Outside of a few holdovers from Morello and the younger guys recruited under Masseria we are still in the dark about who many of the original members were in the early 1920s. I have tended to see the Luccheses as the "true" continuation of the Morello Family because they inherited the majority of the Corleonesi but as I said a while back, I now think that is a questionable stance given the Morello Family did not look exactly the same way it did in 1920 as it looked in the early 1900s. For one, it is fairly evident now that the Morello Family had brought prominent mainlanders in as members or associates by the late 1910s and that some of these (Yale most prominently) continued on with Masseria. Point being, we can't view the split of the Morello Family purely through the lens of people from Corleone or even Sicily. Even with the Sicilians I'm now starting to believe the Genovese took on an element of the Morello Family from comuni further east, too.
The Luccheses do overlap with the Genovese here, as they obviously had a lot of Corleonesi but also members from Baucina, Marineo, and even Caltanissetta, however at present I'm not aware of them having many members from the more eastward villages. I'm also under the impression that the Luccheses had more of an element from in and around Palermo citta, with Tommy Lucchese, Steve Rannelli, and Ettore Coco coming from there, whereas I'm not aware of Genovese members from there (offhand at least). Corleone / Baucina / Marineo is common between the Genovese and Luccheses so maybe this element was split between them while the Genovese took in the network further to the east. Just a theory and if true I'd guess this was based on organic relationships, not something they drew out on paper when the Family split.
I included some Morello Family members here even if it could be argued they weren't Genovese members but some guys from that period did join the Genovese Family or are otherwise relevant so I included them here just to further show continuity. It should be noted though that the early members are clustered to the western side of the map and some later recruits did come from that cluster but moreso the villages on the eastern side. These villages all share a region, though.
![Image](https://theblackhand.club/forum/ext/dmzx/imageupload/files/b5d4908340380c0279dbdd8d966083f8.png)
Piana degli Albanesi (Piana dei Greci)
Giovanni Pecoraro
Marineo
Salvatore Loiacano
Joseph Loiacano
Michael Spinella
Cefala Diana
Saverio Pollaccia
Villafrati
Fortunato LoMonte
Tommaso LoMonte
Baucina
Antonino Cecala
Salvatore Mauro
Vincent Mauro
Ciminna
Joseph Agone
Anthony LaPaglia (possible candidate, re: Bonanno movie)
Mezzojuso
Angelo Lagattuta
Corleone
Giuseppe Morello
Ciro Terranova
Vincent Terranova
Liborio Bellomo (probable)
Salvatore Bellomo
Liborio Bellomo (Barney)
Liborio Bellomo (cousin)
John Schillaci
Frank Amato (Dick)
Joseph Gagliano (Lucchese?)
Lercara Friddi
Salvatore Lucania
Pietro Dolce
Ralph Dolce
Gaetano Licata
Frank Cacciatore
Montemaggiore Belsito
Joseph Stassi
Other Stassi brothers?
Cerda / Collesano
Rosario Mogavero (paternal heritage from Cerda, maternal from Collesano)
?Ottilio Frank Caruso (wife's family from Cerda, Caruso's heritage unconfirmed but his closest associates were from this area)
Anthony Provenzano (Collesano)
George Fillipone (Collesano)
Joseph Lanza (Cerda)
Harry Lanza (Cerda)
Scillato / Grattieri
Joseph Lapi
Angelo Lapi
Polizzi Generosa
Gandolfo Curto
Charles Gagliodotto
Petralia Sottano / Castellana Sicula
Peter LaPlaca
Resuttano
Angelo Tuminaro
Not included on this map but other members from Caltanissetta:
San Cataldo
Angelo Lapadura
Joseph Lapadura
Nicosia (historically part of Caltanissetta)
Frank Livorsi
Barrafranca (historically part of Caltanissetta)
Raffaele Belvedere
Vincenzo Piazza was likely a Genovese member in NJ alongside Lapadura and Belvedere, and I believe he may have come from Caltanissetta as well. The Lapaduras and Belvedere were in the same crew as LaPlaca whose heritage was technically in Palermo province but his parents were from comuni right on the border with Caltanissetta.
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Other thoughts:
- Obviously a lot of the guys with heritage further east were younger and more Americanized, so it's not clear how explicit these connections were on the street. Many of them were street hoodlums and one factor could have been and probably was general migration patterns to certain neighborhoods. But even then, they lived in neighborhoods (especially Lower Manhattan) that were cross-pollinated by multiple Families and these guys associated closely with members of the other groups (even being related to them, i.e. Tuminaro) yet they still ended up with the Genovese and play into these patterns. Many of these guys also tended to associate most closely with their paesans or neighboring paesans despite having a wide range of associates to choose from. It's possible too that some of these younger recruits had older relatives or paesans who were obscure/unknown members as we typically see that in American Families that show these kinds of patterns.
- Note that none of these villages are coastal and the nearby coastal towns were known mafia strongholds that played an early pivotal role in the Sicilian and American mafia. This appears to be a network within the interior, though, and the far-eastern interior of Palermo is largely mysterious. There was organized banditry and mafia-like activity there going back to the 1800s but it doesn't surface much in the national American mafia and even info on the Sicilian side is limited but there was definitely a mafia presence there later in the 1900s. The proximity to aggressive mafia powerbases like Termini Imerese, Caccamo, and Corleone suggest to me the mafia was influential there further back than we know.
- This region is also a gateway to Messina province along with Caltanissetta and it may be worth looking more into Messinesi within the Genovese Family with this in mind. There is a big difference between someone coming from the western side of Messina vs. the east, for example.
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As always, feel free to mention any mistakes or misinterpretations. It is evident to me though that this region, which is largely obscure even to us maniacs, played a significant role in the Genovese Family's Sicilian heritage and though much of the focus is on the area immediately around Corleone it certainly appears they were tapped into the entire area east of Corleone as well, seemingly without touching the coast.
I also haven't looked into the entire Genovese Family by any means so there may well be more guys we could add. I suspect the early members in particular would be relevant here but we lack info on most of them. There is no question the Genovese were a pan-Italian organization and this was key to their identity, one report calling them the "Napolitano Family" because of the number of Neapolitans, but the Sicilian roots still seem to have informed who they recruited into the 1950s and maybe a little bit beyond even though these were organic influences and not an explicit design.