Giovanni Battista Piamarta was born in
Brescia on 26 November 1841 into a poor household; his father was a barber. Piamarta lost his mother at the age of nine in 1850 and spent time living in the slums of the town. His maternal grandfather sent him to the Oratory of Saint Thomas. His adolescence was difficult but thanks to the parish of
Vallio Terme he entered the diocesan seminary. He was
ordained to the
priesthood on 23 December 1865 prior to
Christmas and he began his pastoral mission in Carzago Riviera (Bedizzole), spending his first two decades in intense pastoral work, and is remembered as a priest "zealous, excellent, flawless in everything". In that time he was appointed as the priest (and later director) of the parish of Saint Alexander and later as the pastor of Pavone del Mella. Brescia was in the process of industrialization and Piamarta identified with the difficulties and hopes of disadvantaged adolescents due to his own experiences on the streets as a child. In 1886 he returned to Brescia. With Pietro Capetti and the Catholic Movement he started the Institute Artigianelli for the vocational and Christian education of the poorest children and adolescents on 3 December 1886. The "Workman's Institute" grew in workspaces and buildings, making it possible for many adolescents to receive a technical education. In 1889, he and Giovanni Bonsignori began the Agricultural Colony of
Remedello. As a result, a number of religious who shared the ideals and labors of the mission gathered around Piamarta. In March 1900 he established the
Congregation of the Holy Family of Nazareth ("Piamartinis") to continue the work of technical Christian education around the world. This would include
Italy,
Angola,
Mozambique,
Brazil and
Chile. Piamarta's work with the Brescian printing and publishing house, "Queriniana", helped make Brescia a European center of Catholic publications.
Death and exhumation Giovanni Battista Piamarta died on 25 April 1913 in
Remedello after a life spent in the service of
God and his fellow neighbors. In 1926 his remains were moved to the church of the workmen that he himself had built. ==Sainthood==