie Bombacino. I believe that Albano Bakery in Elmwood Park was originally run by Anthony Bombacino and Frieda Albano, and subsequently taken over by Eugene (possibly after Anthony Bombacino died in 1964). Under Eugene, the bakery was a well-known hangout for Outfit figures like Ricca and DeChiaro.

As stated, it's very likely that Albano was related to Joe Amabile (some old info on Albano Bakery stated that Eugene Albano had a cousin who was a member of the mob; that may well have been Joe Shine). A more recent connection is Mike Sarno. Again, Eugene's mother was Emilia Sarno. I have Mike Sarno's father as Michael John Sarno of Cicero. Mike, Sr was the son of Salvatore Sarno and Rosa Albano of Bracigliano, who settled in Cicero after arriving in Chicago in the 1920s. So, very possible that Mike Sarno, Sr was a cousin of Eugene Albano on both sides of their families. But that's only part of it. Fat Mike's mother was Concetta Aiello (don't get excited -- no relation), born in Chicago to Francesco Aiello of Rende, Cosenza province, and Luigia Albano, of Bracigiliano and the older sister of Emilia Sarno, Eugene Albano's mother.

Also worth noting, given Fat Mike's connection to Solly D, that although the DeLaurentis family goes back to Acerra, Solly D's maternal grandfather was Bartolomeo Moccio, of Bracigliano. Like Fat Mike's maternal grandfather, Solly D's maternal grandmother's ancestry was from Rende, Cosenza.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by NorthBuffalo » Tue Apr 08, 2025 10:00 am

Polack question for you or others - is James 'Jimmy' Sarno who had owned Club 30 in Cicero related to Mike Sarno? Asking as I notice Club 30 became 'Errico's' after James retired and was frequently used as the spot where Mark Polchan and Mike Sarno's burglary crews would meet and hold court according to court documents.

https://obituaries.mysuburbanlife.com/u ... d=29385347

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by PolackTony » Mon Apr 07, 2025 3:09 pm

jonesma3 wrote: Mon Apr 07, 2025 1:48 pm PolackTony: I am the only living relative of Joseph I. Bulger. Who contacted you?
You did, a couple of days ago, though the message only reached me via email rather than via the "private message" platform here on BHF and I was thus unable to reply to you via BHF messaging. Maybe you deleted the message after sending it, or maybe there's some bug in the BHF messaging system. I'm not sure.
jonesma3 wrote: Mon Apr 07, 2025 12:40 pm Some errors in this. Calcedonia is Charles "the Blizzard" Imburgio. I believe the original name is Imburgio and has been misspelled as Imburgia. Rose is Joe's only sister. Lawrence was the "Hindu", who died in 1947 of Buergers. Another brother of Joe was Sam, who died falling off a ladder in 1970. Legitimate sons of Joe Bulger were Joe jr. who died in WWII,awarded the silver star and purple heart and Robert, gravely wounded in WWII died in 2004. His illegitimate sonwas also Lawrence born in 1958 died 2023.
Thanks for posting this info about Joe Bulger's kids.

Perhaps my post above wasn't clear enough. The brothers Calcedonio and Lorenzo Imburgia who I mentioned were not *brothers* of Joe Bulger -- they were his *uncles*, brothers of Bulger's father Giuseppe Imburgia; all born in Campofelice di Roccella, Palermo province, and all immigrated to the US. It's very common that the same given names are passed on in Sicilian/Italian families over many generations, hence Joe Bulger *also* having brothers named Calcedonio/Charles and Lorenzo/Lawrence (another brother of Joe Bulger, as you note, was Salvatore/Sam. As per tradition for the second-born son of a family, named after his maternal grandfather, Salvatore Scanio). Likewise, the Rosa Abbate that I mentioned above was not Joe Bulger's *sister* Rose, but their paternal grandmother (traditionally, the first daughter of a family is named after her father's mother).

I can assure you that the original surname in Sicily is Imburgia and that the "Imburgio" variant used by Joe Bulger's immediate family (on some documents; on others, they used the original version Imburgia) is the misspelling. Such errors of transcription were *very* common on US documents of Italian immigrants in those days, particularly the swapping of vowels in unstressed position, as we see here. Imburgia is a traditional surname of your family's hometown of Campofelice di Roccella, and is very well-documented there ("Imburgio" is not recorded there, nor anywhere else in Sicily -- this spelling is only seen in America), and is also found in neighboring comuni in that section of Palermo province (Cerda, Collesano, Termini Imerese, Altavilla Milicia, etc.).

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by jonesma3 » Mon Apr 07, 2025 1:48 pm

PolackTony: I am the only living relative of Joseph I. Bulger. Who contacted you?

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by jonesma3 » Mon Apr 07, 2025 12:40 pm

Some errors in this. Calcedonia is Charles "the Blizzard" Imburgio. I believe the original name is Imburgio and has been misspelled as Imburgia. Rose is Joe's only sister. Lawrence was the "Hindu", who died in 1947 of Buergers. Another brother of Joe was Sam, who died falling off a ladder in 1970. Legitimate sons of Joe Bulger were Joe jr. who died in WWII,awarded the silver star and purple heart and Robert, gravely wounded in WWII died in 2004. His illegitimate sonwas also Lawrence born in 1958 died 2023.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by NorthBuffalo » Fri Apr 04, 2025 5:09 pm

PolackTony wrote: Fri Apr 04, 2025 4:29 pm
PolackTony wrote: Sat Jun 17, 2023 11:21 pm Speaking of sleepers, prominent attorney and former Melrose Park mayor and head of the IANU (the "Unione Siciliana") Joseph Imburgio Bulger, first cousin of Charles Imburgia of the Pittsburgh outfit, was only ID'd as a Chicago member following his death in 1966.
I was contacted recently by a relative of Joe Bulger, and thus I went back and looked into some of my notes on him again.

