Today in Family History…

On today’s date in 1810, during the night, my ancestor Domenico Damiani was murdered with other male members of his family because of a vendetta. Domenico left behind young children, including my ancestress Giovanna Damiani, and a pregnant wife. The two other men murdered that night were his uncles Donato Damiani and Nicola Damiani.

Below is his death record. The information regarding the murder and vendetta is sourced from La Storia di Farindola by Antonio Procacci in the chapter on Brigandage.

Farindola Morti, 1810 #3

For more on Giovanna’s family, please visit this two year old blog post:

https://cinziarosasdescendantsblog.wordpress.com/2019/08/19/52-ancestors-in-52-weeks-34-tragedy-the-tragic-losses-in-the-early-life-of-giovanna-damiani/

The book on the history of Farindola was found at this glorious website: https://gelsumino.it/

– I’ll be continuing the transcription of the records of the midwives when I am more familiar with the upgrade on the Antenati website.

Happy New Year!

The 1817 Typhus Outbreak and Famine of Abruzzo and My Family Tree Part 3 ~ Giuditta Urbania Dell’Orso, 55

My fifth great grandmother Giuditta Urbania Dell’Orso was born around 1762 in Farindola to Urbano Dell’Orso and Candelora Ciarma.  She passed away at age 55 during the typhus outbreak in Central Italy on February 26, 1817.

farindola

Giuditta had AT LEAST two siblings named Giustino and Agostino.

Some time before 1785, Giuditta married Domenico Antonio Lucerini when their first child I could find in the Farindola civil records appears to have been born.  Their children are as follows:

Maria Concetta Lucerini, born 1785, married Antonio Di Luca;

Maria Domenica Lucerini, born 1787, married Matteo Cirone;

Domenica Lucerini, born 1789, married Filippo Andrea Lizza;

Anna Vincenza Lucerini, born 1792, married Diego Pompili;

Carmina Lucerini, born 1794, married Giovanni Lacchetta;

my ancestorAntonio Lucerini, born 1801, married Giovanna Damiani (daughter of Domenico Damiani and Laura Rosa.)

There may be more children I have not yet located.

My ancestor Antonio married my fourth great grandmother Giovanna in 1825.  His father Domenico Antonio passed away in 1846.

Antonio and Giovanna had at least 11 children.  Their daughter Anna Emidia Lucerini was born in 1830 and she married Luigi Di Francesco – which makes them the grand parents of my great grandfather Paolo Di Francesco.

Paolo
My great grandfather Paolo.  He had blue eyes.

Do you have any additions or corrections?  Are we related?  Please email me:  cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net.  

Happy Easter

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks #34: Tragedy ~ The Tragic Losses in the Early Life of Giovanna Damiani ~

This week’s 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks them is Tragedy.  My four times great grandmother Giovanna Damiani suffered tragedy after tragedy in her early life.  She was born in 1804 in Farindola, Italy to contadini Domenico Damiani and Laura Rosa.  Present at her baptism on March 23, 1804 at the Parish of San Nicola di Bari, were her godmother Domenica Fragasso, and the midwife named Anna Dell’Orso.*  The baptism was performed by Arch Priest Giovanni Mantricchia.

baptism

Giovanna was the middle child, with two older brothers named Giuseppantonio and Antonio, and two younger sisters named Anna Emidia and Catarina.  How does she relate to me specifically?  She is the ancestress of my paternal grandmother, and the snipped image of her descendancy to my paternal grandmother is shown below.
Giovanna DamianiOn the night of January 9, 1810, when Giovanna was 5 years old, her father Domenico was murdered at Contrada Valchiera in Farindola, with other male members of his family – namely his uncles Donato and Nicola Damiani.  According to La Storia di Farindola by Antonio Procacci, these were likely vendetta murders.

My 5 times great grandmother Laura Rosa had been pregnant when he was murdered.  Their youngest child Catarina was born on July 28th of that year at Contrada Valchiera.

