14 January 2025

Finding TV-Worthy Stories in Your Family Tree

Doing the research myself makes this story closer to my heart.
Doing the research myself makes this story closer to my heart.

Imagine you're a guest on PBS's "Finding Your Roots." Knowing what you already know, what are the juiciest stories we'd learn about your family?

There's little I can learn about my ancestors before they came to America. They came from small towns where most people were illiterate. I can't imagine they had a local newspaper.

I'll bet the "Finding Your Roots" staff would dig into my grandfather and my two great grandfathers.

The Patriot

My grandfather Adamo Leone sailed to America twice. Between voyages he returned to Italy to fight for his country in World War I.

What we heard: As a child I heard that Adamo had been a prison of war and he had to eat rats to stay alive. That's all any of us knew.

What I discovered: I researched Italian World War I army defeats online. The Battle of Caporetto led to the most Italian casualties and captures. A shocking 275,000 Italians wound up in two different prisoner of war camps in Austria. One of the camps, Mathausen, was also a notorious POW camp in World War II.

Next I found the website of the state archives of Adamo's province of Benevento. A listing for Adamo includes the volume and record number of his military record. The only way to see his military record was to go to the city of Benevento and ask to see it. I did that in 2018.

The page is completely filled with line entries. At age 20, the army assigned him to the 2nd regiment of the infantry. Six months later they gave him one year's convalescence leave, but it doesn't say what was wrong with him. Then there were different calls to arms to which he didn't respond. He was in New York City at the time.

Then in August 1915, he received the order to return to Italy and go to war. Not all Italian men in America responded to that call, but Adamo did. In 1917 the Italian Army promoted him to the rank of corporal. Later that year, as I had guessed from my research, he fought in the Battle of Caporetto. The record confirms that he became a POW in Mathausen in Austria. Adamo's liberation came exactly one year later. The Italian Army granted him an honorable discharge. They sent him home to recuperate.

He left for New York again on 15 Feb 1920. The Italian government paid his fare. Two years later he married my grandmother and worked as a shoemaker.

I watched a movie that took place in Adamo's POW camp during World War II—"The Photographer of Mauthausen". I couldn't stop crying.

The Businessman

My great grandfather Giovanni Sarracino came to New York with no education. He somehow wound up owning a commercial/residential building on a busy corner in the Bronx.

What we heard: All I ever knew was that Giovanni and his wife came from a town called Pastene. No one knew how to spell it, and there is another town with a name that sounds the same. So we never knew where this branch came from exactly.

What I discovered: Eight months after Giovanni married Maria Rosa, they had a child unknown to us. Little Carmine Antonio died within seven months. The couple left for America to join Maria Rosa's family in the Bronx, New York, in 1899. (Her father, my 2nd great grandfather, was my first immigrant ancestor.) Maria Rosa became pregnant right after Carmine Antonio was born. She was six months pregnant with my grandmother when she made that long voyage.

Giovanni worked as a bartender in a saloon, then became the storekeeper of the saloon. Later he was a building painter. During World War I he was a machinist's helper for a construction contractor. This may have been to aid the war effort because he returned to being a building painter after the war.

In the 1940 U.S. census, Giovanni owned a "beer garden". Since he owned the building at 603 Morris Avenue, I can assume the beer garden was the saloon on the ground floor. Giovanni's son Alfredo owned a butcher shop in this building. His other son Amelio owned a photography studio in this building.

I don't know how Giovanni and his brother-in-law Semplicio became property owners. They went from working for a saloon or a brewery to owning the building. I found one legal document that gives me a clue. Semplicio seemed to find a legal loophole in his lease and took extreme advantage of it. They were a couple of shrewd businessmen.

The Man of God

My great grandfather Francesco Iamarino came to America at least five times. On one of his trips, he felt inspired by a church in a Bronx neighborhood. Despite deep Catholic roots, he returned to Italy and founded a non-Catholic church. It carries on to this day.

What we heard: My grandfather Pietro said his father became an evangelical minister. He said the local Catholic church denounced Francesco because of this.

