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The traditional Polish community in Chicago, Illinois, an organization-rich ethnic settlement that developed in the years after the Civil War, reached maturity and almost complete institutional self-sufficiency before World War I.

Polish Chicago, sometimes referred to as “Polonia,” has been shaped by at least three distinct immigration waves. The first and largest lasted from the 1850s to the early 1920s, and was driven primarily by economic and structural change in Poland. This immigration is often referred to as 'Za Chlebem' (For Bread). Primarily a peasant migration, it drew first from the German Polish partition, and then from the Russian partition and Austrian Polish partition. Although restrictions during World War I and in the 1920s cut off this immigration, by 1930 Polish immigrants and their children had replaced Germans as the largest ethnic group in Chicago.

A second wave brought hundreds of thousands of Poles, displaced by World War II and then by the Communist takeover of Poland. This second immigration reinvigorated many Polish-American institutions and neighborhoods. A small, economically stimulated immigration persisted throughout the postwar period. A third wave of immigration began in the 1980s, commonly referred to as the “Solidarity” immigration. These Polish immigrants came to Chicago as a result of the imposition of martial law in Poland (1981) and the decade-long struggle to bring democracy to the Polish Republic. Mainly professionals, artists, and intellectuals, these newest immigrants influenced the cultural and institutional life of Chicago's Polish community.

The first Polish emigrants to Chicago were noblemen who had fled Poland after the Polish-Russian War of 1830–1831. They arrived with ill-fated plans of establishing a “New Poland” in Illinois. Among these early settlers was John Napieralski, believed to have been the first Pole in Chicago.

Polish Chicago's growth began in earnest after 1850. By the time of the Civil War, approximately five hundred Poles had created a small community on the Northwest Side; Anthony Smarzewski-Schermann, who emigrated to the United States around 1850 and earned his living as a carpenter before opening a grocery store on the corner of Noble and Bradley Streets, provided leadership for the young community. Peter Kiolbassa, who first fought in the Confederate army, but later served as a captain in the Sixth Colored Cavalry during the Civil War, also emerged as an important local leader. Kiolbassa organized the first Polish Society of St. Stanislaus Kostka in 1864. This organization prepared the community for the development of the first Polish Roman Catholic parish in the city. The first Polish elected official in Chicago, Kiolbassa served in the state legislature (1877–1879), and as city treasurer (1891–1893).

The Polish settlement along the North Branch of the Chicago River grew quickly. Many Polish Catholics attended St. Boniface Catholic Church. Here they met hostility from some of their German coreligionists who did not want their priest to attend to Polish religious needs. In 1867 the Polish community created its own Roman Catholic parish, St. Stanislaus Kostka, just a few blocks north of the German parish. The creation of the parish was central to the creation of Polonia. Since the midcentury arrival of large numbers of Irish and German Catholic immigrants in Chicago, the creation of ethnic Catholic parishes provided both a stable institutional base for community and a status symbol that announced the importance of the new immigrant colony. St. Stanislaus Kostka became the first of nearly 60 Polish parishes in the archdiocese. In 1870, Bishop Thomas Foley invited the Polish Resurrectionist congregation to minister to Polonia's religious needs. Four years later the Resurrectionist Father Vincent Barzynski arrived to act as pastor of St. Stanislaus Kostka. Barzynski proved to be the great builder-priest of Polonia and remained pastor at St. Stanislaus Kostka until his death in 1899.

Kiolbassa paved the way for Polish participation in local elections, and others soon followed. By World War I, various other Polish Americans had entered politics on both the Democratic and Republican tickets. Among the most important of these early politicians was John F. Smulski (1867–1928), a Republican who was elected city attorney in 1903 and state treasurer in 1906, and served on the West Side Park Board. Later important Polish politicians include Benjamin Adamowski, Roman Pucinski, and Dan Rostenkowski.

