Did we say that? Because we have continuity of members (Fontana, Fanara) and a captain (Virzi) who were under Lupo and then under D'Aquila. That's cut and dry established. Now with the Mineo, we don't have virtually any names of anyone under him, so no one we can link to Lupo or anyone else. It's not until 1930 when a Colombo member provided information which included taking orders from Mineo.B. wrote: ↑Sun Oct 08, 2017 11:44 pm In your article you say it's not clear whether it was D'Aquila or Mineo who took over directly for Lupo, which is sort of like the discussion about whether the Lucchese or Genovese are "technically" the continuation of the Morello family, but it doesn't seem clear to me that a new family was created at that time either, only that Mineo and D'Aquila were bosses from that point forward. Is there a source who specifically says Mineo (or possibly D'Aquila) took over a new family, or is there any possibility that this "second" Palermitani family existed pre-1911 and Mineo simply took it over as the new boss?
The Profaci family (which is probably the Mineo family) can trace its Villabate roots to Giuseppe Fontana, said to be an influential member under D'Aquila. If the Mineo family split off and eventually became the Profaci family, then I would guess it included Fontana's people. I've never been completely sold on the idea that Fontana was "just" a captain in the D'Aquila family, though... I believe he was a boss in Villabate and reports have him meeting with the highest ranking members in both Sicily in the US.
It's confusing territory with these bosses from Sicily coming to the US, though. This came up in the Vincenzo Troia topic when we found out he was the boss of San Giuseppe Iato when he fled to the US. He was recognized as a top figure in the US at the time of the Castellammarese war but it's not clear if he was boss of a small US family or if his status as boss of SGI was simply recognized in the US for political reasons. Maranzano is another example, as he was a top boss in Sicily and apparently became a soldier in the US but held the influence of a top leader before he became the official boss. If Fontana was a boss in Sicily, it's hard not to imagine he had more influence than the average member. What that influence amounted to, who knows.
D'Arco is always good at mucking up these types of discussions with his "history"... in his book he says that original Vario crew captain Salvatore Curiale went back to the days when there was one family in Brooklyn. It's not hard to imagine the Gambino and Profaci Brooklyn groups were part of one family, but hard to say with the other families. Would be interesting if what D'Arco is referring to is the Mineo family. Curiale could have switched families during/after the war, and the Frankie Yale crew would end up with ties to both the Profaci and Genovese family, so that group could have been under Mineo previously. The Bonanno family doesn't seem to have come from Mineo at all, but that was a much different part of Brooklyn. It doesn't seem completely insane to me that Mineo may have had most of South and East Brooklyn under his control, or at least the dominant presence there.
We searched for potential predecessors for Mineo and couldn't find anyone. In 1912 there was a meeting which involved a "break up" and in 1913 you first hear about "The Mineo Gang" as a separate entity from "The D'Aquila Gang." It seems logical because before 1905, the numbers wouldn't have justified another family. But due to a string of earth quakes and other events transpiring in Italy at the time, there was a surge in immigration in 1904-1906 and continued steadily until the mid 1920's. We know that when mafiosi came to NYC they had to "transfer" into an existing group, they couldn't go around as free agents. So given that Palermo was the port city and Sicily's largest premier city, it's probable the majority of immigrants and ergo majority of mafiosi hailed from Palermo. With less immigrants coming from the Sicilian interior and the Trapani region it's plausible Gambino membership shot upward out of control. We don't have numbers but I could see in 1910 the totals being 150-300 for the Gambinos with the Genoveses being half that and the Bonannos slightly smaller. Going back to what I normally harp on about Mafia Families not being in a race to have the largest group, I think that perhaps played a part in the 1912 formal split. And interestingly enough, Mineo's bro in law Palermo Boss was in Palermo in 1910 when the Palermo groups formally splintered 2-3 sometimes 4 different ways into new groups (which later would semi-rejoin under the mandamenti system.
In New York City, Villabate was like Bisacquino, people from these towns could go with one or the other depending on who their contacts were. If I'm Castellammarese and all my mafia contacts are in Palermo and I don't know anyone in Castellammare there's a good chance I'd end up with the Gambinos. But quite generally, people from the same towns know each other and that's why you have clumps of people aligned from close areas in Sicily. And that tradition continued for the most part: following the mafia's arrival in America when they began to recruit on US soil, they made people close to them, from the same neighborhoods or at least had been in the area for a certain amount of time or came with connections somewhere else. That Colombo acting boss made out of nowhere a few years back with no connections to NYC is a very rare scenario.