Sulphur, Sicilians, and the Exodus to the USA

There is not one manufacturing industry in the world that can work without sulphur. When the industrial revolution took place in the 19th century, 90% of all the sulphur in the world came from Sicily.

These are Sicilian sulphur miners:

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Why are they working naked? It was 40 degrees centigrade above ground and down in the mines it could get above 45 degrees, which (for you Americans) is 113 degrees fahrenheit. There was also 100% humidity and they were engaged in hard labour for up to twelve hours at a time. Sulphur gives off suffocating hydrogen sulphide gas which makes it hard to breathe: it was once called brimstone and thought to be smoke from the fires of hell. The human body cannot survive these conditions with clothes on.

There were not only men down in the mines. Little boys would go to work with their fathers from the age of six. Children this young worked as miners in Sicily even after the second world war.

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This precious mineral was so coveted by the British and the French that they almost came to war over which country would have all of Sicily’s precious reserves. Meanwhile the Sicilians worked for such low wages that, technically, they counted as slaves. They fuelled the industrial revolution of Northern Europe yet failed to partake in any of the profits at all.

I think a country in possession of a global monopoly, which fails to make any profits from it, can only be explained by extraordinarily bad government.

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Sulphur causes a lung disease called silicosis. The Sicilians who started working under ground at the age of 6 died, on average, aged 40.

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Sicily has vast sulphur deposits partly because it was once under the sea, and partly because it is a volcanic island fed with sulphur from deep within the earth. Some of the sulphur was taken out in rock form, but to extract the smaller traces as well, part of the mining process involved dissolving the sulphur into fluid.

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Above ground, it was re-set into the blocks in the photo below. These blocks were a dazzling yellow so I think, if this photo were in colour, they would look exactly like giant gold ingots.

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When crude oil was extracted from deep under ground, the oil cracking process produced sulphur as a by-product. This was a far cheaper and safer way of obtaining sulphur, and so Sicily lost its global monopoly.

Thousands and thousands of sulphur miners and their families lost their livelihood. Like the Irish at the time of the potato blight, Sicilians moved to America in a mass exodus.

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Today there are 5 million Sicilians living in Sicily, and 17 million “Sicilians” living in the USA.

Some of their descendants visit Sicily today and cannot understand why their grandparents left an island that looks like paradise. Yet I doubt if those first generation immigrants ever gave a second thought to the brimstone of hell they had left behind.

Mineral exhibition at Villa Ramacca, Bagheria, Sicily

All of the images in this article came from a special exhibition on minerals and geology displaying the private collection of geologist Mario Tozzi. It was held at Villa Ramacca, a spectacular 18th century Sicilian villa. Their owner is hoping to find a place for a permanent museum.

Instructions for playing 12 Sicilian card games, plus where to buy packs of cards

88 Comments Add yours

  1. Diane C says:

    Once again Veronica, you’ve knocked it out of the park. This is exactly what happened in Cianciana, our little town. And I think you are right about the Sicilians who immigrated. They may have thought wistfully about their childhoods or the food and family but there was very little desire to go back.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Thank you Diane!
      Apparently the exodus of the sulphur miners created ghost towns all over Sicily. I think Cianciana was lucky not to end up like some of the towns which are still empty in the centre…

      Like

    2. My family came from Cianciana, too. At least two of my great-great grandfathers were sulfur miners. One died at 31, the other at 44.

      Like

  2. Pecora Nera says:

    Amazing, this post should be freshly pressed….

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Thank you! That’s such a nice thing to say. ā¤

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Clare says:

        Just A question, what time period does all this take place in? I’m writing a research essay, and I’m studying Sicily 1860-1900

        Like

      2. VH says:

        Hi Clare,
        That is exactly the time period that this was taking place. It continued well into the first half of the 20th century as well.

        Like

  3. Candy Smellie says:

    Hi, Love your blogs so thank you for this one as well. However, I do wonder if the reason they worked naked wasn’t just to do with the heat but that any cloth or boots would rot in the sulfurous atmosphere. They would have come out of the mine minus any clothes they walked in wearing. I could be talking nonsense though. Candy

    On 1 April 2015 at 13:41, The Dangerously Truthful Diary of a Sicilian

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes, I think you might well be right about that – there were probably lots of reasons. I think there has to be a reason why they aren’t even wearing underpants!

