Before 1880 }} Italian navigators and explorers played a key role in the exploration and settlement of the Americas by
Europeans.
Genoese explorer
Christopher Columbus completed
four voyages across the Atlantic Ocean for the
Catholic monarchs of Spain, opening the way for the widespread European
exploration and
colonization of the Americas.
John Cabot and his son
Sebastian explored the
eastern seaboard of North America for
Henry VII in the early 16th century. In 1524, the
Florentine explorer
Giovanni da Verrazzano was the first European to explore the Atlantic coast of North America between Florida and New Brunswick. The Italian explorer
Amerigo Vespucci first demonstrated that the New World was not Asia, as initially conjectured, but a different continent (
America is named after him). The first Italian to be registered as residing in the area corresponding to the current United States was
Pietro Cesare Alberti, a Venetian seaman who, in 1635, settled in the
Dutch colony of
New Amsterdam. A small wave of Protestants, known as
Waldensians, immigrated during the 17th century, with the majority coming between 1654 and 1663. They spread out across what was then called
New Netherland and what would become
New York,
New Jersey, and the Lower Delaware River regions.
Enrico Tonti, together with the French explorer
René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, explored the
Great Lakes region. De Tonti founded the first European settlement in
Illinois in 1679 and in
Arkansas in 1683, making him "The Father of Arkansas." With LaSalle, he co-founded
New Orleans and was governor of the
Louisiana Territory for the next 20 years. His brother
Alphonse de Tonty (Alfonso de Tonti), with French explorer
Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, was the co-founder of
Detroit in 1701, and was its acting colonial governor for 12 years. The southwest and California were explored and mapped by Italian Jesuit priest
Eusebio Kino in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. The
Taliaferro family, believed to have roots in
Venice, was one of the
First Families to settle
Virginia;
Richard Taliaferro designed much of
Colonial Williamsburg. The period from 1776 to 1880 saw a small stream of new arrivals from Italy. Some brought skills in agriculture and the making of glass, silk and wine, while others brought skills as musicians. After American independence, numerous political refugees arrived, most notably
Giuseppe Avezzana,
Alessandro Gavazzi,
Silvio Pellico,
Federico Confalonieri, and
Eleuterio Felice Foresti.
Giuseppe Garibaldi resided in the United States in 1850–51. In 1773–1785,
Filippo Mazzei, a close friend of
Thomas Jefferson, published a pamphlet containing the phrase, "All men are by nature equally free and independent," which Jefferson incorporated essentially intact into the
Declaration of Independence. Italian Americans served in the
American Revolutionary War both as soldiers and officers.
Francesco Vigo aided the colonial forces of
George Rogers Clark by serving as one of the foremost financiers of the Revolution in the frontier Northwest. In 1789–91,
Alessandro Malaspina mapped much of the
west coast of the Americas. In 1822–23, the headwater region of the
Mississippi was explored by
Giacomo Beltrami in the territory that was later to become
Minnesota. Missionaries of the
Jesuit and
Franciscan orders were active in many parts of America. Italian Jesuits founded numerous missions, schools, and two colleges in the west.
Giovanni Nobili founded the Santa Clara College (now
Santa Clara University) in 1851. The St. Ignatius Academy (now
University of San Francisco) was established by
Anthony Maraschi in 1855. The Italian Jesuits also laid the foundation for the
winemaking industry that would later flourish in
California. In the east, the Italian Franciscans founded hospitals, orphanages, schools, and St. Bonaventure College (now
St. Bonaventure University), established by
Pamfilo da Magliano in 1858. Las Vegas College (now
Regis University) was established by a group of exiled Italian Jesuits in 1877 in
Las Vegas, New Mexico. The Jesuit
Giuseppe Cataldo, founded Gonzaga College (now
Gonzaga University) in
Spokane, Washington in 1887. In 1801,
Philip Trajetta established the nation's first conservatory of music in Boston. In 1805, Thomas Jefferson recruited a group of musicians from
Sicily to form a military band, later to become the nucleus of the
U.S. Marine Band. In 1833,
Lorenzo Da Ponte, formerly Mozart's librettist and a naturalized U.S. citizen, founded the first opera house in the United States, the Italian Opera House in New York City, which was the predecessor of the New York Academy of Music and of the
New York Metropolitan Opera.
