Joseph Caucino
Early Life
Joseph Caucino was born on January 8, 1890, in Biella, Italy. He later immigrated to the United States, becoming part of the large wave of Italian newcomers who arrived in America in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. He settled in Rye, New York, where he established his residence along Boston Post Road.
At the turn of the twentieth century, Rye was a community in transition. Expansive estates owned by wealthy families existed alongside a growing population of immigrant laborers who supported them through work as gardeners, craftsmen, and tradesmen. Within this environment, Caucino built his early life as part of Rye’s working-class immigrant community, contributing to the local economy and social fabric of the town.
World War I Service
Caucino entered military service on October 8, 1917, through Local Board No. 6 in Westchester County, New York, during the rapid expansion of the United States Army for World War I under the American Expeditionary Forces.
He was first assigned to the 152nd Depot Brigade, where newly inducted soldiers were processed, equipped, and prepared for further assignment. Depot brigades were essential to the Army’s mobilization system, serving as the central point for transforming civilian recruits into organized military personnel.
He was subsequently transferred to Company A of the 320th Machine Gun Battalion. Machine gun battalions played a critical role in World War I combat operations, providing sustained automatic fire to support infantry advances and defensive positions. Even for soldiers who remained stateside, assignment to such units reflected the Army’s preparation for the increasingly mechanized and firepower-intensive nature of modern warfare.
Caucino’s service was conducted within the United States, and his record indicates that he did not serve overseas. He sustained no wounds in action and held the rank of private.
He was honorably discharged on January 20, 1918, after completing his period of service.
Life After Service
Following his military service, Caucino returned to Rye, where he resumed civilian life. He worked as a polisher, a skilled trade that placed him within the network of craftsmen and laborers who supported both local industry and the maintenance of the region’s estates.
Available records provide limited detail regarding his later years, but it is clear that he remained part of the Rye community following the war, continuing the life he had established prior to his military service.