19th century Napoleonic invasion and cholera epidemic rendered it unusable Following the
French invasion of Naples in 1806, a
Napoleonic kingdom of the same name was founded with the French victory, and Tocco reentered the Chieti district. Following the French conquest there were the Napoleonic suppressions of religious orders. Convents were also closed in Tocco, and that of the Dominicans was initially used as military
barracks for the
gendarmerie, By order of the intendant of
Abruzzo Citra in a letter dated September 8, 1836, the Capuchin convent was used as a hospital for
cholera patients. Pharmacist Beniamino Toro, originally from
Cansano, moved to Tocco in the early 1800s and in 1817 began the business of making
centerbe liqueur in his Tocco pharmacy. The liquor's popularity grew during the cholera epidemic as it was used as a disinfectant and remedy for nausea.
1848 In the years leading up to
1848, cultural relations between
Tocco and
Chieti intensified because of the Tocco people who joined Chieti's political and cultural circles. On March 23, 1848, the
First Italian War of Independence broke out between the
Kingdom of Sardinia and the
Austrian Empire. In aid of the Kingdom of Sardinia other Italian states also sent contingents of troops, and among them was the
Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, of which Tocco was part. Bourbon troops traveling through
northern Italy stopped in Tocco in a festive town atmosphere where
tricolors were displayed. News of the riots reached Tocco and a group of Tocco peasants planned an insurrection in the village for March 20 during the feast of the
patron saint. However, Domenico Stromei, a well-known poet in the town, after learning of this warned the lords of Tocco, who sent the
gendarmerie to the town. On the morning of March 20, about 20 mounted gendarmes entered Tocco, and when the procession for the celebration of St. Eustace reached the
Ducal Palace (the castle), a group of armed commoners arrived ready to start a riot, but the crowd that was already there for the procession did not side with them and instead railed against them. The rioters, therefore, retreated and there were no clashes. Following the various uprisings in the Kingdom there came state repression, and in May 1849, a year after the failed uprising in Tocco, Bourbon troops arrived in the village to search Stromei's home and store despite the fact that the previous year he had warned the authorities of the planned uprising by the peasants. All the letters in his possession were seized but he was not arrested. In the following years there were other house searches in Tocco for political reasons and 3 citizens were arrested.
Unification of Italy and the post-unification period In 1860, during the
Expedition of the Thousand, riots broke out in Tocco, so the mayor requested the royal authorities to send a detachment of gendarmerie troops to Tocco from
Chieti to maintain order. When
Victor Emmanuel II of Savoy entered the territory of the
Kingdom of the Two Sicilies to meet
Garibaldi in
Campania, he passed through
Abruzzo and on October 19, departing from
Chieti on his way to
Popoli, he passed over the territory of Tocco in the hamlet of Francoli along the Via Tiburtina Valeria where he was cheered by a jubilant crowd. After the
Proclamation of the Kingdom of Italy in 1861, there arose the problem of having to give a name to the municipality of Tocco to distinguish it from a
municipality of the same name in the
Province of Benevento. At a meeting of the City Council on November 26, 1862 this was discussed. It was proposed as a name "Tocco di Abruzzo" approved by 6 votes to 1 and "Tocco Tremonti" proposed by the councilman who voted against the other proposal, so a unanimous decision was not reached. In the end, the choice for the decision on the new name was entrusted to the Prefect who established the name "Tocco Casauria" because of its historical and geographical proximity to the
Abbey of San Clemente a Casauria, a decision that was finally made official by a Royal Decree in January 1863. Following the
Unification of Italy, there was a dispute between the municipalities of Tocco and
Salle, both of which claimed ownership of an area of land between the two municipalities, the "Stazzo di Carnevale," a plateau with a snowfield that was used for both agriculture and grazing. In 1864 the authorities established that the ownership of this area belonged to the municipality of Salle. After the Unification of Italy, the phenomenon of
post-unification brigandage began, which also involved the territory of Tocco; evidence of this can be found in the essay
Il Bel Paese written by the geologist
Antonio Stoppani, who visited Tocco in 1876 and described in his book the fear felt in the area due to the presence of
brigands who carried out raids in the town. In 1863, the first
oil well drilled by mechanical means in Italy (and among the first in Europe) was used in Tocco. This was the work of industrialists Maurizio Laschi of
Vicenza and Carlo Ribighini of
Ancona, pioneers of mechanical oil extraction. In the mid-nineteenth century Beniamino Toro began to have a palace built in the town for the purpose of using it as a dwelling and
centerbe manufacturing plant and it was completed in 1870. Also in that year, one of Abruzzo's first mutual aid workers' societies was founded in Tocco. On March 1, 1873, the
Pescara-
Popoli section of the
Rome-Sulmona-Pescara railway was inaugurated. This railway line also passed over the territory of the municipality of Tocco, and as early as 1871 (since before the railway itself was inaugurated) the municipality had been lobbying for the construction of a station to serve the town. It was built only decades later along with a bridge over the
Pescara River to reach it and was inaugurated on October 17, 1894.