While the original Polish community located on the Northwest Side, other Polish settlements soon appeared. Poles joined their fellow Slavic immigrants on the Near West Side in the Czech Catholic parish of St. Wenceslaus. Another Polish district appeared just west of 18th Street and Ashland Avenue, where in 1874 Poles founded St. Adalbert's parish. Other Polish settlements appeared soon after in Bridgeport, McKinley Park, Back of the Yards, South Chicago, Pullman, and Hegewisch. These original core immigrant neighborhoods revolved around a heavy industrial base, whose jobs drew Poles to Chicago.

Immigrants from German Poland were soon joined by Poles from the Russian and Austrian partitions. By 1900, 23 Polish Catholic parishes were located throughout Chicago and its nearby industrial suburbs. None of these neighborhoods was exclusively Polish in ethnicity. Like other European ethnic groups at the time, Poles lived in diverse neighborhoods that were residentially integrated (by ethnicity, if not by race), but tended to be socially segregated. These ethnic groups developed their own churches, schools, and other institutions around which their social lives revolved.

The growth of Polonia was not without conflict. Questions of ethnic and religious identity often resulted in strife, including street battles in the early years. Many of these difficulties revolved around church ownership and the concept of parish. Sometimes these conflicts were a result of Polish regionalism transported to American shores. Within the community, nationalists battled with other Poles who were more focused on Roman Catholicism as a unifying factor. Rival fraternal groups emerged, such as the Polish National Alliance (1880) and the Polish Roman Catholic Union of America (1873). Beyond the community, Poles protested against Irish and German domination of the American Catholic Church. One result was the growth of the independent church movement in the 1890s that led to the formation of the Polish National Catholic Church. Another consequence was the consecration of a Polish American Roman Catholic bishop, Bishop Paul Rhode of Chicago in 1908.

Like other immigrant groups, Polish Americans struggled over competing visions of the homeland. Poles in the United States often referred to their community as the “Fourth Partition.” Many of their institutions worked for the liberation and reunification of Poland as well as for the well-being of the immigrant community. This was especially true of the large national fraternals such as the Polish National Alliance and the Polish Roman Catholic Union, as well as for the U.S. branch of the gymnastic and paramilitary group the Polish Falcons (1887). Polish women organized their own ethnic organizations, including the Polish Women's Alliance (1898), spearheaded by Stefania Chmielinska. All of these organizations aided the Polish independence movement by any means they could. In 1918 these efforts proved successful; Poland regained its independence as a result of negotiated settlements after World War I.

By the end of the nineteenth century, Polonia constituted the core of an almost institutionally complete ethnic community, with the parishes providing the base for much of this community development, along with institutions such as fraternal organizations, newspapers, and schools. Most of the large national fraternals located their headquarters near the intersection of Milwaukee and Ashland Avenues with Division Street. This neighborhood, home to the parishes of St. Stanislaus Kostka and Holy Trinity, quickly developed as the national capital of the American Polonia.

The major Polish newspapers also opened offices here, such as the Dziennik Związkowy (Daily Alliance), Dziennik Chicagoski (Chicago Daily), Naród Polski (The Polish Nation), and Dziennik Zjednoczenia (Daily Union). Władysław Dyniewicz published the first Polish newspaper in Chicago, Gazeta Polska (Polish Gazette) in 1872. John Barzynski, brother of the pastor of St. Stanislaus Kostka Church, began publication of another Polish weekly, Gazeta Polska Katolicka (Polish Catholic Gazette) in 1874.

The parochial school provided another foundation for the creation and maintenance of the ethnic community. Catholic schools run by orders of Polish sisters such as the Felician Sisters, Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth, and others served Polonia. One Polish American order was founded in Chicago, the Franciscan Sisters of Blessed Kunegunda, by Josephine Dudzik (Sister Theresa) in 1894. These ethnic schools first taught classes exclusively in the Polish language, but quickly the archdiocese forced them to teach in both Polish and English. The main concern of the schools was the preservation of PolskoŜć or Polishness among immigrant children. Another concern was to prepare the children for life in the United States. In addition to parochial grammar schools, Polish Chicago developed Catholic high schools run both as independent institutions and as part of parish structures. In 1890 the Resurrectionists opened St. Stanislaus College, the first secondary school opened by the congregation in the United States. In 1930 the school was renamed Weber High School. In 1952 the Resurrectionists established Gordon Technical High School. Polish parishes, such as St. Joseph in the Back of the Yards, also opened high schools.

