Luigi Campagnaro – “I didn’t have much money in my pocket but…”

This blog outlines the story of Luigi Campagnaro, another older  member of the Veneto community in Adelaide, who migrated after the war.

In the photo above Luigi checks the early progress of his new wine with Lina, 16 March 2026. (Photo by Madeleine Regan)

Luigi Massimo Campagnaro was born on 12 August 1940 in Bassano del Grappa to Rachele Perotelli and Romano Campagnaro.

Bassano del Grappa, April 2026. Photo by Alex Bennett.
Luigi’s parents, Romano Campagnaro and Rachele Perotelli, Cusinati di Rosa’, early 1950s.

He was the youngest of nine children including a half sister who was the child of Romano and his first wife who died unexpectedly young. By the time Luigi was born, his older siblings were in their 20s and some had left home.

Map with location of Cusinati di Rosa’. https://mapcarta.com/18700994/Map

Luigi grew up in Cusinati di Rosà, a small village about 6 kilometres south of Bassano del Grappa which is about 50 kilometres north-west of Venice. The Campagnaro family lived in a large household with three other families in the same building. They were a poor family, and Luigi remembers the shortages of food, and that his mother had to forage sometimes for wild vegetables because they did not grow their own.

Luigi’s father was a carrier and was not able to make much money. He carted goods to and from villages and towns in the north of the Veneto region and the Trentino Alto Adige area about 80 kilometres away. Luigi was about 7 or 8 years when he accompanied his father on one of the trips and remembered his excitement sleeping a night in an osteria on the way.

The Campagnaro family was close, and more so because no grandparents or other extended family members were alive when Luigi was growing up. Throughout his life he has maintained tight relationships with his brothers and sisters in Italy and a sister in France.

Luigi’s story

Luigi went to school for five years and when he left at the age of about 11 years, he was employed by a tailor to sew. At the time in Australia, the legal age for leaving school was 14 years. He was the youngest of 8 employees and they worked in a room in a house in the village. The main business was making men’s and women’s suits. It was a hard life for a young boy working 6 days a week. The working day started at 6:00 am and finished at 7:00 pm although there was a break of about two hours in the afternoon. During that break time, Luigi learned to iron and he worked to gain some extra money, some of which he gave to his parents and some, he kept “to have a few bob in the pocket.” He worked for the tailor for about 9 years.

Luigi playing soccer, Cusinati di Rosa’, c 1954.

In his limited spare time, Luigi met up with other young boys in Cusinati di Rosa’ and they gathered at the local bar to have soft drinks and talk. Soccer was appealing but it had not been possible to play competitively because there was not enough money to buy shoes. He attended sagras or fairs in the village and in other locations nearby because you did not have to have money to walk around and look at activities. When he was 16 or 17, he had a group of friends and on Sundays the gathered to play records and they bought a cake and shared that.

He also remembers going to the pictures in Bassano del Grappa. Mostly he recalls the constant hard work in the tailor’s room and the limited opportunities for other options.

Luigi standing on the right of  his brother Beppi in white shirt on bike, Cusinati di Rosa’, c 1957.
 Decision to migrate to Australia

One of the young boys who was also employed by the tailor in Cusinati di Rosa’ had migrated to Australia a year before, and Luigi and 3 friends decided to also go there. They agreed it would be a good idea to also migrate because there were no opportunities for advancement and earning more than a small wage if they stayed in the village. Luigi was 19 years old and had a sense of adventure. At the time his parents were very disappointed that he was leaving, and when his father died a year later, Luigi was extremely sad, being so far from his family.

Lui Campagnaro – passport photo, May 1960. NAA: D4878, Italian – Campagnaro L.

Luigi was sponsored by his friend who, at the time, was working in Wallaroo about 160 kms northwest of Adelaide. He remembered, “I left Italy without a cent.” The voyage by ship was exciting and at Port Said, he wanted to buy a few small items including some bananas and a friend loaned him £5 which was a large amount to repay. (Today the equivalent value would be about $175.)

Luigi, on the left, playing cards with friends on board ‘Toscana’, 1 June 1960.