      Like

  4. T. Franke says:

    I would like to know whether the sulphur mines played any roles in antiquity, and – even more special – in the late bronze age = approx. 1250 BC. I heard that the pre-Greek Sicels and Sicani painted walls of caves and huts with sulphuric colour yet I never could find any reliable source for this.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I do know there were lots of sulphur deposits right up at ground level in ancient times. You still see them all over the place at the top of Etna. So maybe the Romans didn’t need to go underground to mine it?
      I doubt they needed anything like the quantities that were desired in the industrial revolution. Do you know what they used it for? I think it was used in glass making??? and metal working??? Do you know?

      Like

      1. T. Franke says:

        It was widely used as medicine! šŸ™‚ Egyptians whitened textile with it.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. I think you should get an award for your interesting questions!
        I’ve just found out that the Romans used sulphur to make fireworks at the circus games, and also as explosive incendiary devices in warfare – early bombs/gunpowder.

        This web page has a lot of info about Roman deep shaft mining techniques:
        http://www.unc.edu/~duncan/personal/roman_mining/deep-vein_mining.htm

        This is the best, apparently sulphur was mined a great deal by the Romans in Sicily:
        http://www.academia.edu/9306599/Sulphur_exploitation_and_landscape_in_Roman_Sicily_between_IV_and_VI_century_AD
        (It’s written by a Sicilian researcher so the English is strange, but it’s very interesting)

        Liked by 1 person

      3. T. Franke says:

        Like šŸ™‚

        Liked by 1 person

  5. Anonymous says:

    My family emigrated from Aragona, Sicliy near the sulfur mines in the early 1900’s. Your post and these pictures are fascinating. Thank you for your insightful and interesting stories form Sicily!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you!
      The exhibition really was fantastic. I really hope they manage to make a permanent museum of it. The mineral collection besides the history of sulphur was absolutely gobsmacking. I’m going to do another post about that soon!

      Liked by 2 people

  6. jaima says:

    It brought tears to my eyes, and I understand my grandparents better now. They left Caltanissetta and came to the US.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you for your compliments!
      Do you know if your family were sulphur miners in the past? I suppose even if they weren’t, the mass exodus of the miners probably put the other workers out of business too – the shopkeepers, farmers etc who no longer had any customers. I think some areas of Sicily were literally emptied out.

      Like

      1. jaima says:

        The family history says that my grandfather went to work in the sulfur mines at the age of 6. He immigrated to the US in 1903 at the age of 33 and died at the age of 71. I’m glad that he was able to be out of the mines, and live a longer life.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. I hope the second half of his life was happy enough to make up for the first half, which must have been so tough. The idea of little children living that kind of a life makes me cry. I’m glad to hear he got out and was one of the success stories.

        Liked by 1 person

  7. It’s impossible for our modern sensibilities to grasp the sheer drudgery, not to mention danger and suffering, that many people endured day in and day out back in the “good old days” just to earn a living. These photos are a stark reminder of just how good most of our lives are now. I remember visiting a textile mill museum exhibit in Lowell, Massachusetts where they insisted we wear ear plugs before entering. Only one quarter of the looms were operating and when I slipped the earplugs out for a second, I was brought to tears by the sheer slamming agony of the noise. Of course many of the girls ended up deaf in later years from their years in the mills.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I toured an old pottery in Staffordhire in England a couple of summers ago, thinking of all the olden days jobs, it must have been quite healthy (coming from a family of Welsh coal miners who chose coal mining “for the sake of their health because so many workers in the tin works died before they were adults”)
      Well anyway, the entire factory went deaf in no time and apparently right up to the eighties, there were swarms of old women in the region who would lipread and talk silently to each other – including the ones who weren’t deaf!
      and not only that. They all used to get lung cancer too as the place was full of toxic fumes coming off the kilns, and maimed by dangerous moving parts of machinery.
      Really I think there was nothing good about the good old days unless you were an aristocrat!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Agreed. I read a book years ago something like “The Good Old Days Really Weren’t” and talk about an eye opener. I mean we know life was difficult but just the enormous amount of work involved in laundry, for instance. EGAD! The women were absolute laborers unless they had help. No thanks!

