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Polish Americans

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Americans of Polish birth or descent
Ethnic group
Polish Americans
Polscy Amerykanie
Americans with Polish ancestry by state according to the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey in 2019
Total population
Alone (one ancestry)
2,686,326 (2020 census)[1]
0.81% of the total US population

Alone or in combination
8,599,601 (2020 census)[1]
2.59% of the total US population
Regions with significant populations
Languages
Religion
Related ethnic groups

Polish Americans (Polish:Polscy Amerykanie) areAmericans who are of full or partialPolish origin. The Polish American population is well dispersed across the states. Only Illinois and New York contain more than 10.0% of the Polish American population, though neither state is over 15.0%.[citation needed] However, when viewed at the regional level, there is concentration around theGreat Lakes and theMid-Atlantic.

Poland has a long history ofrepublicanism going back to the establishment of the first national legislature, theSejm of the Kingdom of Poland, in 1386. This legislature became bicameral in 1493. Poland and Lithuania formed a federated state in 1569 with the establishment of thePolish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. In this commonwealth of two nations there was a joint legislature called theGeneral Sejm. Anelective monarchy was started in 1572. Influenced by the Constitution of the United States, the commonwealth enacted a written constitution called theConstitution of 3 May 1791.

In addition to political liberty, Poland has a long tradition ofreligious liberty. Statutes for the toleration of specific religious groups date to the 13th century. TheCompact of Warsaw, which was passed in 1573, codified religious tolerance for the nobility and burghers in the commonwealth. Polish Americans have been very active in religion, particularly Christianity and Judaism.

Polish Americans have demonstrated a strong interest in the sovereignty of Poland. During World War I, notable numbers of Polish Americans joined either theUnited States Armed Forces or theBlue Army with the goal of re-establishing an independent Poland. ThePolish American Congress was established during World War II to advocate in the United States for a sovereign Poland. The congress lobbied successfully for the admission of Poland to theNorth Atlantic Treaty Organization in 1999.

Polish Americans continue to produce and consume many of the foods from the old country. Festivals centered on food, religion, art, and patriotism are found in many locations throughout the United States. News media is produced in Polish and/or English. There are several museums as well.

History

[edit]
Main article:History of the Poles in the United States
Marker of immigration fromSilesia into Texas, located inIndianola, Texas

The history of Polish immigration to the United States can be divided into three stages, beginning with the first stage in the colonial era down to 1870, small numbers of Poles and Polish subjects came to America as individuals or in small family groups, and they quickly assimilated and did not form separate communities, with the exception ofPanna Maria, Texas founded in the 1850s. For instance, Polish settlers known as theJamestown Polish craftsmen came to theVirginia Colony as skilled craftsmen as early as 1608.[2][3] Some Jews from Poland even assimilated into cities which were Polish (and also other Slavic and sometimes additionally Jewish) bastions to conceal their Jewish identities.[4]

In the second stage from 1870 to 1914, Poles and Polish subjects formed a significant part of the wave of immigration fromGermany,Imperial Russia, andAustria Hungary. The Poles, particularly Polish Jews, came in family groups, settled in and/or blended into largely Polish neighborhoods and other Slavic bastions, and aspired to earn wages that were higher than what they could earn back in Europe and so many took the ample job opportunities for unskilled manual labor in industry and mining. The main Ethnically-Polish-American organizations were founded because of high Polish interest in theCatholic church,parochial schools, and local community affairs. Relatively few were politically active.

During the third stage from 1914 to present, the United States has seen mass emigration from Poland, and the coming of age of several generations of fully assimilated Polish Americans. Immigration from Poland has continued into the early 2000s and began to decline after Poland had joined the European Union in 2004. The income levels have gone up from well below average, to above average. Poles became active members of the liberalNew Deal Coalition from the 1930s to the 1960s, but since then, many have moved to the suburbs, and have become more conservative and vote less oftenDemocratic.[5]

Demographics

[edit]
See also:List of Polish Americans
Number of Polish Americans
(self-reported) as per U.S. Census
YearNumber
1900[6]
1,903,000
1970[7]
5,105,000
1980[8]
8,228,037
1990[9]
9,366,106
2000[10]
8,977,444
2010[11]
9,569,207
2020[12]
8,599,601

TheUnited States Census Bureau published an infographic in 2023 entitled Detailed Races and Ethnicities in the United States and Puerto Rico: 2020 Census. This data source showed that the number of Americans in 2020 who cited their ethnic group as Polish was 2,686,362 alone and 8,599,601 alone or in any combination.[13] The proportion of the former to the latter was 31.2%, thus indicating that a substantial majority were of mixed origin. The adjacent table shows the Polish American population going back to 1900.

