Milwaukee's Italian families have a distinguished heritage, one that
began in a great rush to the city shortly before the turn of the 19th
century. Seeking a way out of the economic misery of their homeland,
tens of thousands of Italians made their way to the Midwest, lured by
the promise of Milwaukee's well-paying factory and service industry
jobs. The emigres brought their colorful traditions and culture with
them, making themselves at home in close-knit neighborhoods. Arrivals
from various villages settled into specific blocks, with a widespread
Sicilian contingent living in the old Third Ward, while Italians from
the north settled in Bay View. Others moved into the Brady Street area.
Not afraid to work, at first the Italians were railroad employees, fruit
peddlers, refuse collectors, shopkeepers, tavern owners, or skilled
craft workers in the masonry and stone trades. Today, the descendants of
those first arrivals make up an extraordinary share of Milwaukee's
business leaders, politicians, clergy, restaurateurs, and educators,
while others have become police officers and military personnel. The
Italian Community Center and Festa Italiana continue to provide
marvelous opportunities to socialize.