        Liked by 1 person

      2. There used to be a TV programme in England where families would volunteer to live exactly as people did at certain periods in history, doing hand laundry etc as well as wearing period costumes – they were followed by the cameras like a reality show.
        They all talked about how incredibly hard it was. They basically had no leisure time at all.

        Like

  8. mfryan says:

    I appreciate this history lesson – really helpful for understanding the region, and what brought so many Sicilians to America.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I love history as it helps you see more deeply into everything around you, and I think Sicily is one of the places which you cannot understand at all without looking at its history.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. mfryan says:

        Agreed! šŸ™‚

        Like

  9. Anna says:

    Fascinating – and such tragic – history. I think an example like this very much supports the efforts of many governments today to nationalize natural resources or at least keep the governing share in the hands of local companies.

    Like

    1. So long as the government is good. I think the mines were actually owned by local companies, but they were just so bad at forming contracts and negotiating prices. I see this still happening, where members of the local councils make contracts with private companies that are suicidally un-advantageous to themselves… they just cannot see it. My mind repeatedly boggles at how naive they are.

      Like

  10. cindyfisherwoman says:

    Dear lord! Stunning stunning stunning.

    Liked by 1 person

  11. Sofia says:

    Very interesting! I remember all the sulphur as I went up Etna. What was the sulphur used for?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Apparently just about any chemical make today either has sulphur in it, or needs sulphur at some stage in making it. It makes fertilisers, fungicide and pesticides, it goes into foods and wines as preservatives, it makes paints adn dyes, lots and lots of medicines. It is also made into sulphuric acid which is used by water purifying plants, for mineral extraction in mining more minerals and for oil cracking to get…yep, more sulphur. Like I said, there’s basically no industry that can operate without it.

      Like

      1. Sofia says:

        You’re right… And with all the chemistry classes I’ve had in my life, you can see that maybe it wasn’t my forte to not realise it!

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Chemistry makes my brain hurt!

        Like

  12. Pip Marks says:

    Some of these Sicilian ‘sulphur slaves’ migrated to Australia & replaced our South Sea Islander ‘sugar slaves’ after the White Australia Policy came in. It was still devilishly hot work but conditions in Queensland would have been better than in the sulphur mines at least. http://www.qhatlas.com.au/content/italians-queensland

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ah, very interesting. Didn’t you write a blog post around this subject?

      Like

      1. Pip Marks says:

        Yes – re South Sea islanders but I didn’t know much about who replaced them. I was pleased to find out that many of the Italians became share farmers as they were determined not to be indentured workers. It makes lots of sense after reading your post.

        Like

  13. Mannaggia la miseria! Sounds like they were working in Dante’s Inferno! Sad but wonderful post.

    Liked by 2 people

  14. How very sad but a very interesting read. We are lucky to be living in the times we are. Although there are still so many sad things happening now around the world, the past sounds appalling and I worry what the future will bring as we destroy the planet day by day. (How depressing!Tomorrow’s Twiiter #FriFotos theme is JOY, off to dig out some photos to cheer myself up!)

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Yes I very much agree. I grew up with my Welsh grandfather’s stories of coal mining so I was well aware of how lucky I was from a very early age indeed.

      While researching this I saw an article (with amazing photos) about sulphur miners in Indonesia who were working in similarly hellish conditions and getting serious illnesses. They did at least have clothes on, which is making me wonder more about the nudity of Sicilian miners – the fact they didn’t even wear shoes when the ground must surely had hurt and cut their feet makes me think their lack of clothes was at least partly a result of extreme poverty.

      Like

      1. It does look very strange. Presumably they struggle to replace anything destoryed by the dreadful conditions they worked in.

        Like

  15. Zambian Lady says:

    I understand that it may have been too hot to wear clothes in the mines, but even underwear was too much? I would think that containing some body parts would be more comfortable, but that’s just my opinion. The miners’ poor working conditions and benefits remind me of present day sweat shops.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I agree with your comparison with sweat shops. I saw a documentary on Al Jazeera recently about workers in China suffering horrible illnesses as a result of dirty work they had to do making designer jeans. It may not be quite so wretched as these miners but it is still close to slavery.

