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Monday, March 23, 2026

The Italian American Legislative Caucus of California

 

The Italian Caucus of California

A Small Beginning — and a Big Moment for Italian Americans in Sacramento

By Chris M. Forte

For more than a century, Italian Americans helped build California — from fishermen in San Francisco and farmers in the Central Valley to merchants in Los Angeles and the families who shaped neighborhoods like San Diego’s Little Italy. Their names are on wineries, churches, restaurants, civic halls, and family businesses across the state.

Yet in Sacramento, that presence has largely been invisible.

California has long had legislative caucuses representing major communities — Black, Latino, Asian Pacific Islander, LGBTQ, Jewish — but Italian Americans never had a comparable organized voice inside the Legislature.

That may now be starting to change.

A newly formed Italian Caucus of California — still informal and developing — represents what could become the first modern Italian-American legislative caucus effort in California history. Small in membership but large in symbolism, the caucus signals something many Italian-American leaders have quietly discussed for years: the need for recognition, coordination, and representation at the state level.


A Caucus Is Born

The emerging caucus is being led by two lawmakers:

  • Assemblymember Catherine Stefani
  • State Senator Dave Cortese

The two legislators have been identified as co-chairs of the Italian Caucus of California, presenting the initiative during meetings with Italian diplomatic officials and community organizations in early 2026.

Their message was simple: support Italian-American associations, preserve heritage, and strengthen ties between lawmakers and California’s Italian communities.

That may sound modest. But for a community that has historically lacked a unified political voice in California, it is significant.

Pull Quote:
“For the first time, Italian Americans in California are beginning to organize a visible presence inside the state’s political system.”

Unlike long-standing legislative caucuses, the Italian Caucus is still in its early phase. It does not yet have a published membership roster, legislative platform, or formal recognition in official caucus listings. But the foundation is there — and foundations matter.


What the Caucus Appears to Support

Based on public statements, appearances, and early outreach, the Italian Caucus of California appears focused on several core priorities:

Cultural Heritage Preservation

Supporting Italian-American cultural organizations, historical societies, and heritage districts across California.

Recognition of Italian-American Contributions

Highlighting the role Italian immigrants played in shaping California’s economy, agriculture, fishing industry, and urban neighborhoods.

Community Relationship Building

Connecting lawmakers with Italian cultural centers, Little Italy districts, and statewide organizations.

Youth and Language Preservation

Encouraging transmission of Italian language and cultural traditions to younger generations.

Public Visibility

Promoting Italian-American heritage events and statewide recognition initiatives.

These priorities resemble the early stages of many other ethnic caucuses — beginning with recognition, then expanding into policy.


Visits to Little Italies and Cultural Districts

One of the caucus’s most visible early activities has been engagement with California’s historic Italian neighborhoods.

Lawmakers connected with community leaders in places like:

  • San Diego’s Little Italy
  • Bay Area Italian-American organizations
  • Northern California cultural associations

These visits emphasize a key theme: Italian American history is not just nostalgic — it is living, evolving, and still relevant to California’s identity.

Pull Quote:
“Italian-American heritage in California isn’t just history — it’s a living cultural network that still shapes communities today.”


Why This Matters Now

Italian Americans in California occupy a unique position.

Unlike some other ethnic groups, Italian Americans are often seen as fully assimilated — part of the broader mainstream. That success, however, has also meant less organized advocacy, fewer coordinated statewide initiatives, and limited representation in policy discussions.

Meanwhile, other communities have built strong caucuses that influence:

  • Cultural preservation funding
  • Educational curriculum
  • Historical recognition
  • Tourism promotion
  • Community grants
  • Anti-discrimination efforts

The absence of an Italian-American caucus meant those issues were rarely coordinated statewide.

That gap may now begin to close.


Sidebar

Why an Italian-American Caucus Matters in California History

Italian Americans have played a major role in California’s development:

  • San Francisco fishermen and waterfront workers
  • Central Valley farmers and winemakers
  • Los Angeles merchants and restaurateurs
  • San Diego tuna fleet families
  • Northern California miners and laborers
  • Builders of Little Italy districts across the state

Despite this influence, Italian Americans have historically lacked:

  • A statewide legislative caucus
  • Coordinated heritage policy
  • Unified cultural advocacy
  • Consistent political representation

An Italian-American caucus could help:

• Protect historic Little Italy districts
• Support Italian cultural centers
• Promote Italian language education
• Recognize Italian-American history in schools
• Strengthen California–Italy cultural ties
• Celebrate Italian-American Heritage Month
• Support preservation of immigrant history

In short, it gives a historic community a modern voice.