20th century In 1910, the first turbines were put in place to produce electricity at the Tocco hydroelectric power plant on the Pescara River. On January 13, 1915, the
Avezzano earthquake also caused severe damage in Tocco. There were several collapses, many religious buildings suffered damage and in particular the sacristy of the church of St. Eustace was destroyed. The
Ducal Palace also suffered major collapses.
Fascism Fascism took hold in the village from before the
March on Rome, and the phenomenon of
squadrismo against
anti-fascists involved Tocco as well with some incidents. During the period of the
Fascist regime, the urban center of Tocco was particularly developed in the area of Via Roma. Public works were built in the village and there were various restorations of churches and public areas. The town's first school building was also built, the project for which was begun in 1926 with the purchase by the municipality of private land in the area of today's Piazza Domenico Stromei with a view to a future school building that was begun in 1935. In 1923 the war memorial by
Torquato Tamagnini was placed and unveiled. Between 1925 and 1926 the
fascistissime laws were enacted, which, among other things, provided that the functions previously performed by the mayor, town council and city council were transferred to a
podestà appointed by the government by royal decree, and on April 22, 1927 the installation of the first
podestà Giorgio Ventura took place in Tocco. On January 2, 1927 the
Province of Pescara was established, which also incorporated the municipality of Tocco da Casauria, previously belonging to the
Province of Chieti. The Maiella earthquake of 1933 struck Tocco with an intensity of VIII on the
Mercalli scale causing some injuries among the population but no deaths. The houses that suffered damage were surveyed as: 38 damaged irreparably, 58 severely and 517 slightly; in total, the estimated damage to private homes amounted to 344,067
liras.
World War II During
World War II, following the
events of September 8, 1943, the Germans settled on the
Gustav Line. Tocco, being north of the Line, was occupied and the Germans settled in various public and private buildings in the town. After the occupation, Tocco was also affected by
Allied bombing: on one occasion the town's hydroelectric power plant was bombed, while on another occasion, on the morning of January 25, 1944 around 9:30 a.m., a single
British air force plane bombed the town of Tocco causing civilian deaths and damage to buildings. On June 8, 1944, the evening before withdrawing from Tocco, around 8 p.m. the Germans blew up a bomb and ammunition depot near the town's train station. The following day they left Tocco at 3 p.m. departing for
L'Aquila, and on June 10 Allied troops entered the town. Following the arrival of the Allies, in the transitional constitutional period the parties chose as mayor Beniamino Toro (who previously served as
podestà in the village from 1929 to 1943), who administered from July 8, 1943 to September 2, 1944, and was later replaced by Emilio di Donato until March 26, 1946. In the
first democratic local elections after World War II, the
Christian Democrats won in Tocco with their mayoral candidate Vittorio D'Angelo. In 1960 Tocco underwent major changes in its town center. Due to an ordinance of the public works department, several historic houses on the slope of Porta del Borgo towards the hill along with the Monte dei Morti church were demolished, as they turned out to be buildings still unsafe from the 1933 Maiella earthquake that damaged them. Also in the Porta del Borgo area, the fountain with the obelisk dedicated to
Giordano Bruno was demolished, while in today's Via Santa Liberata the church of Santa Liberata was demolished. On May 7, 1984 there was an earthquake in central and southern Italy that struck Tocco with an intensity of VI on the
Mercalli scale. There were 2 evacuation orders and some religious buildings were declared unfit for use. In 1992 the town's wind farm was established with 2 wind turbines of 200 kW, which would later be upgraded to a total capacity of 4 MW in 2009.
21st century The
2009 L'Aquila earthquake caused damage to several building aggregates and individual buildings in Tocco, including the historic town hall, the Church of St. Eustace and the Domenico Stromei Middle School being declared unusable. In 2016, earthquakes in central Italy also hit Tocco causing damage in the town. == See also ==