Text by: Dominic A. Pacyga

Source: http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/982.html

https://archive.org/stream/polesofchicago1800zgle/polesofchicago180...

Illinois

As far as the early settlers in Illinois, before 1850, we find Polish pioneers settling in the following counties:

Adams County

Samuel Solomon Gerszteyn (Harris)

Adolph Kettz

Harris Leib

Isaac Levi

Samuel Marks

Casper Sommerfield

Alexander County'

Martin Leftcovitch

Felix Charles Malinski

Boone County'

Paweł Sobolewski

Cook County'

John Barzynski

Joseph Barzynski

Rev. Vincent Michael Barzynski

Jan Frużyna

Józefa Frużyna, II

Thomas Jaworski

General Henry Kałussowski h. Korwin

Peter Kiolbassa

Captain Joseph Napieralski

Anton Schermann

Paweł Sobolewski

Catherine Stasch

Lawrence Stasch

Alexander Zakrzewski

DeKalb County

Francis Jasinski aka Easinski aka Senska

Edger County

Alexander Bielawski h. Jastrzębiec

Effingham County

Alexander Bielawski h. Jastrzębiec

Fayette County

Greene County

Michael Cohen

John Wardynski

Hancock County

Iroquois County

Col. Julian Hulanicki aka Hulaniski

Jackson County

Jersey County

Jo Davies County

Lake County

Count Alexander Adolph Bilinski

Theodore Dombski

Bazyli Jaroszynski

Edward Wilkoszewski

Francis Wlodecki

LaSalle County

Lee County

Logan County

Madison County

Marion County

Monroe County

Morgan County

Andrew Johnson

Lieutenant Edward Młodzianowski

Jacob Zabriskie, (twin)

Montgomery County

Randolph County

Anna H. Fiegel

John Fiegel

Rosalia Józefa Johny aka Janny

Sangamon County

St. Clair County

Dr. Alfonso Xavier Illinski

Shelby County

Alexander Bielawski h. Jastrzębiec

George Gregory Suprunowski

Tazewell and Peoria Counties

Wabash County

Will County

Winnebago County

Francis Jasinski aka Easinski aka Senska

Woodford County

Major Ludwik "Louis" Chłopicki h. Nieczuja

Source: Polish Pioneers in Illinois 1818-1850 by James D. Lodesky, 2010.

Helpful sites:

https://ipn.gov.pl/pl/publikacje/ksiazki/13084,Polonia-chicagowska-...

https://dziennikzwiazkowy.com/polonia/chicagowska-polonia-2017-jacy...

https://culture.pl/en/article/how-chicago-became-a-distinctly-polis...

https://news.wttw.com/2019/11/18/story-chicago-s-rise-distinctly-po...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poles_in_Chicago

https://earlychicago.com/encyclopedia_letter_n/

The traditional Polish community in Chicago, an organization-rich ethnic settlement that developed in the years after the Civil War, reached maturity and almost complete institutional self-sufficiency before World War I.

Polish Chicago, sometimes referred to as “Polonia,” has been shaped by at least three distinct immigration waves. The first and largest lasted from the 1850s to the early 1920s, and was driven primarily by economic and structural change in Poland. This immigration is often referred to as Za Chłebem (For Bread). Primarily a peasant migration, it drew first from the German Polish partition, and then from the Russian partition and Austrian Polish partition. Although restrictions during World War I and in the 1920s cut off this immigration, by 1930 Polish immigrants and their children had replaced Germans as the largest ethnic group in Chicago.