Still Early — But Symbolically Important

It is important to be clear: the Italian Caucus of California is still new and developing.

It does not yet have:

  • A full membership roster
  • A legislative agenda
  • Official recognition in caucus listings
  • A large bloc of lawmakers

But every caucus begins this way.

Small. Informal. Growing.

Pull Quote:
“This may be a small caucus today — but historically, even small beginnings can reshape how communities are recognized.”


The Road Ahead

The future of the Italian Caucus of California will depend on several factors:

  • Whether additional legislators join
  • Whether the caucus formalizes its structure
  • Whether it introduces policy initiatives
  • Whether Italian-American organizations engage with it
  • Whether the community supports and grows the effort

If it expands, the caucus could become a meaningful voice for:

Italian heritage
Italian-American identity
Historic preservation
Community institutions
Cultural education
Statewide recognition

If it remains small, it will still represent something new: Italian Americans organizing politically in California in a visible, coordinated way.

Either way, it marks a moment worth watching.


Known Leadership (So Far)

Co-Chairs

  • Assemblymember Catherine Stefani
  • Senator Dave Cortese

Membership beyond leadership has not yet been publicly formalized.


A Quiet but Historic Development

California’s Italian-American story stretches from the Gold Rush to modern Little Italies. It includes farmers, fishermen, priests, activists, business owners, artists, and families who helped shape the state.

For decades, that story existed mostly outside Sacramento.

The Italian Caucus of California — even in its early stage — suggests that may finally be changing.

And sometimes, history begins quietly.

Assemblymember Catherine Stefani

Co-Chair — Italian Caucus of California




District: Assembly District 19 (San Francisco)
Website: https://stefani.asmdc.org
Capitol Office: 1021 O Street, Suite 5220, Sacramento, CA 95814
Phone: (916) 319-2019
District Office: (415) 557-2312
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CatherineStefaniCA

Stefani is one of the co-founders of the Italian Caucus of California, working to strengthen ties between lawmakers and Italian-American organizations, cultural institutions, and heritage districts across the state.


“Italian-American heritage is part of California’s identity — and it deserves recognition in Sacramento.”


Senator Dave Cortese

Co-Chair — Italian Caucus of California




District: Senate District 15 (Santa Clara County)
Website: https://sd15.senate.ca.gov
Capitol Office: 1021 O Street, Suite 7520, Sacramento, CA 95814
Phone: (916) 651-4015
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/davecortesegov
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/davecortesegov

Cortese has described himself publicly as co-founder of the Italian Caucus of California, emphasizing heritage recognition, community outreach, and collaboration with Italian-American organizations statewide.


“Italian Americans helped build California — this caucus helps ensure that story is not forgotten.”

____________________________________________


Contact the Caucus

Since the caucus is still forming, contact through co-chairs:

Assemblymember Stefani
https://stefani.asmdc.org/contact

Senator Cortese
https://sd15.senate.ca.gov/contact


About

 


Finding Italy in California


The first time I realized Italy was in California, I wasn’t in Rome or Florence or Naples.


I was standing on a street corner in San Diego.


It was early evening in Little Italy—the kind of golden hour where the light softens everything. The air carried the smell of garlic and wine. Voices drifted from outdoor patios. Someone laughed in Italian. A church bell rang somewhere in the distance.


For a moment, it didn’t feel like California at all.


It felt like something older.


Something remembered.


And that was the moment everything changed for me.


I didn’t grow up deeply connected to my Italian roots.


Like many Italian American families, mine had, over generations, become something else—more American than Italian. The language faded. Traditions softened. The identity remained, but faint—like an old photograph left too long in the sun.


But the curiosity never left me.


Living in Southern California, surrounded by so many cultures, I began to ask questions:


Who were we before we became this version of ourselves?

Where did we come from—not just geographically, but culturally?

What had been lost… and what still remained?


At first, I thought the answers would be found in books.


I was wrong.


They were in places.


They were in neighborhoods like this one—Little Italies that still breathe with life. In old churches where generations had prayed in the same language. In social halls where immigrants gathered to build community from nothing. In cemeteries where names etched in stone told stories of sacrifice, migration, and hope.


