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- Q7193052 subject Q15280794.
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- Q7193052 subject Q8517251.
- Q7193052 subject Q8525394.
- Q7193052 subject Q8526098.
- Q7193052 subject Q8547731.
- Q7193052 subject Q8579472.
- Q7193052 subject Q8650848.
- Q7193052 subject Q8664079.
- Q7193052 subject Q8673868.
- Q7193052 abstract "The Pietro and Maria Botto House, also known as Pietro Botto House, at 83 Norwood Street, Haledon in Passaic County, New Jersey, United States, is where leaders of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) union spoke to the 15,000 striking workers of the Paterson Silk Strike of 1913.The original owners, Pietro Botto (1864-1945) and his wife Maria Boggio (1870-1915) were both immigrants from Biella, Italy. They married in 1885 and arrived in the United States in 1892 with their first daughter, Albina. The couple lived in West Hoboken (now Union City, New Jersey) for fifteen years and had there three more daughters, Adelia, Eva, and Olga. They saved their money until they could afford to build their own home in Haledon. In 1908 they finally moved into their new home, which was large enough to accommodate the entire family and included three additional rooms on the second floor that were rented for additional income.Pietro Botto and the couple's daughters worked as weavers in that town's Cedar Cliffs mills, while Maria did some "outwork", cleaning and snipping imperfections from finished bolts of silk. In weekdays, she also served meals to boarders and working men in her dining room. As it was situated on a country hillside near the trolley line, especially on Sundays and holidays the Botto House became a popular meeting place with its bocce court, the card tables and the cooking provided by Maria and her daughters.During the Paterson Silk Strike of 1913, Paterson's mayor refused to allow the strikers to assembly in the city. Pietro and Maria Botto, at the urging of Big Bill Haywood, invited the strike organizers to hold rallies at their home in nearby Haledon, where the workers were not on strike, counting on the support of the local socialist major William Brueckman. The Botto House became the Sunday rallying point from March 3 to the end of the strike in June. During this time Maria kept the house in order and fed the activists who addressed the crowd either from the balcony or from in front of the house. In addition to Haywood, these speakers included Upton Sinclair, Carlo Tresca, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, Adolph Lessig and Patrick L. Quinlan. Despite not being part of the strike himself, Pietro could not find work after the strike, nor could his daughter Eva, who was blacklisted. Maria got sick and died only two years after the silk strike.Because it served as a haven for free speech and assembly for the laborers, the Botto House was placed on both the New Jersey Register of Historic Places and the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1974. It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1982, the first Italian American site to be placed on the nation's most distinguished roster of historic sites.".
- Q7193052 added "1974-07-30".
- Q7193052 location Q1083356.
- Q7193052 nrhpReferenceNumber "74001188".
- Q7193052 nrhpType Q7009307.
- Q7193052 thumbnail Pietro-betto-house.jpg?width=300.
- Q7193052 wikiPageExternalLink www.labormuseum.net.
- Q7193052 wikiPageExternalLink 102paterson.htm.
- Q7193052 wikiPageExternalLink mpbotto.htm.
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- Q7193052 wikiPageWikiLink Q15280794.
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- Q7193052 wikiPageWikiLink Q8547731.
- Q7193052 wikiPageWikiLink Q8579472.
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- Q7193052 wikiPageWikiLink Q8664079.
- Q7193052 wikiPageWikiLink Q8673868.
- Q7193052 yearOfConstruction "1908".
- Q7193052 added "1974-07-30".
- Q7193052 built "1908".
- Q7193052 designatedOther1Name "New Jersey Register of Historic Places".
- Q7193052 location "83".
- Q7193052 name "Pietro and Maria Botto House".
- Q7193052 refnum "74001188".
- Q7193052 point "40.93476111111111 -74.18871111111112".
- Q7193052 type Place.
- Q7193052 type ArchitecturalStructure.
- Q7193052 type Building.
- Q7193052 type Location.
- Q7193052 type Place.
- Q7193052 type Thing.
- Q7193052 type SpatialThing.
- Q7193052 type Q41176.
- Q7193052 comment "The Pietro and Maria Botto House, also known as Pietro Botto House, at 83 Norwood Street, Haledon in Passaic County, New Jersey, United States, is where leaders of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) union spoke to the 15,000 striking workers of the Paterson Silk Strike of 1913.The original owners, Pietro Botto (1864-1945) and his wife Maria Boggio (1870-1915) were both immigrants from Biella, Italy.".
- Q7193052 label "Pietro and Maria Botto House".
- Q7193052 lat "40.93476111111111".
- Q7193052 long "-74.18871111111112".
- Q7193052 depiction Pietro-betto-house.jpg.
- Q7193052 name "Pietro and Maria Botto House".