The true Carlo Gambino

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Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by AlexfromSouth » Tue Dec 06, 2016 7:11 am

Oh okay Ill make a tread of it and we will maybe intrest Antiliar to join in. Thank you very much

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by Angelo Santino » Tue Dec 06, 2016 6:47 am

AlexfromSouth wrote:
Chris Christie wrote:
AlexfromSouth wrote:
Chris Christie wrote:I believe that area was mixed with various Itals. Depending on the era going that south west from Red Hook you would be venturing into Russian/Polish Jewish and Irish dominated neighborhoods but it wasn't a black and white thing and all these groups shared the area. Even deep Italian Elizabeth in Manhattan or Sacket St Brooklyn still had some Irish sprinkled in here and there. Elizabeth St in 1890 was an Irish neighborhood, by 1893 there were only a few families remaining but they were there.
Thank you Christie very much, we could open a topic about the history of the Italian neigbourhoods in NY. That would be very cool. Do you recomend any online read about this kind of thing? Thank you.
Sadly no, Brooklyn was only incorporated into NYC in 1898, and given that Manhattan is the most widely recognized borough of NY, history wasn't as scrutinized until that point. Brooklyn's pre-1890 Italian history is often overlooked.
Just to ask, are you in the know and Interested about the South Brooklyn/The docks Italian american gangs?
"In the know" as in personally connected- not in the least. My Brooklyn bonafides, if we can even call it that lasted three months and was limited to Bensonhurst. I do consider myself somewhat knowledgeable about the area but for every one thing I know there's certainly 100 things that I don't. I reckon Antiliar probably knows more than all of us and his take would be interesting. Currently he is working on a project that relates to this exact topic, although perhaps more Manhattan centered as it revolves around the 5 Points Gang.

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by AlexfromSouth » Tue Dec 06, 2016 6:37 am

Chris Christie wrote:
AlexfromSouth wrote:
Chris Christie wrote:I believe that area was mixed with various Itals. Depending on the era going that south west from Red Hook you would be venturing into Russian/Polish Jewish and Irish dominated neighborhoods but it wasn't a black and white thing and all these groups shared the area. Even deep Italian Elizabeth in Manhattan or Sacket St Brooklyn still had some Irish sprinkled in here and there. Elizabeth St in 1890 was an Irish neighborhood, by 1893 there were only a few families remaining but they were there.
Thank you Christie very much, we could open a topic about the history of the Italian neigbourhoods in NY. That would be very cool. Do you recomend any online read about this kind of thing? Thank you.
Sadly no, Brooklyn was only incorporated into NYC in 1898, and given that Manhattan is the most widely recognized borough of NY, history wasn't as scrutinized until that point. Brooklyn's pre-1890 Italian history is often overlooked.
Just to ask, are you in the know and Interested about the South Brooklyn/The docks Italian american gangs?

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by Angelo Santino » Tue Dec 06, 2016 6:30 am

AlexfromSouth wrote:
Chris Christie wrote:I believe that area was mixed with various Itals. Depending on the era going that south west from Red Hook you would be venturing into Russian/Polish Jewish and Irish dominated neighborhoods but it wasn't a black and white thing and all these groups shared the area. Even deep Italian Elizabeth in Manhattan or Sacket St Brooklyn still had some Irish sprinkled in here and there. Elizabeth St in 1890 was an Irish neighborhood, by 1893 there were only a few families remaining but they were there.
Thank you Christie very much, we could open a topic about the history of the Italian neigbourhoods in NY. That would be very cool. Do you recomend any online read about this kind of thing? Thank you.
Sadly no, Brooklyn was only incorporated into NYC in 1898, and given that Manhattan is the most widely recognized borough of NY, history wasn't as scrutinized until that point. Brooklyn's pre-1890 Italian history is often overlooked.

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by AlexfromSouth » Tue Dec 06, 2016 6:17 am

Chris Christie wrote:I believe that area was mixed with various Itals. Depending on the era going that south west from Red Hook you would be venturing into Russian/Polish Jewish and Irish dominated neighborhoods but it wasn't a black and white thing and all these groups shared the area. Even deep Italian Elizabeth in Manhattan or Sacket St Brooklyn still had some Irish sprinkled in here and there. Elizabeth St in 1890 was an Irish neighborhood, by 1893 there were only a few families remaining but they were there.
Thank you Christie very much, we could open a topic about the history of the Italian neigbourhoods in NY. That would be very cool. Do you recomend any online read about this kind of thing? Thank you.