He disembarked in Melbourne and remembered arriving in Adelaide and he saw some women cleaning the train and Luigi was shocked to see them independent of their families. Luigi began his life in Adelaide in Flinders Park where he stayed for about 18 months with a relative. “Adelaide felt like a big city to me, but it was very quiet.”

Working life in Australia

Within a short time, he was fortunate to get work in an engineering construction company, McMillan. He had not been able to find work as a tailor. He was dressed very formally when he applied for the job at McMillan, and when the employer asked about his previous experience, Luigi admitted that he had been a tailor. The boss was impressed that he had told the truth, shook Luigi’s hand and gave him the labouring job on building sites. He recalled, “It was very hard for me to make the change. I didn’t know anything about labouring, but I always tried to learn, and I was working with good people who helped me.” It was a surprise when he received his first pay of £16 – “Oh, it was a lot of money.”

Luigi worked five days a week and on Sundays, he went to Isidoro Ballestrin’s shed in Flinders Park. Isidoro opened up his packing shed on Sundays with a keg of beer, and it was mainly the older Veneto men who attended although families were involved sometimes.  More young men who migrated after the war also went along for the company and the opportunity to talk in Veneto dialect which was very important for them.

After some time, Luigi went to Echuca/Moama, about 250 kms north of Melbourne on the River Murray with two other Italians, and went to work on tobacco farms – “we hoped to find our fortune.” They stayed about 6 months until the season finished.

Luigi, on the right with two friends on the tobacco farm, Echuca, 1961.

While he was in Echuca, he turned 21 years of age. Luigi and his friends played the juke box in a hotel at Moama and when people discovered that it was his 21st birthday, they made a fuss and lit candles. He remembered one of the songs on the juke box was “Save the last dance for me,” which is still a significant memory for him.

Reflecting on his time in Echuca, Luigi said, “I became a man in Echuca because I had to learn how to be independent.”

One of his brothers and a sister-in-law lived in Adelaide for a couple of years and it was good to have a sense of family but they went back to live in Italy in 1964. Luigi kept himself busy with work and social life with friends and was not homesick but there were times when he felt sad and thought about his parents and brothers and sisters.

Return to Adelaide

When he returned to Adelaide, Luigi lived with four young Veneto men on the property of Narciso and Maria Ballestrin off Findon Road. He was employed by Primo Ballestrin who had a concreting business and Luigi worked seven days a week because he was keen to earn money and establish himself in Adelaide. After about six months he worked for himself and formed a partnership with a friend, Rocco Calabro’ and they worked very hard. Luigi remembers, “All the time I was thinking of buying a house.” Although he wanted to buy an MG sports car, he bought a block of land instead.

Luigi at the Ballestrin house, Flinders Park, c 1963.
Meeting Lina and getting married
Engagement photo, Lina and Luigi, June 1963.

Luigi had come to know Lina Ballestrin over a few years – he had seen her at church and through the Veneto network at Flinders Park. They began going to dances together at Glenelg and the Norwood Town Hall. When Lui decided to make their relationship more formal, he contacted his sister, Clara, in Cusinati di Rosa’ and asked her to choose a ring for him to give Lina.

At the time, Luigi’s mother was concerned and did not want him to marry because she thought he was too young and he was so far away. Luigi was 22 years and Lina, 18 and a half when they got engaged. Lina also bought a ring for Luigi and in the photo above left, both rings are visible.

Wedding group – Rino Berno, Gabi Gazzola, Jimmy, Lesley and Steven Ballestrin (pageboy), Lui and Lina, Maria and Narcisio Ballestrin and children, Norina, Silvano, 4 April 1964.

Luigi and Lina went to Italy for their honeymoon and spent time in Cusinati di Rosa’ with his mother who was pleased to see Luigi again and to meet Lina. They had opportunities to be with his brothers and sisters and their families. Luigi and Lina also travelled to other places. Luigi was able to enjoy the time in Italy because “I had a little bit of money in my hand which was different from when I left home and travelled to Australia.”

Three Veneto friends: Johnny Marchioro, Luigi, Frank Ballestrin, Adelaide, c 1965.

They returned to Adelaide and began preparing for the birth of their first-born, Lia. Life for Luigi and Lina was busy as they raised their family of eight children in Adelaide.

