Italian Oakland
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About this ebook
Rick Malaspina
Author Rick Malaspina was a reporter and columnist for the Oakland Tribune and the San Francisco Examiner daily newspapers. His grandparents settled in San Francisco in the late 1800s after emigrating from northern Italy. A resident of Oakland, he personally gathered the images and information in this collection mainly from local individuals and families who, like him, proudly cherish their Italian American heritage.
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Italian Oakland - Rick Malaspina
tutti!
INTRODUCTION
Sempre avanti. In Italian, it means, Always move forward.
The phrase was heard and uttered often by Italians in old Oakland, sometimes paired with the words sensa paura, or without fear.
Sempre avanti, sensa paura. More than a saying or greeting, it was a call of mutual encouragement, support, and camaraderie from one friend or family member or fellow newcomer to the United States to another: Onward, have courage, be strong, never fear, press on. In a sense, the phrase symbolizes the Italian American immigrant experience itself and certainly captures the indomitable spirit of early immigrants. They left their homeland and their loved ones, typically with little or no belongings, and traveled by sea to an unknown land with a strange language and new customs. They often faced hardship and adversity, but through hard work, determination, and perseverance they built new lives and contributed in various ways to the growth and betterment of their communities and their adopted country.
The greatest influx of Italians to the United States took place between 1880 and 1920, when more than four million Italians came to a country whose name they could pronounce because of its Italian origin but knew little about—except that it offered opportunity and prosperity. They came largely from southern Italy, mainly the regions of Sicily and Calabria, escaping poverty, overpopulation, unemployment, and the effects of soil erosion, natural disasters, and disease that beset both people and crops. Most of these immigrants were single men in their teens, twenties, and thirties—peasants, mostly—and unmarried men or men who left their wives behind and called for them later, after finding housing and work. Most of these immigrants put down roots in the urban centers of the East Coast, which accounts for the Italian neighborhoods and concentrations of residents of Italian descent existing there today.
Other Italian immigrants, however, were more adventurous than their countrymen. They went West. After the weeks-long transatlantic voyage from Italy, they traveled a long distance again, this time by train, to a newer, more expansive land of opportunity called California. It was a place where the climate, geography, and means of livelihood more closely resembled those of the parts of Italy they had left behind. These hardy pioneers hailed predominantly from northern Italy, the regions of Tuscany, Liguria, Lombardy, and Piedmont. They left Italy for many of the same reasons as other immigrants, but for these northern Italians a different sort of American experience beckoned—and their move west resulted in a legacy of ingenuity, creativity, and entrepreneurship that helped shape the Golden State and flourishes to this day.
Two local documentary exhibits give particular perspective to the history of Italian Americans in California. One, titled In Cerca di Una Nuova Vita (In Search of a New Life
), was produced by San Francisco’s Museo ItaloAmericano (museoitaloamericano.org) and presented there in 2009–2010. The other is an online exhibit, Italian Americans in California (bancroft.berkeley. edu/collections/italianamericans), crafted by the Bancroft Library at the University of California at Berkeley with funding from the National Italian American Foundation.
Taken together, these exhibits frame the movement of Italians to California in three stages, or waves. The first and largest wave, consistent with the general pattern of Italian immigration to the United States, spanned the period between 1850 and 1924. Although mostly poor and unskilled, these immigrants arrived early in the state’s development and were able to take advantage of its burgeoning economy. They found work in the agriculture, fishing, winemaking, mining, railroad, logging, construction, food processing, and manufacturing industries. They also struck out on their own as laborers, merchants, and craftsmen. Some, or their offspring, began businesses and companies in California that would grow to worldwide prominence.
The second wave of Italian immigration to California took place after 1924 and extended until after World War II. In contrast to the Italians who preceded them, the immigrants in this second wave were from Italy’s middle class, affluent, and generally older. They had endured Italy’s political, social, and economic turmoil before and after the war and the devastating aftermath of the war. Like their predecessors, they left Italy in search of a new beginning in the United States.
A more recent, though perhaps less apparent, wave of Italian immigration began in the 1970s. It brought to California a breed of immigrants from every part of Italy, lured by a new era of enterprise and innovation in the state. They were entrepreneurs, scholars, scientists and engineers, artists and professionals, and they made significant contributions in areas such as high technology, agribusiness, biotechnology, research, and higher education.
Against this backdrop stands Oakland’s Italian American community. From its beginning in the late 1800s to the early 1900s, it grew to be a center of activity, advancement, and assimilation for thousands of immigrants and their families. Early residents, part of the first wave of Italian immigration, settled in Oakland and other cities and towns on the east side of San Francisco Bay, stretching from Martinez to San Jose. They came from the larger, more established, and more prominent city of San Francisco after the earthquake and fire of 1906 destroyed much of the Italian district of North Beach and other parts of the city or to escape labor union resentment in San Francisco against cheap, unskilled labor. They came from the more crowded and urban centers of the East Coast, where many immigrants remained after leaving Italy. They came directly from Italy, encouraged by friends and family members who had already made their way to California or enticed by California’s natural appeal at the dawn of the 20th century.
By the 1930s, Oakland had one of the largest Italian American populations in California. And within Oakland, the place to live for Italians—or the place to move up to for many—was a bustling section of north Oakland known as the Temescal district. It had everything Italian residents needed to feel at home, and then some. The 1950s and 1960s, however, brought an end to Temescal, at least as old-timers knew it. Like other Italian American enclaves in California and elsewhere, the old neighborhood, both physically and culturally, was giving way to factors such as urban development and suburban sprawl, changing demographics, and increasing independence and affluence among young people as they started families and sought housing of their own. In short, the need and desire to maintain a close-knit, ethnic community was dissipating, an experience common to other ethnic populations, an American experience.
This book highlights the history and character, the feeling and flavor, of a special time and place. It is a time and place that exists in the hearts and minds of those who were there and still remember and that lives on, at least in spirit, for those who have the joy—and the duty—of upholding Oakland’s Italian American heritage.