Angelina From Stromboli to D'Urville Island a Family's Story

From Archivio Digitale


Category: Book

Angelina: From Stromboli to D'Urville Island: a Family's Story by Hindmarsh Gerard, Hindmarsh Angelina

Title Angelina: From Stromboli to D'Urville Island: a Family's Story
Author Hindmarsh Gerard, Hindmarsh Angelina
Editor {{{editor}}}
Year 2004
Publisher Potton & Burton; Illustrated edition edizione
ISBN 1877333212
Language English
Format paperback
Geographic reference D'Urville Island, Stromboli
Time reference early to mid 1900s
Online resource no
Subcategory {{{subcategory}}}
Topic Italian immigrants in New Zealand, Women immigrants in New Zealand, Sicilian immigrants


You can find the book here



In 1906, at just 16 years of age, Angelina Criscillo left the tiny volcanic island of Stromboli off Sicily to travel to an even remoter island on the other side of the world. From the age of eight she had been betrothed to her cousin, Vincenzo Moleta, who was now twice her age and taking her to a new life on D'Urville Island in New Zealand. Facing the fierce tides and weather of this wild island on the edge of Cook Strait, and having to cope with loneliness, the incessant toil of a pioneer farm, and the bitterness of a developing family feud, Angelina found solace in an unlikely friendship with a high-born Maori woman, Wetekia Ruruku Elkington, who lived nearby. Together they shared their own struggles, their different cultures and lack of English language; a process that awakened Angelina to her own inner strengths. Angelina and Vincenzo finally left D'Urville Island in 1946, and both died within a few months of each other in Wellington in 1954. The part that the Moletas and Wetekia played in the history of D'Urville Island has since been acknowledged by having features on the island named after them. The author of Angelina: From Stromboli to D'Urville Island: a Family's Story is Angelina and Vincenzo's grandson Gerard Hindmarsh, who dramatised the story into a novel. ​