Samuel Wilds Trotti of South Carolina was the first Italian American to serve in the
U.S. Congress (a partial term, from December 17, 1842, to March 3, 1843). In 1849, Francesco de Casale began publishing the Italian American newspaper ''L'Eco d'Italia'' in New York, the first of many to eventually follow. Beginning in 1863, Italian immigrants were one of the principal groups of unskilled laborers, along with the Irish, that built the
Transcontinental Railroad west from
Omaha, Nebraska. The first
Columbus Day celebration was organized by Italian Americans in New York City on October 12, 1866.
Civil War by President Lincoln Between 5,000 and 10,000 Italian Americans fought in the
American Civil War. The great majority of Italian Americans, for both demographic and ideological reasons, were in the
Union Army, including
Francis B. Spinola, the first Italian American to be elected to the
United States House of Representatives, who served as a general. Some Americans of Italian descent fought in the
Confederate Army. They included Confederate generals
William B. Taliaferro and
P. G. T. Beauregard. Six Italian Americans received the
Medal of Honor during the war, including Colonel
Luigi Palma di Cesnola, who later became the first director of the
Metropolitan Museum of Arts in New York (1879–1904). The
Garibaldi Guard recruited volunteers for the Union Army from Italy and other European countries to form the
39th New York Infantry. The
39th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment, with 350 Italian members, was nicknamed Garibaldi Guard in honor of
Giuseppe Garibaldi. In 1861, Garibaldi himself volunteered his services to President
Abraham Lincoln. Garibaldi was offered a major general's commission in the U.S. Army through the letter from Secretary of State
William H. Seward to
H. S. Sanford, the U.S. minister at
Brussels.
Period of Italian mass immigration (1880–1914) }} From 1880 to 1914, 13 million
Italians migrated out of Italy. During this period of mass migration, 4 million Italians arrived in the United States, 3 million of them between 1900 and 1914. They came for the most part from southern Italy and from the island of
Sicily. This period of large-scale immigration ended abruptly with the onset of WWI in August 1914. Immigrants without industrial skills found employment in low-wage manual labor jobs. Instead of finding jobs on their own, most used the
padrone system whereby Italian middlemen (
padroni) found jobs for groups of men and controlled their wages, transportation, and living conditions for a fee. In terms of the push-pull model of immigration, the push factor came primarily from the harsh economic conditions in southern Italy. Major factors that contributed to the large exodus included political and social unrest, the weak agricultural economy of the South modeled on the outdated
latifundist system dating back to the
feudal period, a high tax burden, soil exhaustion and erosion, and military conscription lasting seven years. By far the strongest "pull" factor was higher income. Immigrants expected to make considerable sums in only a few years of work, enabling them to improve their economic status when they returned home; however, the Italian immigrants earned well below average rates. The result was a sense of alienation from most of American culture and a lack of interest in learning English or otherwise assimilating. Not many women came, and those who did remained devoted to traditional Italian religious customs. When
World War I broke out, European migrants could not go home. Wages shot up, and the Italians benefited greatly. Most decided to stay permanently.
The New York Times in May 1896 sent its reporters to characterize
the Little Italy/Mulberry neighborhood: :They are laborers; toilers in all grades of manual work; they are artisans, they are junkmen, and here, too, dwell the rag pickers....There is a monster colony of Italians who might be termed the commercial or shop keeping community of the Latins. Here are all sorts of stores, pensions, groceries, fruit emporiums, tailors, shoemakers, wine merchants, importers, musical instrument makers....There are notaries, lawyers, doctors, apothecaries, undertakers.... Many sought housing in the older sections of the large
Northeastern cities—districts that became known as "
Little Italys." Such housing was frequently in overcrowded, substandard tenements, which were often dimly lit and had poor heating and ventilation; tuberculosis and other communicable diseases were a constant health threat. The Italian male immigrants in the Little Italys were most often employed in manual labor and were heavily involved in
public works, such as the construction of roads, railroad tracks, sewers, subways, bridges, and the first skyscrapers in these cities. As early as 1890, it was estimated that around 90 percent of New York City's and 99 percent of Chicago's public works employees were Italians. The women most frequently worked as seamstresses in the garment industry or in their homes. Many established small businesses in the Little Italys. In spite of the economic hardship of the immigrants, civil and social life flourished in the Italian American neighborhoods of the large northeastern cities. The
festa street festival became for many an important connection to the traditions of their ancestral villages in Italy, helping give the immigrants a sense of unity and common identity. Many of the Italian immigrants also went to more remote regions of the country, such as Florida and California, drawn by opportunities in agriculture, fishing, mining, railroad construction, and lumbering. It was not uncommon, especially in the South, for the immigrants to be subjected to economic exploitation, hostility, and sometimes even violence. The Italian laborers who went to these areas were in many cases later joined by wives and children, which resulted in the establishment of permanent Italian American settlements. A number of towns, such as
Roseto, Pennsylvania,
Tontitown, Arkansas, and
Valdese, North Carolina, were founded by Italian immigrants during this era.