While the Polish American population is dispersed across the union, there are four states of note.Illinois has the largest population both for the alone and combination categories. The alone population of 352,882 equaled 13.1% of the total alone in the United States in 2020. The alone or in any combination figure of 857,583 was equivalent to 10.0% of the national total. Also of note in Illinois is the high concentration of the Polish American population inCook County. 57.6% of the alone population in the state and 48.0% of the combination population were located in that county in 2020. Other counties with notable numbers wereDuPage,Will, andLake.

New York had the second largest Polish American population in the 2020 Census. The alone category summed to 274,580 while the combination category was 788,624. These figures equaled 10.2% and 9.2% of the national totals respectively. There are two nodes in the state.Erie County had the largest population with 58,949 alone and 147,201 in combination, making it the largest in the state and second largest in the nation. The other node consists of the five contiguous counties ofNew York,Kings,Queens,Nassau, andSuffolk.

Distribution of Polish Americans by county in 2018

The third highest ranking state isMichigan. Its alone population of 256,398 comprised 9.5% of the national figure in 2020. The combination population of 752,515 was 8.8% of the national total. The population is concentrated in the three contiguous counties ofMacomb,Wayne, andOakland. These three counties were the third, fourth, and fifth largest in the United States respectively. Their populations for both the alone and combination categories were close.

Pennsylvania had the fourth highest ranking population in 2020. Its alone population was 206,264 and its combination total was 710,565. The Polish American population is very dispersed in the commonwealth.Allegheny County had 12.3% of the alone and 14.6% of the combination population in Pennsylvania, lower ratios for the leading county compared to the top three states. Other counties of note wereLuzerne,Philadelphia,Bucks, andMontgomery.

Other states with 5% of the total Polish American population in either category wereFlorida,New Jersey,Wisconsin, andCalifornia.

Polish Language

[edit]
Year[14][15]Speakers
1910943,781
19201,077,392
1930965,899
1940801,680
1960581,936
1970419,912
1980820,647
1990723,483
2000649,649
2010608,333
2019510,430

TheUnited States Census Bureau began to count language use in its decennial census starting in 1890. In addition, the bureau conducts an annual service called theAmerican Community Survey which began estimating language use in 2005. The most recent publication of language use from this survey is dated 2019.[16] In that year 510,430 people over five years old reportedPolish as the language spoken at home. The adjacent table gives the historical figures for Polish language use in the United States. The peak year for Polish language in the United States was 1920 when 1.08 million people reported it as their language spoken at home.

At the state and local level several governments provide language service in Polish. TheIllinois Department of Human Services as well as theIllinois Department of Employment Security offer services in the language.[17][18] The City of Chicago provides language assistance in Polish.[19] TheNew York State Department of Labor provides services in Polish.[20] Local Law 30 of 2017 in New York City designated Polish as one of ten languages guaranteed interpretation and translation services for interaction with the city government.[21]

Communities

[edit]

Illinois:Chicago[22][23][24]

Maryland:Baltimore

Michigan:Detroit[25]

Nebraska:Omaha

New York: Buffalo,[26][27] New York City[28]

Ohio: Cleveland,[29] Toledo[30]

Pennsylvania:[31] Anthracite Coal Mining Region,[32] Philadelphia,[31] Pittsburgh

Texas:[33] Central, South

Wisconsin:[34] Milwaukee,[35] Stevens Point[36]

Religion

[edit]

Christianity andJudaism are the most common religions among Polish Americans. However, a small group ofLipka Tatars, originating from theBiałystok region, founded thePowers Street Mosque inBrooklyn in 1907.[37]

Christianity

[edit]
St. Stanislaus Kostka Church inChicago, Illinois, the city's first Polish parish

The Central Archives of American Polonia is a research center at the Orchard Lake Schools.[38] The archives compiles data about the history of Christianity among Polish Americans. Its General List of Polish Parishes counts 1.036Roman Catholic parishes of a Polish character that were established over the history of the United States. A portion of these parishes are no longer active. The first parish, Immaculate Conception, was established inPanna Maria, Texas in 1854.[39] The dioceses with the largest concentration are theArchdiocese of Chicago at 64, theDiocese of Buffalo at 50, theDiocese of Scranton at 49, and theArchdiocese of Detroit at 40. ThePolish Roman Catholic Union of America was instrumental in establishing many churches in the dioceses of Chicago, Detroit, and Buffalo.[40] The monumental scale of some of these urban churches led to the creation of a new genre of architecture known asPolish cathedral style. Parishes were established in rural areas such as farming communities and mining towns as well. The General List of Polish Parishes indicates that 177 parishes were established in Pennsylvania, 122 in New York, 118 in Michigan, 112 in Wisconsin, and 99 in Illinois.

