by B. » Fri May 13, 2016 10:58 am
Here is a summary of some things related to the general topic based on what I've learned so far. Gonna break this up into sections for readability...
The Early DeCavalcante / New York Connection
I think it's in the main DeCavalcante thread we've had going, but we were talking a bit about the possible New York Family connections for these guys. I was leaning much more toward that explanation (them splitting off from the Gambinos), but these few sources that mention the DeCavalcantes being "the oldest" or "one of the oldest" (I'm leaning toward the latter) has put me on the fence about it.
There was a Rosario Cocchiara who came to NYC from Ribera in 1920 and I'm not 100% it's the same guy, but there was also a Rosario Cocchiara/Cucchiara who was involved in a mob-related hit for an NYC family I believe during the 1920s (need to look up the specifics again). Rosario is the name of DeCav capo Frank Cocchiaro's son who was an NY-based member and Cocchiara/Cocchiaro seem to interchangeable names (side note, but the Cocchiaras were related to the LoRasos (LaRasso) back in Ribera), so this was bound to be an older relative.
There was no doubt a strong association with Gambino members going back as far as you can go. But we can't rule out the Genovese connection either. Nick Delmore was close to Genovese members (apparently including Vito himself) and before it had been fully established that he was boss of his own family, the FBI speculated that Delmore was a Genovese capodecina. When Sam DeCavalcante became boss one report said he had to get approval from Gerry Catena and Genovese leaders (though maybe he had to get approval from all 5 family leaders and they were only aware of the Genovese meeting).
Then there is the Majuri angle that Christie mentioned. Frank Majuri used the alias "Frank Gagliano", his father was from Corleone, and they lived in East Harlem when the Morellos were in full swing. That doesn't necessarily mean that the DeCavalcante family as a whole had ties to the Morellos, but it does tell me that the Majuri/Maiuris could have been with the Morellos in NYC originally and possibly related to some key figures like the Gaglianos. Throw in D'Arco's line about the Luccheses originally being aligned with the DeCavalcantes and it really makes you wonder. You also have to wonder if D'Arco had any ideas about the Luccheses/Morellos being one and the same pre-1920s.
Early Riberesi in Birmingham and Elizabeth
Rick had said that two potential Alabama members/leaders were Pasquale Amari and Giuseppe Caterinicchia, both from Ribera. Not only is Ribera a meaningful connection given how closeknit the Riberesi are in the US, but those last names basically guarantee some blood relation to the DeCavalcantes (Caterinicchia/o are probably interchangeable, much like Cocchiara/o and Castellana/o, etc. etc.).
There were Giuseppe and Pietro Caterinicchio, probably brothers, who came to the US from Ribera in 1908 and 1909 respectively and by 1910 were living with their brother-in-law Giuseppe "Rigga" (Riggi) in Elizabeth. This is pretty significant to me, as Emanuel Riggi and Sal Caterinicchio were two of the most influential Local 394 figures for many years and this would mean they are related at least through marriage. Sal had a brother named Pietro, though I don't believe he had a brother named Giuseppe so I'm thinking these were his cousins. Sal came to the US in 1920.
I don't know when Giuseppe "Rigga" settled in Elizabeth, but he was in the US by 1892. John Riggi's grandfather Giovanni came to the US in 1905 and was living in Elizabeth by 1910 under the name "Rigga" as well. So by 1905-1910 (possibly earlier, I just don't have the info), you had Merlos, Caterinicchios, and Rigga/Riggis living in Elizabeth.
DeCavalcante member Carmelo Corsentino (father of member Carl) came to the US from Ribera in 1913 and by 1915 was settled in Elizabeth. The Corsentinos are related to the Collettis back in Sicily (the Collettis are related to many familiar names through marriage).
This is all significant to me because it means that Phil Amari didn't "start" a Riberesi colony in Elizabeth when he moved from NY to NJ in the 1920s, he joined an existing one with some significant names already there, including John Riggi's family. There's no evidence one way or another, but I don't believe Amari was the first Riberesi/Elizabeth leader, only the first one that was known (and the only real source I've seen that suggests Amari was the first Elizabeth leader was a non-member who wouldn't have been old enough to know firsthand).