What I discovered: Francesco made his first trip to America in August 1903. He left his pregnant wife and infant son Pietro behind. He joined his brother Giuseppe in the Bronx and was back in Italy in time for his daughter's birth in February 1904.

In 1909, Francesco again joined his brother Giuseppe in the Bronx. He joined Giuseppe another time in late 1913. During one of these visits, in 1903, 1909, or 1913, he had a religious awakening. I learned this story from his granddaughter, my cousin Maria. During one of his stays in the Bronx, he passed by a church and felt moved by their songs and what they had to say. He felt it was his calling to return home to Italy and start a church like this one.

No one was living in his old house in Colle Sannita when I saw it in 2018, but his chapel still exists. The family was renovating the building to benefit the flock Francesco had grown.

Francesco made his last trip to America in 1929, this time going to Ohio. He visited his son Pietro and met Pietro's wife Lucy (my grandmother) and their baby, my Aunt Lillian. Lillian's real name was Libera, named for Francesco's wife. He would also have seen Lucy's father for the first time in years—his second cousin Pasquale.


Each of these stories deserves mention in my "Finding Your Roots" episode. But The Patriot's story would make the best TV. Imagine the stock footage and newspaper accounts of the disastrous Battle of Caporetto. Picture the still photographs of emaciated prisoners of war looking like skeletons, barely surviving.

Contrast this with Adamo's life in America after the war. He was a shoemaker in Italy before he turned 20. In New York he worked for a 5th Avenue shoe store, owned a store in the Bronx, then made saddles and holsters for the NYPD. His only son Johnny served in World War II. His US Army Air Corps base in Italy wasn't too far from Adamo's hometown. Johnny died during a bombing run not far from Austria and the nightmare Adamo survived.

It's important to stop and reflect on your family stories once in a while. Which of your ancestors' stories would make it into your "Finding Your Roots" episode?

07 January 2025

5 Steps to Making a Cousin Connection

It's easy to get sidetracked when searching for a cousin connection. Follow these 5 steps for the best results.
It's easy to get sidetracked when searching for a cousin connection. Follow these 5 steps for the best results.

I've been having a conversation on Ancestry.com with a man who found his ancestors in my family tree. Let's call him CP. It's rare that I hear from someone with roots in this particular little Italian town of Santa Paolina. I'm eager to figure out our connection.

I have to remind you that my family tree encompasses entire towns. All my people came from tiny, neighboring Italian towns. Almost everyone from there has a connection by blood or marriage. That's why CP's ancestors are in my tree without a cousin connection to me.

One of CP's ancestors was Rosaria Consolazio. My 2nd great grandmother Vittoria Consolazio's paternal side came from Santa Paolina. But there's a big problem. Rosaria's death record names her parents, but there are no records for her siblings. She's a dead end.

If the most enticing lead to a cousin connection won't work, what should we do next? Let's go through the best steps to take to make a cousin connection. Keep in mind, these steps won't find a cousin connection if there isn't one. But they will build and strengthen a big branch of your family tree. Let's get started.

1. Set a Place at the Table

Work your potential cousin into your family tree in any way you can. Use the details they've told you, their family tree, and online searches. This will give you an important visual of their family.

When I fit CP into my family tree, Family Tree Maker found 2 types of relationships between us:

  • 2nd great grand nephew of wife of uncle of husband of 3rd great aunt (a Consolazio) of me
  • 3rd great grand nephew of husband of 5th great aunt (a Ricciardelli) of me

2. Take a Good Look Around

Find the last names among your potential cousin's ancestors that mean anything to you. Search for more details about these people and their families.

I see a few last names that I know are common to the town of Santa Paolina. (I know this thanks to the work I've done with the town's vital records.) I also see a few missing generations I may be able to find among the town's vital records. Tons of vital records are available on the Antenati website. I've already downloaded them to my computer and renamed them to make searchable.

It's clear that CP's family tree has something else in common with mine. It has people from Santa Paolina who married people from the neighboring town of Tufo. That means I need to search those vital records, too. I haven't renamed all the Tufo records yet, so some of my searches will be manual.

