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David F. Menicucci's 'Two Centuries to Freedom' delves into a family's journey

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David F. Menicucci will talk about 鈥淚talian Immigrants: Their Lives and Legacy in sa国际传媒官网网页入口鈥 and signs copies of his book 鈥淭wo Centuries to Freedom鈥 at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, May 17 at the sa国际传媒官网网页入口 Library Genealogy Center. The center is on the second floor of the Main sa国际传媒官网网页入口 Public Library, Fifth Street and Copper Avenue NW. Validated parking is available in the city garage diagonally across from the library entrance.

In conjunction with his talk, Menicucci is presenting in several display cases with various artifacts he鈥檚 gathered that relate to his book. The artifacts will be displayed through the end of June.

It was about 12 years ago when David F. Menicucci began sorting through a pile of seemingly unrelated material about his family.

鈥淎nd I mean a pile. Historical documents, old letters, pictures, recordings, old newspaper articles,鈥 Menicucci said in a phone interview.

鈥淚 sorted things in different categories. I stepped back and asked myself, 鈥業s there a story here?鈥 I knew there was, but is there a documented story? Is there enough direct evidence to support this story, to verify family lore, or not?鈥

Menicucci concluded that indeed there was sufficient evidence. 鈥淚t is a true account of actual events described in the context of history,鈥 he said.

Maybe it鈥檚 a history in layers 鈥 a family鈥檚, with flashes of a province鈥檚, a nation鈥檚 and the world鈥檚.

Menicucci鈥檚 conclusion has resulted in his authorship of the newly published book 鈥淭wo Centuries to Freedom: The True Story of One Family鈥檚 Two-Century Migration from Lucca, Italy, to New Mexico and Other American States.鈥

The book鈥檚 main focus is the author鈥檚 family, the Menicuccis. But it casts a wide net in mentioning other families who immigrated to the United States from the same northern Italian province of Lucca and ended up in sa国际传媒官网网页入口.

The book details the hardscrabble life in Lucca for the Menicucci family 鈥 the few years of basic public education the children received, the deeply religious ties to the Catholic Church, the family鈥檚 industry on the farm and at home, their meals, their love of wine and porcini mushrooms.

The author鈥檚 grandfather Giulio (later changed to Julio) and his brother Amerigo grew up dirt-peasant poor under the oppressive mezzadria sharecropping system. Because of the family鈥檚 low socioeconomic status, life would be a dead-end for the teenagers if they remained in Italy.

The American Revolution and its powerful spinoff concept of political freedom were early inspirations for generations of the Menicucci family, the author said.

Here was a country, the United States, that was established without a king, a harsh contrast to the monarchies that governed Italy and other European countries, the author said.

The family also heard the widely circulated stories of the economic opportunities in America鈥檚 free-market capitalist system, the book states.

From the mid-19th century forward into the early 20th century, Lucca sent many of its young people to work in America. If they found jobs, they were expected to send home some of their earnings.

The hard-working Menicucci brothers Giulio and Amerigo wanted to cross the Atlantic to seek their fortune there, too. They did, in the first decade of the 20th century. Giulio came first.

The brothers were hired to work in a Hancock, Michigan, copper mine.

Underground mining, they soon found out, was dangerous duty. They almost suffocated to death in one cave-in.

Then the brothers took jobs at a foundry in Kankakee, Illinois. In both communities, they stayed in rooms rented from welcoming Italian American families who had earlier emigrated from Lucca.

In late 1917, with the U.S. at war, the brothers faced the possibility of induction in the army. Fearing they might be split up, the brothers moved to sa国际传媒官网网页入口 where they had an aunt, a cousin and close friends from Lucca, the three Matteucci brothers.

The two Menicucci brothers waited in the Duke City before traveling to Camp Cody, an army training facility near Deming, where they enlisted.

The author said when he was young he lived down the street from Julio and he had an open invitation to visit him. He pedaled his bicycle over.

鈥淚 was often invited to join Julio, Amerigo and their friend Victorio Bachechi on fishing, hunting and (porcini) mushroom-gathering trips to the Jemez Mountains,鈥 the author writes.

Gathering and drying porcini mushroom for dishes was a favorite culinary tradition in Lucca, he added.

The author referred to the two brothers and their wives, women from Lucca, as 鈥渢he original New Mexico Menicucci patriarchs.鈥

The 642-page book includes a bibliography and references, appendices and indices and extensive end-of-chapter notes. Menicucci advises readers to concentrate on the narrative and skip the notes in their first reading of the book.

The narrative could have been more tightly organized to deal with the abundance 鈥 overabundance, actually 鈥 of information the author compiled.

Menicucci, the 74-year-old author, is a professional researcher retired from Sandia National Laboratories and is a former research faculty member at the University of New Mexico.