      I found a mini documentary on You Tube which explained at last the real reason why they had to work naked. Apparently the sulphur dust would be absorbed into their clothes and react with their sweat, causing caustic burns on their skin.

      Like

  16. Isabelle says:

    Apparently there is a film about the boys forced into mining called La Discesa di Acla’ a Floristella (Floristella being one of the mines) made in 1992. And a law was passed in 1959 stipulating that the miners had to wear clothes and shoes.
    I read that the boys forced into mining were referred to as ‘carusi’ and were ‘rented’ by the miners from the boys’ parents. The miners paid the parents and the carusi had to work in the mine for a fixed time, therefore they lived like slaves for the “rental” period. Besides the formal condition of slave, there were many similar legal arrangements that were very similar arrangements to slavery. So the Carusi were virtual slaves. The working conditions were horrendous and there was a real lack of freedom. The “renter” paid poor families an amount equivalent to the salary for some years of work, that salary was very low. So the boy was essentially ‘rented’ and had to work for the stipulated time. He received only his food. If the boy tried to run away, fell ill, or died, the family had to return the amount or provide the services of another child. As the family was involved in the forced labour scheme, there was virtually no way for a boy to escape. When a runaway boy was caught, as was often the case, he was severely punished, usually beaten with a stick. So sad.
    There is a monument in Comitini to miners who lost their lives.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’d like to see that documentarym, it woulds really interesting – though probably very upsetting too.

      BTW Carusi is just the Sicilian dialect word for “boys” in the East and south of the island. (In the Palermo area the word is piciotti).

      Like

  17. For anyone who speaks Italian, I have just found this fascinating film on You Tube:

    It shows how some of the sulphur mines in Sicily were still using mining techniques in the 1950s adn 1960s which were used in British coal mines in the 1880s.

    Like

  18. Very interesting post never knew that the history of Sulphur is so painful…

    Like

    1. Same here, I knew that mining is always unhealthy but I never imagined sulphur would actually attack the skin.

      Like

  19. Ellen Hawley says:

    Good post on an industry I knew nothing about. But I’ve read about what’s called the curse of resources (I think I’m remembering the phrase correctly), where a country with some valuable natural resource suffers for it instead of profits from it. More powerful countries come in and exploit the resource–along with whatever local labor it needs. For an example, think of the African countries that have diamonds, or oil. So yes, blame the government, but often it’s a matter of power and money, and the screwed-up government’s not much more than a symptom.

    Like

    1. But Africa is generally characterised by lazy and greedy politicians just like Sicily, so I think their wasting of their natural resources fits the same model as the Sicilian one.
      Some countries make excellent use of their natural resources – China and the Middle East for example, and also Britain before they were pretty-much exhausted. I think perhaps we characterise African countries as resource-rich because they have little else, whereas other resource-rich regions have built a whole working economy on top of them, so we almost forget the resources they made such sensible use of to get their industries started.
      If I were to write an article about the curse of resources I would call it “The curse of a government that does not understand how to make profitable use of resources”

      Like

  20. phil100a says:

    Superb reporting! Here are some additional links about sulphur and Sicily.

    1) http://www.bestofsicily.com/mag/art145.htm

    2) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carusu
    “The horrific conditions in Sicilian sulfur mines prompted Booker T. Washington āˆ’ himself an African American born a slave ā€“ to write in 1910: “I am not prepared just now to say to what extent I believe in a physical hell in the next world, but a sulphur mine in Sicily is about the nearest thing to hell that I expect to see in this life.” He had traveled to Europe to acquaint himself, in his words: “with the condition of the poorer and working classes in Europe”.[3] As an eyewitness, he described the plight of the carusi as follows:
    …”From this slavery there is no hope of freedom, because neither the parents nor the child will ever have sufficient money to repay the original loan. […]
    The cruelties to which the child slaves have been subjected, as related by those who have studied them, are as bad as anything that was ever reported of the cruelties of Negro slavery. These boy slaves were frequently beaten and pinched, in order to wring from their overburdened bodies the last drop of strength they had in them. When beatings did not suffice, it was the custom to singe the calves of their legs with lanterns to put them again on their feet. If they sought to escape from this slavery in flight, they were captured and beaten, sometimes even killed” ”