As I add more parents, spouses, and children to CP's family tree, I keep looking at the index list in Family Tree Maker. Do I already have anyone who may be a match for this new addition? It could help if I add someone who turns out to be a known cousin of mine. That could lead to a common ancestor for CP and me.

3. Search, Search, and Search Some More

Work through your potential cousin's closest families. Keep finding records and sources for all their direct ancestors. You need to build out their families. Find the siblings of their direct ancestors. Find out who they married. Find their children and see who they married. One of those extended family members may already be in your family tree. They could be the piece you need to solve the puzzle.

Keep your focus on the potential cousin's blood relatives. You may find an interesting lead in an in-law's family, but that's unlikely to get you the answer you need.

4. Stay on a Logical Path

Remember to think through your logical plan for each person who's missing an ancestor. Based on what you know so far, search for a person's birth, marriage, and death records. Search for their children and who their children married. Search for their siblings. Build out this one person's family as much as you can.

I had one woman, CP's 3rd great grandmother Giovanna, who was missing her parents. Here's how I expanded her family and added to CP's branch:

  • I found Giovanna's death record, giving me the names of her parents and her approximate year of birth.
  • I found her marriage record because I knew her husband's name and that she had a child in 1834. (I worked backwards from 1834 until I found her in the town's annual marriage index.)
  • I found her 1811 birth record that shows the same parents as her death record and her marriage record. This makes Giovanna's vital records complete and confirms the information I had.
  • Armed with her marriage date and death date, I located another 3 children for her.
  • I moved up to her parents—CP's 4th great grandparents. I found their 1809 marriage record and learned their parents' names. These are CP's 5th great grandparents who were born in the 1760s. The town's vital records won't let us go any further back. This generation died before civil record keeping began.
  • I looked for death records for CP's 4th great grandparents and found two of them. One was Domenico (father of the Giovanna who started this journey), and he was in my tree already. Until this moment, I didn't have enough facts to see he was the same person. That led to my next step.
  • I searched for details about Domenico's three wives and his children. I found a ton of facts and added 45 people to CP's branch of my family tree, all based on vital records.

I still can't find a common ancestor for CP and me. We're either completely unrelated or our connection goes back to the 1700s. That's too early for Italian vital records.

5. Use DNA

You can certainly start with this step—you may get lucky. Use what DNA tells you as you run through the previous steps.

If your potential cousin and you have taken a DNA test, are you matches? If so, use your DNA website's estimated relationship to figure out where your connection should be. Consult this relationship calculator to see which of your great grandparents is key.

CP and I are not DNA matches. He's not a match to my mother, and his son is not a match to my mother or me. This could mean we have no connection, or it could mean our connection is too distant. Once again, my research is stuck because I have no vital records to connect our ancestors from the mid 1700s.

My earliest documented Consolazio ancestor from Santa Paolina was born about 1725. Buonaventura Consolazio was my 7th great grandfather. CP and I could have a connection through Buonaventura or one of his children. If so, we'd be 7th or 8th cousins. So far I can't prove anything.

UPDATE: I did it! I found the elusive connection and made CP my 6th cousin twice removed. It's a crazy story. One of his direct ancestors was a dead end because the 1859 death records aren't available. I know she died on 15 Apr 1859 because it's noted on her daughter's 1864 marriage record. But then I discovered the 1859 death index is online. I found her listing with the same date, and it names her parents. Her mother is my 7th great aunt. Her grandparents are my 7th great grandparents. NEVER GIVE UP!

These 5 steps are very important to making a cousin connection. I'll continue to build out my many family branches in the little towns of Santa Paolina and Tufo. You never know what you'll find.

31 December 2024

Commit to This One Genealogy Project

No time for a genealogy marathon? Commit to one family tree project and tackle it in sprints.
No time for a genealogy marathon? Commit to one family tree project and tackle it in sprints.

As I hope you noticed, I haven't publish a new genealogy article for the last two weeks. I had to travel to help my parents move, and after that was Christmas. But the visit gave seven of us COVID-19, so there was no Christmas.

