Showing posts with label Abbate Family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abbate Family. Show all posts

Saturday, April 18, 2015

The Artichoke King


This post was actually written by my Aunt, Virginia Lee Abbate Thompson, in response to a writing prompt in a course she attended at the University of North Carolina. She was given 10 minutes. She is amazing! Enjoy:
It was my father who taught us to enjoy artichokes.  He would boil them whole in salted water.  When he was able to easily pull off an outer petal with tongs, the chokes were done. Then he would pull each artichoke out of its boiling bath with the same tongs,  squeeze it gently over the pot until the steaming water had drained from between the petals, and place it on your plate together with a generous pat of soft butter and a small circle of salt.
He taught us to pick up each petal by the cactus end, dip the soft end in butter and salt, then, placing the buttered end in your mouth, draw it through your teeth so that its soft outer layer floated in a delicious salty sea of butter in your mouth. The remainder of each petal was discarded in a common bowl in the center of the table.
He taught us to eat each petal until we reached the flower center. There we separated the tender soft center (choke) from the spines that surround it. We learned to remove the spines and discard them so that we were free to enjoy the soft heart with even more butter and salt. It was a treat to remember.
Once when we were together at home on a hot summer afternoon, my mother told me that when she and my father were first married they lived in New York City. They had been invited to a very elegant dinner given by someone she remembered only as “the artichoke king.” She recalled that only a week later she had read in one of the newspapers that he had been machine-gunned down on his own doorstep. "What a shock,” she said shaking her head. “ I couldn’t believe it.”
Many years later, I found a job working for New York City District Attorney Frank Hogan’s chief investigator. Among other things, I was keeper of his files.
Remembering my mother’s story, I looked up “the artichoke king" in their top-secret files. There I learned that former Mayor Fiorello Laguardia had “regulated” the infamous artichoke king out of business. Perhaps it was because of this defeat  that  the “king” was later demoted by his new boss,  Lucky Luciano, and died from a stroke at age 49.
I’m still wondering who it actually was my parents had dinner with that night, and who was actually machine-gunned down a week later! My mother had always been so disciplined and accurate, but she was also somewhat  naïve, and Sicilian men just don’t believe in telling anyone, their wives especially, what is really going on.
As a post script, I have done just a tiny bit of research to see if I could make any connections here but I come up short as well. There is a lot of information on the web about "The Artichoke King" and his life in the Morello crime family in New York. Maybe you can come up with a connection.... I was always told that my grandfather changed his last name from Abbate to Abbott to get out of the "mob" and I thought that was just a "romantic" version of why he would do that. Hmmm, maybe there is more truth to that story than I thought!

Monday, May 6, 2013

Travel Tuesday: Boy Scout Camp 1947


Here are a couple of postcards that my Dad sent home to his family when he was at Boy Scout Camp in June, 1947. He was twelve years old.



Dear Family,
I received your letter and was very glad. I am having a grand time; I am sleeping right under Terry Shaw and when he squeaks the bed I punch him. We have been having wet weather today but I believe it will clear up. We have a big boy sleeping with us. He is 19 years old. Love, Jimmy A.



Hi Cuties,
I am going to be seeing you  in a few days. I am doing fine. I might break out whith poision ive or poision oak but Terry doesn't thing so. Goodbye for now. love, Jimmy A.

Loving the postmark on the first card: "Build your future wisely, safely. U.S. Savings Bonds" and the 1 cent stamps!

Friday, April 26, 2013

An Anniversary Today!

Chuck and Angie Mood
April 26, 1980
So, today is our 33rd wedding anniversary.  It is not one of those, "Wow, where did the time go?" days because it feels like we have been doing this dance always, not in a bad way but in the way that says, "I don't remember life without you and its good!"