Luigi and Lina with the family celebrating Lia’s birthday, 1986.
 Connections to the Veneto region

Luigi feels strongly about his Veneto roots. To speak Veneto is such an important part of his life – and was especially in the early years when he was settling in Australia. He has been involved with the Veneto Club since 1972 when he became a Foundation member and he contributed his time when the building was being constructed by volunteers on weekends.  He loved the opportunity to connect with Veneto people when the Club opened its doors in Adelaide in 1974 and he was there several times a week and took Lina and the family to the Sunday night dances.

 The passion for bocce

Luigi’s passion for bocce began in 1961 when he first played at the Fogolar Furlan Club and also at the Italian Club in the City of Adelaide and at the Campania Club.

He represented the Veneto Club in many interstate bocce competitions over about 40 years. In 1974, Luigi was selected as one of six players from Australia who competed in the World Bocce Competition in Vals-Les-Bain, France.

Luigi, Vals-Les.Bains, 1974.

 

 

L-R – Veneto Club Adelaide team – Gino Innocente, Gaetano Gallio, Luigi, Duilio Dametto – 7th Australian Masters Bocce Competition, 1999. (Adelaide Veneto Club took first prize.)

 

 

 

 

Luigi finished playing bocce about 10 years ago after some physical limitations made it a challenge. “I was very disappointed when I stopped because I loved playing and moving around to different places to compete.”

Visits to Italy

Luigi loves visiting his family in Italy. He estimates that he has returned 11 times and the last time was in 2025 when he stayed with his brother, Romano, the last of the Campagnaro family in Cusinati di Rosa’. He arranged to meet three of his grandsons in Bassano del Grappa and proudly showed them the village of his birth.

Lui Campagnaro and family group, Rosa’, c 1976
Luigi with his sister, Clara, in Cusinati di Rosa’, c 1976.

 

Brothers, Beppi, Lui, Romano, Rosa’, 2014.
Lui with grandsons, Oliver, Isaac, and Spencer, Bassano del Grappa, 2025.

 

 

 

 

 

Retirement
Luigi, admiring his produce, salami and wine in his cellar, Kidman Park, c 2010.

Luigi retired from the workforce in about 1998 although he continued to take on small jobs. He leads a very full life – growing seasonal vegetables and fruit which he and Lina preserve. They make sauce and every year Luigi makes wine and kills the pig and makes salami that he cures in the cellar.

One of his favourite rituals is taking a morning walk on the beach and he likes fishing at Rapid Bay and Second Valley about 90 kms south of Adelaide. He has maintained relationships with many Veneti in Adelaide and he and Lina enjoy their social life with friends.

Luigi and Lina love spending time with their eight children and their families – 14 grandchildren and a great-grandchild. Luigi is delighted that nearly all his grandchildren have been to Italy and visited Cusinati di Rosa’ and Bassano del Grappa.

Luigi’s story is of a young man leaving his family and the poverty in the Veneto region that made life a constant challenge. It is a story about Luigi’s 66 years in Australia and the opportunities he took to work, settle and marry Lina, and raise a large family, and to enjoy bocce and his membership of the Veneto Club and the Vicentini nel Mondo. It is also a story of the strong connections to his relatives and roots which he passes onto the next generations in his family. Luigi says, “I was born in Italy, and the pull is there to go back, to remember and feel the place where I was raised in my big family.”

Luigi and Lina, Kidman Park, March 2026. Photo by Madeleine Regan.

Luigi Campagnaro, Lina Campagnaro nee Ballestrin, Madeleine Regan
12 April 2026

Family photos provided by the Lina and Luigi Campagnaro.

Luigina Montin nee Rech – ‘I grew up Italian, all the way’

In this blog you will read about Luigina Montin nee Rech who was born in Adelaide to parents who migrated from the Veneto region between the wars.

Luigina is pictured in the image above with her parents, Bernardo and Maria Rech and her older sister, Luciana, Adelaide, c 1947.


When Luigina Montin nee Rech thought about her life in preparation for this blog, she said she was half Italian and half Australian. Reflecting more deeply, she acknowledged that her Italian heritage had had a huge impact during her life through her parents, relatives and friends. Luigina says she is proud of her family history and always wanted her children and grandchildren to value their inheritance as Italian Australians.

