Not sure about Mangiapane, but Terenzio Armone from Misilmeri witnessed Lucchese boss Bonaventura "Joe" Pinzolo's naturalization. Pinzolo in turn was the brother-in-law of Gambino captain/consigliere Joe Riccobono. Terenzio Armone's sons Stephen, Joe, and nephew Stephen Graumauta were members of Riccobono's crew (or some iteration of it). Another son Alfred Armone was ID'd as an associate / possible member. Terenzio ran a grocery store in Manhattan and has never been ID'd as a mafioso though the connections are strong.Chris Christie wrote: ↑Tue Nov 16, 2021 6:43 pm There was an early D'aquila member secretly working with Yale. Mangiapane? Did we find some connection with Armone family or am I disremembering? Armone was originally Armona and I think his family was from Misilmeri (I've gone through alot of names today and I could be wrong).
-
The Contes may have come from Passo di Rigano or a nearby neighborhood. The FBI questioned Pasquale Conte who told them his family knew the Gambinos and Castellanos back in Palermo before coming to the US. His father Antonino living in Williamsburg when Pasquale and his mother arrived to NYC is interesting but given where they were from in Palermo it makes sense they linked with the Gambinos opposed to Bonanno. I believe one of the first grocery stores the Contes owned was in Williamsburg.
The woman who arrived to the US with the Contes was DeCavalcante boss Phil Amari's mother. She is listed right next to Pasquale and his mother on the manifest. Makes you wonder if they coordinated for important mafia members' female relatives to travel together or if it was a coincidence. Not aware of any ties Patsy Conte had to the DeCavalcantes.
Gambino member Francesco Paolo Graziano was Patsy Conte's first cousin on his mother's side (maiden name Graziano). He's in a couple of the well-known photos of Conte.
-
Joe N. Gallo's family knew Rumores from Bisacquino in both Birmingham and New York. The New York ones were Gambino members but can't substantiate a relation to the ones in Birmingham. A Bisacquinese Joe Gallo who was born in Birmingham moved to New York then returned to Birmingham where he got married and then brought his wife to NYC with him -- however, his father's name differs from Joe N. Gallo (Antonio opposed to Michele) so not sure if there's a relation but Joe N. Gallo maintained ties to Birmingham in the 1960s according to telephone records.