Our anniversary week always begins with remembering the day, April 23, 1980, that my husband graduated from Officer Training School at Lackland Air Force Base and was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the United States Air Force. That day started our "wedding week" and it was a whirlwind.
Isabelle Hume Mood, 2LT Charles Mood,
 Angie Abbate Mood
Lackland Air Force Base
April 23, 1980


Chuck's parents and I flew to San Antonio for his graduation on a Tuesday.  After arriving in San Antonio we quickly took in a River Parade the night before attending his graduation on Wednesday of that week. We flew home to Florida on Thursday afternoon. Friday was the rehearsal and dinner, Saturday the wedding and on Sunday we said goodbye to family and friends before heading toward California on Monday. Destination?  Mather Air Force Base.


Our wedding? A typical 1980s affair with a plethora of qiana dresses, lace and sheer capes, Farah Faucett hair, wide lapels and ruffled tuxedo shirts, bridesmaids in a "rainbow" of blues and purples, ribbon bedecked flowers, a unity candle, traditional vows, and a friend who crooned Dan Fogleberg's new hit "Longer" and a 1940s hit by Irving Berlin (chosen by our mothers) "Always."  Our reception was held at Chuck's sister's home complete with her awesome neighbors who directed traffic and aunts who added the perfect touch to all the details. It was magical for us, the newly commissioned Second Lieutenant in his Mess Dress and his bride ready to take on the world.



Angie's Hiking Outfit!
Within one week of Chuck's graduation and just days after our wedding we had made our way half way across the country driving my beautiful, red, 1974 Camaro (8 miles to the gallon all the way to Cali baby!) carefree and well, not exactly. We, of course, didn't have much money so we had decided that we should camp on our way. After all, I figured, Chuck is an Eagle Scout, he is great at this and it will be an adventure for me. After several nights in a pup tent and not having brought anything remotely "camping like" in my suitcase I was pretty much done. Seriously, like, he even had these little plastic holders for his soap and his toothbrush and stuff like a raincoat for heavens sake! I had some really cute shoes, a blow dryer and curling iron and a bunch of sun dresses. It was the night in El Paso, Texas that finished me in. After driving all day, getting stopped for speeding in the middle. of. nowhere. Texas. (Yep, that was me driving while Chuck snoozed!), hiking up some mountain to see a fort, in heels, no place to plug in a blow dryer at the KOA Campground and freezing in the desert evening, I was near the edge. What pushed me over was the hail storm as we literally held the tent down with our bodies that night. We didn't camp again for another year!
Yep, there she is,
 the beautiful, red, 1974 Camaro!

The last day of our trip the battery went dead in the beautiful, red, 1974 Camaro. (Did I mention how much I loved my beautiful, red, 1974 Camaro?) We got a jump start in southern California and drove the rest of the way to Sacramento without turning the car off.  We arrived at Mather, parked the beautiful, red 1974 Camaro and there it sat until the next day when we could get help. Yep, we walked to the TLF (Temporary Living Facility, in Air Force speak.) that would be our home for the first few weeks of marriage.


Charles Gordon Mood, Angie Abbate Mood, COL Charles Wayne Mood,
 Sarah Mood Lyons, James Alexander Lyons
Chuck's retirement, April 2012

Here are some take aways after 33 years. Chuck retired from the Air Force last year on April 23, the 32nd anniversary of his commissioning, a job more than well done. We still visit forts on most every road trip and I am still rarely dressed appropriately for the occasion. I sometimes, actually, enjoy the journey more all these years later. Us= me, always in a hurry...Chuck, never too busy to notice the details along the way. We see people with campers now and
we wonder, "What if......" (Campers mind you, not pup tents!). Two amazing children and one equally amazing son-in-law and a grand baby on the way, God has blessed us beyond measure. Chuck is a man of integrity, one of the many great qualities I love about my husband. Thirty three years and counting, "I'll be loving you always"*..."even when the binding cracks and the pages turn to yellow!"*

*Irving Berlin's "Always"
*Dan Fogleberg's "Longer"


Saturday, April 20, 2013

Talented Tuesday: The Abbates in the California Desert

In 1938, the United States Bureau of Land Management Small Tract Act allowed citizens to homestead five acre tracts of land in the California High Desert under the condition that they built inhabitable structures on the land within three years. The desert was billed as a great place to seek relief from the crowded urban conditions of Los Angeles and a place for recreation and renewal. 