At some point, Laura moved Giovanna and her remaining family, to live with her Damiani in-laws according to addresses found in the 1811 Farindola Civil Records, to Contrada delle Tavo, Farindola.  There is a clue that perhaps Giovanna’s mother’s family had contracted an illness, because in April of 1811, Giuseppe Rosa, the brother of Giovanna’s mother, Giovanna’s mother Laura, and Giovanna’s youngest sister Catarina all passed away within a week of each other.  The deaths progressed as follows:

  • Giuseppe Rosa passed away on April 5, 1811 at Contrada Santa Maria, Farindola;
  • Catarina Damiani passed away on April 10, 1881 at Contrada delle Tavo, Farindola.  Informant was her grandfather Giovanni Damiani, also living at Contrada delle Tavo;
  • Laura Rosa passed away the day after her daughter at Contrada delle Tavo, Farindola.  Informants were her father-in-law Giovanni Damiani(again) and brother Domenico Rosa from Contrada Santa Maria.

death
Note my 5 time great grandfather’s signature at the bottom – Nicola Carusi —–Remember him?

At age 7, Giovanna and her remaining siblings were now orphans.  Luckily, their paternal grandparents Giovanni Damiani and Veneranda Paolucci were still alive, for Giovanni successfully married off all of his orphaned grandchildren before he died in 1827 –  in the same place his son and brothers were murdered – Contrada Valchiera, Farindola.  They married the following individuals:

  • Giuseppantonio married Elisabetta Colangelo;
  • Antonio married Angela Maria Dell’Orso;
  • Giovanna married my 4 times great grandfather Antonio Lucerini, son of Domenico Antonio Lucerini and Guiditta Urbana Dell’Orso in early 1825;
  • Anna Emidia married Pasquamarino Riccitelli.

After a sad early life for my 4 times great grandmother Giovanna, she and Domenico had 10 children that survived to adulthood.   In their 47th year of marriage in 1872, Domenico left Giovanna a widow.  She passed away in 1886 at #24, Contrada Casebruciate, Farindola.

*I suspect that Anna Dell’Orso was a 5th or 6th great grand aunt of mine, because in my experience looking at the Farindola records, the midwives were usually relations to the children they delivered.

If you have any comments, additions, or corrections, or any question on my sources (Italian civil records on Antenati and La Storia di Farindola) please email me- cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net.

 

 

 

Women’s History Month/52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks #11: Large Family ~ Anna Emidia Lucerini and Her Crazy Birth Record ~

This week’s 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks prompt is Large Family.  I am choosing to share a story about researching my third great grandmother Anna Emidia Lucerini and her crazy birth record this week.

farindola

My third great grandmother Anna Emidia Lucerini was born in 1830 in Farindola.  She was the 5th child of contadini Antonio Lucerini and Giovanna Damiani and 1 of 11 children.  A curious thing happened to her birth record.  This is the link to her original birth record on Antenati.

Anna Emidia was born at about 8 in the morning on June 25, 1830.  At noon that day, her father appeared at the municipal hall to have the birth of his fifth child recorded.  The clerk, or perhaps it was the mayor Serafino Pompei, recorded Antonio and Giovanna had a male baby that was given the name Emidio.

While I was researching this part of my Di Francesco line in Farindola, I knew Anna Emidia’s parents were named Antonio Lucerini and Giovanna Damiani, because I had already found her death record.  I was going through the records by year and adding her siblings when I found this record.  I had just assumed she had a brother named Emidio.

Then when I found Anna Emidia’s marriage record about a year later, I found an interesting document included in the marriage processetti called “Atto di Rettifica di Nome di Anna Emidia Lucerini.”  (or Act of Rectification of the Name of Anna Emidia Lucerini).  This is the Antenati link to that original atto in Farindola’s 1852 Diversi:  Antenati link.

I suppose Antonio Lucerini was illiterate, but what was the clerk or mayor’s excuse?  What are the excuses of the two witnesses as well?

The following are the children Antonio Lucerini and Giovanna Damiani had in Farindola:

Vincenzo born 1825

Pasquale born 1826

Giuditta born 1827

Berardino born 1828

Anna Emidia born 1830

Domenico born 1831

Maria born 1836

Antonio born 1839

Sabatino born 1841, died 1843

Sabatino born 1843

Pietro born 1845

Their last three children were born at a place called Pietralunga near Farindola.

While I researched her mother’s line, I realized that my third great grandmother was likely named for her mother’s older sister named Anna Emidia Damiani.