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by Angelo Santino » Tue Dec 06, 2016 6:08 am

I believe that area was mixed with various Itals. Depending on the era going that south west from Red Hook you would be venturing into Russian/Polish Jewish and Irish dominated neighborhoods but it wasn't a black and white thing and all these groups shared the area. Even deep Italian Elizabeth in Manhattan or Sacket St Brooklyn still had some Irish sprinkled in here and there. Elizabeth St in 1890 was an Irish neighborhood, by 1893 there were only a few families remaining but they were there.

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by AlexfromSouth » Tue Dec 06, 2016 5:44 am

Chris Christie wrote:Columbia, Van Brunt, President, N 2nd, Hicks, Union, Sackett, Degraw, Columbia Heights up to Water and Main St's. It's kinda forgotten now but Sicilians had a thriving colony there as early as the 1850's. It evidently was large enough by 1860 for Valerio Lanzirotti and Charles La Fata, staunch Lincoln supporters, to form the Italian Garibaldi Republican Wide-Awake Club. Compagnans began arriving in the 1870's and used Mulberry Bend as a landing point, in time many left for Jersey, others went to Italian Brooklyn and shared the area with the larger Sicilian population. None of these streets or neighborhoods were 100% homogeneous.
Very nice info, very good it tells alot. As you say non of them were homogenous. One more question please, the area close to "south slope" around 3rd ave and 9th st, 4th ave and 12th st for example, the are benith the canal was it italian also? Was it sicilan or neapolitan, or? Were there any indications? It maybe a stupid wuestion and I appologize, but I haven't found it anywhere online so im asking you. Thanks.

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by Angelo Santino » Tue Dec 06, 2016 4:37 am

Columbia, Van Brunt, President, N 2nd, Hicks, Union, Sackett, Degraw, Columbia Heights up to Water and Main St's. It's kinda forgotten now but Sicilians had a thriving colony there as early as the 1850's. It evidently was large enough by 1860 for Valerio Lanzirotti and Charles La Fata, staunch Lincoln supporters, to form the Italian Garibaldi Republican Wide-Awake Club. Compagnans began arriving in the 1870's and used Mulberry Bend as a landing point, in time many left for Jersey, others went to Italian Brooklyn and shared the area with the larger Sicilian population. None of these streets or neighborhoods were 100% homogeneous.

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by AlexfromSouth » Tue Dec 06, 2016 3:14 am

Chris Christie wrote:The Lucchese Family, when it was constituted in the 1920's amassed an unknown number of Palermitans, including Three Finger Lucchese himself who, correct me if I'm wrong, also came from a Mafia background. Whether the Bronx Corleonesi welcomed the Palermitans with a red carpet or just recruited locally is up for debate. Bronx had a sizable Palermitan populaton which is why D'Aquila had members there as well as lived there in his later years and ultimately met his demise there.

Biondo is a common surname but there might have been a relation. We'd have to hire a genealogist to be certain. Palermo families (lower f) were related to people in Sciacca (hence the Capitalized F connection within the Gambinos). Sicily from Tapani to Messina is only 80-some miles, not very large at all.

The Gambino's non-Sicilian membership is an area I admittedly know very little about. I have noticed that plenty of members were on or had business on Mott and parts of Mulberry and downtown Brooklyn which was very Compagnian whereas other parts of Mulberry and Elizabeth were Calabrian along with Boerum Hill to the Bushwick sections of Brooklyn. Amazingly, Williamsburg had a higher concentration of Calabrians than they did Sicilians (ie Castellammaresi).

Tell me please if you know where in South Brooklyn (Red Hook, Carroll Gardens, Gowanus) were the Sicilians placed, lived? My understanding is that Gowanus ( area around Montes restaurat, 3rd ave, 4th ave) was pretty much people from, as you say, Campania. Is that true?