Here's a quote from the Desert Magazine in 1950 that sums up the conditions that these homesteaders were facing:


Jackrabbit homesteads are only for folks who have a bit of pioneering blood in their veins. The land generally is rough, no water is immediately available, more or less road building has to be done. But fortunately there are many Americans who find infinite pleasure in doing the hard work necessary to provide living accommodations on one of these sites—and cabins are springing up all over the desert country.”
–Desert Magazine 1950

Some of those "many Americans" just happened to be my paternal grandparents. Victor and May Abbott (Abbate) and Victor's siblings Agnes and Frank built weekend getaways in the Yucca Valley on land they acquired through the Small Tract Act. Yep, my grandfather, the plasterer from Sicily, built his own desert getaway. 

Bureau of Land Management records show that Agnes was the first to acquire land in the Yucca Valley on October 4, 1957.  Frank's land was awarded on October 1, 1956 and Victor's on February 9, 1959. *

Here are some of the Abbate ladies celebrating the groundbreaking
of one of the cabins!

Pictures show Agnes,  Frank, Victor and their families enjoying weekends at their cabins hanging out, eating, playing games and getting away from it all for awhile. 

A little research revealed that some of the areas where these cabins were built have been abandoned and the structures are in disrepair.  There are still structures on the lots where both Victor and Frank's cabins stood.  Check out this link to Google Maps to see how the lots look more recently.

Early progress on Victor's cabin on Kickapoo Trail.
Look closely and you can just make out my talented grandfather
 sitting on the porch of his place!

Water and electricity!



A carport!
The completed cabin!

Visitors!
Croce Scalisi, Louisa Abbate, May Abbott and Victor Abbott

May Abbott on the cabin property.
Check out that interesting tree branch above May.
Angie Abbate Mood and Victor
Yep, looks like that's the same Joshua Tree!
Hey there, welcome to my homestead!
Victor Abbott
Hey there, my grandpa built this place!
Angie Abbate Mood, 1965

*Follow these links to view the original Patent details for the land acquisitions.
Frank Abbate
Agnes Abbate
Victor Abbate

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Sibling Saturday: My Brother's Easter Basket!

She didn’t talk to her husband for hours when he came home from work that day. She was terrified, afraid for herself and her precious three children. He did not ask permission, it wasn’t a slight, just a surprise gone a little awry. In that moment she couldn’t see that one day they would become the best of friends. Yep, that day, Dad had brought home a mild mannered Collie and Shepherd blend canine whose name was King. Of course, the kids were elated but the Mom was sure we would all be found dead the next morning, mauled by this intruder!


Stories of King, where to begin?  He was best buddies with the youngest son, Jimmy and the protector of the Mom, Jane. He was a gentle giant but when he wagged his tail everything in its path was on the verge of destruction. He loved long walks late at night, barking at the neighborhood children while tethered to the anchor secured in the middle of the front yard, and vanilla ice cream from Dipper Dan. Yep, when our grandmother was visiting we kids used to lie and say to our Dad, "Grandma said she wants ice cream from Dipper Dan!" She would just smile and Dad would always oblige. We enjoyed ours but King did more! I can still conjure, in my mind, the sight and sound of King lapping up his scoop of vanilla ice cream in his turquoise bowl right in the middle of the walkway from the living room to the dining room.

This was my brother's Easter basket. One year he decided that it should belong to King. One of us kids wrote his name on it and that was it! I have saved it, along with my own childhood Easter basket, all these years. An Easter basket for a dog, weird, I know, but our family is like that, and, remember, I love simple things that remind me of family and special relationships. The price stamp on the bottom of the basket is 89 cents. Now? Priceless!

King was adopted from the Miami Humane Society after weeks of our Dad searching for just the right dog. We think he had been abused, in today's terms, he was a rescued soul.