The Riberesi Sphere of Influence and Later Immigration
Riberesi presence in the US 1920s and earlier was spread between Elizabeth, NYC, Birmingham, and Chicago. All of these areas had members or potential members from Ribera. Then there is the DeCav Connecticut faction which was active most likely by the 1940s and had fewer than ten known members, with most if not all of them being non-Riberesi and even non-Sicilian. That's a whole other topic that I'm hoping to sort out someday.
After Pasquale Lolordo's death, his brother Joseph immediately left Chicago for NYC and took Pasquale's wife and son with him. By the 1960s he is a DeCavalcante capodecina. Pasquale Lolordo's close friend Phil Bacino stays in Illinois and continues to associate with fellow Riberese Vincenzo DeGeorge, seemingly both a part of the Chicago family, though Rotondo tells Italian authorities that Bacino was an early DeCavalcante boss. Bacino definitely maintained social ties with DeCavalcante members and visited Ribera, where his brother Luciano was a member of the local family.
The Birmingham family was dead before the 1940s, though the children of Pasquale Amari at least stayed in Alabama. Seems unlikely that immigration from Ribera continued in that area. The Riberesi presence in Chicago also seemed to dwindle and aside from Bacino and the DeGeorges, there was no significant presence in the Chicago family.
Many of the known DeCavalcante members (or their parents) who were living in NYC had moved to Elizabeth by the 1920s. This leaves Elizabeth as the remaining Riberesi stronghold, with members of Ribera heritage in NJ and NYC making up most of the DeCavalcante family. In the 1950s and 60s, quite a few future DeCavalcante family members come straight to Elizabeth from Ribera, including the Vitabiles, the Palermos (1947, but close enough), Jake Amari, Frank Guaracci, and others. Most Ribera-born immigrants in general seem to have come straight to Elizabeth given the large paesan population in Peterstown and guaranteed employment with local 394.
From there, a lot has already been discussed and we know that the DeCavalcante family for the past several decades has been almost exclusively a NJ/NYC affair, still with a strong Riberesi presence and many familiar names that go back to the start of the 20th century in Elizabeth.
Here is a summary of some things related to the general topic based on what I've learned so far. Gonna break this up into sections for readability...
[size=150][b]The Early DeCavalcante / New York Connection[/b][/size]
I think it's in the main DeCavalcante thread we've had going, but we were talking a bit about the possible New York Family connections for these guys. I was leaning much more toward that explanation (them splitting off from the Gambinos), but these few sources that mention the DeCavalcantes being "the oldest" or "one of the oldest" (I'm leaning toward the latter) has put me on the fence about it.
There was a Rosario Cocchiara who came to NYC from Ribera in 1920 and I'm not 100% it's the same guy, but there was also a Rosario Cocchiara/Cucchiara who was involved in a mob-related hit for an NYC family I believe during the 1920s (need to look up the specifics again). Rosario is the name of DeCav capo Frank Cocchiaro's son who was an NY-based member and Cocchiara/Cocchiaro seem to interchangeable names (side note, but the Cocchiaras were related to the LoRasos (LaRasso) back in Ribera), so this was bound to be an older relative.
There was no doubt a strong association with Gambino members going back as far as you can go. But we can't rule out the Genovese connection either. Nick Delmore was close to Genovese members (apparently including Vito himself) and before it had been fully established that he was boss of his own family, the FBI speculated that Delmore was a Genovese capodecina. When Sam DeCavalcante became boss one report said he had to get approval from Gerry Catena and Genovese leaders (though maybe he had to get approval from all 5 family leaders and they were only aware of the Genovese meeting).
Then there is the Majuri angle that Christie mentioned. Frank Majuri used the alias "Frank Gagliano", his father was from Corleone, and they lived in East Harlem when the Morellos were in full swing. That doesn't necessarily mean that the DeCavalcante family as a whole had ties to the Morellos, but it does tell me that the Majuri/Maiuris could have been with the Morellos in NYC originally and possibly related to some key figures like the Gaglianos. Throw in D'Arco's line about the Luccheses originally being aligned with the DeCavalcantes and it really makes you wonder. You also have to wonder if D'Arco had any ideas about the Luccheses/Morellos being one and the same pre-1920s.
