Author: | Robert Grey Reynolds Jr | ISBN: | 9781301285280 |
Publisher: | Robert Grey Reynolds, Jr | Publication: | January 7, 2013 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition | Language: | English |
Author: | Robert Grey Reynolds Jr |
ISBN: | 9781301285280 |
Publisher: | Robert Grey Reynolds, Jr |
Publication: | January 7, 2013 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition |
Language: | English |
Bonanno family members lived mostly in Brooklyn and Manhattan in 1920. Some resided in the Bronx and Queens also. Their professions ranged from police detectives to laborers for the city of New York. Clothing was the most prominent industry of employment of Bonannos at the time. Most all of the persons profiled in my eBook rented their residences. The text of Bonanno Family Members In New York In 1920 is advantageous to Italian and Italian-Americans who are working on individual family research projects of their own. The volume will likely assist crime researchers also, as some of the work professions may have been "fronts" for organized crime activities. I hope that my research will enable readers to find out more about the lives of their ancestors. Genealogy investigation is challenging. It needs useful texts which can serve as springboards to more accurate explorations of past lives. The beauty of ancestral study is found in the many directions it can take. In 1920 many Bonanno family members had been in the United States for only a few decades. Some of them had immigrated only a few years before the start of the second decade of the 20th century. It was a time of settlement and aspirations for the future for individual family members.
Bonanno family members lived mostly in Brooklyn and Manhattan in 1920. Some resided in the Bronx and Queens also. Their professions ranged from police detectives to laborers for the city of New York. Clothing was the most prominent industry of employment of Bonannos at the time. Most all of the persons profiled in my eBook rented their residences. The text of Bonanno Family Members In New York In 1920 is advantageous to Italian and Italian-Americans who are working on individual family research projects of their own. The volume will likely assist crime researchers also, as some of the work professions may have been "fronts" for organized crime activities. I hope that my research will enable readers to find out more about the lives of their ancestors. Genealogy investigation is challenging. It needs useful texts which can serve as springboards to more accurate explorations of past lives. The beauty of ancestral study is found in the many directions it can take. In 1920 many Bonanno family members had been in the United States for only a few decades. Some of them had immigrated only a few years before the start of the second decade of the 20th century. It was a time of settlement and aspirations for the future for individual family members.