So, I know that a pet does not really count as an ancestor and King does not fit anywhere into our family tree but who says that the heirlooms that we have from "man's best friend" don't count here, right?! It's my blog and I can write what I want to....! (Can you hear the tune...it's gonna' be stuck in my head all day now!)

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Fearless Females: An Immigration Story

Women's History Month Fearless Females blog prompt: Do you know the immigration story of one or more female ancestors? Do you have any passenger lists, passports, or other documentation? Interesting family stories?

"Back in the day" when finding an immigration record meant that you needed, if I remember correctly, at least three out of five pieces of information about an immigrant family to submit a request to the National Archives, I remember that "bingo" moment when My Uncle Salvatore Abbate provided the missing details. Well, actually, all the details were missing for me. Uncle Salvatore remembered the port they departed from in Sicily, the name of the ship, and the month and year he arrived at Ellis Island, with his mother and siblings.

I carefully completed the application that I had picked up while visiting Washington D.C. and mailed it, yep, snail mail! (Does anyone use that slang anymore? Oops, my age is showing!) Anyway, after months of waiting and pretty much forgetting about ever hearing back, one day, a nice, fat envelope arrived from the Archives. I still remember standing at the mailbox and doing the "happy dance" clutching that envelope in my hands!

The Abbate side of my family is the only one for which I have documentation of the point of entry into the United States and any documentation of their existence in their original "home land." I may be only 1/4 Sicilian but I am certainly proud of the brave family that risked it all for a better life in America.

One of my favorite blog posts is this one, Benvenuti Nella Terra d'America, in which I tell the story of my great grandmother and her children and their voyage to America. Enjoy!

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Fearless Females: Working Girls!

Women's History Month Fearless Females blog prompt: Did your mother or grandmother work outside the home? What did she do? Describe her occupation.


We Abbate siblings were fortunate to have our mom, Jane Thomas Abbate, at home during our "growing up" years. In the 1950s, before children, she worked at the Dade County Courthouse in the evidence department. She always told us the most graphic (and awful, for me, the squeamish child!) stories about the morbid pictures and items that she catalogued and stored for future court proceedings. She loved that job and I am pretty sure that started her love for reading murder mysteries too!


My paternal grandmother, May L. Abbott, was a stenographer and worked at the Department of Immigration in Miami. This is a photo of a page in one of her course books. The book, titled, Expert Shorthand Speed Course, was printed in 1945 and featured the "Gregg" method of shorthand. Interestingly, all of the pictures in the book feature men working in offices and demonstrating the proper posture, etc. for taking dictation. I suppose that it was not as common for women to work in those days, but then, my grandmother was no ordinary young lady!


My maternal grandmother, Mildred Silas Thomas, worked in the "Infants Department" at Jackson's/Byrons Department Store in downtown Miami after our grandfather passed away. She spent many years working there and I remember that she always rode the bus, come to think of it, I don't ever remember her having a car! I searched all over the internet for a picture of the Jackson's/Byrons logo but found nothing but this more current picture of the building where the department store was located. I did find several articles recounting the Jackson's/Byrons lunch counter and its role as a "ground zero" location during the Civil Rights demonstrations in Miami in the 1950s. Fortunately times have changed a lot since then!

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Fearless Females: How'd they meet?

Today's Fearless Females blog prompt: Do you know the story of how your parents met? Your grandparents?

I'll have to go to grandparents on this one and it is a story told on my very first blog post, She's A Solid Lady. The "how they met" story that I know is of my paternal grandparents. First, however, let's get their names straight!



Grandpa: Born Vito Carmello Abbate, grandpa went by Victor after arriving in America. Sometime during the early to mid-1930s he changed his last name to Abbott. From that day on he was known as Victor C. Abbott.

Grandma: Born Lena May Stockton, grandma preferred to use her middle name for a first name and her first name initial as a middle name. Got that? She went by May L. Stockton. When she and grandpa were first married they used the last name Abbate but she too decided to "go by" Abbott. From that day on she was known as May L. Abbott.


