St Marys High School - Salute Yearbook (New Baltimore, MI)

 - Class of 1946

Page 113 of 174

 

St Marys High School - Salute Yearbook (New Baltimore, MI) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 113 of 174
Page 113 of 174



St Marys High School - Salute Yearbook (New Baltimore, MI) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 112
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St Marys High School - Salute Yearbook (New Baltimore, MI) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 114
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Page 113 text:

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Page 112 text:

Polish Americans inhabit every one of the 48 states. You will find them among the farmers of Wis- consin and Minnesota, the miners of Pennsylvania and West Virginia, the lumberjacks of Washington and Oregon, the fruit-growers of Flar- ida and California, the ranchers of Texas and Montana, and especially among the factory workers of New York, Illinois and Michigan. Eight out of ten Polish Americans are most likely to live in New York, Pennsylvania, Illin ois, Michigan, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Ohio, Wisconsin and Connecticut --- the nine States in which about 86W of all P o l i s h Americans are found. The home address of five out of every ten is likely to be a street in Chicago, Detroit, Buf- falo, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Mil- waukee, Pittsburgh, New York. Hamtramck, Newark, New Jersey, Toledo, New Britain or Boston-the fourteen cities in which almost half of all Polish Americans reside. Only about 1 out of 10 Polish Americans lives on a farm or in a small village. Wisconsin, Michigan, New York, Pennsylvania, Minnesota and Connecticut are his favorite agricultural regions, each of the first three claiming over 30,000 farmers. Polish - American farmers have won an enviable record in New England, reclaiming hundreds of abandoned farms. Others, in the The fund Where the Politfll 14mericanA five Middle West, hold high reputation for food-growing skill. Polish American miners, as yet largely neglected by chroniclers. play an important role in the coal and iron industry. The Pennsylvania Patch districts contain rich ore for the historian as well as the in- dustrialist. Urban Polish Americans are en- gaged in practically all industries- manufacturing, steel, textile, leather. refining, meat, food and transporta- tion. Many are in business and the professions. In some cities, like Chicago, Detroit, and Buffalo, they form sizable proportions of the pop- ulation. They support numerous organizations and institutions. They are vocal in local politics. Their children attend parochial and pub- lic schools. Hamtramck is perhaps the clas- sical example of a Polish American urban community. Surrounded by Detroit, it is inhabited largely by Polish Americans who guard their city's political autonomy with jeal- ous love. Many of Hamtramclds business places bid for attention in English and Polish. Almost every household has at least one member belonging to a political or social club or a fraternal benefit society. But whether in the city, on the farm or in the mine, Polish Amer- icans are today an integral living part of America, conscious of their day-to-day achievements and con- tributions toward the building of a better America, J: Aan Jenn tl



Page 114 text:

PoliAk-lmerican The first Poles came to Amer- ica in 1608 together with the first white women to reach James- town . . . Polish artisans helped lay the foundations of American industry by building the first glass, tar and soap works in Virginia . . . In 1619 the Polonians resident in Virginia struck a pioneer blow for American demo- cracy by their successful demand for equal civic rights . . . An unidentified Polish youth in 1643 hailed Father Isaac Joques on the streets of New Amster- dam as a martyr of Jesus Christ . . . Upon the request of the Dutch, Dr. Charles Curtius established the first Latin School in New Amsterdam 1New Yorkj . . . Albert Zaborowski was commissioned the first justice of the peace in Upper Bergen County, New Jersey, in 1682 . . . His descendants, the Zabriskies, pioneered several New Jersey communities . . . Anthony Sandusky was one of the first white men to push beyond the Alleghenies about the middle of the eighteenth century . . . The Sadowski, or San- dusky, brothers were among the early pioneers of Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee . . . Charles Blasko- wicz draughted the first reliable map of The New Eng- land coast in 1762 . . . By 1776 nearly every colony could boast of being, or of having been. the haven of a Polish immigrant . . . TRAIL BLAZERS 11608 - 17763 Iii torical During the Revolution, Thad- deus Kosciuszko, The Father of the American Artillery , was the first prominent alien to join the American Patriots . . . His engineering skill ensured the victory at Saratoga in 1777, the turning point in the Revolution . . . Casimir Pulaski, The Father of the American Caval- ry , helped save Charleston in 1779 . . . Peter Stad- nitski, called by Jefferson, the principal broker of the United States , assisted in the financial recon- struction of the nation in the 1780's . . . In the War of 1812, in which Lt. Jan Kamiriski and Lt. Stefan Laske served honorably, Kosciuszko's book on The Manoeuvers of the Horse Artillery published in 1808 was used as the official manual for the training of American artillery officers . . . F. Piotrowicz and Felix Wardzinski fought for Texan Independence in the 1830's . . . In the Mexican War of 1846 Capt. Charles Raidziminski and Capt. Napoleon Kosciolow- ski won distinction . . . Dr. Paul Wierzbicki helped in the winning and building of California . . . During the Civil War, the first officially recorded fatality was Thaddeus Strawinski who fell in the attack on Fort Sumter in January 1861 . . . Gen. Vladimir Krzyianowski distinguished himself at Gettysburg in 1863, and eventually became the first governor of Alaska . . . CHAMPIONS of DEMOCRACY 11776 - 18657 .J4nfAony .!6alu,arz

Suggestions in the St Marys High School - Salute Yearbook (New Baltimore, MI) collection:

St Marys High School - Salute Yearbook (New Baltimore, MI) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

St Marys High School - Salute Yearbook (New Baltimore, MI) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 135

1946, pg 135

St Marys High School - Salute Yearbook (New Baltimore, MI) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 28

1946, pg 28

St Marys High School - Salute Yearbook (New Baltimore, MI) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 7

1946, pg 7

St Marys High School - Salute Yearbook (New Baltimore, MI) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 144

1946, pg 144

St Marys High School - Salute Yearbook (New Baltimore, MI) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 81

1946, pg 81


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