Turns out that he was *not* the first cousin of Pittsburgh member Charles Imburgia, aka "Charlie Murgie".

I had confused Charlie Murgie with another Charles Imburgia, of about the same age, from the Pittsburgh area, who was in fact a cousin of the Melrose Park Imburgia/Bulger family.

Charlie Murgie was born in 1908 in Pittsburgh to Filippo Imburgia and Margherita "Minnie" Manna. Filippo Imbirgia was a native of Campofelice di Roccella, born to Salvatore Imburgia and Benedetta Saccone. Later in life, Charlie Murgie moved across the OH/PA border to Warren, OH.

Joe Bulger was born in NOLA in 1899 to Giuseppe Imburgia and Caterina Scania, both natives of Campofelice di Roccella (it should be noted that while a number of US documents related to Joe Bulger's family mispelled the surname "Imburgio", the original spelling is Imburgia). The family moved north to Chicago, where brother Lorenzo "Lawrence" was born in 1902; after returning to NOLA for several years, the family returned north and settled in the Italian colony in Melrose Park, IL, following the death of father Giuseppe in 1912.

Giuseppe Imburgia was born in CdR to Giuseppe Natale Imburgia and Rosa Abbate, both natives of the same comune. Several of his siblings also immigrated to the US. One brother, Calcedonio Imburgia, entered the US at NOLA and remained there until his death in 1947. Other siblings settled in the Pittsburgh/Youngstown area, including brother Francesco Imburgia. One of Francesco's sons, born in 1906 in Westmoreland County outside of Pittsburgh, was named Charles Imburgia -- I had erroneously believed some of his documents to be referring to Charlie Murgie. Another brother, Lorenzo Imburgia, lived in Warren, OH, like Charlie Murgie.

While Charlie Murgie and Joe Bulger were therefore not first cousins, I would still strongly suspect that their families were related in some degree, given that CdR was a small village in the late 19th century, members of both families lived in close proximity to each other in places like Warren, OH, and some of the same given names recur in both.
That's great to hear the family members are reaching out to you - we have an ongoing communication with multiple family members going. Feel free to PM me if you think he might be interested in joining - a lot of information and photos have been shared by relatives of these guys who can probably fill in a lot of the nuanced gaps we struggle to fill from the internet.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by PolackTony » Fri Apr 04, 2025 4:29 pm

PolackTony wrote: Sat Jun 17, 2023 11:21 pm Speaking of sleepers, prominent attorney and former Melrose Park mayor and head of the IANU (the "Unione Siciliana") Joseph Imburgio Bulger, first cousin of Charles Imburgia of the Pittsburgh outfit, was only ID'd as a Chicago member following his death in 1966.
I was contacted recently by a relative of Joe Bulger, and thus I went back and looked into some of my notes on him again.

Turns out that he was *not* the first cousin of Pittsburgh member Charles Imburgia, aka "Charlie Murgie".

I had confused Charlie Murgie with another Charles Imburgia, of about the same age, from the Pittsburgh area, who was in fact a cousin of the Melrose Park Imburgia/Bulger family.

Charlie Murgie was born in 1908 in Pittsburgh to Filippo Imburgia and Margherita "Minnie" Manna. Filippo Imbirgia was a native of Campofelice di Roccella, born to Salvatore Imburgia and Benedetta Saccone. Later in life, Charlie Murgie moved across the OH/PA border to Warren, OH.

Joe Bulger was born in NOLA in 1899 to Giuseppe Imburgia and Caterina Scania, both natives of Campofelice di Roccella (it should be noted that while a number of US documents related to Joe Bulger's family mispelled the surname "Imburgio", the original spelling is Imburgia). The family moved north to Chicago, where brother Lorenzo "Lawrence" was born in 1902; after returning to NOLA for several years, the family returned north and settled in the Italian colony in Melrose Park, IL, following the death of father Giuseppe in 1912.

Giuseppe Imburgia was born in CdR to Giuseppe Natale Imburgia and Rosa Abbate, both natives of the same comune. Several of his siblings also immigrated to the US. One brother, Calcedonio Imburgia, entered the US at NOLA and remained there until his death in 1947. Other siblings settled in the Pittsburgh/Youngstown area, including brother Francesco Imburgia. One of Francesco's sons, born in 1906 in Westmoreland County outside of Pittsburgh, was named Charles Imburgia -- I had erroneously believed some of his documents to be referring to Charlie Murgie. Another brother, Lorenzo Imburgia, lived in Warren, OH, like Charlie Murgie.

While Charlie Murgie and Joe Bulger were therefore not first cousins, I would still strongly suspect that their families were related in some degree, given that CdR was a small village in the late 19th century, members of both families lived in close proximity to each other in places like Warren, OH, and some of the same given names recur in both.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by PolackTony » Sun Mar 09, 2025 1:38 pm

B. wrote: Sun Mar 09, 2025 1:27 pm Fascinating stuff, especially the Hillsville connection. Interesting too his father was from Trabia given Trabia had a strong presence in Western PA.
Yup. In addition, after immigrating from Trabia, the Terminis lived at Grand Ave and Green, near the barbershop of Pasquale "Charles Calta" Caltabellota, a seemingly important mafioso from Trabia who was a close partner of Tony D'Andrea.

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