![]() ![]() Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. This work serves as a time capsule to remind us of the contributions and influences these immigrants have offered to the community. Although the last notable wave of Italian immigration ended in the 1960s, Italian remains one of the six prevalent foreign languages in New York according to a 2007 census estimate. Italians of Brooklyn by Marianna Biazzo Randazzo Arcadia Publishing Books Italians of Brooklyn By Marianna Biazzo Randazzo 21.99 Overview Details Author Brooklyn, or 'Bruculinu,' as many Italians affectionately pronounced it, is where Italian values, culture, and dreams thrived. By 1900, Brooklyn's Italian population was second only to Manhattan. The 1855 New York Census did not list any Italian natives in Brooklyn however, by 1890, there were 9,563 Italians residing in the borough. Although Italians in South Brooklyn have been traced back as far as the 1820s, most settled in Manhattan. ![]() ![]() In an era when over four million Italians found their way to America, the first significant influx came during the 1880s, primarily from rural peasant communities fleeing poverty and overpopulation. Brooklyn, or "Bruculinu," as many Italians affectionately pronounced it, is where Italian values, culture, and dreams thrived. ![]()
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