Sarah Wool Moore was so concerned with
grifters luring immigrants into rooming houses or employment contracts in which the bosses got kickbacks that she pressed for the founding of the Society for the Protection of Italian Immigrants (often called the Society for Italian Immigrants). The society published lists of approved living quarters and employers. Later, the organization began establishing schools in work camps to help adult immigrants learn English. Wool Moore and the society began organizing schools in the labor camps that employed Italian workers on various dam and quarry projects in Pennsylvania and New York. The schools focused on teaching phrases that workers needed in their everyday tasks.
Integration into American society The Italian immigrants and their descendants were successful in numerous areas of endeavor including, but not limited to, those involving traditional Italian skills. A number of major business ventures were founded by Italian Americans.
Amadeo Giannini originated the concept of branch banking to serve the Italian American community in
San Francisco. He founded the
Bank of Italy, which later became the
Bank of America. His bank financed the
Golden Gate Bridge and also the first American animated film, the
Walt Disney film
Snow White, which established
Hollywood as the capital of American film production. Other companies founded by Italian Americans—such as
Ghirardelli Chocolate Company,
Progresso,
Planters Peanuts,
Contadina,
Chef Boyardee, and
Jacuzzi—became nationally known brand names in time. Italian conductors contributed to the early success of the
Metropolitan Opera of New York (founded in 1880), but it was the arrival of impresario
Giulio Gatti-Casazza in 1908, who brought with him conductor
Arturo Toscanini, that made the Met internationally known. Many Italian operatic singers and conductors were invited to perform for American audiences, most notably, tenor
Enrico Caruso. The premiere of the opera
La Fanciulla del West on December 10, 1910, with conductor Toscanini and tenor Caruso, was a major international success as well as an historic event for the entire Italian American community. Italian Americans became involved in entertainment and sports.
Rudolph Valentino was one of the first great film icons.
Dixieland jazz music had a number of important Italian American innovators, the most famous being
Nick LaRocca of
New Orleans, whose quintet made the first jazz recording in 1917. Italian Americans became increasingly involved in politics, government, and the labor movement.
Andrew H. Longino was elected governor of Mississippi in 1900.
Charles Bonaparte was secretary of the Navy and later attorney general in the
Theodore Roosevelt administration, and he founded the
Federal Bureau of Investigation. in 1909
Joe Petrosino was a
New York City Police Department (NYPD) officer who was a pioneer in the fight against
organized crime. Crime-fighting techniques that Petrosino pioneered are still practiced by law enforcement agencies.
Salvatore A. Cotillo was the first Italian American to serve in both houses of the New York State Legislature and the first who served as Justice of the New York State Supreme Court.
Fiorello La Guardia was elected to Congress from New York in 1916. He served as mayor of New York City from 1934 to 1946 as a Republican. Numerous Italian Americans were at the forefront in fighting for worker's rights in industries such as the mining, textiles, and garment industries, the most notable among these being
Arturo Giovannitti,
Carlo Tresca, and
Joseph Ettor.
World War I and interwar period , recipient of the highest military decoration, the
Medal of Honor, for his actions during
World War I The United States entered
World War I in 1917. The Italian American community wholeheartedly supported the war effort and its young men, both American born and Italian born, enlisted in large numbers in the American Army. It was estimated that during the two years of the war (1917–18) Italian American servicemen made up approximately 12 percent of the total American forces, a disproportionately high percentage of the total. An Italian-born American infantryman,
Michael Valente, was awarded the
Medal of Honor for his service. Another 103 Italian Americans (83 Italian born) were awarded the
Distinguished Service Cross, the second highest decoration. Italian Americans also accounted for more than 10 percent of war casualties in World War I, despite making up less than 4 percent of the U.S. population. The war, together with the restrictive
Emergency Quota Act of 1921 and
Immigration Act of 1924, heavily curtailed Italian immigration. Total annual immigration was capped at 357,000 in 1921 and lowered to 150,000 in 1924. Quotas were allotted on a national basis in proportion to a nationality's existing share of the population. The
National Origins Formula, which sought to preserve the existing demographic makeup of the United States and generally favored northwestern European immigration. It assigned Italians, the fifth-largest in national origin of the U.S. population in 1920, only 3.87 percent of the annual immigrant quota. Despite implementation of the quota, the inflow of Italian immigrants remained between 6 or 7 percent of all immigrants. And when the restrictive quota system was abolished by the
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, Italians had already grown to be the second largest immigrant group in America, with 5,067,717 immigrants from Italy admitted between 1820 and 1966—constituting 12 percent of all immigrants to the United States—more than from
Great Britain (4,711,711) and from
Ireland (4,706,854). The
Metropolitan Opera continued to flourish under the leadership of
Giulio Gatti-Casazza, whose tenure continued until 1935.