And once I started looking, I began to see it everywhere.


Not just in San Diego.


But across California.


In San Francisco’s North Beach, where the past lingers in cafés and cathedrals.


In San Jose, where a lost Little Italy is being rediscovered.


In Monterey, where Italian fishermen helped define the coastline.


In the Gold Country, where immigrants came not for culture—but for survival.


In the vineyards of the Inland Empire, where Italian pioneers shaped California’s wine industry.


In San Pedro and Los Angeles, where dockworkers and laborers built tight-knit communities along the harbor.


And always—back in San Diego, where the story is still being written.


But this journey didn’t stay personal for long.


It became something more.


Over time, I stopped being just an observer of this history.


I became a part of it.


I have spent years working within the Italian American community in San Diego—not just studying it, but helping sustain it.


I served as the Facilities Coordinator for Amici House, the cultural and heritage center in Little Italy, where events, traditions, and community life continue to thrive. I sat on the Convivio Society’s Little Italy Heritage Commission, helping preserve and promote the very history this book explores.


I am a member of the House of Italy in Balboa Park. I have served as a leader in the Italian Catholic Federation. I have volunteered with the Little Italy Association and remained deeply involved with Our Lady of the Rosary Church—an Italian national parish that still anchors the community today.


I’ve worked alongside organizations like the Sons and Daughters of Italy and the Italian American Civic Association.


This isn’t secondhand knowledge.


This is lived experience.


At the same time, I bring a professional background in management, operations, and writing—skills that allow me to organize, research, and present this world in a way that is both accessible and meaningful.


I hold a Certificate in Writing for Publication, and through years of research, documentation, and storytelling, I’ve built The Italian Californian into a growing platform dedicated to preserving and sharing this heritage.


This travel guide is an extension of that work.


So if you’re asking:


Why should I read this?

What makes this guide different?


The answer is simple.


This is not written by an outsider.


It’s written by someone inside the community—someone who walks these streets, works with these organizations, and participates in the very culture being described.


This is not just research.


It is relationship.


And that matters.


Because culture is not just something you study.


It’s something you experience.


This website is not just a history.


And it’s not just a travel guide.


It is something in between.


It is a map—not just of places, but of identity.


A guide to what remains, what has been forgotten, and what is being rediscovered. To the Italy immigrants carried with them—and the new identity they built here in California.


Because Italian American identity is not simple.


It is not fully Italian.


It is not just American.


It is something layered. Something evolving. Something deeply tied to memory, place, and community.


As I traveled, researched, and became more involved, this journey stopped being something I observed.


It became something I lived.


Places like Amici House are not just buildings.


They are living symbols of continuity.


Organizations like the Convivio Society, the House of Italy, and the Italian Catholic Federation are not relics of the past.


They are bridges between generations.


And the people—the people are the story.


This guide is for them.


But it is also for you.


It is for the traveler who wants more than destinations—for meaning behind the places they visit.


It is for the Italian American searching for roots.


It is for anyone who has ever wondered how culture survives… how it changes… how it endures.


Because Italy, as I came to learn, is not just a place on a map.


It is something carried.


Something remembered.


Something rebuilt—again and again—in new lands, by new generations.


And here, in California, it found a new home.


Not identical.


Not untouched.


But alive.


So this guide is an invitation.


To explore.


To travel.


To rediscover.


To see California not just as a destination—but as a story.


A story written by immigrants, shaped by communities, and carried forward by people who refuse to let it fade.


This is The Italian Californian.


This is where Italy meets the Golden State.


Benvenuti.




Sacramento

 




Discovering Sacramento’s Little Italy 

A Travel Guide to Italian Sacramento & the Capital Region

When someone talks about Sacramento, culture doesn’t always come to mind. It’s often the butt of jokes — labeled “boring.” But for anyone interested in history, architecture, or politics, California’s capital is surprisingly rich. I’ve always enjoyed Sacramento for its State Capitol, the Governor’s Mansion, Old Sacramento, Victorian homes, and its leafy tree-lined streets that feel more like the Midwest or New England than inland California.

There’s something almost Mark Twain–like about the paddlewheel boats on the Sacramento River, the historic Old Sacramento waterfront, and the golden Tower Bridge rising over the river. And like much of California, I was surprised to learn Sacramento also has a long Italian American history.