But – there is one thing that Luigina says gives her a sense of being Australian and that is her passion for sports, especially tennis. Luigina has played competitive tennis since she was 18 years old and even now, participates at a local club every week. Luigina proudly told us she has been to every Grand Slam – the Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon and US Open.

 Family background

Luigina was born in Adelaide in 1942. Her father Bernardo was from Seren del Grappa in Belluno in 1904 and migrated to Australia in 1926. After working in the mines of central Australia, he settled in Adelaide and befriended Gelindo Rossetto and Lina Rossetto nee Bordin. At Lina Rossetto’s suggestion, when Bernardo went back to Italy in 1937, he called on Lina’s sister Maria Bordin, 9 years his junior, in Biadene near Montebelluna in Treviso. They fell for each other and as Maria had no family left in Italy she decided to come to Australia with Bernardo.

Bernardo Rech and Maria Rech nee Bordin Adelaide c 1937.

Lina and Gelindo Rossetto were part of the small network of Veneti who had settled in Adelaide between the wars. They provided support for Bernardo as he had no other relatives in Australia at the time. Lina continued to be involved in the life of the Rech family, and she was like a grandmother to Luigina’s children. [See three blogs about the life of Lina Rossetto]:

https://venetimarketgardeners1927.net/a-proxy-marriage-1930/

https://venetimarketgardeners1927.net/significant-elders-adele-rossetto-1904-1997/ and

https://venetimarketgardeners1927.net/significant-elder-lina-rossetto-nee-bordin-part-2/)

Three Bordin sisters, Maria, Lina, Irma, Adelaide c 1955.
 A future in Australia – and a family

Within a week of arriving in Australia, Bernardo and Maria had married at the Registry Office and went to live with Lina and Gelindo in the west end of the City of Adelaide.

Bernardo holding Luciana with Maria and two friends, Harts Range, c 1941.

After he first arrived in Adelaide, Bernardo had worked in the mica mines at Harts Range, like many other young Veneto migrants. Maria and Luciana lived with him on the mica fields for a couple of years.

 

Mica was used widely in World War II for navigation equipment and in insulation in electrical items such as irons and toasters. Bernardo also worked for concrete contractors in the building industry in Adelaide.

Luigina Rech, Adelaide, 3 months old.

 

On 8thAugust 1938 Maria and Bernardo welcomed their first daughter, Luciana, and Luigina was born four years later, on 1st April 1942. The family lived in Crowther Street in the City of Adelaide at the time.

 

 

The Rech house at 6 Kensington Road, Rose Park, Adelaide, late 1940s.

 

 

 

 

 

By 1945 Bernardo and Maria purchased a house at Rose Park which also became a first home to Bernardo’s brothers and other young single Italian men who migrated after the war, several of whom he sponsored.

Bernardo and Maria, Adelaide early 1950s.

Later Bernardo bought a truck and carted grapes from the Riverland to Penfolds Winery at Magill. He became chronically ill early in his 50s and died at the age of 56 years in 1960.

 

Until that time, Maria had been a homemaker and looked after boarders at Rose Park. After Bernardo died, she went to work in a factory that produced cotton and other fabrics.

Luigina – growing up
Luigina and her father, Adelaide c 1946.

Before she went to school at Loreto College, at 5 years old, Luigina did not speak English because Veneto dialect was the family language.  Although she loved sport, she did not like school and left when she was 14 years. She enjoyed spending time with her father and sometimes went with him to the Riverland when he collected grapes. Luigina remembers that “he was a loving and attentive father and joked a lot with children. I didn’t have enough time with him.”

 

 

Luciana, Maria, Luigina Rech, European Grocery, c 1958.

Luigina’s first job lasted 12 years. She worked for her brother-in-law Giordano Rossetto at the European Grocery and Wine shop in the City of Adelaide. She enjoyed the work and the opportunity to meet customers. Part of her role was to assist with catering for weddings – work that included setting up tables at the venues, preparing and serving food and cleaning up the following day.

Luigina, Vanda Cunial, Vanda Passelli – early 1960s.

 

 

Luigina acquired strong organisational skills which were in use when, at the age of 18 years, she organised her father’s funeral as her sister and brother-in-law and family were in Italy.

