List of Italian-American neighborhoods
Italian-Americans in the United States can be found in large numbers and densities in states such as New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Michigan, Florida, California, Illinois, and Massachusetts. An estimate of 20 million Americans are of Italian or Sicilian descent. New York City has by far the most Italian-Americans in one area though and is still a common destination for Italians coming over to start a new life in America.
Communities of Italian Americans were established in most major industrial cities of the early 20th century, such as Baltimore, Maryland; Boston, Massachusetts (the "North End"); Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Providence, Rhode Island; St. Louis, Missouri; Chicago, IL; Cleveland, OH; Buffalo, NY; and Kansas City, Missouri. New Orleans, Louisiana was the first site of immigration of Italians and Sicilians into America in the 19th century, before Italy was a unified nation-state. This was before New York Harbor and Baltimore became the preferred destinations for Italian immigrants.
In sharp contrast to the Northeast, most of the Southern states (exceptions being the Atlantic coast of Florida, New Orleans, and a fast-growing community in Atlanta) have very few Italian-American residents. During the labor shortage in the 19th-early 20th centuries, planters in the Deep South did attract some Italian immigrants to work as sharecroppers, but they soon left the extreme anti-Italian discrimination and strict regimen of the plantations for towns or other states. Because of concerns about peonage and anti-Italian lynching, the Italian embassy warned Italian emigrants away from the American South.
In Kansas City, Missouri, the areas known as "North of the River" (and the former areas of "The North End" and "Northeast Kansas City") have flourished with Italian American families, mostly of Sicilian heritage, from 1st to 3rd generation.
New Italian immigrants have been entering California, specifically Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Long Beach, and Fresno but the state has Italian-American residents since the 1850s.
Since the 1950s, like many Americans, Italian Americans have moved to the cheaper, slower-paced and rapidly growing Western states, including Arizona, Colorado, Nevada (especially Las Vegas), Oregon, Texas (mostly in Houston and Dallas areas) and Washington (especially Seattle).
Most Italian-American organizations and demographic experts say that they leave to escape the high real estate prices, cold weather and traffic, among other reasons, in the congested Northeast and East Coast in general.
States with the largest Italian-American communities are New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Rhode Island.
Alabama
Daphne Prior to the 1978 annexation of the Lake Forest subdivision, Daphne was a heavily Italian community, and pre-1978 Daphne territory remains Italian, with street names such as Guarisco. The Archdiocese of Mobile considers Christ the King Parish in Daphne as an Italian-American parish
Arkansas
- Little Italy in unincorporated northern Pulaski County.
- Little Rock.
California
Southern California
- Little Italy in San Diego
- Los Angeles, such as the neighborhood of San Pedro and the city of Long Beach.
- Palm Springs and nearby Palm Desert.
Northern California
- North Beach, San Francisco - baseball legend Joe Di Maggio grew up here.
- Spaghetti Hill, Monterey- birthplace of current CIA director Leon Panetta.
- Fresno.
Colorado
- Denver in "Little Italy" in the Cherry Creek section.
- The Denver metropolitian area.
Connecticut
- Bridgeport
- Danbury
- East Haven
- Hartford
- Middletown
- New Haven- home of Frank Pepe Pizzeria Napoletana, Sally's Apizza, and a vast number of other purveyors of Apizza. The city was 60% Italian descent in the 1960 census
- Stamford
- Waterbury- home of the late Italian real estate tycoon Angelina Galante DeRienzo.
- Prospect
- West Haven
District of Columbia
- Washington, D.C. is home to 10,000 Italian Americans [citation needed]
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Illinois
- Little Italy in Chicago
- Little Sicily, Grand Avenue, Chicago
- Armour Square, Chicago
- South Side, Chicago
- Addison
- Chicago Heights
- Elmwood Park
- Franklin Park
- Melrose Park
- Park Ridge
- Riverton
Louisiana
- New Orleans
- Kenner
- Independence - 29.5% Italian
- Marrero
- Donaldsville
Massachusetts
- Brockton- birthplace of the late boxing champ Rocky Marciano.