So, when I asked my aunt (their daughter) how they met, here's her response:
"How did Lena May and Victor meet? I believe they met in Miami on vacation. It was the "in" thing to do for the Ohio crowd to visit Miami during the winter months, and Victor must have done the same. Somewhere there are photos of them hanging out at the beach. Other members of Victor's family must have been in Miami too, because my mother told me they were never allowed to date as a couple. One of Dad's sisters always had to be along!"  

Victor and May Abbott
Austin, Texas
July 1972


Sunday, March 3, 2013

Fearless Females: Favorite Female

So, I am three days late in deciding to join this wagon suggested by The Accidental Genealogist and tell you about the women in our families during Women's History Month. I'll just jump right in here before I freak out about having to come up with a post everyday! Here's a "catch up" post.


Fearless Females: Favorite Female
March 1- Do you have a favorite female ancestor? One you are drawn to or want to learn more about?

That's an easy one, just check out my post on Luigia Forte Abbate from last week. Lately, she ranks right at the top for me. Whew, that was easy!







Friday, March 1, 2013

Luigia Forte Abbate

Louisa on her 86th birthday.
March is Women's History month so it seems fitting to highlight the last few tidbits of information that I have collected over the years about Luigia (Louisa) Forte Abbate since her story has been the focus of my blog posts this week and, in my book, she is a woman to be admired: courageous, hardworking, smart, tenacious, beautiful inside and out, charming, and funny! Here we go, enjoy!

"I did hear that Angelo did not have enough money to send for his family once he got to New York...Louisa dreamed of a number one night, played the number in the lottery the next day and won!  That's how my dad and the others got to America!" -Virginia Lee Abbate Thompson (granddaughter of Louisa)

"Louisa studied English and got her citizenship all on her own while living at 8691 17 Avenue in Brooklyn." -Catherine Cognata Trapani (granddaughter of Louisa) (Family, check that link, there is a "street view," is that the house?)

"Louisa's father (Vito Forte) received a dowry consisting of a cart of flax for his marriage to Maria Lombardo, Louisa's mother. Vito took the flax and started a business in fabrics and became very successful. So successful, in fact, that he had urns of gold and fine fabrics, and was a money lender in the town of Salemi. The business was willed to their daughter Louisa and was sold by her before she immigrated to the United States in 1909." - Catherine Cognata Trapani (granddaughter of Louisa)

"Mother (Louisa) had a store in the 1st floor of our house. The kitchen and attic were on the 3rd floor. Hay was stored in the attic and one day I started a bonfire and my mother heard the crackling of the hay and yelled "fouco" (fire). The whole town heard and came running with buckets and formed a line from the fountain to the fire." -Salvatore Abbate (eldest son of Louisa)

"Louisa Abbate was such a delightful lady. She always had her hair done and her nails polished. She had breast cancer before I met her and had such radical surgery that she could never raise her right arm above her head. I don't know how true it is, but she once took a bus into downtown Los Angeles to shop, then, growing tired and not wanting to wait for another bus ride back, went up to a police officer and told him she was lost! He drove her home in his police car much to her delight. She also liked to hang garlic cloves from the door knobs to keep out evil spirits! Also, a song titled "Pop Goes the Weasel" was very popular many years ago and Louisa would joke that the song was about her: Pop Goes Louisa!" -Virginia Lee Abbate Thompson (granddaughter of Louisa)



"This is our house where we live.  Like this?"
Not sure where this house is, anyone have ideas?
Louisa, seated on the right.
On the left is her younger sister, Crocifissia (Croce) Scalisi




Louisa with her youngest son, Frank.

Seated: Louisa and Angelo on their 50th Wedding Anniversary
Standing (L to R): Amalia/Molly, Frank, Maria/Mary and Agata/Agnes

Louisa Forte Abbate was born on March 29,1873 to Vito and Maria Lombardo Forte. She married Angelo Abbate in 1896 at the age of 23.  They were the parents of of six children: Agata/Agnes (1897-1983), Maria/Mary (1898-1989), Salvatore (1901-2000), Vito/Victor (1903-1976), Amalia/Molly (1906-1996), Andre (1910-2002), and Frank (1912-2010). She died at age 90 in Los Angeles, California and is buried at the San Fernando Mission Cemetery.  




Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Benvenuti Nella Terra d'America

The Registry Hall
 Ellis Island Immigration Station
 New York, May 2004
These days the Registry Hall at Ellis Island Immigration Station stands empty except for a few National Park Service Rangers who await the completion of post-Hurricane Sandy repairs which will allow the 113 year old building to receive visitors again. Standing in the hall, as my daughter and I did in the spring of 2004, is an experience I will not forget. It was quiet on that day as well. Just a few people roaming around, taking in the vast Hall and, maybe, like us, trying to envision the day that their ancestor arrived at this most coveted destination. My grandfather and his mother and siblings arrived at Ellis Island Station to be processed for admission into America on April 22, 1909, a story right out of the history books. Let's go back a few years, 104 years to be exact, and imagine how it all must have appeared to Luigia Forte Abbate and her five children.

Luigia Forte Abbate
circa. 1897
Luigia is strong. For the last three years she has, alone, endured pregnancy, managed the raising of five children, run the family business, and prepared herself to leave the rest of her family to join her husband Angelo in America. On April 8, 1909, 36 year old Luigia Forte Abbate gathers her five children, the eldest, Agata is 13 years old and the youngest, Amalia is just three years old, to leave their home in Salemi, Sicily for the last time. Their plan is to board the Lloyd Sabaudo steamship, the Principe di Piemonte in Palermo, sail to America and be reunited with their husband and father after three long years apart.  Destination: Brooklyn, New York...a new life and new dreams.

The Principe di Piemonte
As Luigia and children board the ship they are taken into the very depths of the vessel to their quarters in third class. Below the waterline, no windows, no privacy, and few amenities. Unlike their fellow passengers in first and second class, there will be no fine dining, no walks on along the deck and little to keep them occupied for the two week crossing. Almost immediately after the ship sails the children begin to experience sea-sickness.  Soon, Luigia herself is ill.
"Our mother and the children (except me!) were all very sick on the voyage to the USA, especially Maria".  -Salvatore Abbate, eldest son who was 8 years old at the time.
The Principe di  Piemonte arrives in New York Harbor on April 22, 1909 after 14 days at sea, with a total of 2,336 passengers. As passengers disembark, the first and second class guests are escorted to awaiting family and friends at the pier, no need for the wealthy to endure the processing at Ellis Island, they have been pre-screened and released long before arriving in the harbor. The third class passengers or "aliens in steerage" as they are classified on the manifest are shuttled by ferries to the Ellis Island Immigration Station. I find myself thinking that this must have been a day of immensely conflicting emotions for Luigia. She must have been both terrified and excited at the same time.  History remarks of the crowds of people who were lined up for processing in the Registry Hall. Imagine standing among thousands of men, women, and children, keeping five children and your belongings together, trying to follow directions given in a language that you don't understand, and  trying to wrap your head around one of the most significant moments in your life amid such turmoil. The immigrants received physicals that would often separate families if one was found to be ill or "unfit" to be processed. Four of the five had been sick aboard the ship, what if? Would she be able to keep the children all together? Would they be allowed to move through the lines together? Would they receive the paperwork they needed to stay in the US?  Would she know the answers to all the questions the officials would ask? Her heart and mind must have been racing!  The ship's manifest recorded their names, ages, birth years, race, gender, distinguishing marks, their next of kin in the port of departure, the name and address of their sponsor in America.* Was the information that was recorded correct? Just one misstep and they could be sent back to Sicily or separated from each other.

The Registry Hall
Ellis Island Immigration Station
circa. 1907
ellisisland.org



The answers were all YES! Luigia, Agata, Salvatore, Maria, Vito, and Amalia were now well on the way to their new lives and new dreams...benvenuti nella terra d'America, welcome to the land of America!

And there you have it, the end of one journey and the beginning of another, all on the same day!







Copies of this photograph have been in my family for as long as I can remember.
La famiglia nel paese vecchio...The family, in the old country!