Did I put the brakes on my family tree progress during that time? Well, helping my parents move was beyond exhausting, so I had no time for genealogy. But COVID has only slowed me down a bit. As sick as I am, I've spent at least a half-day every day adding people and source citations to my family tree. It helps keep my mind off my symptoms.

My overwhelming project in 2024 has been to create thousands of source citations I'd left out. I used Family Tree Analyzer to create a spreadsheet of everyone in my family tree who had no citations at all. My tree has 83,000 people, and I still have 62,000 people with no citations. That's embarrassing.

But I know why I skipped them in the past. I have easy access to the vital records for my Italian nationals. I knew I could go back at any time and create the source citations. But yikes! I went too far.

Because this project seems as if it'll take a few years, I need to liven things up sometimes. Instead of working my way down the list, I jump on opportunities.

When a man contacted me on Ancestry about his ancestors in my family tree, I decided to kill two birds with one stone. I added missing source citations to his people and crossed them off my citation to-do list.

I haven't found a cousin connection for the two of us, but his people are from my 2nd great grandmother's hometown. Long ago I downloaded all the available vital records for the town to my computer. (These mass-downloads are no longer easy to do. Websites block any attempts.) Then I renamed each of the more than 12,000 documents to make them easy to search on my computer.

I built out all my closest families from the town, and I completed their source citations. But I have a lot more families to build. With a bit of luck, I may find my connection to the man who contacted me.

Channel Your Energy into One Important Project

I know you aren't all as lucky as I am—able to spend several hours a day knee-deep in genealogy. But if you focus on one project that's important to you, you can make progress in smaller amounts of time.

If you had to choose one genealogy project that's important to you, what would it be? Here are some ideas to get you thinking:

Imagine you've chosen that one project, and you're committed to spending a little bit of time on it every day you can. After a short time you can make measurable progress! In my half-days last week, I added more than 100 new people with source citations, and made new family connections.

What's your top-priority genealogy project for 2025? Now, is it time for another dose of medicine yet?

10 December 2024

3 Family Tree Tasks Need Your Attention

3 simple, worthwhile family tree tasks set you up for a new year of genealogy discoveries.
3 simple, worthwhile family tree tasks set you up for a new year of genealogy discoveries.

It can be hard to find time for genealogy with the holiday season looming. But I'm sure you can find a moment here and there. And when you do, these 3 tasks are the perfect thing to accomplish before the year is through. Knock them off, and you'll be all set for bigger and better family tree achievements in the coming year.

1. See What's Missing

Review yourself and your direct ancestors (up through your second great grandparents) to see what's missing. Since these are some of the first people you entered into your family tree, it may be a long time since you've given them any attention.

  • Have you found every available census record for them?
  • Are there birth, marriage, or death records available that you couldn't find before? What about obituaries?
  • Have you gathered the draft registration cards or military records for your men?
  • If anyone from this group was an immigrant, have you found their ship manifest and naturalization papers?

A funny thing happened to me recently. I wanted to use the new LiveMemory™ feature from MyHeritage, but I had to do it through the phone app. (I had bad results, by the way. I still need to find a perfectly-lit, crisp photo to try. When I tried it on people I know very well, I hated the results.)

While I was using the app, I saw an unexpected hint for my Grandma Lucy's 1954 obituary. I couldn't access this particular Ohio newspaper with my free subscription, but I found it on Google News. There, for the first time, I saw Grandma Lucy's obituary, and I found her mother's obituary! I couldn't get her father's obit because that publication date was missing.

This proves how important it is to re-investigate your closest relatives.

2. Fix Errors Hiding in Plain Sight

Export a GEDCOM file from your family tree and open it in Family Tree Analyzer. This free program points out errors you can fix, including a mother who's too old to have that baby, someone who died before they got married, and "siblings" who were born too close together.

With your GEDCOM open in FTA, click the Errors/Fixes tab. Along the top of the window you'll see 32 types of errors, each with a checkbox. You can click the Select All button and then below that, click the little button with the downward arrow at the top of the Error Type column. Choose Sort A to Z. You may find that some of these errors should be excluded.

