171st Blackshirt Legion 167th Blackshirt Legion 31st CCNN Legions Group "Sassari" Blackshirt Group "Barca" 13th Blackshirt Group 9th Blackshirt Group M Battalions Landing Group 2nd "M" Battalion Landing Group
The son of Vincenzo Quasimodo and Rosa Papandrea, he was a career soldier. In 1912 he took part in the Italo-Turkish War as a Lieutenant in the Royal Italian Army, fighting in Libya and receiving a Bronze Medal of Military Valor. During the First World War he rose to the rank of Major and was awarded another bronze medal for military valor in November 1918. In 1921 he married Oliva Barbiera, who gave him four children.[1][2]
After the war he joined the National Fascist Party (PNF), and in the second half of the 1920s he was transferred at his request from the Army to the Voluntary Militia for National Security (MVSN), with the rank of console (colonel) of the 171st Blackshirt Legion in Palermo. He was later transferred to Catania, at the command of the 167th Blackshirt Legion. In 1930 he became federal secretary of the PNF of Catania, where among other things he was the first president of Società Sportiva Catania.[3][4][5][6]
In 1934 he was promoted to console generale (Brigadier General) and given command of the 31st CCNN Legions Group "Sassari". He participated in the Second Italo-Ethiopian War and was assigned to the Governorate of Addis Ababa in 1936; in 1937 he received a Silver Medal of Military Valor for a successful operation against Ethiopian armed bands in Southern Dankalia, at the command of the Blackshirt Group "Barca". In 1938 he was in command of the 13th Blackshirt Group in Verna and in 1940 he commanded the 9th Blackshirt Group in Bologna.[7][8]
As the Italian Social Republic collapsed in late April 1945, he was hosted for a few days in Milan by his nephew Salvatore Quasimodo, then left. He disappeared in the Brescia area around 1 May 1945, and his body was never found.[14]
^A. Baglio, Il Partito nazionale fascista in Sicilia. Politica, organizzazione di massa e mito totalitario, 1921-1943, p. 137
^A. Buemi, C. Fontanelli, R. Quartarone, A. Russo, F. Solarino, Tutto il Catania minuto per minuto : la storia, la geografia, la letteratura e financo la religione rossazzurra! : [dalle origini al 2010], p. 32