By the way, Anna Emidia Lucerini’s grandfather Domenico Damiani and her great uncles were murdered 20 years before her birth in 1810 because of a vendetta.  Her mother Giovanna Damiani was only 5 at the time.  Did you know I have 4 people in my Farindolesi tree with Ancestry’s new tree tags using my custom tag “Murdered because of Vendetta.”  But that is a 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks post for another week! 

Anna Emidia Lucerini married Luigi Di Francesco in 1853.  They would have needed the corrected birth record for their legal marriage to take place.

Next week:  Women’s History Month/52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks #12 – Writing A Letter to An Ancestress

Source:  Antenati

cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net

 

 

 

 

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks #5: At the Library ~ Il Brigantaggio Farindolesi e Mia Famiglia/The Brigandage Farindolesi and My Family ~

This week’s 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks challenge is At the Library.  I have been lucky enough to find a treasure of a book on the history of one of my main Italian ancestral villages in Abruzzo online at the website:  www.gelsumino.it.  The book is called Storia di Farindola, Dalle Origini ai Giorni Nostri by Antonio Procacci.  Since my family has lived in Farindola for centuries and my immediate family left Farindola less than 100 years ago, I was ecstatic.

There is a chapter in the book called “Il Brigantaggio/The Brigandage”.  I found quite a few ancestors and relatives mentioned in this chapter, specifically in the time period the author referred to as being the most violent in Farindola – the years 1805 to 1810.  The author clearly pointed out that this is during the time of French dominion over Italy, under Giuseppe Napoleone and Gioacchino Marat, and that some of the brigands were veterans of the fight to keep the French out of Abruzzo.

Please note, my translations of what I read are to the best of my ability, and that I am mentioning which page I took the information from as I write this post, and that I hope to provide accurate information to you.

In 1799 when the French left Teramo, these 100 or so soldiers returned home.  It is believed that these returning soldiers became “political brigands,” who in turn, joined the  factions of the “common brigands” already active in the country-side of Farindola for over a century. (page 36) 

 

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Two of these veterans, I believe are either cousins or a degree of uncles to me: Massimantonio Marcella and Nicola Pompili. (page 35)

Massimantonio Marcella

Massimantonio Marcella was well-known friend to bandit leaders, his house was a meeting place for them, and he was believed by authorities to have been the go-between that engaged in bribes for protection from the Guardia Urbana di Farindola (Urban Guards of Farindola), of whom the Comandata (Commander) was my 6th great grandfather Paolo Carusi(page 40, page 42)

This previous post relates some data I have collected on Paolo: Paolo Carusi, Writer and Landowner, Brother to a Conte.  Because this current post is an update to that  previous post, there is a link in that post to this one.

Massimantonio was also presumed to be the man one would seek out to gain protection from authorities in Penne and the other small villages surrounding it.  The author noted, Massimantonio Marcella was said to be close to the infamous brigand leader from Penne named Mascierelle and the brigand leader from Farindola Giovanni Sergiacomo dei Colli.  Testimony referred their relationships as compare. (page 42-43) 

Based on the naming patterns in my tree, and because some shootouts between French authorities and the brigands in Farindola took place at Contrada Trosciano, where Massimantonio lived, and was also the home of my early 19th century ancestors, I am taking a wild guess that there is a possibility that Massimantonio Marcella was the uncle of my 3rd great grandfather Massimonicola Marcella.  This is just a guess, however, I am sure there is a blood connection.

Paolo Carusi, my 6th great grandfather and

Nicola Carusi, my 5th great grandfather

More on the Guardia Urbana ~  This force were formed in 1808 by French authorities because of il brigantaggio in the Farindola environs.  The French appointed my 6th great grandfather Paolo Carusi the commander of the Farindola forces.  According to the Storia di Farindola, and if my translation is correct, he commanded the other urban guards – 12 French soldiers.  (page 40)

The book tells me that on May 11, 1807, a group of brigands got into a firefight with the Guardia Urbana in Farindola.  Because the villagers feared looting, they gave up the brigands and under the order of the son of Paolo Carusi, the French soldiers followed the brigands to their hideouts.  In fear for his life and that of his family’s, the son of Paolo fled with them to nearby Penne, leaving behind his business and property.  Paolo Carusi wrote to the French General Chavardes who then sent his son 15 days of rations while they hid out. (page 41)

Based on my research in the Farindola civil records on Antenati, that son of Paolo, and the only son married with children in 1807, was my 5th great grandfather, the future Cancelliere of the Comune di Farindola, Nicola Carusi.  Interestingly, Nicola died young!  At age 40 in 1817.  The civil records do not give a cause of death.  1817 was a year of famine in Abruzzo but he was a wealthy man.  It was also the year of a typhoid epidemic.  Is that why he died?  