[size=150][b]Early Riberesi in Birmingham and Elizabeth[/b][/size]
Rick had said that two potential Alabama members/leaders were Pasquale Amari and Giuseppe Caterinicchia, both from Ribera. Not only is Ribera a meaningful connection given how closeknit the Riberesi are in the US, but those last names basically guarantee some blood relation to the DeCavalcantes (Caterinicchia/o are probably interchangeable, much like Cocchiara/o and Castellana/o, etc. etc.).
There were Giuseppe and Pietro Caterinicchio, probably brothers, who came to the US from Ribera in 1908 and 1909 respectively and by 1910 were living with their brother-in-law Giuseppe "Rigga" (Riggi) in Elizabeth. This is pretty significant to me, as Emanuel Riggi and Sal Caterinicchio were two of the most influential Local 394 figures for many years and this would mean they are related at least through marriage. Sal had a brother named Pietro, though I don't believe he had a brother named Giuseppe so I'm thinking these were his cousins. Sal came to the US in 1920.
I don't know when Giuseppe "Rigga" settled in Elizabeth, but he was in the US by 1892. John Riggi's grandfather Giovanni came to the US in 1905 and was living in Elizabeth by 1910 under the name "Rigga" as well. So by 1905-1910 (possibly earlier, I just don't have the info), you had Merlos, Caterinicchios, and Rigga/Riggis living in Elizabeth.
DeCavalcante member Carmelo Corsentino (father of member Carl) came to the US from Ribera in 1913 and by 1915 was settled in Elizabeth. The Corsentinos are related to the Collettis back in Sicily (the Collettis are related to many familiar names through marriage).
This is all significant to me because it means that Phil Amari didn't "start" a Riberesi colony in Elizabeth when he moved from NY to NJ in the 1920s, he joined an existing one with some significant names already there, including John Riggi's family. There's no evidence one way or another, but I don't believe Amari was the first Riberesi/Elizabeth leader, only the first one that was known (and the only real source I've seen that suggests Amari was the first Elizabeth leader was a non-member who wouldn't have been old enough to know firsthand).
[size=150][b]The Riberesi Sphere of Influence and Later Immigration[/b][/size]
Riberesi presence in the US 1920s and earlier was spread between Elizabeth, NYC, Birmingham, and Chicago. All of these areas had members or potential members from Ribera. Then there is the DeCav Connecticut faction which was active most likely by the 1940s and had fewer than ten known members, with most if not all of them being non-Riberesi and even non-Sicilian. That's a whole other topic that I'm hoping to sort out someday.
After Pasquale Lolordo's death, his brother Joseph immediately left Chicago for NYC and took Pasquale's wife and son with him. By the 1960s he is a DeCavalcante capodecina. Pasquale Lolordo's close friend Phil Bacino stays in Illinois and continues to associate with fellow Riberese Vincenzo DeGeorge, seemingly both a part of the Chicago family, though Rotondo tells Italian authorities that Bacino was an early DeCavalcante boss. Bacino definitely maintained social ties with DeCavalcante members and visited Ribera, where his brother Luciano was a member of the local family.
The Birmingham family was dead before the 1940s, though the children of Pasquale Amari at least stayed in Alabama. Seems unlikely that immigration from Ribera continued in that area. The Riberesi presence in Chicago also seemed to dwindle and aside from Bacino and the DeGeorges, there was no significant presence in the Chicago family.
Many of the known DeCavalcante members (or their parents) who were living in NYC had moved to Elizabeth by the 1920s. This leaves Elizabeth as the remaining Riberesi stronghold, with members of Ribera heritage in NJ and NYC making up most of the DeCavalcante family. In the 1950s and 60s, quite a few future DeCavalcante family members come straight to Elizabeth from Ribera, including the Vitabiles, the Palermos (1947, but close enough), Jake Amari, Frank Guaracci, and others. Most Ribera-born immigrants in general seem to have come straight to Elizabeth given the large paesan population in Peterstown and guaranteed employment with local 394.
From there, a lot has already been discussed and we know that the DeCavalcante family for the past several decades has been almost exclusively a NJ/NYC affair, still with a strong Riberesi presence and many familiar names that go back to the start of the 20th century in Elizabeth.