    3) http://www.iitaly.org/bloggers/1066/child-slavery-sicily-1910

    4) Why the Carusi Matter
    http://www.timesofsicily.com/carusi-matter/

    5) Sulphur and debt in Sicily (start on p.74)
    http://tinyurl.com/nafvhvf

    6) http://tinyurl.com/pcf58b2
    written in the 1890’s

    7) Queer Things about Sicily (1928)
    http://tinyurl.com/oz8ndea
    keep in mind that the prevailing elite classes in Italy and Europe has a distorted idea of Sicilians – in a word, they were essentially racist opinions. Two SUPERB books that debunk these Sicilian myths are “The Pursuit of Italy A History of A Land, Its Regions, and Their Peoples” By David Gilmour. and “Terroni: All That Has Been Done to Ensure That The Italians of The South Became “Southerners”, by Pino Aprile (published in Italian, and available in Englidh translation from Borddihera Press, NY). The latter book is not easy to find. It’s a fairly recent publication and apparently had a large impact in Italy. Essentially, The Kingdom of Two Sicily’s was compelled to become “2nd rate”. It was used by the conquering north. Gilmor’s book points this out in detail, occasionally quoting from Aprile’s book.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you so much for all this extra info! Really appreciate it!

      Like

  21. Hello. I have just returned from the Brandywine Valley in Delaware where we visited a fascinating museum about the DuPont’s family rise to wealth through the manufacture of gunpowder. And one of the three key ingredients used was sulfur. From Sicily. I couldn’t help but think of these miners as I looked at a basket of yellow chunks of sulfur and thought of what went on to bring it to our shores.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. It’s a story that really gets under your skin, isn’t it?
      I wonder how many families of millionaires these men created while working as slaves under ground?

      Liked by 1 person

  22. Toni Villaraut Belleranti says:

    I just found this blog and this post. Yes, you got it right that those who left Sicily in the early 20th century had no desire to return, mostly because of the terrible conditions there.
    My mother’s family came from southwest County Cork, Ireland to the USA because of the potato famine and my father’s family of illiterate and hardworking people emigrated from the interior mountains of Sicily about 100 years ago. And while they never went back, I, as a grandchild of the immigrant generation, have always been curious. So this coming week I will make my third visit to Sicily in the past five years. I now know dozens of loving cousins there, have researched some of my family history (peasants and nobility both) and I look forward to visiting this belissima island, significant “warts” and all.
    When I retire in a couple of years, maybe I’ll be able to spend more time there, although I will always be American, with children and family in the states. I have that luxury that my grandparents did not.

    Like

    1. I was told by a third-generation Sicilian American recently that the Irish and Sicilians in America really saw eye-to-eye with each other because they had lived through similar suffering and left their home countries for similar reasons. And being Catholics as well gave them similar values. I guess your parents may have gone through this kind of bonding?
      I think seeing Sicily as a visitor gives you the chance to enjooy all the best of it without getting sucked down into the heavy economic and political problems we’re still struggling with.
      Anyway, have a great holiday!

      Like

  23. I have written a novella about a Sicilian Sulfur mining family, entitled ‘The Lady of the Wheel’. For details, see http://bit.ly/SicilianStory

    Like

  24. I read your article with great interest, and profound sadness. I have been researching my maternal ancestors and discovered just today the marriage registry for my great-grandmother and great-grandfather, both from Riesi. In the document that I found on Antenati, my grandfather is listed as a sulphur miner. I am happy to say that he immigrated with his wife and many friends and relatives to the USA and lived to be 101 years of age. I have a picture of him in a military uniform, which is confusing. Can you tell me if Italy/Sicily had mandatory military service? Thank you again for this very informative article.

    Like

    1. That’s such a great story about your grandafather! My poor old grandad was a coal miner in Wales and didn’t have such a lucky escape.

      Well, my husband did military service in the early 1990s and Italy has had it for a long time, but I dont know how far back it goes. Do you have a rough date estimate for when the photo in military uniform was taken? And is it definitely military – Italians are a bit uniform crazy and they have about 7 different police forces with military-looking uniforms.
      I have a few friends who are history experts – if you want to scan in the photo I could probably find out the whole story behind it! (if you want to do that, drop me a message from the contact form so that I can switch this over to private email chatting….)