Candeloro Salvitti, my 5th great grand uncle

The chapter also mentioned that a man was murdered on June 30, 1807.  He was my 34 year old, 5th great grand uncle Candeloro Salvitti(page 42)

According to my tree, Candeloro was also the brother of the father of the future mayor of Farindola, Donato Salvitti. 

Domenico Damiani, my 5th great grandfather

I was nearing the end of this very informative chapter when the author was mentioning that the Brigantaggio was winding down towards 1809 and 1810 and how the old leaders in hiding were still carrying out vendettas against those in Farindola that had betrayed them, and that such happened the night of January 9, 1810 when three men of the same family were murdered.  They were Domenico, Nicola, and Donato Damiani.   (page 44-45)

This rang a bell with me because I remembered seeing three death records in a row for three men of the same last name and I had figured it was an illness!  HA!  The name Domenico Damiani also rang a bell.  So I went to my tree and sure enough, I had an ancestor with that name and oh boy, yes, he died January 9, 1810 and by the way, Domenico Damiani, was my 5th great grandfather.

Donato and Nicola Damiani were brothers and were Domenico’s uncles.  My 5th great grandfather Domenico was married to Laura Rosa.  Besides leaving behind my 5th great grandmother, he also left behind three young children, and a teenager.  (More on Laura Rosa and Domenico Damiani at a later date!)  According to the death records I found in the civil records Antenati, all three men lived in the countryside at Contrada Della Valchiera.  Does that translate to Valkyrie?

I want to mention that my 5th great grandfather’s signature, Nicola Carusi (the same man mentioned above), is at the bottom of those three records as the Cancelliere, and that the same two men, Domenico Rosa and Tommaso Basile were informants on all three death records.

Other Potential Relations

Finally, these are some other names in this chapter that are likely some form of relation to me:

  • Tommaso Iannascoli, Cesidio Colella, and Giovanni Frattarola were among 20 accused brigands in the Penne area in December 1806 and were from Farindola.  Tommaso Iannascoli was hung at contrada della Piano della Fonte on January 15, 1808. (page 40)
  • 4 murdered on the night of June 4, 1807 were brothers Antonio and Nicola Pompili, and Francesco Di Francesco and his wife Anna Saveria (Basilicati) (page 41)
  • 4 were murdered during the month of July, 1807, including Jacopantonio De Rizio. (page 42)
  • Murdered on September 20, 1807 was Giovanni Battista Pompili, brother of the men killed on June 4, 1807. (page 42)
  • Vincenzantonio Lepore was hung at contrada della Piano della Fonte on January 15, 1808. (page 42)
  • On February 27, 1808 Domenicantonio Frattarola sopranome Cipranne and Orazio Cervo were shot and killed. (page 42)
  • On March 23, 1808, brigand Ambrosio Frattarola was arrested. (page 43)
  • In April 1808, a small band of brigands got into a firefight with French soldiers in Trosciano (an area where my ancestors lived.)  Killed were Filippo di Simone and Giovanni Colangeli. (page 43)
  • In May 1809, Giuseppe Frattarola was arrested for murder. (page 43)
  • On August 1, 1809, an award was launched for the information and capture of famous robbers Sabatino Marcella, Saverio Marcucci, and brothers Sabatino and Gesualdo De Juliis.  (page 44)
  • I also read that in 1809, the local occupying French Major Cochet was murdered at age 40 as an act of revenge, and buried without sacraments, according to Storia di Farindola. It is believed the murder was carried out by those avenging the arrest and hanging of the leader of the Dell’Orso family from Farindola. I have several known Dell’Orso ancestors. How does the hung man connect to me? I don’t know right now and they are only referenced as a family in this chapter and not by their first names like in my tree.  (page 40-41)
  • Lastly, on March 5, 1815, the L’Intendente della Provincia di Teramo sent a message to the mayor of Farindola that only one brigand was still on the run.  He was, the aforementioned, Sabatino Marcella. (page 45)  Note – 1815 was the last year of the French occupation.