  • Couples with same surnames. My people come from small towns where everybody shares a small number of surnames. This happens a lot. Removing this type of error brings my error total from 988 down to 584. (My family tree has 82,072 people!)
  • Possible Duplicate Fact. My family tree has mostly Italian marriages where there are two recorded sets of marriage banns. That's not an error even if it looks like one. But I'm not going to uncheck this type of error because I see a few duplicate marriage facts. These must have happened when I realized I could merge people, and I overlooked the extra marriage fact. In other places I have duplicate residence facts. When I look at them in my family tree, one fact has a source citation, and the duplicate does not. These may be leftovers from a bad Ancestry sync I had a couple of years ago. I'm going to check these all out. If I did uncheck Possible Duplicate Fact, my error total would drop from 584 down to 59!

See what you can do to whittle down your error list. I know you'll be glad you did.

3. Check Locations

Use Family Tree Analyzer again to spot obvious typos in place names. Once you've opened your GEDCOM file in FTA, click the Main Lists tab to view the Individuals tab. Two columns in this list have place names: Birth Location and Death Location. One at a time, click the little button with a downward arrow beside the column name and choose Sort A to Z. Now all the place names are in alphabetical order. You may have lots of blanks at the top, as I do.

I must note that the Birth Location list will seem as if it's not entirely in alphabetical order. It turns out the locations are grouped by country, then state/province, then town, then street. So my United States locations are near the bottom of the list. My mother's Bronx New York, birth location is way, way down the list. Once you realize that, this task becomes easier.

Scan the list one screenful at a time and see what sticks out to you. If my list had 10 "Elmira, Chemung County, New York, United States" listings in a row, and then one "Elmyra, Chemung County, New York, United States", the mistaken "Elmyra" would stick out as being a typo. Make any necessary corrections to your family tree (wherever you build it), and then do the same with the Death Location list. First click that same little button with the downward arrow and choose Clear Sort, then sort the Death Location column A to Z.

Finally, switch from the Individuals tab to the Families tab. Scroll over to the Marriage Detail column which shows marriage dates and locations. Sort that column A to Z. This is a little less efficient, but still worth a look. The column is sorted by date, but the dates are treated like text. Because of that, my first non-blank rows are:

  • 1 APR 1813 at Santa Paolina, Avellino, Campania Italy
  • 1 APR 1824 at Chiesa del Santissimo Salvatore, Largo Chiesa Madre, 2, Pescolamazza, Benevento, Campania, Italy
  • 1 APR 1824 at Chiesa di San Giorgio Martire, Via Gradoni San Giorgio, Colle Sannita, Benevento, Campania, Italy

This sorting method means that fewer of the same addresses will be grouped together. But it's the first time I'm seeing all my tree's marriage locations in one place, and that's still a good chance to proofread.


When you've done what you can on these 3 tasks, be sure to synchronize or republish your updated and scrubbed family tree. Come January, you're on to bigger and better genealogy research!

Quick Note: I've never done this before, but there will be no new articles for the next two weeks. Hundreds of my past articles are always here for you.

03 December 2024

Why Your Immigrant Ancestors Came Here 'Legally'

Learn the truth about your ancestors' immigration and citizenship process.
Learn the truth about your ancestors' immigration and citizenship process.

Years ago when women wore slips beneath their dresses and skirts, other women would tell them—very discreetly—if their slip was showing. They'd try to save the lady any further embarrassment. Well, if you're still bragging "My ancestors came here legally," I must tell you, your slip is showing.

Of course they came here legally. The process was incredibly easy for them. Basically, if your immigrant ancestors were not Asian, senile, or likely to become a public charge, all they had to do was show up. And here's why I say that.

United States Immigration Laws, 1790–1952

Let's look at the immigration laws that likely affected your ancestors. It's a long list, but it probably had zero impact on your immigrant ancestors unless they are most types of Asian.

