Adolfo Rossi


Adolfo Rossi was an Italian journalist, writer and diplomat. Starting as an aspiring but poor emigrant in New York City, he helped establish the Italian-language daily Il Progresso Italo-Americano despite having little prior experience. Upon returning to Italy, he rose to prominence as a journalist, contributing to the country's leading newspapers and gaining recognition for both his investigative work at home and his war reporting abroad.
He later served as an itinerant inspector for the Italian government's General Commissariat for Emigration, where his detailed reports on the troubling conditions faced by Italian migrants in Brazil, South Africa, the United States and Argentina played a key role in prompting reforms in Rome's migration policies. Ultimately, he was appointed as a diplomat with the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the Americas.

Early life

Adolfo Rossi was born on 30 September 1857, in the hamlet of Valdentro di Lendinara in the province of Rovigo, Veneto, in northern Italy, to Giuseppe Rossi and Filomena Malin. He began his education at the local Ginnasio, and later attended the Liceo di Rovigo. However, due to the sudden death of his father, he was forced to leave school before graduating. His first job was at the Lendinara Post Office, where he came under the mentorship of Alberto Mario – a journalist and an early supporter of Italian unification who was deeply influenced by the ideas of Giuseppe Mazzini and a close ally of Giuseppe Garibaldi –, who encouraged him to continue his education.
An aspiring writer, he published a novel on "the condition of young elementary schoolmistresses" in Bacchiglione, a journal based in Padua. With the help of Mario, he also succeeded in publishing several novellas in Vita Nuova, a Milanese publication edited by Arcangelo Ghisleri. In 1879, he founded a bimonthly family magazine titled Il Grillo del focolare.
In the summer of 1879, Rossi left for America almost in secret, seeking adventure and without knowing a word of English. Later, in his book Un italiano in America, he described why he escaped the prospect of a tedious life in a provincial town and his reasons to move to America:
At Southampton he embarked on the Canada, bound for New York City. During the Atlantic crossing in third-class steerage, he was robbed of all his belongings. Upon arriving in New York, he lived the life of any desperate immigrant and took on any job he could find – street vendor, day labourer, pastry chef, waiter in the Brunswick hotel – and learning to speak and write in English, until a stroke of luck changed his life: the foundation in 1880 of the daily Italian language newspaper Il Progresso Italo-Americano by Carlo Barsotti, which for over a century would remain the largest Italian-language newspaper in the United States. Hired as a jack of all trades in December 1880, Rossi was the editor and the sole correspondent busy from 9am to midnight. This marked a turning point in Rossi's life.
In July 1881, he left the newspaper to try his luck in the gold and silver mines of Colorado, which had recently joined the Union as the 38th state and was in the midst of the Colorado Silver Boom and rapid railroad expansion. Contracted by the Denver, South Park and Pacific Railroad, but unsuited for the demanding labour of railroaod construction, Rossi instead found work as a pastry chef and waiter in the mining town of Breckenridge, surrounded by gold prospectors, ongoing conflicts with railway companies, and scenes of frontier justice – including lynchings. Eventually, he was hired as an accountant by a railway company to travel on horseback between various work camps, inspecting progress and conditions.
As winter approached and railway work came to a halt, Il Progresso urged him to return to New York, offering improved terms. He accepted, and made his way back and incorporated his experiences into the book Vita d'America.

Journalistic career

Despite his inexperience, Rossi proved highly capable and helped turn Il Progresso into a thriving publication as its editor-in-chief. He faced numerous challenges: a minimal staff, printers unfamiliar with Italian who introduced frequent errors, and the logistical hurdles of daily production. Rossi translated local news from English, adapted content from Italian sources, proofread each edition, and handled the layout. One of his earliest major stories was a series of articles defending the unacknowledged inventor of the telephone, the Italian Antonio Meucci, who was then living in poverty in Clifton, Staten Island — in the same modest home that had housed Garibaldi three decades earlier. This coverage caught the attention of even the mainstream American press, which echoed Il Progresso's key arguments in Meucci's case against Edison and his associates.
He also quickly learned the journalistic technique from overseas: concise writing, facts separated from opinions, objective narration, researching the event where it happens, so as to report without filters or conditioning. His experience in America, including the early, chaotic days at Il Progresso, and the appaling conditions of the Italian immigrant community in the slums of Five Points, culminated in the publication of the book Un italiano in America in 1892, which gained widespread acclaim. It was followed in 1894 by a second volume, Nel paese dei dollari, further cementing his reputation as a writer and journalist.
In the meantime, in New York he had befriended Ferdinando Fontana and Dario Papa, the latter an already influential editor of the Milanese Corriere della Sera newspaper and on a trip in the United States to study the organisational model of the New York Herald, one of the leading U.S. daily newspaper of the time. Rossi convinced Fontana and Papa to contribute to Il Progresso. After five years in the U.S., he returned to Italy with Papa in 1884 with a solid professional experience as a journalist. It is very likely that his friendship with Papa, who, like him, had become convinced that the American style of journalism should be introduced in Italy, assured him of a job at the Corriere.