 Social life as a young woman
Luigina, 4th from right with friends at a cousin’s wedding, 1962.

Growing up, Luigina remembers that her social life was centred around mixing with Veneti – through her parents and her own friends. Reflecting on her teenage and young adult years, Luigina stated that she did not have an extensive social life. She accompanied her parents and aunt to watch Juventus soccer matches. After her father died, she went to see movies with her mother and sister and gradually began attending dances at the Norwood Town Hall and the Fogolar Furlan Club.

Luigina liked her independence and gained her Driver’s Licence at the minimum age of 16 years.

Luigina with club trophy c 1962.

She thinks that she was about 18 years old when she began playing tennis for a club. Before then she had enjoyed hitting balls against the wall of the house.  It was not long before Luigina was winning competitions.

 

From 1960 to 1965, the house on Norwood Parade became a busy three-generational household when Luigina’s sister, Luciana, her husband, Giordano, and their eldest daughter, Julie also lived there.

The steps to marriage
Mario and Luigina – Victor Harbor – early 1965.

Looking back, Luigina considers that she was quite brave when, a week after she met him, she asked Mario Montin to accompany her to the 21st birthday party of her cousin Silvano Rossetto (son of Lina and Gelindo Rossetto) in October 1964. She’d met Mario at a dance at the Fogolar Furlan Club and liked the look of him.

 

Luigina knew that Mario was doing concreting at a house near her home and went there to invite him to the party. Theirs was a whirlwind courtship – engagement in December 1964 and marriage on 5th June 1965.

Luigina recalls that her mother was very pleased that Mario had come from the village of Caselle, only about 6 kilometres from Maria’s village, Biadene. “It was a big, big plus because they could talk about Italy. My mother really liked him and had more of a connection to Italy than I did and this did not change until we travelled there later.”

Mario, Luigina with her mother, Maria, and brother-in-law, Marcello Montin, 5 June, 1965.

Mario had been in Adelaide for five years and although he had friends, his circle was not nearly as large as Luigina’s who had an extensive group of close relatives and Veneto family friends. They decided to invite the same number of guests and on Mario’s list, migrants from Caselle made up a large group.

Luigina chose close relatives for her attendants – her first cousin, Rita Rech, and the flower girls were her niece Julie and a cousin, Margaret Rech, from Melbourne.

 

Wedding party, Back: Lino Gatto, Mario and Luigina, Rita Rech. Front: Julie Rossetto, Margaret Rech.
 Raising the family

 After Luigina and Mario married, they lived in the Rech house at Rose Park that had become the base for so many newly arrived Italian migrants since 1945. They moved to the family home on The Parade at Magill in 1972 when their first child Anita was 5 years old.

Luigina, Peter, 3 months, Anita, 4 years, Adelaide, 1972.

Anita was born in 1967 and Peter, in 1972.

The Montins enjoyed social life with the extended Rech family and spent time with a group of Veneto families who often got together and whose children grew up with Anita and Peter.

Summer holidays in ‘Via Veneto’
Veneto family group at Kingston Park beach, January 1975.

For about 35 years, Luigina and Mario and their group of Veneto friends spent three weeks at the Kingston Park caravan park south of Adelaide. At the beginning, in 1969, there were about 20 families who enjoyed summer holidays together.

 

Group of Veneto families at ‘Via Veneto’, Kingston Park caravan park, c 1978.

Adults played cards and bocce games. Children had fun on the beach and swam, and everyone relaxed together in the location in the caravan park that they called ‘Via Veneto.’

 Visits to Italy
Luigina and Mario, Castelfranco Veneto, 1969.

When Luigina and Mario went to Italy in 1969 with Anita who was nearly 2 years old, Luigina felt as though “I knew where I was going.” She had heard so much about Caselle, and also Biadene where her mother came from. She felt as if it was all an adventure that first time and enjoyed being included in the Montin family and their daily life. They spent time with Mario’s many cousins. At that time, there was running water only in the kitchen and baths were once a week.

The passion for tennis
Luigina, national competition, Berri, c 2015.

Luigina has played tennis for 60+ years – evidence of her passion for the sport. She had a break after she was married and returned when Peter went to school in 1977. Playing tennis, she has felt ‘Australian.’ She has always loved to compete and until a few years ago, played three days a week.