  • 1790. The first U.S. immigration law required you to be a free white person who'd been in the United States for 2 years, and in one state for 1 year.
  • 1795. This law required residency of 5 years with a 3-year notice of intention.
  • 1798. This law, repealed in 1802, required residency of 14 years with a 5-year notice of intention.
  • 1824. This law reduced the waiting period after declaration of intention to 2 years.
  • 1882. This law barred Chinese citizens.
  • 1891. This law barred polygamists and people with a contagious disease.
  • 1903. This law barred anarchists, beggars, and pimps.
  • 1917. This law had 2 requirements: (1) do not be Asian (Filipinos and Japanese excluded), and (2) be able to read any single language if you're over age 16.
  • 1921. Immigration quotas began. This law capped new immigrants at 3% of the number of their countrymen living in the United States per the 1910 census. For example, if the United States had 100,000 Belgians, only 3,000 people from Belgium (3% of 100,000) could enter per year. This cap did not apply to the Western Hemisphere. There was a total immigration cap of 350,000 people in a year. Asians were still barred.
  • 1922. Before this year, women received citizenship through their husband. They didn't need to file for their own naturalization.
  • 1924. This law reduced the cap from 3% to 2% of the current population from certain countries (based on 1890 census numbers). It also reduced the total immigration cap to 165,000 people in total. Asians were still barred.
  • 1942. This law allowed the immigration of temporary agricultural workers from Mexico.
  • 1943. This law once again focused on the Chinese. Chinese people already living in the United States could now apply for naturalization. A total of 105 (one hundred and five) new Chinese immigrants could enter the country.
  • 1952. This law ended the exclusion of Asians. It slashed the immigration cap to one sixth of one percent (0.0016666666666667) of each nationality (based on 1920 census numbers). (This is why I have Italian-born cousins who went to Canada.) After 1952 people no longer needed to file a Declaration of Intention.

Before 1906 you could file for citizenship at any court—local, county, state, or federal. Very convenient. And before 27 Sep 1906, declaration of intention forms were as simple as:

  • name
  • country of birth
  • date of application.

After that date they added:

  • town of birth
  • port and date of arrival
  • physical description (plus a photo starting in 1929)
  • names of wife and children.

That's not exactly a burden for anyone. The petition for naturalization form also asked for:

  • residence and occupation
  • prior citizenship
  • when they began living here and for how long
  • residence of wife and children.

Here's what everything above boils down to for most Americans' immigrant ancestors. Be white, somewhat self-sufficient, and file papers that barely ask any questions. That's all it took to immigrate to the United States legally and become a citizen.

The Immigration Process Today

Before you can apply for citizenship today, you must have "Permanent Resident" status. That means you must be eligible for a Green Card through one of several paths, including:

  • being an immediate family member of a United States citizen
  • having immigrant worker status which usually requires an excellent job
  • being a religious worker, international broadcaster, or a NATO employee
  • having asylum or refugee status for at least one year (each of which has its own hurdles to overcome)
  • being a human trafficking or crime victim
  • being the victim of battery or extreme cruelty
  • having lived in the United States continuously since before 1 Jan 1972

If you meet any of those criteria, you may be eligible for Permanent Resident status. If you achieve that, you're ready to begin the citizenship process. To be eligible to apply for United States citizenship today, ALL of the following must be true:

  1. You must be at least 18 years old.
  2. You must be a Permanent Resident for at least 5 years (or 3–5 years IF you've been married to a citizen for at least the past 3 years AND they've been a citizen for at least the past 3 years AND you haven't been out of the United States for 18 months or more).
  3. You must not have been out of the United States for 30 months of more (UNLESS you were serving on board a United States vessel OR you were under contract to the United States government OR you were performing ministerial or priestly functions for a United States-approved religious denomination).
  4. You must not have taken a trip outside the United States that lasted a year or more (UNLESS you have an approved "Application to Preserve Residence for Naturalization Purposes").
  5. You must have lived in the district or state in which you're applying for citizenship for the last 3 months.
  6. You must be able to read, write, and speak basic English (UNLESS you're over 50 and have been a Permanent Resident for at least 20 years OR you're over 55 and have been a Permanent Resident for at least 15 years OR you have a medical disability form signed by a doctor).
  7. You must be knowledgeable about the fundamentals of United States history and the form and principles of the United States government (UNLESS you have a medical disability form signed by a doctor).
  8. You must be a person of good moral character.
  9. You must be a female OR a male registered with the Selective Service OR a male who didn't enter the United States before the age of 26 OR a male with a "Status Information Letter" from Selective Service explaining why you were in the United States between the ages of 18 and 26 but did not register OR a male between 18 and 26 who is in the United States as a lawful non-immigrant.
  10. You must never have deserted from the United States Armed Forces.
  11. You must be never have received an exemption or discharge from the United States Armed Forces on the grounds that you are an alien.
  12. You must be willing to perform either military or civilian service for the United States if required by law.
  13. You must be willing to support the Constitution of the United States.
  14. You must understand and be willing to take an oath of allegiance to the United States.

