Add an Article
Add an Event
Edit
In 1820, there were just thirty
Italian immigrants in all of the United States.
However, between 1880 and 1920, a wave of new immigration came to the United
States from southern Italy,
and many came to Delaware. They
came to work as contract laborers on the railroad and to work to builders. By
1890, there were 459 Italian-born residents in Delaware,
and their numbers grew by the close of the century.
Other industries in Delaware
attracted Italian immigrants who wanted a better life. These included leather, iron,
and steel. Many of the early immigrants were men who left their families behind
temporarily until they could establish themselves and bring their families to Delaware.
They often stayed in boarding houses with other workers. Eventually, they
brought families here and bought homes.
Over the years, these immigrants
settled in the neighborhood around Union and Lincoln
Streets between Pennsylvania and
Lancaster Avenues. They brought with them a strong, determined and independent
culture, which they preserved through strong family structures and ties. The
neighborhood was known as The Hill, and eventually Little Italy.
As Italian immigrants continued
to settle in Delaware many began
to open their own businesses, such as mom and pop shops. They opened fruit stores
and offered their services as shoemakers, tailors, barbers, bakers, butchers,
cheese and macaroni makers. Later they became restauranteurs, grocery and other
retail store operators.