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Monte Grappa |
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MONTE GRAPPA Without any official local or national records to consult*, the Monte Grappa Lodge #212 of Heilwood is difficult to document. There are some newspaper and tax records that reveal its meeting place and some of its activities. However, the cause of its rise and later demise is unclear. With the great influx of immigrants into the United States in the early part of the 20th century, various ethnic groups formed associations so they could meet and discuss their homelands with fellow immigrants. These "voluntary" associations, in which the immigrant workers themselves set the terms of membership, became prominent in many industrial communities. Some of these groups included the National Slovak Society, the Polish National Alliance, and Monte Grappa (a group for Italians). In addition to promoting ethnic solidarity, these associations were probably also a source of financial assistance to their members. Workers' compensation did not come into being until 1915, so whether it was a weekly payment after being hurt on the job or a death/burial benefit, this financial assistance was important. The exact amount of dues paid by each member, in order to receive these benefits, is unknown. According to old newspaper and tax records, the Heilwood Monte Grappa lodge held meetings in house #30 on Doctor’s Row as early as 1920. Further records indicate that in July or August of 1921, 1925, 1926, and 1928, the lodge sponsored picnics in the Heilwood park. It appears that these picnics were open to the entire community and featured food, baseball games, dancing, amusement rides, and even fireworks. At the 1928 picnic, raffle tickets for an electric Atwater Kent radio were sold. The 1928 closure of all mines in the immediate Heilwood area and the resulting loss of employment may have contributed to the demise of the local lodge. It's worth noting that the records of the nearby Colver Monte Grappa lodge (see photos at left) show that several members of the Heilwood lodge joined that group and traveled there for meetings throughout the 1930s. There is no further mention of the Heilwood Monte Grappa lodge, either in the newspapers or tax records, after 1928. We can only assume that the lodge disbanded. *Monte Grappa Lodge #212 of Heilwood had to have been a part of a larger, national organization. However, efforts to locate documentation of its existence have proven fruitless. |