Italian immigrants have been settling in Sacramento since the Gold Rush, working as farmers, merchants, ranchers, and winemakers. Over time, a strong Italian community developed — especially in East Sacramento.

In fact, a portion of East Sacramento was officially designated “Little Italy” in 2021, recognizing generations of Italian families and businesses in the neighborhood.

Today, Sacramento’s Little Italy is smaller than those in San Francisco or San Diego, but the Italian heritage remains visible through cultural organizations, businesses, festivals, and community institutions — especially the Italian Cultural Society and its center in nearby Carmichael.


Why Visit Sacramento’s Little Italy

When I think of Italian Sacramento, I think of:

  • East Sacramento “Little Italy” district
  • Corti Brothers Italian market
  • Italian Cultural Society & Center
  • Italian festivals & heritage events
  • historic Italian neighborhoods
  • Italian restaurants & bakeries
  • Italian-American institutions

This is less of a dense ethnic enclave and more of a heritage-driven Italian community.


Best Things to Do — Italian Sacramento

Visit East Sacramento Little Italy
Historic Italian neighborhood

Walk McKinley Park area
Historic Italian-American families nearby

Corti Brothers Italian Market
Sacramento Italian institution

Italian Cultural Society & Center
📍 6821 Fair Oaks Blvd, Carmichael

Italian language classes, museum, events

Italian heritage neighborhoods
East Sacramento
Land Park
Midtown

The Italian Cultural Society offers language classes, festivals, exhibits, and heritage programs for the regional community.


Suggested Sacramento Italian Itineraries

Quick Visit (1–2 Hours)

Drive East Sacramento Little Italy
Visit Corti Brothers
Walk neighborhood streets
Coffee at Italian café


Half Day Italian Sacramento

Start — East Sacramento Little Italy
Walk — McKinley Park
Lunch — Corti Brothers deli
Drive — Italian Cultural Society (Carmichael)
Browse — cultural exhibits


Full Day Italian Sacramento

Morning — East Sacramento Little Italy
Lunch — Italian restaurant
Afternoon — Italian Cultural Center
Explore — Midtown Sacramento
Dinner — Italian restaurant


Festivals & Italian Events — Sacramento 

Here are the main Italian festivals and events in Sacramento, with contact info, locations, and links.


Italian Cultural Society Events (Year-Round)

📍 Italian Center
6821 Fair Oaks Blvd
Carmichael, CA 95608

📞 (916) 482-5900
📧 italy@italiancenter.net
🌐 https://www.italiancenter.net/events.html

The Italian Cultural Society hosts year-round Italian cultural events, including cooking classes, heritage lectures, cultural celebrations, and seasonal festivals at the Italian Center in Carmichael.

Examples for 2026:

Tutti a Tavola Italian Cooking Class

📅 April 11, 2026
📍 Italian Center — Carmichael
Hands-on Italian cooking experience (ravioli class)


Italian Car & Motorcycle Show (2026)

📅 May 9, 2026
⏰ 11:00 AM – 4:00 PM
📍 Italian Center — Carmichael
6821 Fair Oaks Blvd, Carmichael

🌐 https://www.italiancenter.net/events.html

Annual “Made in Italy” automotive and cultural festival featuring Italian cars, food, and cultural displays.


Italian American Heritage Day / Festa Italiana

📅 October (annual — varies yearly)
📍 Italian Center — Carmichael
6821 Fair Oaks Blvd

📞 (916) 482-5900
🌐 https://www.italiancenter.net

Traditional Italian festival featuring:

  • Italian food
  • folk dancers
  • Italian marketplace
  • wine & beverages
  • cultural exhibits

Held annually at the Italian Center celebrating Italian heritage in Sacramento.


Italian Family Cultural Events — Italian Cultural Society

📍 Italian Center — Carmichael
📅 Various dates throughout 2026

Includes:

  • Italian movie nights
  • language programs
  • heritage lectures
  • travel to Italy presentations
  • Italian music events

The Italian Cultural Society regularly hosts community events promoting Italian heritage and culture.


Italian Cultural Society Contact (Main Organizer)

Sacramento Italian Cultural Society
📍 6821 Fair Oaks Blvd
Carmichael, CA 95608

📞 (916) 482-5900
📧 italy@italiancenter.net
🌐 https://www.italiancenter.net
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ItalianCulturalSocietySacramento

This organization hosts Sacramento’s primary Italian festivals and cultural events.


