Nick Salvatore


Nicholas Anthony Salvatore was an American historian who served as the Maurice and Hinda Neufeld Founders Professor of Industrial and Labor Relations and Professor of American Studies at Cornell University.

Biography

Salvatore was born in 1943 in the [Boroughs of New York (state)|New York City|New York City borough] of Brooklyn, one of three children born to Nicholas and Katherine Salvatore. Salvatore's father died in 1945. Salvatore attended St. Savior's parochial school followed by Brooklyn Prep High School. Salvatore attended Saint Andrew-On-Hudson seminary for a year, before going to Fordham University and dropping out before working for the Railway Express Agency. During this time, Salvatore "became active in the Civil Rights and Vietnam Anti-War movements" and worked "to organize against a system he had come to understand as unjust and inhumane".
Salvatore graduated from Hunter College in 1968, and graduated from the University of California, Berkeley, with an MA and PhD, where he studied with Leon F. Litwack.
In 1976, Salvatore started teaching American history at the College of the Holy Cross, where he "earned a reputation as a demanding, impassioned, charismatic lecturer". In 1981, Salvatore began working at the New York State School of Industrial Relations at Cornell University. Salvatore was a visiting lecturer at universities in Turin and Paris, and also spent one year at the Divinity School at Yale University.

Personal life

Salvatore had two daughters, Gabriella and Nora, and two grandsons, Joseph and Oscar. Salvatore lived with his wife, Ann Sullivan, in Ithaca, New York. Salvatore suffered with Alzheimer's disease in his later years. He died on 29 November 2025. In an obituary published in The Ithaca Voice, Salvatore was described as someone who "loved life and never took its magic for granted. Salvatore suffered with Alzheimer's disease in his later years. Julie Greco wrote that Salvatore was a "lifelong champion for working people".

Awards

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