Thousands of immigrants from the southern Italian region of Calabria
came to the Chicago-area in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth
centuries. As many as 8,000 of them served in the U.S. military during
World War I, and until now no effort has been made to document their
story. Historian Peter L. Belmonte has been researching these men using
military, immigration, naturalization, census, family, and other records
for more than twenty years. This book recounts the military history of
more than 380 men from the province of Cosenza, Calabria. Their history
highlights the role of the U.S. military in World War I; they served in
every type of unit, from stateside camps to the trenches of France and
even to the frozen wasteland of Siberia. Some of them earned medals for
bravery. Many of the men suffered life-changing wounds, and some made
the supreme sacrifice. Long without a voice in historical works, their
story is finally told here.