A second wave brought hundreds of thousands of Poles, displaced by World War II and then by the Communist takeover of Poland. This second immigration reinvigorated many Polish-American institutions and neighborhoods. A small, economically stimulated immigration persisted throughout the postwar period. A third wave of immigration began in the 1980s, commonly referred to as the “Solidarity” immigration. These Polish immigrants came to Chicago as a result of the imposition of martial law in Poland (1981) and the decade-long struggle to bring democracy to the Polish Republic. Mainly professionals, artists, and intellectuals, these newest immigrants influenced the cultural and institutional life of Chicago's Polish community.

The first Polish emigrants to Chicago were noblemen who had fled Poland after the Polish-Russian War of 1830–1831. They arrived with ill-fated plans of establishing a “New Poland” in Illinois. Among these early settlers was John Napieralski, believed to have been the first Pole in Chicago.

Polish Chicago's growth began in earnest after 1850. By the time of the Civil War, approximately five hundred Poles had created a small community on the Northwest Side; Anthony Smarzewski-Schermann, who emigrated to the United States around 1850 and earned his living as a carpenter before opening a grocery store on the corner of Noble and Bradley Streets, provided leadership for the young community. Peter Kiolbassa, who first fought in the Confederate army, but later served as a captain in the Sixth Colored Cavalry during the Civil War, also emerged as an important local leader. Kiolbassa organized the first Polish Society of St. Stanislaus Kostka in 1864. This organization prepared the community for the development of the first Polish Roman Catholic parish in the city. The first Polish elected official in Chicago, Kiolbassa served in the state legislature (1877–1879), and as city treasurer (1891–1893).

The Polish settlement along the North Branch of the Chicago River grew quickly. Many Polish Catholics attended St. Boniface Catholic Church. Here they met hostility from some of their German coreligionists who did not want their priest to attend to Polish religious needs. In 1867 the Polish community created its own Roman Catholic parish, St. Stanislaus Kostka, just a few blocks north of the German parish. The creation of the parish was central to the creation of Polonia. Since the midcentury arrival of large numbers of Irish and German Catholic immigrants in Chicago, the creation of ethnic Catholic parishes provided both a stable institutional base for community and a status symbol that announced the importance of the new immigrant colony. St. Stanislaus Kostka became the first of nearly 60 Polish parishes in the archdiocese. In 1870, Bishop Thomas Foley invited the Polish Resurrectionist congregation to minister to Polonia's religious needs. Four years later the Resurrectionist Father Vincent Barzynski arrived to act as pastor of St. Stanislaus Kostka. Barzynski proved to be the great builder-priest of Polonia and remained pastor at St. Stanislaus Kostka until his death in 1899.

Kiolbassa paved the way for Polish participation in local elections, and others soon followed. By World War I, various other Polish Americans had entered politics on both the Democratic and Republican tickets. Among the most important of these early politicians was John F. Smulski (1867–1928), a Republican who was elected city attorney in 1903 and state treasurer in 1906, and served on the West Side Park Board. Later important Polish politicians include Benjamin Adamowski, Roman Pucinski, and Dan Rostenkowski.

While the original Polish community located on the Northwest Side, other Polish settlements soon appeared. Poles joined their fellow Slavic immigrants on the Near West Side in the Czech Catholic parish of St. Wenceslaus. Another Polish district appeared just west of 18th Street and Ashland Avenue, where in 1874 Poles founded St. Adalbert's parish. Other Polish settlements appeared soon after in Bridgeport, McKinley Park, Back of the Yards, South Chicago, Pullman, and Hegewisch. These original core immigrant neighborhoods revolved around a heavy industrial base, whose jobs drew Poles to Chicago.

Immigrants from German Poland were soon joined by Poles from the Russian and Austrian partitions. By 1900, 23 Polish Catholic parishes were located throughout Chicago and its nearby industrial suburbs. None of these neighborhoods was exclusively Polish in ethnicity. Like other European ethnic groups at the time, Poles lived in diverse neighborhoods that were residentially integrated (by ethnicity, if not by race), but tended to be socially segregated. These ethnic groups developed their own churches, schools, and other institutions around which their social lives revolved.