If you are eligible for United States citizenship based on the list above, you may now:

  • collect the necessary documents to demonstrate your eligibility (these include a copy of your Permanent Resident Card AND payment for the $725 application fee and biometrics fee; this may also include proof of legal name change, marriage certificate, spouse's birth certificate and passport, divorce decree, tax returns, and a whole lot more)
  • complete an application for naturalization (this includes 100 questions on American history and government that Americans learned in high school and have likely forgotten)
  • have your biometrics taken if applicable (fingerprints, photograph, signature)
  • complete an interview
  • wait for a decision
  • if approved, take the oath of allegiance.

The information about today's citizenship process outlined above comes from the website of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

As you can see, the immigration and citizenship process is much tougher today than it was for your ancestors decades or a century or more ago. My immigrant ancestors were not escaping gang warfare, a war-torn nation, or religious persecution. They were leaving a life of poverty to come to a land of opportunity. They had relatives who came before them and were doing well. The relatives they left behind in the old country survived. That's not the case for many of today's immigrants.

It was not an enormous challenge for your 1800s–1900s immigrant ancestor to come to the United States and become a citizen. They made it through a simple process with little or no education. And you have them to thank—your immigrants—for your citizenship. You were merely born where you were born.

You dishonor your immigrant ancestors by saying "my people came here legally". That's why I hate it when people say that like a brag. Of course they came here legally. But how would they fare today?

26 November 2024

How to Read Italian Marriage Records REVISED

This is the third and last in a series of articles revising my February 2017 look at Italian vital records. Today we'll dissect Italian marriage records so you can:

  • Find the important details you need for your family tree, and
  • Overcome any language barrier.

Italian marriage records include:

  • Two dates, usually a week apart, when the couple publicly posted their intention to marry. These are the marriage banns. Today's equivalent is the "speak now or forever hold your peace" statement.
  • A third date when the banns are complete and the couple receives permission to marry.
  • The groom and bride's basic information.
  • The date on which the mayor married the couple.
  • The date on which the couple married in the church. A small number of couples will not have a church wedding. The church wedding may be the same day as the civil wedding or it may be sometime later.

The look of the marriage records changed over time, but the main details are the same. Each marriage record boils down to this:

On this date, two people came to city hall to ask the mayor to marry them before witnesses. The document spells out the groom and bride's:

  • names
  • ages
  • professions
  • places of birth and/or residence, and
  • their parents' names.

This article divides Italian marriage records into six phases based on their layout. Each phase spans several years.

For each type of Italian marriage record below, you'll find a simple version of the wording used. Then you'll see an image highlighting certain key facts. The words for names, ages, dates, and professions are handwritten on the documents. Other phrases are usually pre-printed. It's the handwritten words that are critical to your family tree.

Phase One Civil Marriage Records, Circa 1809–1819

The exact layout of the pre-printed sections varies, but the basic layout is the same.

Simple version: On this date and hour there appeared before me, the mayor of this town, the following people. This man of this age and profession, living in this place, son of this father and mother who give their consent. And also this woman of this age and profession, living in this place, daughter of this father and mother who give their consent. They requested to be married, and they have completed the publication of their intention to marry. I declare them to be united in matrimony in the presence of these witnesses (name, age, profession, residence). The bride, groom, and witnesses attest to these facts by signing below.