      Like

  25. P.S. you may be interested in reading Stephen Puleo’s book, The Boston Italians.

    Like

    1. Oh thank you, I’ll go and look for that…

      Like

    2. jaima17 says:

      Hello Stephanie, I read your reply and had the same response of great sadness about the situation with the miners. I did write above that my grandparents came from the province of Caltanisetta and they were from town of Riesi also! They settled in Boston, and I’ve never met anyone else whose ancestors came from Riesi. Can we get in touch with private email chatting to discuss this?

      Like

      1. If you guys want to exchange email addresses without having to post them publicly, drop me a message via the contact form and I will send you each other’s emails privately.

        Like

    3. David says:

      It’s a wonderful book. I knew many Italian families from Boston and elsewhere in Massachusetts. I n Massacusetts there is a very large chapter of the Sons of Italy organization..

      Like

  26. David says:

    Veronica..this was so interesting about the sulphur industry in Sicily.. I must admit that i wasn’t aware of it.

    Like

  27. Ernie LaPaglia says:

    I never knew this about Sicily. My grandparents immigrated in 1903 and 1906. From what I know, my grandfather was a tailor and do not know about the mines. They hailed from Valledolmo. Great story. Thank you…

    Like

  28. Anonymous says:

    MY FATHER (NOW DECEASED, AGED 85 IN 1981) WORKED IN THE SULPHUR MINES IN ARAGONA . WHILE HE MENTIONED THE MINES A FEW TIMES WE HAD NO IDEA OF ITS CRUELTY. I GUESS HE MANAGED TO ESCAPE WITH THE GREAT MIGRATIONS DUE TO POVERTY THAT BEFELL THE MINERS IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY. HE ALSO SERVED IN THE AMERICAN ARMY IN WWI AND WAS WOUNDED IN BATTLE.
    WE ARE A LARGE FAMILY OF 12 CHILDREN. I LOST A BROTHER IN WWII, ANOTHER BROTHER GRADUATED FROM THE MILITARY ACADEMY AT WEST POINT AND IS A RETIRED GENERAL, ONE SISTER WAS MARRIED TO A LOCAL US CONGRESSMAN AND I SERVED IN THE US ARMY SPECIAL FORCES 1962-1965. THANK YOU FOR YOUR GREAT WORK.

    Like

    1. VH says:

      What an impressive and accomplished family! It is amazing what people can achieve in a country that gives opportunities. I wonder what the family would have done back in Sicily?
      I have no doubt your father couldn’t bear to talk about such horrible memories.

      Like

      1. Kathleen Benkowski says:

        Hello my family is from calascibetta n owned a surfer mine there the last name was corvara in the year about 1883 do u have any info on that

        Liked by 1 person

      2. VH says:

        I’m afraid I don’t, but have you tried contacting the Sulphur mining museum? They are likely to have more information than anyone else.
        https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museo_della_miniera_di_zolfo_di_Cabernardi

        Like

  29. NoBS says:

    Excellent article. You mention “can only be explained by extraordinarily bad government” for a reasoning of the “slave” conditions.
    The Sicilians have never had a semblance of a unified nation. Too many immigrants with emotional baggage that divided the population for corruption and exploitation. It the most efficient way to destroy a sovereign nation from within.

    I’m very please that humanity is kind enough to repeat the past. Sometime it’s better to enslave others with the least amount of bloodshed. After all, war is expensive and exploiting useful idiots is free through social media.

    Like

    1. Alessandra says:

      Abnsolutely right. However, do you think that conitions in the USA were any better? Take a look at how all immigrants…including the Sicilians, suffered when they came to America,. It is all documented.

      Like

  30. Alessandra says:

    Absolutely right. However, have you ever considered the deplorable..life-threatening conditions in the USA which were faced by the Sicilian people..and all immigrants for that matter? It is VERY well-documented.

    Like

    1. Anonymous says:

      I am so glad you are out of FB jail! Why it happened doesn’t even make sense.
      My cousin and I, the family historians, suspect that our great-grandfather was a child miner. We’ve searched the Antanati records for proof, but there isn’t any mention of the miners. Do you have any idea where we might look for records pertaining to the miners?