- North End, Boston (Little Italy of Boston)
- East Boston
- East Cambridge
- Gloucester
- Medford
- Milford
- Revere
- Saugus
- Taunton
- Everett
- Lynn
- Springfield (South-End)
- Lawrence
- Waltham
- Quincy Point in Quincy
Maryland
- Highlandtown in Baltimore
- Little Italy in Baltimore
- Locust Point in Baltimore
- Bel Air
- College Park
- Edgewood
- Elkridge
- Essex
- Joppatowne
- Laurel
- Middle River
- Parkville
- Perry Hall
- Towson
Michigan
Minnesota
- Minneapolis - St. Paul area
Missouri
- The Hill, Saint Louis, Missouri- Three famous baseball figures, Yogi Berra, Harry Caray and Joe Garagiola grew up here.
- Kansas City, Missouri- The northeast side is a "Little Italy" neighborhood
Nebraska
Nevada
New Jersey
New Jersey municipalities with over 25% of the population identifying themselves as of Italian ancestry (in those municipalities where at least 1,000 residents identified their ancestry):[1]
- Hammonton 45.9 (second highest percentage for a town in the United States)
- Dover Beaches South 42.8
- Totowa 37.7
- South Hackensack 36.3
- Nutley 36.0
- Woodland Park (formerly West Paterson) 34.3
- Moonachie 34.1
- Lyndhurst 33.8
- Buena 33.5
- Lodi 33.3
- Ocean Gate 32.5
- Carlstadt 31.2
- Hasbrouck Heights 30.8
- West Long Branch 30.5
- Netcong 30.1
- Gibbstown 30.1
- Raritan 30.1
- Newfield 29.8
- Saddle Brook 29.8
- Cedar Grove 29.7
- Greenwich Township 29.3
- Glendora 28.7
- Belleville 28.7
- Little Falls 28.6
- Kenilworth 28.0
- Oceanport 27.7
- Lavallette 27.7
- North Arlington 27.4
- Longport 27.3
- Folsom 27.3
- Hawthorne 26.5
- Bloomfield 26.4
- Rochelle Park 26.1
- Washington Township 25.9
- Mystic Island 25.9
- Seaside Heights 25.7
- Blackwood 25.5
- Belford 25.3
- Riverdale 25.1
- East Rutherford 25.1
- Other places in New Jersey
- Seventh Avenue, Newark
- Ironbound, Newark in the Italian Down Neck section
- Roseville, Newark
- Trenton
- Atlantic City
- Asbury Park
- Ventnor City 22.8% Italian
- Vineland 22.8% Italian
- Patterson 25.5% Italian
- Bayonne 20.1% Italian
- Hoboken- Three popular celebrities Frank Sinatra, Jimmy Roselli and Joseph Pantoliano grew up here.
- Jersey City
- Elizabeth
- Neptune City
- Hackensack
- Orange
- Secaucus
- Rutherford
- Garfield
- Clifton
- Camden
- Rockaway
New York
The state of New York has the largest population of Italian Americans, at 3.1 million people. The majority of Italian Americans in New York City originated from southern parts of the country. In the peak of Italian immigration (1910s), New York City and Chicago according to the 1920 census each had 28 neighborhoods and census tracts in which over 50% of the population was of Italian descent.
New York City
- The Bronx
- East Bronx
- Sections of South Bronx
- Arthur Avenue, Bronx (Little Italy of the Bronx)
- Belmont, Bronx - home of 1950s doo-wop group Dion DiMucci and the Belmonts.
- Morris Park, Bronx - has a very large Italian population
- Pelham Bay, Bronx - has very large Italian population
- Woodlawn, Bronx (Traditionally an Irish neighborhood with about 30-35%
Italian)
- Brooklyn, New York
- Bensonhurst, Brooklyn (Little Italy of Brooklyn)
- Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, has the highest percentage of people claiming Italian ancestry in the county after Bensonhurst. Bensonhurst and Bay Ridge neighbor each other in south Brooklyn and the area is well known to Italian Americans across the country.
- South Brooklyn
- Red Hook, Brooklyn
- Cobble Hill, Brooklyn
- Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn
- Sections of Flatbush, Brooklyn
- Sections of Canarsie, Brooklyn
- Gravesend, Brooklyn
- Sections of Kensington and Windsor Terrace, Brooklyn
- Midwood, Brooklyn
- Greenwood Heights, Brooklyn
- Sections of East New York, Brooklyn
- Mulberry Street (Little Italy), Manhattan
- East Harlem, Manhattan - birthplace of famous actor Al Pacino. The highest concentration of Italians in East Harlem can be found in Italian Harlem between Pleasant Avenue to the east, First Avenue to the west, East 114th street to the south and East 120th Street to the north.