Back in Italy

Drawing on his American experience, Rossi quickly established himself in the Italian newspaper industry. Just over two decades had passed since Italian unification, and the country's media landscape was undergoing significant transformation with the rise of modern daily newspapers – some of which, like the Corriere della Sera, La Stampa, and Il Gazzettino, are still in circulation, while others, such as Il Secolo and La Tribuna, have since disappeared. Over the final two decades of the 19th century, Rossi contributed to nearly all the major newspapers of the era. Over the years, he developed his distinctive reportage style, which involved "taking the train whenever there was an important event anywhere in the country and telegraphing – without concern for cost and with absolute priority – to his newspaper," and using the concise journalistic technique he had acquired in New York.
Rossi settled in Rome, where he began with a four-year tenure at Il Messaggero, a sensationalist city newspaper with a circulation of 35,000 copies. He notably covered the 1884 cholera outbreak in Naples, going so far as to outpace official death reports by touring the city in a carriage and personally counting the corpses prepared for burial. From 1888 onward, Rossi spent nearly two years abroad in Paris, contributing to various publications, including a newspaper in New York. During this period, he reported on the unfolding Boulangist crisis and the 1889 Paris Exposition – highlighted by the construction of the Eiffel Tower – as well as dispatching vivid portrayals of Parisian variétés.

At ''La Tribuna''

The next step in his career came when in the course of 1889, he joined La Tribuna, the leading daily newspaper in Rome with a circulation of 100,000 copies. In a series of articles, he painted a picture of the 'unknown Rome' of the underprivileged and those who had fallen through the cracks, and his style of local reporting became a model of the genre. In the summer of 1893, Rossi reported on a high-profile trial of outlaw brigands from the Maremma region. His coverage went beyond the courtroom, offering a detailed reconstruction of two decades of brigand activity and shedding light on the rule of Domenico Tiburzi, the most notorious of the bandits. Widely cited in both the Italian and international press, including Le Figaro, Rossi's reporting is still regarded today as a remarkable account of the socio-cultural conditions that allowed brigandage to thrive in the region.
In October 1893, he investigated firsthand the turmoil in Sicily sparked by the Fasci Siciliani movement for La Tribuna. He was the only journalist to make the journey to the island at a time when the mainstream press in northern Italy echoed the government's stance, framing the unrest as a matter of public order and relying mainly on police reports. Rossi traveled extensively across Sicily, interviewing members and leaders of the Fasci and bringing their voices to light. During his journey in Sicily, he visited the sulfur-mining towns, and described the horrific labour conditions of the carusi, minors of eight or nine years of age that worked in conditions of near-slavery that sparked public outrage. Rossi, by then a seasoned war correspondent, wrote that no spectacle had affected him as deeply as that of the conditions of the carusi. He revealed a reality of severe poverty and exploitation in Sicily, arguing that the situation called for "political solutions, not military repression."
In December, La Tribuna, aligning with Prime Minister Francesco Crispi's colonial aspirations, dispatched Rossi to Italian Eritrea, where he would stay for approximately three months. This first mission marked Rossi's initial encounter with the region, and his reports offered a detailed account of Italy's expansion into Eritrea and Ethiopia, following the Italian victory at the Second Battle of Agordat on 21 December 1893 against an army of Mahdist rebels. After describing the Agordat battlefield – strewn with a thousand unburied corpses, left to hyenas and vultures – Rossi traveled extensively throughout the Italian colony, from Assab to Massawa and deep into the highland interior.
Upon returning from Eritrea, Rossi saw how dramatically the situation in Sicily had worsened. Crispi had crushed the Fasci Siciliani, authorizing the use of deadly force against demonstrations, imposed martial law on the island, suppressed the freedoms of association, the press, and speech, dissolved the Fasci, arrested thousands, established military tribunals, sentenced movement leaders to long prison terms, and sent thousands into forced internal exile — guilty only of having called for social justice before the nation. Rossi revised his reports, added an introduction and a conclusion including a defense of the Fasci leaders in jail, and compiled them into a book. Since its publication, this unique work has been widely cited and remains a key source for anyone writing about the Fasci Siciliani. The Sicilian deputy Napoleone Colajanni drew on Rossi's accounts during parliamentary debates, using them as part of his efforts to challenge the government's response.