The earliest Italian marriage records have a lot of handwritten sections, but the format is straightforward.
The earliest Italian marriage records have a lot of handwritten sections, but the format is straightforward.

Phase Two Civil Marriage Records, Circa 1820–1853

This phase introduces a second column where the parish priest records the date of the church wedding. The main part of the marriage record follows the same pattern as Phase One above.

Simple version of the marriage column: On this date in this parish, the parish priest certifies that the celebration of matrimony took place on this date in the presence of these witnesses. The mayor attests that he has seen the marriage document.

This phase of Italian marriage records adds a column for the church wedding. Pay attention to its format.
This phase of Italian marriage records adds a column for the church wedding. Pay attention to its format.

Phase Three Civil Marriage Records, Circa 1854–1865

Depending on the town, the marriage records for this phase may cover two pages. Page two uses a lot of space to provide details about four witnesses to the church wedding. Each of the four lines is as follows:

Simple version: This man, of this age, of this profession, resident of this town and street.

Example: Eduardo delGrosso of the age 40 of the profession lawyer, resident of Colle, street Piazza.

Two-page Italian marriage records give you details about 4 witnesses, but the main format is the same.
Two-page Italian marriage records give you details about 4 witnesses, but the main format is the same.

Phase Four Civil Marriage Records, Circa 1866–1874

Ah, the dreaded fully-handwritten marriage records. But you're prepared. Because you're learning the basic format of Italian marriage records, you CAN find what you need.

Simple version: The year, the day of the month at this hour in the city hall of this town there appeared before the mayor the following people. These witnesses (name, age, profession) who live in this town. Groom, of age, profession, living in this town, son of this father and of this mother, residents of this town. Bride, of age, profession, living in this town, daughter of this father and of this mother, residents of this town. They requested to be married, they have submitted the requested documents, and their are no impediments to their marriage. I, the mayor, have performed the marriage. The bride, groom, and witnesses attest to these facts by signing below.

Fully handwritten Italian marriage records can be daunting until you realize the format is the same as always.
Fully handwritten Italian marriage records can be daunting until you realize the format is the same as always.

Phase Five Civil Marriage Records, Circa 1875–1929

This phase is an easy-to-read single page without a lot of handwriting. There may be no mention of the church wedding. Notice how the basic format is the same as all the previous phases. Only the layout has changed.

Simple version: The year, the day of the month at this hour before the mayor of the town appeared the following people. 1. Groom, of age, profession, born in this town, living in this town, son of this father, resident of this town, and of this mother, resident of this town; 2. Bride, of age, profession, born in this town, living in this town, daughter of this father, resident of this town, and of this mother, resident of this town. They requested to be married, they have submitted the requested documents, and there are no impediments to their marriage. I, the mayor, have performed the marriage in the presence of these witnesses (names). The bride, groom, and witnesses attest to these facts by signing below.

Later Italian marriage records are the easiest to read, and the important details are at the top.
Later Italian marriage records are the easiest to read, and the important details are at the top.

Phase Six Civil Marriage Records, Circa 1930–1951

This phase is very much like the previous phase, but it adds one fact. It mentions the church wedding in the column and above the couple's names in the body of the document. It may present the groom and bride's information in two columns. Beneath their details are the dates on which they published their intention to marry.

Simple version: The year, the day of the month at this hour the mayor of the town has learned that on this year, date, month, and hour in this parish, the following people were married according to Catholic rites. 1. Groom, of age, profession, born in this town, living in this town, of this race and this nationality, son of this father and of this mother; 2. Bride, of age, profession, born in this town, living in this town, of this race and this nationality, daughter of this father and of this mother. The couple are officially married. They published their intention to marry on these dates.

And in the column beneath their names: Today, day, month, year, this representative of the church submits the record of this marriage.

The latest available Italian marriage records include the church name and wedding date.
The latest available Italian marriage records include the church name and wedding date.

When you know what to look for and where to find it, you can get what you need from Italian marriage records.