 

Luigina, Tranmere Tennis Club, October 2022. Courtesy, ‘Adelaide East Herald.’

 

In 2022, in a local newspaper it was reported that Luigina had bought herself a new tennis racquet for her 80th birthday and that she was oldest woman player in the Tranmere Tuesday Ladies’ Tennis Competition. Today, Luigina plays twice a week.

 

Life in 2026

Luigina states that family is the most important part of her life. She enjoys preparing dinner once a fortnight for the family – her daughter and partner, Anita and Maria, son, Peter and wife, Tania, and their four adult children, Xavier, Oliver, Zachary and Ava.

60th wedding anniversary celebrations, Peter, Mario, Luigina, Anita, Adelaide, 2025.
Family celebrations for Luigina and Mario, June 2025.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“The Italian influence is strong”, Luigina says, “There has to be brodo in the house or else there’s something wrong.” Mostly she speaks dialect with Mario and Veneto friends. The family keeps traditions at Easter and Christmas. Relatives and friends are very important, and Luigina keeps in contact with cousins in Melbourne and recently went to visit them. She plays cards once a month.

“Sport is a good piece of my life. I never miss a Crows [Australian Rules Football] home game and for many years I went with my good friends Norma Camozzzato nee Ballestrin and Rita Rech nee Mattiazzo until their deaths. Now I usually go with Anita. I always go to Adelaide United soccer matches. And of course, there is tennis!” Luigina also enjoys going to a monthly school friends’ lunch.

Luigina and Mario, Piazza San Marco, Venice, 1969.

Looking back, Luigina says that as a young person she felt different and a bit out of place especially at school because she was Italian. For over 60 years she and Mario have built a life together, raised their children with the support of a close family and the company of caring friends and have enjoyed a lively social life. She liked the opportunities to visit Mario’s family and her Bordin relatives in Italy and enjoyed other international travel. All the while she has maintained her passion for tennis.

 

“I’ve had some sadnesses in my life with the deaths of my parents and dear friends, but the greatest sorrow was the loss of my sister and two of her children on Christmas Eve, 1986.”

Luigina is very proud of her Italian roots, her Italian identity and has passed on that pride to her children and grandchildren.


Luigina Montin nee Rech, Mario Montin, Anita Montin, Peter Montin, Amanda Rossetto, Madeleine Regan

12 March 2026

All family photos supplied by the Montins.

I came away by myself and came back in three

In this blog, the focus is on another significant older member
of the Veneto community in Adelaide, Mario Montin.

The image above shows Mario and Anita Montin in Caselle di Altivole in 1969, when Mario made his first return visit.


Mario Montin was 19 years old when he saw his first banana in May 1960. He was on board the ship, ‘Oceania’, in the Suez Canal travelling to Australia – a destination that Mario had not expected. He had planned to migrate to Canada where two uncles were living but this was not possible because of government restrictions on migration at the time. However, the priest at Caselle di Altivole had advised his parishioners that Australia was open for new migrants and this information led Mario and some friends to decide that they would go to Australia.

 Family background

Mario Alessandro Montin was born on 26 August 1939 in Caselle the eldest surviving child of Pietro Montin and Antonietta Piovesan.

Montin family, Caselle, c 1960. L-R: Maria Rosa, Pietro, Marcello, Rita, Antonietta, Gusto, Bruno. (The photo was taken after Mario left.)

The Montin family lived in a large household with Mario’s grandparents – a contadino family who owned a few fields or campi where they grew olives, wheat, corn and hay for their four milking cows. The family raised chickens and had a donkey for transport.

Mario Montin, Caselle di Altivole c 1953.

 

His father was a shoemaker and family members helped out in the fields. His mother’s father was a bricklayer and a ‘Mr Fixit’, a man who could fix anything.

Growing up in Caselle

Mario, like most of the young people in his village, was able to attend school for six years.

Mario’s school report, 5th class, 1952.

 

The war seriously affected the daily lives of people in Caselle and men like his father had been called up to serve in the Army. Mario was old enough to remember the fear when his uncle Nino was taken away for several days by German soldiers at the end of the war.

