Announcing the Vivo-Fruttauro Collection

Nov 18, 2020 968

In July 2016, Lisa Giordano of Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn, arrived at the John D. Calandra Italian American Institute’s midtown Manhattan offices bearing a cache of letters written in Italian. Earlier that same year, on a Saturday morning in March, she had come upon the letters strewn on the sidewalk in front of a brownstone on Degraw Street, between Smith and Court Streets.

Carroll Gardens was once a significant Italian American community that became gentrified over time, many houses being gutted for renovation by new owners. Giordano thought the Calandra Institute might provide a haven for these discarded artifacts. We accepted her donation—even though the Institute is not an archival institution—with the hope to one day do justice to those epistolary correspondents.
 
Toward that goal, the Institute partnered with graduate students Domenica Diraviam, Viviana Pezzullo, and Federico Tiberini at Florida Atlantic University to make the letters part of the Italian-American Memories: Documentary Archive, an online digital collection of letters and ephemera from Italian American lives the three students had created.
 
We are excited to announce the launch of the Vivo-Fruttauro Collection, which features transatlantic correspondence between members of the Vivo-Fruttauro families from Brooklyn, La Spezia (Liguria region), and Bagnoli (an area on the outskirts of Naples).The letter writers covered a variety of topics, including pending emigration to the United States, among other quotidian matters.
 
You can browse the scanned letters at: https://itamm.omeka.net/collections/show/4

SOURCE: John D. Calandra Italian American Institute

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