The growth of Polonia was not without conflict. Questions of ethnic and religious identity often resulted in strife, including street battles in the early years. Many of these difficulties revolved around church ownership and the concept of parish. Sometimes these conflicts were a result of Polish regionalism transported to American shores. Within the community, nationalists battled with other Poles who were more focused on Roman Catholicism as a unifying factor. Rival fraternal groups emerged, such as the Polish National Alliance (1880) and the Polish Roman Catholic Union of America (1873). Beyond the community, Poles protested against Irish and German domination of the American Catholic Church. One result was the growth of the independent church movement in the 1890s that led to the formation of the Polish National Catholic Church. Another consequence was the consecration of a Polish American Roman Catholic bishop, Bishop Paul Rhode of Chicago in 1908.

Like other immigrant groups, Polish Americans struggled over competing visions of the homeland. Poles in the United States often referred to their community as the “Fourth Partition.” Many of their institutions worked for the liberation and reunification of Poland as well as for the well-being of the immigrant community. This was especially true of the large national fraternals such as the Polish National Alliance and the Polish Roman Catholic Union, as well as for the U.S. branch of the gymnastic and paramilitary group the Polish Falcons (1887). Polish women organized their own ethnic organizations, including the Polish Women's Alliance (1898), spearheaded by Stefania Chmielinska. All of these organizations aided the Polish independence movement by any means they could. In 1918 these efforts proved successful; Poland regained its independence as a result of negotiated settlements after World War I.

By the end of the nineteenth century, Polonia constituted the core of an almost institutionally complete ethnic community, with the parishes providing the base for much of this community development, along with institutions such as fraternal organizations, newspapers, and schools. Most of the large national fraternals located their headquarters near the intersection of Milwaukee and Ashland Avenues with Division Street. This neighborhood, home to the parishes of St. Stanislaus Kostka and Holy Trinity, quickly developed as the national capital of the American Polonia.

The major Polish newspapers also opened offices here, such as the Dziennik Związkowy (Daily Alliance), Dziennik Chicagoski (Chicago Daily), Naród Polski (The Polish Nation), and Dziennik Zjednoczenia (Daily Union). Władysław Dyniewicz published the first Polish newspaper in Chicago, Gazeta Polska (Polish Gazette) in 1872. John Barzynski, brother of the pastor of St. Stanislaus Kostka Church, began publication of another Polish weekly, Gazeta Polska Katolicka (Polish Catholic Gazette) in 1874.

The parochial school provided another foundation for the creation and maintenance of the ethnic community. Catholic schools run by orders of Polish sisters such as the Felician Sisters, Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth, and others served Polonia. One Polish American order was founded in Chicago, the Franciscan Sisters of Blessed Kunegunda, by Josephine Dudzik (Sister Theresa) in 1894. These ethnic schools first taught classes exclusively in the Polish language, but quickly the archdiocese forced them to teach in both Polish and English. The main concern of the schools was the preservation of PolskoŜć or Polishness among immigrant children. Another concern was to prepare the children for life in the United States. In addition to parochial grammar schools, Polish Chicago developed Catholic high schools run both as independent institutions and as part of parish structures. In 1890 the Resurrectionists opened St. Stanislaus College, the first secondary school opened by the congregation in the United States. In 1930 the school was renamed Weber High School. In 1952 the Resurrectionists established Gordon Technical High School. Polish parishes, such as St. Joseph in the Back of the Yards, also opened high schools.

Text by: Dominic A. Pacyga

Source: http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/982.html

Helpful sites:

https://ipn.gov.pl/pl/publikacje/ksiazki/13084,Polonia-chicagowska-...

https://dziennikzwiazkowy.com/polonia/chicagowska-polonia-2017-jacy...

https://culture.pl/en/article/how-chicago-became-a-distinctly-polis...

https://news.wttw.com/2019/11/18/story-chicago-s-rise-distinctly-po...