 

 

At the age of 14 years, Mario began work in a shoe factory and cycled the six kilometres to Caerano San Marco. He sold shoes at different local markets such as Valdobbiadne, Feltre and Belluno and he also repaired shoes at home. He was resourceful and used his skills also to cut men’s hair on weekends.

Mario Montin, Caselle, c 1951

The Montin family was close and when he wasn’t working, Mario enjoyed spending time with his grandparents, parents and siblings. He also played bocce and cards with friends and relatives. As a young man, Mario spent almost all his free time in Caselle.

Mario, a worker, Caselle di Altivole c 1953.
 The decision to migrate

Mario remembers that the economy was very bad and that many were living in poverty. Migrating to a better place seemed like the only choice. If not Canada, then Australia would do.

At the time, Mario thought he would leave for three or four years, work hard to send money back to his parents and return to live in Caselle. A further reason for his decision to migrate was because he did not agree with compulsory military service required of young adult males who were called up at the age of 21. He knew young men who had been conscripted, and Mario did not want to go through that experience.

 Leaving home, leaving Caselle…

Mario made the arrangements with the Australian Government in Trieste where he was required to undergo a medical examination and he paid a deposit for the voyage at the travel agency in Castelfranco. His parents were sad about his departure – they had already said goodbye to members of Mario’s extended family who had migrated to Canada and America.  He was 20 years old when he left in 1960.

Mario Montin – passport, April 1960.
Mario Montin, passport, April 1960.

The prospect of the trip was exciting for Mario and his 3 friends who travelled by bus to Genoa, about 400 kilometres away. Mario remembered that they sang – they were looking forward to the adventure of a long ship voyage and a new life in Australia. However, Mario’s mood changed at the port because he realised the seriousness of his decision and the separation from his family and life in Caselle– “I was very sad, and the tears set in.”

 First years in Adelaide

He was sponsored by Bruno Tessari who was married to Bianca Piovesan, a relative of Mario’s mother. They were from Caselle and had settled in Adelaide during the early 1950s and they met him when he arrived in Adelaide. While he had the security of the Tessaris, Mario experienced the challenges of a new independence because he had enjoyed the ease and comfort of living in a large loving family household in Caselle.

First impressions
Mario Montin, soon after arriving in Adelaide, 1960.

Mario was very disappointed when he first saw Adelaide in June 1960 – “I arrived on a Sunday morning about 10:00 am and there were no people. It was empty.” This was a huge contrast with Caselle. He spent the first year living with his Tessari relatives in Walkerville and then moved into a boarding house in Hackney run by the De Pieri family from Castelfranco Veneto. He enjoyed living there with other young Italian men.

 Working life

He began working for Albert Del Fabbro, a cement/terrazzo contractor, on houses in the suburbs of Adelaide. He then worked for other smaller sub-contractors for about four years and even took his first plane flight to Ceduna when there was a job there.

Mario Montin, near the De Pieri boarding house, Hackney, 1961.

 

For the first year or so, he sent most of his money to his uncle Nino in Canada who had lent Mario the money to buy his passage to Australia. After repaying the debt, he sent most of his earnings to his parents except saving to buy a second-hand car. He kept strong ties to the family through letters back and forth, and his mother wrote monthly.

 Social life
Mario with his first car 0 outside Luigina Rech’s family home, 1964.

In the first years, Mario enjoyed playing darts at the Hackney Hotel with other Veneti, including Lino Gatto from Caselle who had arrived in 1961. Mario and his friends went to the Fogolar Furlan Club to a Saturday night dance and to play bocce on Sundays.

Meeting Luigina Rech

Mario had worked and lived in Adelaide for four years and had bought a deposit for his ticket back to Italy. However, his direction in life changed when he attended one of the dances at the Fogolar Furlan Club, and he became interested in a young woman, Luigina Rech, who had been born in Adelaide, also paid attention to Mario.

Mario Montin and Luigina Rech, Adelaide, c 1965.

When Luigina received an invitation to the 21st birthday party of her cousin, Silvano Rossetto, she decided to ask Mario to accompany her, and this led to an eight-month courtship before they married on 5th June 1965. Mario looked back on their decision to marry and stated that it was very important that Luigina’s family had come from Biadene, only six kilometres from Caselle. There was a sense of familiarity because they came from the same province and spoke the same dialect – and he wrote to his parents and said that she came from “a good family.”