- Queens, New York
- Ozone Park, Queens (Little Italy of Queens)
- Howard Beach, Queens has one of the highest percentage of Italian Americans in Queens County, with about 15,000 of its 28,000 residents claiming Italian ancestry.
- Astoria, Queens
- Middle Village, Queens
- Ridgewood, Queens
- Little Neck, Queens
- Rosedale, Queens
- Belle Harbor, Queens,
- Glendale, Queens
- Floral Park, Queens
- Whitestone, Queens
- Staten Island : The borough has the highest proportion of Italian Americans of any county in the United States. Around 200,000 residents claim Italian heritage.
Long Island
- Selden
- Franklin Square
- Lindenhurst
- Oceanside
- Glen Cove
- Huntington
- Smithtown
- Port Jefferson
- Mastic Beach
- Lynbrook
- East Meadow
- Bridgehampton
- Greenport
- West Islip
- Long Beach
- Mineola
- Cedarhurst
- Westbury
- Levittown
- Massapequa Park
- Massapequa
- North Messapequa
- West Babylon
- North Babylon
- Hewlett
Westchester County
Rockland County
Upstate New York
- Buffalo- The city's north side
- Schenectady
- Niagara Falls
- Frankfort
- Utica - 28% Italian-American, concentrated in East Utica
- Rome - 30.2% Italian-American
- Geneva
- Little Italy, Syracuse
- Monroe
- Carmel
- Mahopac
- Rochester- East Rochester
- Canandaigua
- Albany- the South End neighborhood
- Troy - Hillary Clinton has proposed a "Little Italy" section in the city.
Ohio
- Little Italy in Cleveland
- Italian Village in Columbus
- Brier Hill in Youngstown
- Struthers (28.3% Italian)
- Lowellville (48.0% Italian)
- Niles
- Highland Heights (31.3% Italian)
- Mayfield Heights - (26.1% Italian)
- Mayfield Village - (25.1% Italian)
- Lyndhurst - (23.9% Italian)
- Steubenville- birthplace of the famous singer/actor Dean Martin
Oregon
Pennsylvania
- Philadelphia - home to the second-largest Italian-American population in the United States, according to the 2000 census.
- South Philadelphia
- Sections of Southwest Philadelphia
- Sections of Northeast Philadelphia
- Areas of Kensington and West Kensington
- Tacony
- Roseto- 49.4% of the population
- Norristown
- Aliquippa
- Ambler
- Darby
- Upper Darby
- Clifton Heights
- Ambridge
- Pittsburgh
- Bloomfield, Pittsburgh
- Larimer, Pittsburgh
- Coraopolis, Pittsburgh
- Braddock
- Bridgeville
- Brockway
- Canonsburg - birthplace of famous singer Perry Como
- Clairton
- Coatesville
- Downingtown
- Dunmore
- Ellwood City
- Easton
- Bangor
- Scranton
- Farrell
- Harmony
- Homewood
- Hopewell
- Jessup
- Kennedy Township
- Koppel
- Midland
- New Castle (Mahoningtown)
- New Galilee
- Penn Hills
- Pittston
- Rankin
- Sharpsburg
- Stowe Township
- Washington
Rhode Island
19% of Rhode Island residents are Italian American, the greatest percentage of any state. 199,180 of Rhode Island's population of 1,048,319 claim Italian ancestry.
- Federal Hill, Providence (Little Italy of Providence)
- Cranston (34.5% Italian American)
- Johnston (53.6% Italian American - the highest percentage of any community in the United States
- North Providence (43% Italian American)
- Westerly (34.2% Italian American)
- Warwick (22.8%)
- Bristol (21.2%)
Texas
Utah
- Utah Italians- an article about Italian Americans in Utah
Washington state
West Virginia
Approximately 11% of the combined population of "Mountaineer Country", collectively the north central West Virginia Cities of Clarksburg, Fairmont and Morgantown claim Italian ancestry, mostly from Italian immigrants recruited to work in mining and glass manufacturing. [1]
References
- ^ Italian Communities, accessed November 11, 2006