Title (generic)
Photograph
This photo features Strike of 1919 organizer Nino Capraro (1896-1975) with wife Marie Bambace Capraro and daughters Clytia and Athena. The family is posed outside in front of some foliage. Daughter Athena is standing on a wooden crate. She and her father have their arms around each other. Maria is holding baby Clytia. The photo was taken in Rochester, NY in 1923.
For additional pictures of Nino see LE2-Italians 2001.042.001, .002 and .004 and LS5-Strike of 1919 2001.042.005, .006 and .008.
Capraro's papers are available at the University of Minnesota. The following is a brief bio excerpted from that finding aid:
Born in Sciacca, Sicily, on Jan. 11, 1891, Anthony (Nino) Capraro was the son of a wine and leather merchant. He came to the United States as a child, settling with his family in New York in 1902.
As a teen-ager Capraro joined a group of Italian-American anarchists inspired by Enrico Malatesta. Among his friends were the journalist Carlo Tresca whose murder in 1942 in New York is still unsolved, and the poet Arturo Giovannitti. Both were anarchists.
Arrested in 1908 in connection with his political activities, Capraro spent three years in the jails of New York State. After his release, he became one of the major organizers of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America and a collaborator of Sidney Hillman and August Bellanca.
While directing the 1919 strike of textile workers in Lawrence, Capraro was kidnapped and beaten. At that time he was also a correspondent for the New York Call, a Socialist daily newspaper. Later he edited his own newspaper, Utopia, in Rochester, N.Y.
During the 1920's, he was active in the effort to save the lives of Sacco and Vanzetti.
He became a spokesman for antifascism among Italian-Americans and helped Italian exiles who came to the United States. As an arbiter in labor disputes, he founded the Greater Clothing Contractors Association in New York City in 1932.
Upon his retirement in 1953, Capraro devoted himself to the study of Cervantes. He had lived in Northampton for 10 years.
Max Salvadori, professor of history at Smith College, described Capraro as it “one of the most effective organizers among Italian-Americans in the labor movement." He said his friendship with Capraro dated back to 1938, when Salvadori first visited the United States.
Collection
Lawrence History Center General Photograph Collection
Place
United States, New York, Rochester