Signing the marriage register – Lino Gatto, best man, Mario, Luigina.

Mario invited all the families who had migrated from Caselle to the wedding reception at the Italian Club in the City of Adelaide.

Group of families from Caselle at Mario and Luigina’s wedding reception.

In the image above, Mario and Luigina are seated in the middle, Luigina with a white hat, ready to leave the reception.

 Marriage and family

After their marriage Mario and Luigina lived in a couple of rooms in a house at Rose Park owned by Luigina’s parents where they lived for seven years until they moved into a house built by Luigina’s parents in 1972.  They still live there today.

Mario and Luigina enjoyed a full social life and mixed with half a dozen Veneto couples and Mario continued to play bocce at the Fogolar Furlan Club and for the Veneto Club after it was established in 1972.

Anita Maria was born in 1967 and Peter Anthony, in 1972.

Anita, Peter, Mario, 1972.
Luigina, Mario, Anita, Peter c 1973.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mario’s working life changed when he was employed by his brother-in-law, Giordano Rossetto, at Pasta d’Oro at Norwood and at the winery, Valle D’Oro at Mclaren Vale for 4 years before he started a business, with a partner, John Breda, SA Olive Oil at Flinders Park. They bought olives from Melbourne and processed and packed the oil. Mario delivered the oil to restaurants around Adelaide and really enjoyed opportunities to interact with people. He worked there until his retirement in about 2005.

Connections to Italy

Mario has continued to hold a strong connection to Caselle through the 66 years since he arrived in Adelaide. He has always kept in touch with the family – at first, through letters, and later with telephone calls especially at Easter and Christmas.

Anita and her nonno, Caselle, 1969.

After nine years, Mario and Luigina made a first visit to Italy with Anita who turned two years when they were there for three and a half months in 1969. Mario remembers the emotion of his return visit: “I came away by myself and came back in three.” Everything seemed strange – his youngest sister, Rita, had only been five years old when he left.

 

Luigina and Mario, Piazza San Marco, Venice, 1969.

 

They made other visits to Caselle with Anita and Peter, and the last time that Mario and Luigina went together was in 2024. They have also visited Mario’s sister and brother and families in Canada.

 

 

Mario’s mother, Antonietta, who was in her late 60s in 1980, stayed in Adelaide with the family for several months.

Montin family – Marcello, Luigina, Peter, Antonietta, Anita, Mario, Adelaide, Christmas 1980.

In the photo above, Antonietta sits between her two sons, Marcello on the left and Mario on the right.

Four generations of the Montin family

The following photo of Mario with his mother, son and grandson was taken in Castelfranco Veneto in the province of Treviso during a family visit to Italy.

Four Generations: Mario with his mother Antonietta, his son Peter and eldest grandchild Xavier, Castelfranco Veneto, Treviso, 2001.
 Involvement with the Veneto community in Adelaide

For many years Mario has maintained interest in two community organisations in Adelaide. He joined the Veneto Club in the early 1970s – “All my friends were there – we could all go to the same place and speak dialect.” He played bocce and represented the Club in Sydney.

Veneto Club bocce competition participants, mid 1970s. Mario is first on left in the front row. Photo courtesy, the Veneto Club. Inc., Adelaide.

Mario has also been a member of  the Trevisani nel Mondo since its establishment in Adelaide in 1982. He has been President for many years. He enjoys the planning of, and participation in, the annual events that attract several hundred people with connections to the province of Treviso.

Group of members at the Trevisani nel Mondo picnic, 2013. Mario is first on right in the front row.
Photo courtesy, Trevisani nel Mondo, Adelaide.
In retirement…

Mario enjoys spending time with friends and relatives as well as being part of the Trevisani nel Mondo. He feels very connected to his heritage – “Italia is in my heart.” His children and grandchildren share Mario and Luigina’s strong sense of belonging to the Veneto region.

Mario and Luigina’s 60th wedding anniversary celebrations with their family, June 2025.

Mario Montin, Luigina Montin nee Rech, Peter Montin, Anita Montin, Amanda Rossetto, Madeleine Regan
8 February 2026

All Montin photos provided by the family.

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