WHAT AN INFORMATIVE BOOK!  

Sources:

Storia di Farindola, Dalle Origini ai Giorni Nostri by Antonio Procacci ,via http://www.gelsumino.it.  This blog post mentions data contained in pages 33-50.  

Antenati

-cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net

 

 

 

 

My Pescara, Teramo, and Chieti Surnames and Places Lists

gransassoditalia Gran Sasso D’Italia, overlook near Farindola

Pescara, Abruzzo, Italia

  • FarindolaMarcella, Di Francesco, Merlenghi/Merlengo, Massei, Rossi, Cirone, Di Pend/tima, Di Massimo, Colangeli, Iannascoli, Lucerini, Giansante, Pompili/Pompilio, Cacciatore, Damiani/Damiano, Lizza, Puccella, Ferri, Marzola, Cervo, Chiarella, Colella, Carusi, Frattarola/Frattaroli, Rosa, De Nino, Lepore, Paolucci, Lacchetta, Ciarma, Dell’Orso, D’Angelo, Bucci, Di Simone, Tinacci, Del Priore, Salvitti, Sciarra, Di Risio/D’Orizio, Iannascoli, Di Luca, Fragassi/Fracasso, Di Costanzo, Di Julio, De Angelis, Cottelluci, D’Agostino, Fusaro, Trizii/Trizio, Costantini, Ricci, Di Vico, Marcelli, Collalto, Sciambellone, Marcucci  
  • Major Farindola Collateral lines:  Zenone, Belgrado, Generosi, Iezzi, Romagna
  • Penne: Colangeli, Crocetta, Rossi, Barbacone, Cotraccia, Labricciosa/Della Bricciosa, Marrone, Gambacorta, Ricci, Delle Monache, Di Costanzo, Di Falone, Andreoli, Di Donato, Triozzi, D’Angelo, D’Angelo alias Zagliocco, D’Angelo alias “Il Nibbio”, Giansante/Di Giansante, Trignani, Di Belisario, Facciolini, Massei, Imbastaro, Scaramuzzo, Cacciatore, Desiati/Desiati alias Cacciatore, Sacchetti, Sacchetti Sopranome Muffitti, Oriani/Auriano/Di Auriano, Di Norscia, Mincarelli, Di Federico, Ferramosca, Di Carlo, Chiarella
  • Loreto Aprutino: Carusi, Balsamo
  • Carpineto della Nora: Di Giansante, Di Giardini
  • Pianella: D’Agostino, Di Pentima, Di Leonardo
  • Montebello di Bertona: Antonacci, Di Silvestre, Di Vico

Teramo, Abruzzo, Italia

  • Arsita/Baccucco: Rossi
  • Castelli: Sacchetti Sopranome Muffitti/Sacchetti, Menei
  • Castaglione Messer Raimondo: Ricci

Chieti, Abruzzo, Italia

  • Fara San Martino: Salvitti, Sciarra, D’Ippolito

 

Links:

For research in Farindola, Elio Fragassi’s website has been invaluable: External Link.

For Penne and Farindola research, Gelsumino.it has been a goldmine!  The link to it’s resources is here: Link.

Pescara and Chieti records are all available on Antenati.

My Abruzzese tree: Ancestry

 

Thank you for visiting.

-cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net

 

Today’s Anniversary ~ Anna Emidia Lucerini and Luigi di Francesco ~

This year my challenge is to post the marriage documents of all 16 sets of 3rd great grandparents on both sides of my ancestry on their anniversary.  The first wedding anniversary is below.  san-nicola-di-bari

Farindola – On this day in 1853, my 3rd great grandparents Anna Emidia Lucerini and Luigi di Francesco were married in San Nicola di Bari church in Farindola in the presence of Vincenzo Carusi and Tomasso Tommalino, and in the town hall in the presence of:

Don Giacomo Mascioli, 53, landowner;

Nicodemo Giancola, 38, landowner;

Gennaro Barbarossa, 53, contadino; and

Antonio di Luca, 60, contadino.

(Descendants of Nicodemo Giancola and his wife, Maria Domenica Sciarra, are distant cousins and live in the United States today.  Nicodemo Giancola married Maria Grazia Sciarra, daughter of Giuseppe Antonio Sciarra.  He was the brother of Maria Domenica Sciarra  -> wife of Giuseppe Antonio Marcella->4th great grandparents of the author.)

food

Both Anna Emidia and Biagio were contadini and born to contadini in Farindola, Italy.