Rosa Ponselle and
Dusolina Giannini, daughters of Italian immigrants, performed regularly at the Metropolitan Opera and became internationally known.
Arturo Toscanini returned in the United States as the main conductor of the
New York Philharmonic Orchestra (1926–1936) and introduced many Americans to classical music through his
NBC Symphony Orchestra radio broadcasts (1937–1954). Popular singers of the period included
Russ Columbo, who established a new singing style that influenced
Frank Sinatra and other singers that followed. On Broadway,
Harry Warren (Salvatore Guaragna) wrote the music for
42nd Street, and received three
Academy Awards for his compositions. Other Italian American musicians and performers, such as
Jimmy Durante, who later achieved fame in movies and television, were active in
vaudeville.
Guy Lombardo formed a popular dance band, which played annually on
New Year's Eve in New York City's
Times Square. The film industry of this era included
Frank Capra, who received three
Academy Awards for directing and
Frank Borzage, who received two Academy Awards for directing. Italian American cartoonists were responsible for some of the most popular animated characters:
Donald Duck was created by
Al Taliaferro,
Woody Woodpecker was a creation of
Walter Lantz (Lanza),
Casper the Friendly Ghost was co-created by
Joseph Oriolo, and
Tom and Jerry were co-created by
Joseph Barbera. In sports,
Gene Sarazen (Eugenio Saraceni) won both the
Professional Golf Association and
U.S. Open Tournaments in 1922.
Pete DePaolo won the Indianapolis 500 in 1925.
Tony Canzoneri won the lightweight boxing championship in 1930, and
Rocky Marciano is the only undefeated heavyweight champion in history.
Joe DiMaggio, who was destined to become one of the most famous players in baseball history, began playing for the New York Yankees in 1936.
Louis Zamperini, the American
distance runner, competed in the
1936 Olympics and later became the subject of the bestselling book
Unbroken by
Laura Hillenbrand, published in 2010 and a 2014 movie of the same title. Italian Americans employed traditional Italian skills in growing and selling fresh fruits and vegetables, which were cultivated on small tracts of land in the suburban parts of many cities. In California, the
DiGiorgio Corporation was founded, which grew to become a national supplier of fresh produce in the United States. Italian Americans in California were leading growers of grapes and producers of wine. Many well known wine brands, such as
Mondavi,
Carlo Rossi, Petri, Sebastiani, and
Gallo emerged from these early enterprises. Italian American companies were major importers of Italian wines, processed foods, textiles, marble, and manufactured goods. Italian Americans continued their significant involvement in the labor movement during this period. Well-known labor organizers included
Carlo Tresca,
Luigi Antonini,
James Petrillo, and
Angela Bambace.
Benito Mussolini's Fascist regime in Italy sought to build a base of popular support in the United States, focusing on the Italian community. His supporters far outnumbered his opponents, both inside the Italian American community and among all Catholics, as well as among the wider American leadership.) According to Stefano Luconi, in the 1920s and 1930s "numerous Italian Americans became US citizens, registered for the vote, and cast their ballots in order to lobby Congress and the Presidency on behalf of fascism and to support Mussolini's goals in foreign policy." According to Fraser Ottanelli, Rome also worked to enhance Italy's reputation through a series of highly visible moves. They included participating in the
Century of Progress (1933–1934) world fair in Chicago; supporting
Italo Balbo's dramatic transatlantic flights; and donating a statue to Chicago. A minority of Italian Americans who fervently opposed fascism did not support Rome's moves. They promoted an unsuccessful measure in Congress that condemned Italy's meddling in U.S. internal affairs and called for the revocation of U.S. citizenship from people who swore allegiance to Mussolini.
