Swiss Italians of Australia explained

Swiss Italians of Australia are the Italian-speaking Swiss who settled in Australia during the 1850s and 1860s and their descendants who identified as such.

The Swiss immigrants were from the canton of Ticino and the southern part of Graubünden. Many initially settled in the area around Daylesford, Victoria. A community centred around the Savoia (Spring Creek) Hotel and the Macaroni Factory. The Savoia is named after the royal family of unified Italy. An Italian reading library was located at the hotel and pasta was made opposite in Lucini's Macaroni Factory which was also home to the Democratic Club. Lucini's moved from Lonsdale Street, Melbourne in 1865, where they had set up as the first pasta factory in Australia in 1864. Vanzetta's bakery supplied bread to the community and Crippa, Perini, and the Gervasoni's (Yandoit Creek) produced wine.

Their influence remains in the township of Hepburn Springs in the names of residents, the names of Locarno Springs, Savoia Hotel, Parma House and buildings, Perinis and Bellinzona. The Swiss Italian Festa, first held in 1993, celebrates the history, culture and lifestyle of Swiss and Italian settlers.[1] In 2007, the Melbourne Immigration Museum featured a display entitled Wine Water and Stone reflecting Swiss and Italian heritage.

An associated delicacy is bullboar, a sausage made from beef, pork, garlic, and spices. In 2005 Daylesford Secondary College came in second place in the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's Young Gourmets by making bullboars from the Gervasoni and Sartori recipes.

Swiss Italian heritage places

Swiss Italian places of significance

Lavandula Swiss Italian Farm in Shepherds Flat (about 10 km north of Daylesford) was a dairy farm established by Aquilino Tinetti (born 1835 d. 1905) in the 1860s. He married Maria Virgilia Martina Capriroli (born 1850 d. 1932) and they had 13 children. The dairy farm ceased about 1975. The property was purchased in the late 1980s, the buildings restored and the property revived as a lavender farm and European-style gardens. It offers guided tours of the original stone farmhouse and a history room.

Notable descendants of Swiss Italians in Australia

Note: While of Swiss Italian descent, it is unverified whether the following people identified as such.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Festa Story . Hepburn Springs Swiss Italian Festa . 12 August 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150227112449/http://www.swissitalianfesta.com/general.php?pageID=15 . 27 February 2015 . dead.
  2. Web site: Ron Barassi . AFL Tables . 12 August 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210428144531/https://afltables.com/afl/stats/players/R/Ron_Barassi1.html . 28 April 2021 . live.
  3. Web site: Vern Barberis . Australian Olympic Committee . 12 August 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210728171521/https://www.olympics.com.au/olympians/vern-barberis/ . 28 July 2021 . live.
  4. Book: McNicoll, Ronald. Cultural Advice. Carlo Giorgio Domenico Enrico Catani (1852–1918) . National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  5. Web site: Victor Zelman . NGV Collection . 12 August 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20091007040704/http://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/collection/pub/artistItemListing?view=table&artistID=9291&page=1 . 7 October 2009 . dead.