      Like

      1. VDG says:

        The sulfur mining museum has a document archive and they may have some helpful records

        https://www.tripadvisor.it/Attraction_Review-g5561749-d6495576-Reviews-Museo_della_Zolfara-Montedoro_Province_of_Caltanissetta_Sicily.html

        There are other museums at specific mines. Here’s another example.

        https://www.comune.sommatino.cl.it/zf/index.php/musei-monumenti/index/dettaglio-museo/museo/5

        If you can narrow down the region or town, you may be able to focus your search. Otherwise you could try emailing all of them to explain what you’re looking for.

        Good luck!

        Like

  31. Valerie Petrantoni Malone says:

    My great grandmotherā€™s only sibling brother worked in the Sulphur Mines of Sicily as a young child and died at the age of 14 in her arms. He obviously died of the effects of working there. I am just presuming his parents needed the money to survive to knowingly let him work in harmā€™s way. Had my great grandmother been born a boy, I would not even be in the United States today They lived in the town of San Cataldo, Sicily.

    Like

    1. VDG says:

      It’s so sad to think of all the families who lived in such poverty that they had to send their children to work at such young ages. My grandparents had similar stories about kids going down the coal mines in Wales in the same time period.
      I’m glad we’ve moved on from there, and I hope all the parts of the world where this still goes on will manage to move beyond it soon.

      Like

  32. Anonymous says:

    I shared a link to this story in a facebook page about Sicilian culture and ended up in facebook jail not following their community standards. Apparently facebook thinks this is too sexually explicit.

    Like

    1. VDG says:

      Oh no!
      I’m really sorry it put you in Facebook jail. Have you appealed?
      Evidently they have changed their rules, as it was shared many times on Facebook when it was first written.

      Like

      1. Anonymous says:

        Thank you for replying. I did appeal and got out of jail. LOL The group I posted it, is about Sicilian culture and food. I was surprised how many people with Sicilian roots don’t know about the sulphur mining in Sicily and the horrible conditions.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. VDG says:

        I’m glad you’re out of jail!

        I was surprised to hear about the sulphur mining suddenly, after I’d lived in Sicily for several years and it had never been mentioned. I did wonder if that was because it was restricted to a few isolated communities, or if people just never wanted to reminisce about bad memories. I suspect a bit of both.

        Like

      3. Anonymous says:

        Sulphur and salt mining was Sicily’s main industry back in the days. I know it was huge in my parents home town in the Agrigento region, don’t know about the rest of Sicily. What I didn’t know about was the horrible conditions. There’s a few documentaries and movies based on the abuse of children in the mines. Sicilian people tend not to talk about their dark past. I’m guess because they’re ashamed. The Facebook group is called: Nonna Maria’s Sicilian Recipes and Culture https://www.facebook.com/groups/1668376503326979

        Liked by 1 person

      4. VDG says:

        What’s your group called, by the way? Would you mind posting a link, please?

        Like

      5. Anonymous says:

        I honestly do not remember. That was so long ago.

        Like

  33. nina pavone from Rochester, NY says:

    My mother’s father was in the mines at age seven because his father died. They lived in Valguarnera in Caltanisetta Province. He came to America as a young married man with a child. I never knew any details other than this and that his mother’s name was Marie and she was French and had a bad reputation. I am wondering if she was driven to prostitution to keep him out of the mines after he came home from his alloted time there. My heart broke and I cried when I first read about the conditions.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. VDG says:

      It’s quite possible her “bad reputation” was entirely undeserved and just came from being a foreigner. Sicilians in the old days were very male chauvinist and in some villages, all a woman need do to ruin her reputation was leave the house without her husband! The French were more modern and wouldn’t be aware of things like this.
      Even in the 1980s when my husband went to do homework with his friend, who was a girl, they had to push the table across the room so it was right under the window so that everyone could see they were on opposite sides of the table and never touched. This was done to protect her good reputation.

      Like

      1. nina pavone from Rochester, NY says:

        Thank you for your comment. I also have thought that my great grandmother Marie did not deserve the bad reputaion. I am trying to find records of this family, but do not have her maiden name or the reason she found herself in the middle of Sicily ! I visited in 1985 and it was a bit primitive for me then, I can’t even imagine what it was like when my grandfather was born there in 1888 ! Was she running from something or someone ?

        Like

So, what do you think?