Alberto Tarchiani, Italy's first ambassador to the United States after
World War II, requested the removal of any displays that honored the fascist regime, but with little success. Many memorials remain in the 21st century.
World War II }} As a member of the
Axis powers,
Italy declared war on the United States on December 11, 1941, four days after
Japan attacked Pearl Harbor. Although many Italian Americans admired Mussolini in the 1930s, very few if any demonstrated a desire to transfer fascist ideology to America. Anti-fascist Italian expatriates in the United States founded the
Mazzini Society in 1939 to work toward ending fascist rule in Italy. Between 750,000 and 1.5 million people of Italian descent are thought to have served in the U.S. armed forces during the war, about 10 percent of the total, and 14 Italian Americans received the Medal of Honor for their service. The work of
Enrico Fermi was crucial in developing the
atom bomb. In the realm of international
cultural diplomacy,
Alfredo Antonini joined forces with
John Serry during World War II on
La Cadena de las Americas to support President Franklin Roosevelt's policy of
pan-americanism while also helping to introduce the romantic
bolero to large audiences in the United States.
World War II ended the mass unemployment and relief programs that characterized the 1930s, opening up new employment opportunities for large numbers of Italian Americans, who significantly contributed to the nation's war effort. Much of the Italian American population was concentrated in urban areas where the new war materiel plants were located. Many Italian American women took war jobs, such as Rose Bonavita, who was recognized by President Franklin D. Roosevelt with a personal letter commending her for her performance as an aircraft riveter. She, together with a number of other women workers, provided the basis of the name, "
Rosie the Riveter", which came to symbolize the millions of American women workers in the war industries.
Chef Boyardee, the company founded by
Ettore Boiardi, was one of the largest suppliers of rations for U.S. and allied forces during World War II.
Wartime violation of Italian-American civil liberties From the onset of the Second World War, and particularly following
Pearl Harbor attack, Italian Americans were increasingly placed under suspicion. As a consequence,
Executive Order 9066 called for the compulsory relocation of more than 10,000 Italian Americans and restricted the movements of more than 600,000 Italian Americans nationwide, and the
Department of Justice classified unnaturalized Italian Americans as "
enemy aliens" under the
Alien and Sedition Act. Thousands of Italians were arrested, and hundreds of Italians were interned in military camps, some for up to two years. As many as 600,000 others were required to carry identity cards identifying them as "resident aliens." Thousands more on the West Coast were required to move inland, often losing their homes and businesses in the process. They were targeted despite a lack of evidence that Italians were conducting spy or sabotage operations in the United States. On November 7, 2000,
Bill Clinton signed the Wartime Violation of Italian American Civil Liberties Act. This act ordered a comprehensive review by the
attorney general of the United States of the treatment of Italian Americans during the Second World War. The findings concluded that: • The freedom of more than 600,000 Italian-born immigrants in the United States and their families was restricted during World War II by government measures that branded them "enemy aliens" and included requirements to carry identification cards, travel restrictions, and seizure of personal property. • During World War II, more than 10,000 Italian Americans living on the West Coast were forced to leave their homes and prohibited from entering coastal zones. More than 50,000 were subjected to curfews. • During World War II, thousands of Italian American immigrants were arrested, and hundreds were interned in military camps. • Hundreds of thousands of Italian Americans performed exemplary service and thousands sacrificed their lives in defense of the United States. • At the time, Italians were the largest foreign-born group in the United States, and today they are the fifth-largest immigrant group in the United States, numbering approximately 15 million. • The impact of the wartime experience was devastating to Italian American communities in the United States, and its effects are still being felt. • A deliberate policy kept these measures from the public during the war. Even today much information is still classified, the full story remains unknown to the public, and it has never been acknowledged in any official capacity by the United States government. In 2010, California officially issued an apology to the Italian Americans whose civil liberties had been violated.
Post–World War II period , one of the most successful drivers in the history of motorsports Italians continued to immigrate to the United States, and an estimated 600,000 arrived in the decades following the war. Many of the new arrivals had professional training or were skilled in various trades. The post-war period was a time of great social change for Italian Americans. Many aspired to a college education, which became possible for returning veterans through the
GI Bill. Since the 1960s, a lot of people left Italy and went to North America (mostly), South America, and Europe. European migration was seasonal and permanent. With better job opportunities and better educated, Italian Americans entered mainstream American life in great numbers. The Italian enclaves were abandoned by many who chose to live in other urban areas and in the suburbs. Many married outside of their ethnic group, most frequently with other ethnic Catholics, but increasingly also with those of diverse religious and ethnic backgrounds. According to Dr.
