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Meet Our Co-Founder, Immediate Past President and Current Acting Treasurer, Nicholas Aiello


DSC01863.JPGNicholas Aiello, President, was an organizer and business agent for the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America Local 125.  He came from a family of Italian garment workers:

“I lived on Wallace Street in the Wooster Square area…all shirt factories and dress factories. All the Italians, they worked in shirt shops. You go in a house on Wooster Street and you’ll find fifty shirt makers in those apartments. Four story buildings. And rows of machines. Some of the men went to work in shirt shops—in the packing department, some in the pressing department, some stitched. I was number ten in the family. Most of the family above [me] had to quit school to go to work. 

“We had 14 kids. Everybody had to pull in their share. I had seven sisters and all seven of them either worked in a shirt factory and one worked in a dress factory. They worked in the shirt factories for years. One place of employment for forty years.  

“The shops were on one side of the street, the houses were on the other side of the street so all they had to do was walk out the front door and go to work...  

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“When New York got completely organized, the ‘runaway shops’ came to New Haven. They ran to New Haven where there were no union shops. And they would open up a storefront. They’d put twenty, thirty machines on the fourth floor and most of the stitching plants were on the fourth floor with no elevator. Conditions were horrible.” 

…”Then in the 1930s came the Amalgamated and they started organizing drives in the area.” 

Excerpts from a 1999 interview with Anthony Riccio, published in Riccio's The Italian American Experience in New Haven: Images and Oral Histories, 2006

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