Philadelphia's first Italian immigrants arrived in the
mid-eighteenth century. Artists and scholars, tradesmen and
entrepreneurs, they established a new community--one of the first
"Little Italies" in America--that would provide not just a home but
a sense of belonging for later arrivals. Richard Juliani tells the
story of early Italians in the City of Brotherly Love: why they
chose that city, what their lives were like, where they lived, and
how they interacted. Examining Italian settlement from
pre-Revolutionary times up to the eve of mass migration in the
1870s, he shows how these early pioneers created the basic
structure of the community that would continue into the twentieth
century.
Juliani has devoted thirty years of research--combing through
newspapers, public archives, religious records, business documents,
and files of private organizations--to recapturing the creation of
a community. He describes such factors as regional origins, methods
of migration, and population growth; patterns of age, sex, income,
and occupation; family structure and living arrangements; and the
formation of communal institutions.
But more than providing data, Juliani explores the private lives
of many individuals in the Italian community--notably business
leaders who spearheaded fraternal societies and political
clubs--and tells how early immigrants made a significant
contribution to the city's life. He also compares the Philadelphia
community with other Italian colonies, particularly in New York,
and shows how, after years of being looked upon in a favorable
light, a more negative view toward Italians began to emerge.
The early Philadelphia Italian community has never before been
studied despite the existence of a large body of records from this
period. Building Little Italy provides a rare opportunity to
witness the origins of an ethnic community. By presenting a
meticulously detailed profile of the Italian immigrant experience
through its early stages of development, it captures a piece of
local history that has been too long ignored.
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