Richard D. Alba, director of the
Center for Social and Demographic Analysis at the State University of New York at Albany, 8 percent of Americans of Italian descent born before 1920 had mixed ancestry, but 70 percent of them born after 1970 were the children of intermarriage. In 1985, among Americans of Italian descent under the age of 30, 72 percent of men and 64 percent of women married someone with no Italian background. Numerous Italian Americans are
people of color, including many people of mixed African-African and white Italian ancestry. Notable Black Italian-Americans include Pittsburgh Steeler running back
Franco Harris. , one of the earliest NASA astronauts to enter into space (1962), taking part in the
Mercury Seven program and later
Gemini and
Apollo programs Italian Americans took advantage of the new opportunities that generally became available to all in the post-war decades. They made many significant contributions to American life and culture. Numerous Italian Americans became involved in politics at the local, state, and national levels in the post-war decades. Those who became U.S. senators included
John Pastore of Rhode Island, who was the first Italian American elected to the Senate in 1950;
Pete Domenici, who was elected to the U.S. Senate from New Mexico in 1972 and served six terms;
Patrick Leahy, who was elected to the U.S. Senate from Vermont in 1974 and served until 2023; and
Alfonse D'Amato, who served as U.S. senator from New York from 1981 to 1999.
Nancy Pelosi was both the first woman and the first Italian American Speaker of the House.
Anthony Celebrezze served for five two-year terms as mayor of Cleveland, from 1953 to 1962 and, in 1962, President
John F. Kennedy appointed him as United States Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare (now the Department of Health and Human Services).
Benjamin Civiletti served as the United States Attorney General during the last year and a half of the Carter administration, from 1979 to 1981.
Frank Carlucci served as the United States Secretary of Defense from 1987 to 1989 in the administration of President
Ronald Reagan. . His paternal grandfather's family name was Riggitano, a
Sicilian immigrant from
Milazzo Italian Americans founded many successful enterprises, both small and large, in the post-war decades, including
Barnes & Noble,
Tropicana Products,
Zamboni,
Transamerica,
Subway,
Mr. Coffee, and
Conair Corporation. Other enterprises founded by Italian Americans were
Fairleigh Dickinson University, the
Eternal Word Television Network, and the
Syracuse Nationals basketball team – later to become the
Philadelphia 76ers.
Robert Panara was a co-founder of the
National Technical Institute for the Deaf and founder of the
National Theater of the Deaf. Recognized as a pioneer in deaf culture studies in the United States, he was honored with a commemorative U.S. stamp in 2017. Eight Italian Americans became Nobel Prize laureates in the post-war decades:
Mario Capecchi,
Renato Dulbecco,
Riccardo Giacconi,
Salvatore Luria,
Franco Modigliani,
Rita Levi Montalcini,
Emilio G. Segrè, and
Carolyn Bertozzi. Italian Americans continued to serve with distinction in the military, with 4 Medal of Honor recipients in the
Korean War and 11 in the
Vietnam War, including
Vincent R. Capodanno, a Catholic chaplain. At the close of the 20th century, 31 men and women of Italian descent were serving in the U.S. House and Senate, 82 of the 1,000 largest U.S. cities had mayors of Italian descent, and 166 college and university presidents were of Italian descent. An Italian American,
Antonin Scalia, was serving as a
U.S. Supreme Court justice, who was later joined by
Samuel Alito in 2006. More than two dozen Italian Americans were serving in the Catholic Church as bishops. Four—
Joseph Bernardin,
Justin Rigali,
Anthony Bevilacqua, and
Daniel DiNardo—had been elevated to Cardinals. Italian Americans served with distinction in all of America's wars, and over 30 have been awarded the Medal of Honor. A number of Italian Americans have served as top-ranking generals in the military, including
Anthony Zinni,
Raymond Odierno,
Carl Vuono, and
Peter Pace, the latter three having also been appointed
Chief of Staff of their respective services. Over two dozen of Italian descent have been elected as state governors including, most recently,
Paul Cellucci of Massachusetts,
John Baldacci of Maine,
Janet Napolitano of Arizona, and
Donald Carcieri of Rhode Island. == Culture and societal influences ==