Other Italian-Related Events (Sacramento Area)

Italian Heritage Month Events

📅 October 2026
📍 Sacramento region
Hosted by Italian Cultural Society

Includes:

  • heritage celebrations
  • Italian food events
  • lectures
  • cultural programming

Italian Language & Culture Events

📍 Italian Cultural Center — Carmichael
📅 Throughout 2026

Includes:

  • Italian classes
  • cooking demonstrations
  • dance classes
  • cultural presentations

Best Place for Updated Event Info

Use these links for updated dates:

Italian Cultural Society Events
https://www.italiancenter.net/events.html

Sacramento Italian Cultural Society Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/ItalianCulturalSocietySacramento

These are the primary sources for Sacramento Italian festivals and events.


Best Places to Eat — Italian Sacramento 🍝

Here are Italian restaurants in Sacramento, with contact info, addresses, and links.


Corti Brothers (Italian Market + Deli)

📍 5810 Folsom Blvd, Sacramento, CA 95819
📞 (916) 736-3800
🌐 https://cortibrothers.com

Legendary Italian grocery, deli, and sandwich shop founded in 1947 and known for imported Italian foods, wines, and sandwiches.


Sampino’s Kitchen at Joe Marty’s

📍 1500 Broadway, Sacramento, CA 95818
📞 (916) 382-9022
🌐 https://www.joemartys.com

Historic Italian-American restaurant serving classic red-sauce dishes and deli favorites.


Sampino’s Towne Foods (Italian Deli)

📍 1607 F St, Sacramento, CA 95814
📞 (916) 441-2372
🌐 https://www.sampinosfoods.com

Italian deli, sandwiches, imported goods, and Italian grocery items.


Piatti Sacramento

📍 571 Pavilions Ln, Sacramento, CA 95825
📞 (916) 649-8885
🌐 https://piatti.com

Regional Italian restaurant with wine bar and traditional dishes.


Adamo’s Kitchen

📍 2107 P St, Sacramento, CA 95816
📞 (916) 440-4071
🌐 https://adamoskitchen.com

Italian-American neighborhood restaurant near East Sacramento.


OBO’ Italian Table & Bar

📍 3145 Folsom Blvd, Sacramento, CA 95816
📞 (916) 822-7919
🌐 https://oboitalian.com

Modern Italian eatery with pasta, pizza, and wine.


Roma II Pizzeria & Italian Market

📍 8491 Folsom Blvd, Sacramento, CA 95826
📞 (916) 381-2121
🌐 https://roma2pizza.com

Italian market, deli, and pizzeria.


Italian Markets & Bakeries — Sacramento 🧀🥖

Corti Brothers

📍 5810 Folsom Blvd, Sacramento
📞 (916) 736-3800
🌐 https://cortibrothers.com

Historic Italian grocery and deli.


Sampino’s Towne Foods

📍 1607 F St, Sacramento
📞 (916) 441-2372
🌐 https://www.sampinosfoods.com

Italian deli, sandwiches, grocery imports.


Roma II Italian Market

📍 8491 Folsom Blvd, Sacramento
📞 (916) 381-2121
🌐 https://roma2pizza.com

Italian grocery, deli, and pizza.


Selland’s Market Cafe (Italian Items)

📍 5340 H St, Sacramento, CA 95819
📞 (916) 738-3354
🌐 https://sellands.com

Italian deli items, prepared foods, bakery.


Best by Category

Best Classic Italian Market
Corti Brothers

Best Old-School Italian Restaurant
Sampino’s Kitchen

Best Italian Deli
Sampino’s Towne Foods

Best Italian Grocery + Pizza
Roma II

Best Modern Italian
OBO’ Italian Table & Bar


Hotels Near Sacramento Little Italy

Citizen Hotel
📍 926 J St

Hyatt Regency Sacramento
📍 1209 L St

Sheraton Grand Sacramento
📍 1230 J St

Fort Sutter Hotel
📍 1308 28th St (near East Sacramento)

Residence Inn Sacramento Midtown
Near Little Italy area


Transportation — Italian Sacramento

Nearest Airport
Sacramento International Airport (SMF)

Driving
Best option for visiting Italian sites

Light Rail
Downtown Sacramento lines

Parking
Street parking in East Sacramento
Downtown garages

Walkability
East Sacramento is very walkable



Little Italy Sacramento — Interactive Map

Little Italy Sacramento — Interactive Map

A Blogger-friendly map of East Sacramento’s Little Italy area, the Italian Center, Italian restaurants, markets, cultural organizations, and nearby museums and attractions.

