B. You've looked into Michele Maggio, what do you got on him? Here's what I have for the other two:Among those named as bosses of the local Family were Frank "Cheech" Barrale, Michael Maggio and George Catania. Presumably, they held short tenures in the years from about 1905 to 1920 when it was affirmatively known that Salvatore Sabella became the boss.
The noted bosses represent the majority of Mafiosi in Philadelphia from towns in western Sicily where the "Honored Society"
(as it is called there) had been a part of the culture for centuries. By far, the least number of local Mafiosi were from Campobello di Mazara, Province of Trapani. Their route to the citywas through some brief settlement in Bristol, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Michael Maggio(1889-1959) came to the United States in 1905 and by 1910 had established himself as a grocer, then an Italian cheese manufacturer in Philadelphia.4 He became a benefactor of the Roman Catholic Church, various charitable causes and a civic leader. Only a few of his paesani, including relatives, were in the Philadelphia-South Jersey Family.
1 Francesco Cheech Barrale - Cumberland, NJ
1882: B: Mar 15 in Belmonte Mezzagno, Sicily
1900: Barrale (18) arrived May 25 in NYC to his brother Luigi, 267 Elizabeth St.
1915: Age 33, resides with family as a farmer in Deerfield Township, address unspecified. Had a neighbor, Anthony Pipitone, also a farmer. Has business on Christian St, Philly.
1920: Age 37, resides with family at 106 Morton Ave, neighbor Anthony Pipitone.
1930: Age 47, resides with family as a farmer at 43 Morton Ave in Deerfield, Cumberland, NJ. His entire street was Ital.
1942: Age 59, same address in Deerfield.
1958: died.
2 Giorgio Catania - Upper Darby - worked at Christian and Passynk
1877: Born to Filippo and Giuseppina Badame in Caccamo, Sicily.
Said he arrived in 1900, cannot locate anything on him.
1920: Lived at 532 Carpenter St with Family. Retail merchant and grocer.
1928: Murdered July 3. Lived at 706 Wayne Ave, Brywood. Witness for body is son Philly Catania.
3 Michele Maggio - Philadelphia proper...
Maggio-Michele
1889-1959 C.Di Mazzara,Sic.[1906] 1920-50's A.Bruno[M] Con
as per (http://mafiamembershipcharts.blogspot.c ... iladelphia)
*If he was an early boss, he would have been 20 in 1909 and in 1919 Sabella became boss.
If I had to hazard a guess I'd ponder the order was Catania, Barrale, Maggio onto Sabella but I'm not even sure these guys were all one group before Sabella. We're talking 60 miles of distance between these men. But on the other hand, Sabella's group was estimated to have 19-21 members which you'd think would be more if there were 3 or more small groups forming a family.
Are you seeing any early Sciaccatani element? I'm not, although they surely existed in Norristown and Montgomery they don't appear to have any part in the Philly Family since Sabella. Am I correct? And did Maggio have any early links to Christian St? Because that's the only thing all these men have in common. And when Sabella became boss he also operated there. This kinda matters because if we can't connect the Sciaccatani of the county to these other groups that sheds 2 decades off of the Family. Before 1895 very few Sicilians lived in the actual city. So the Caccamesi didn't exist prior to 1890-1895.
South Jersey Sicilians predate Philly. I don't know about the Belmontesi in S. Jersey but starting in the 1870's Italians began immigrating from NYC to that area- Bridgeton and Millville, in 1877 Vineland Italians owned 56 parcels of land and by the late 1910's they owned a combined 2 million worth. Farming appeared to be the big thing. In 1885 East Brighton or 'New Italy' was constructed 4 miles from Vineland.
I'm gonna ask, B. do you think it's possible this group actually began after the 1900's and not prior to 1895? More and more I see this being a possibility so if I'm missing something please check my thinking.
We do have Nick Gentile being made in 1906 in Philadelphia, he was born in Siculiana (a Sciaccatani). Gentile was vague enough that he could have meant the Philadelphia area if he was made by a group of Sciaccatani in the suburbs and this group may have died out. Or It's connected to Philly. Or perhaps the family was starting in the early 1900's and Gentile got in and the Sciaccatani angle played no role. Philadelphia has a history of bringing in people from all different areas- Enna, Castrogiovanni, Campobello di Mazzara, Cast, etc.
I would have one request before you respond and it's reconsider what you know as fact based off of Morello. Go to the book, use the index, find the reference that says things like Sabella gracefully retired and see if its sourced. Some things are but some things are not and we already know her logic can be flawed, as can in all of us.
Lastly, one file claimed that Bruno was made by Mike Maggio? Is that correct or was he simply proposed? Because if he directly did the ceremony, him being a former boss or possibly a founding member might have bestowed that privilege.