Standing (L to R): Luigia Forte Abbate, Crocifissia Forte Scalisi, Pietro Scalisi, Anna Forte
Seated (L to R): Maria Lombardo Forte, Angelo Abbate, Vito Forte
Baby: Agata Abbate, born March 6, 1897

Luigia, Crocifissia, and Anna were sisters, the children of Maria and Vito Forte,
Angelo and Pietro, sons-in-law, and Agata, the first child of Luigia and Angelo.



Luigia and Angelo Abbate
New York



Sarah Mood Lyons (great-great granddaughter of Angelo and Luigia)
Angela Abbate Mood (great granddaughter of Angelo and Luigia)
The Registry Hall, Ellis Island Immigration Station
May 2004



The Principe di Piemonte was sold to the Cunard Steamship Company in May 1916
and was used to carry general cargo from Bristol, England to New York. 
Early in the morning on March 1, 1917, the ship was hit with a torpedo from a
German U-Boat and sunk off the coast of Waterford, Ireland. 
 Seven lives were lost, the unarmed ship became a casualty of World War I.


*To view a copy of the ship manifest go to ellisisland.org.  Use the drop down menu on the left:  passenger search, select search by ship, select the letter "P" and then find the Principe di Piemonte in the listing of ships.  Select the year 1909 and then then date April 22, 1909-Palermo. The children are listed with the last name misspelled Akkate, Luigia is listed under her maiden name, Forte.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Tombstone Tuesday - Angelo and Louisa Abbate

Angelo and Louisa were my paternal great grandparents and I love that my parents chose to name me for Angelo because he and his wife, I have decided, are my new favorite ancestors. These two courageous people took the risk of a lifetime and left their home in Sicily to bring their family to America, Ellis Island immigrants, a true American story!
Angelo left Sicily and his wife and children in 1906 and worked as a plasterer in America for three years before bringing her and their five children, including my grandfather, Vito (Victor) to New York.  They first  lived in the Brooklyn area of New York along with many other first generation immigrants.  I love that the U.S. Census records show that they always had a house full of family. There were fifteen years between their eldest and youngest children and records show that some of their children, along with grandchildren, lived with them even after marriage. In the 1940 U.S. Census it shows that, at 70 years of age, Angelo had four foster children living with his family as well. They were a large Sicilian family who enjoyed hanging out together and laughing and joking around.  I've got the pictures to show it!  Look for more posts on the Abbates coming soon!



Angelo and Louisa are buried at the San Fernando Mission Cemetery in Mission Hills (Los Angeles), California.




Friday, February 15, 2013

Carefree Days in Miamuh!

Mildred and D.C. Thomas
Miami Beach, FL 
"Miamuh," if you've got any history there then you will recognize that pronunciation of the word Miami, the crown jewel of South Florida in the 1920s and 30s. That's how the old-timers and natives (not many left I'm afraid) still pronounce it. All four of my grandparents were transplants to the Magic City. On the maternal side, a young couple from rural south Georgia who, in the mid-1920s wanted to leave the farming communities of their ancestors behind for life in the "big city."  On the paternal side, around 1935, the striking Sicilian whose family had settled in New York after arriving at Ellis Island and his wife, the fashionable young lady from Ohio, along with their two children. Both couples moved to Miami to establish their homes which, in the end, happened to be just one block from each other.

These photos of carefree days in Miami Beach were taken during the days after the 1926 hurricane, after the bursting of the real estate bubble in Miami, and after the Great Depression. These were fun times when dreams for young people like my grandparents were beginning to come true again!


Daniel Claude Thomas
Bayshore Confectionery
Miami Beach, FL
circa 1934



Daniel Claude Thomas
Miami Beach, FL



Lena May Stockton (Abbate) on right
Miami Beach, FL

Lena May Stockton (Abbate) (top right)
Miami Beach, FL


L to R:
Victor James Abbate
Victor Carmello Abbate
Virginia Lee Abbate (Thompson)
Miami Beach, FL