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Louisville was also home to another branch of DiGiacomos who platted the Nicola DiGiacomo subdivision <br />which is adjacent to Caledonia Place. <br />From the 1900 Census, it appears that many members of the DiGiacomo family, including Christina's <br />brothers Peter James and Anthony James lived in the Caledonia Place subdivision in Little Italy. The <br />purchase of the house at 1025 Front by Pasquale and Christina would have kept them close to family. <br />Pasquale and Christina had three children: George (1905-1970), Evelyn (1908-1995), and Thelma (1916- <br />2005). The 1910 census shows the Jacovetta family living on Front Street while Pasquale worked as a <br />machine man at a mine and Christina was a seamstress. <br />This photo was taken by Frank Jacoe c. 1916-1917 and shows the front yard of the Jacovetta house at <br />1025 Front. The man holding the young child is likely Pasquale Jacovetta and his daughter Thelma. The <br />train tracks can be seen along the right side of the photo. <br />In 1908 through a quit claim deed, Pasquale and Christina Jacovetta granted an undivided % interest in <br />the property to Pasquale's brother Raffaelo. Unfortunately, Raffaelo died at a young age in 1916. Shortly <br />after that, the Jacovetta's moved to Frederick, Weld County where Pasquale worked as a coal miner for <br />the Louisville Coal and Land Co. Pasquale was drafted in 1917 during World War I and it appears that the <br />Jacovettas remained in Frederick after the war and did not move back to Louisville. <br />Angelo Bottinelli / Bottinelli Family Ownership, 1917-1952 <br />In November of 1917, Angelo Bottinelli (1875-1952) purchased the property from Pasquale and Christina <br />Jacovetta for $300. Angelo Bottinelli, along with his brother Baptista (Battista) Bottinelli were among the <br />