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Little Joe's Italian American Restaurant was a historic Italian restaurant which once stood in the Chinatown district of Los Angeles, California USA at the corner of Broadway and College Street. The area was once part of the city's Italian American enclave, which preceded Chinatown. ==History== Italian-born Charles Viotto started a grocery store at the corner of 5th and Hewitt streets. Robert Nuccio took over that store after marrying Charles Viotto's daughter, Mary, and in 1895 re-named it The Italian-American Grocery Company. In 1923, Robert Nuccio (the youngest of 12 children) took his children Chel and John back to Italy, to talk his family into moving to America. When he did that, he sold the grocery to his friends down the street, and it was purchased by John Gadeschi & his friend, Joe Vivalda. They moved the grocery store to North Broadway in 1927. When Union Station began construction, the Italian immigrants building it began coming by the grocery store for lunch and John started making them sandwiches. The rough-hewn nature of the Italian laborers started keeping the ladies away from their shopping, prompting John and Joe to open an adjacent restaurant so that the men could go about their lunch breaks while the women could do their shopping undisturbed. When Italy sided with Axis powers in World War II, many Italian businesses changed their names; one famous example was the change in name from Bank of Italy to Bank of America. Subsequently, the Italian-American Grocery Company became Little Joe's after Joe Vivaldi. Little Joe's is not affiliated to any other restaurant that took the same name. Gadeschi's daughter, Marion, married John Albert Nuccio - Robert's son - and, once again, the restaurant was back in the Nuccio family. John, who had been in law school at USC before the war, went to work at the restaurant for his father-in-law after serving in World War II. The business remained under control of the Nuccio family until it closed in 1998. Up until the closure, Little Joe's was operated by the third generation of Nuccio men: Steve, Bob and Jay. Jay went off on his own to open The Crazy Horse, a West Covina-based country-and-western bar and eatery. That left Steve and Bob to operate Little Joe's. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Little Joe's」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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