This is the link to their marriage record: Atto #1 Matrimoni Farindola, 1853.

Anna Emidia Lucerini was born in 1830 to Antonio Lucerini and Giovanna Damiani.  I had an idea that Anna Emidia was born around 1830 because I had found her 1907 death record.  After I found the marriage of her parents in 1825, I began to find the births of her siblings.  In 1830, I found a male child named Emidio born to Antonio Lucerini and Giovanna Damiani.

I continued to find more siblings of Anna Emidia, but could not locate her birth record on Antenati!  She was one of at least 12 children born to Antonio and Giovanna.  I thought perhaps she was born in a neighboring town.  But, right before I found her marriage to Luigi, I found a document in the 1852 Farindola Diversi records titled “Atto di rettifica di nome di Anna Emidia Lucerini,” written by il Sindaco Nicola Cirone.  Please click here to go to Atto #10 in the Farindola 1852 Diversi.

Anna Emidia Lucerini had no brother named Emidio.  She was the baby whose birth was recorded June 25, 1830 in the Farindola town hall as male child named Emidio.  Please follow this link to see that original record numbered 60 from Farindola in 1830.

What went on there?!  At the noon hour on the 25th of June, Antonio Lucerini, father of Anna Emidia, went to town hall and is recorded as having told the mayor, Serafino Pompei, that his wife had a baby boy at their house they named Emidio.  The baby was baptized the same day at San Nicola di Bari.  This was declared in the presence of Luigi Ammazzalorsco and Giuseppe Cirone.  Serafino read it to them because all present were illiterate and his was the only signature on the document.

Maybe Serafino didn’t read it aloud to all present.  Was Antonio drunk?  At noon?  Probably not…

On Anna Emidia’s mother Giovanna Damiani’s side she can trace her ancestry all the way back to 3 sets of 7th greats in Farindola named Pietro Paolucci – Irene Lepore, Domenico Rosa – Laura Lacchetta, and Nicola Di Francesco – Restude Di Nino.

Luigi Di Francesco was born in 1825 in Farindola to Filippo Di Francesco and Angela Nicola D’Angelo Sopranome Zagliocco.  I wondered if he was born in Rione Trosciano since his father died there, he himself died there, and he had his children with Anna Emidia there.  I am unsure.

His father’s ancestry goes all the way back to a Felice Di Francesco who had children with Anna Del Priore living in Farindola sometime in the mid 1700s and even before that on his father’s mother’s side to 7th great grandparents Rinaldo Bucci – Emilia Tinacci, Remauldo Di Simone – a lady named Lucia.

Tree Image

Please note the above snipped tree image does not show all of the 7th greats in the tree and that Anna Emidia’s great grandmother was Anna Saveria Di Francesco (last name at the bottom right corner).  I suppose, it is a possibility she was related to Felice Di Francesco (first name at the top right corner.)

Luigi Di Francesco’s mother Angela Nicola D’Angelo Zagliocco was born in Penne, Pescara.  Filippo Di Francesco went there to marry her.  I spent some time near Christmas and Thanksgiving looking at a lot of Penne records.  D’Angelo is an extremely common surname in Italy.  In Penne, in this time period, it looks like D’Angelo families had a sopranome attached to it.  She and her father and brothers both had the sopranome Zagliocco, while there is evidence that her grandfather may have been the Francesco D’Angelo alias “Il Nibbio.”

Penne

If this Francesco D’Angelo alias pans out, Angela Nicola D’Angelo Zagliocco would descend from Biase D’Angelo alias “Il Nibbio” and Beatrice Triozzi who were probably born around 1700 in Penne.  I would love to know how they got the sopranomes and the aliases!

Luigi Di Francesco died in 1898 in Trosciano as did Anna Emidia in 1907.  They were the parents of  Biagio Di Francesco and the grandparents of Paolo Di Francesco.

Source:

http://antenati.san.beniculturali.it/home

Last year my genealogy blog challenge was to find and record every immigrant in my tree.  That challenge is nearly half-way completed.  I will continue to do it until I find every last one.  

wpid-1304440135_e707dc832a_z.jpg