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by JCB1977 » Mon Dec 05, 2016 8:23 pm

Dwalin2014 wrote:By the way, John Scalish from Cleveland was related to them too by chance? What was his real original last name? Scalise, Scalice, Scalici? I mean, "Scalish" was oblviously a modification.
Scalise. But I've seen him referred to as Scalici but I've found no legal documentation on ship manifests to support this. Scalish had two sisters, one married Scalish's best childhood friend, Maishe Rockman and the other was married to Angelo Lonardo.

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by BillyBrizzi » Mon Dec 05, 2016 3:53 pm

EDIT FOR ABOVE POST: I see know that you probably only meant the Mangano/Gambino family B.

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by BillyBrizzi » Mon Dec 05, 2016 3:50 pm

B. wrote:
Antiliar wrote:Carlo Gambino's sister Giuseppa/Josephine married a Giammona, I believe Giovanni "John" Giammona. He was a descendant of Antoninio Giammona, the earliest known Palermo Mafia boss. He was the boss of Uditore from the 1860s or 1870s to the 1890s, and his son-in-law was a Giuseppe Riccobono. So the Gambinos have a long lineage in the Mafia.
I started reading Lupo's "History of the Mafia" a couple weeks back (a lot to process in there) and saw Giammona's name and thought there might be a connection. I wonder why Leo Giammona ended up with the Luccheses rather than the Gambinos.

I also wondered about the Giuseppe Biondo who is mentioned as a mafia leader from that era of Sicily, though the Joseph Biondo in the Gambinos was from eastern Sicily so it's unlikely he was related.

There is a history of Calabrese Gambino members going back to the 1920s, but it's a much smaller faction than a family like the Genovese. What's weird is that despite being a minority they managed to have a number of influential members over the years with Anastasia obviously being the top one.
I think he shares that nr. 1 spot with Frank Costello.

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by Angelo Santino » Mon Dec 05, 2016 2:14 pm

The Lucchese Family, when it was constituted in the 1920's amassed an unknown number of Palermitans, including Three Finger Lucchese himself who, correct me if I'm wrong, also came from a Mafia background. Whether the Bronx Corleonesi welcomed the Palermitans with a red carpet or just recruited locally is up for debate. Bronx had a sizable Palermitan populaton which is why D'Aquila had members there as well as lived there in his later years and ultimately met his demise there.

Biondo is a common surname but there might have been a relation. We'd have to hire a genealogist to be certain. Palermo families (lower f) were related to people in Sciacca (hence the Capitalized F connection within the Gambinos). Sicily from Tapani to Messina is only 80-some miles, not very large at all.

The Gambino's non-Sicilian membership is an area I admittedly know very little about. I have noticed that plenty of members were on or had business on Mott and parts of Mulberry and downtown Brooklyn which was very Compagnian whereas other parts of Mulberry and Elizabeth were Calabrian along with Boerum Hill to the Bushwick sections of Brooklyn. Amazingly, Williamsburg had a higher concentration of Calabrians than they did Sicilians (ie Castellammaresi).

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by B. » Mon Dec 05, 2016 1:42 pm

Antiliar wrote:Carlo Gambino's sister Giuseppa/Josephine married a Giammona, I believe Giovanni "John" Giammona. He was a descendant of Antoninio Giammona, the earliest known Palermo Mafia boss. He was the boss of Uditore from the 1860s or 1870s to the 1890s, and his son-in-law was a Giuseppe Riccobono. So the Gambinos have a long lineage in the Mafia.
I started reading Lupo's "History of the Mafia" a couple weeks back (a lot to process in there) and saw Giammona's name and thought there might be a connection. I wonder why Leo Giammona ended up with the Luccheses rather than the Gambinos.

I also wondered about the Giuseppe Biondo who is mentioned as a mafia leader from that era of Sicily, though the Joseph Biondo in the Gambinos was from eastern Sicily so it's unlikely he was related.

There is a history of Calabrese Gambino members going back to the 1920s, but it's a much smaller faction than a family like the Genovese. What's weird is that despite being a minority they managed to have a number of influential members over the years with Anastasia obviously being the top one.

Re: The true Carlo Gambino

by Dwalin2014 » Sat Dec 03, 2016 8:05 am

By the way, John Scalish from Cleveland was related to them too by chance? What was his real original last name? Scalise, Scalice, Scalici? I mean, "Scalish" was oblviously a modification.

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