🇮🇹 Little Italy Sacramento 🏛️ Culture & societies 🍝 Restaurants & markets 🏨 Hotels 🚉 Transit & parking 🎨 Nearby attractions Loading map points…
Blogger tip: this works best in an HTML/JavaScript gadget, or as a standalone HTML page embedded with an iframe.

Italian Organizations — Sacramento 🇮🇹

Here are Italian organizations in Sacramento, with addresses, contact info, and links, just like the other sections.


Italian Cultural Society of Sacramento / Italian Center

📍 6821 Fair Oaks Blvd
Carmichael, CA 95608

📞 (916) 482-5900
📧 italy@italiancenter.net
🌐 https://www.italiancenter.net
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ItalianCulturalSocietySacramento

Sacramento’s primary Italian cultural organization offering language classes, festivals, lectures, and heritage programming.


Italian Cultural Society (Sacramento Office)

📍 2791 24th St
Sacramento, CA 95818

📞 (916) 482-5900
🌐 https://www.italiancenter.net

Administrative office and programming location for Italian cultural activities.


Italian American Heritage Organizations (Regional / Sacramento Area)

UNICO National (Regional / Northern California chapters)

🌐 https://www.unico.org

Italian American service organization promoting education, culture, and community service across local chapters nationwide.


Order Sons and Daughters of Italy in America (California)

🌐 https://www.sonsofitalyca.org

Fraternal Italian American organization with lodges across California including Northern California.


Italian Catholic Federation (Northern California)

🌐 https://www.icf.org

Catholic Italian-American organization promoting faith, charity, and heritage.


National Italian American Foundation (NIAF)

🌐 https://www.niaf.org

National nonprofit representing Italian American interests, education, and culture.


Italian American One Voice Coalition

🌐 https://www.iaovc.org

National advocacy organization combating anti-Italian bias and promoting Italian American heritage.

CONFERENCE OF PRESIDENTS OF MAJOR ITALIAN AMERICAN ORGANIZATIONS (COPOMIAO)

🌐 https://copomiao.org
📘 https://www.facebook.com/COPOMIAO

Coalition of Italian American organizations nationwide.


ITALIAN AMERICAN LEADERSHIP FORUM

🌐 https://www.ialforum.org
📘 https://www.facebook.com/ItalianAmericanLeadershipForum

Leadership collaboration network for Italian American organizations.


NATIONAL ITALIAN AMERICAN CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION

🌐 https://italianamericancaucus.house.gov

Bipartisan congressional caucus addressing Italian American issues.


Local Cultural & Community Organizations

Sacramento Italian Cultural Society Dance & Language Programs

📍 Italian Center — Carmichael
🌐 https://www.italiancenter.net

Offers:

  • Italian language classes
  • folk dance groups
  • cooking classes
  • cultural events

Italian Heritage Programs — Sacramento Area

Hosted by:
Italian Cultural Society
Italian Center — Carmichael

Includes:

  • Italian movie nights
  • lectures
  • travel to Italy presentations
  • heritage celebrations

Italian Organizations Summary

Primary Sacramento Organization
Italian Cultural Society / Italian Center

Regional / Northern California
Italian Catholic Federation
OSDIA (Sons of Italy)
UNICO

National Organizations
National Italian American Foundation
Italian American One Voice Coalition

These groups collectively preserve and promote Italian heritage in Sacramento and the Capital Region.


Italian Neighborhoods — Sacramento

East Sacramento (Little Italy)
Land Park
Midtown Sacramento
Southside Sacramento (historic)

Italian immigrants were concentrated in multiple Sacramento neighborhoods, with East Sacramento becoming the primary Italian district after WWII.


My Take

Sacramento’s Little Italy is quieter than San Francisco or San Diego, but that’s part of its charm. It’s not touristy. It’s subtle. You have to look for it — in neighborhoods, organizations, markets, and festivals.

And once you start looking, you realize Italian Sacramento is still there — just woven into the fabric of the city rather than concentrated in one small district.

The Italian American Legislative Caucus of California

  The Italian Caucus of California A Small Beginning — and a Big Moment for Italian Americans in Sacramento By Chris M. Forte F or more than...