Inside view ofSt. Stanislaus Church inSlavic Village inCleveland,Ohio

The General List of Polish Parishes shows that the most common names for the parishes established were Polish saints such asSt. Stanislaus,St. Casimir,St. Stanislaus Kostka, andSt. Adalbert.[41] Also common wereSacred Heart andSt. Joseph. However, the most popular wasSt. Mary including asOur Lady of Czestochowa.[42] Devotion to this form of St. Mary was confirmed by the opening of TheNational Shrine of Our Lady of Czestochowa in 1955. This shrine in Pennsylvania proved so popular that a larger facility was built in 1966.[43] Several statesmen and bishops have visited includingPope John Paul II.

The Order of Saint Paul the First Hermit, also known as the Pauline Fathers and Brothers, operates the National Shrine of Our Lady of Czestochowa. In addition, the monastic order serves several other parishes, primarily in New York.[44] Another religious order for men present in the United States is theCongregation of the Resurrection of Our Lord Jesus Christ, more commonly known as the Resurrectionists. As of 2025, the order is stationed at 21 parishes and universities, mostly in Illinois and California.[45] There is a related order for women known as the Sisters of the Resurrection of Our Lord Jesus Christ.[46] There are two orders of note in theFranciscan tradition as well. TheFelician Sisters arrived in the United States in 1874. Their expansive ministry encompasses education, health care, and social services.[47] The order founded and sponsors three institutions of higher education:Felician University,Madonna University, andVilla Maria College. TheOrder of Friars Minor Conventual, generally known as the Conventual Franciscan Friars, founded and operate the National Shrine of St. Maximilian Kolbe in Illinois.[48] In addition, the order serves theBasilica of St. Josaphat, the third church designated a basilica in the United States.[49]

Church of St. Casimir inSaint Paul, Minnesota, built in 1904

In Michigan the Orchard Lake Schools were established in 1885.[50] One of the schools was theSS. Cyril & Methodius Seminary which trained foreign-born priests for ministry to Polish-speaking Catholics in the United States. The seminary operated from 1885 to 2022.[51] The Archdiocese of Chicago offers Polish language services through its Polonia ministry.[52] As of 2025 there are 37 parishes in the diocese which offer masses in the Polish language and 38 schools which offer religious education in Polish.

Customs around the liturgical year remain common among Polish Americans.Wigilia is practiced atChristmas Eve whileswieconka is performed at churches onHoly Saturday.

Though the majority of Polish Americans remain loyal to the Catholic Church, a breakaway church called thePolish National Catholic Church was founded in 1897.[53] At that time Polish parishioners in Scranton believed that church leadership, then dominated by Irish bishops and priests, was lacking in Polish representation. At the beginning of 2025 the church consisted of 108 parishes of which 27 are in Pennsylvania and 13 are in New York.

Judaism

[edit]

World Agudath Israel was formed in Poland in 1912 by Jews who disagreed with the secular orientation of Zionism.Agudath Israel of America, also known as Agudas Yisroel or Agudah, was established in 1922.[54] This organization advocates forOrthodox Jews at all levels of government in the United States. It also provides social, educational, and youth services.

Government

[edit]
Main articles:Poland–United States relations andPolish-American vote
Further information:Category:American politicians of Polish descent

When drafting theConstitution of the United States, Thomas Jefferson was inspired by the religious tolerance of theWarsaw Confederation.[55]

The Congressional Poland Caucus is a congressional membership organization.[56] The caucus advocates for stronger U.S.-Poland relations around shared values and economic ties.[57]

Polish-Americans founded thePolish American Congress (PAC) in 1944 to support a free and sovereign Poland at the end ofWorld War II.[58] In 1948 it successfully lobbied the U.S. government to admit 140,000 Polish displaced persons, war victims, and veterans to the United States. During the communist era the congress organized humanitarian efforts to Poland. PAC encouraged the passage of the Support East European Democracy Act of 1989 which committed $800 million to Poland. The congress urged the admission of Poland into NATO which happened in 1999. The federation comprises six national membership organizations as of 2025:Polish Daily News,American Council for Polish Culture, Polish Army Veterans Association of America,Polish Falcons of America,Polish National Alliance, andPolish Roman Catholic Union of America.[59]

Military

[edit]

Two Polish volunteers,Casimir Pulaski andTadeusz Kościuszko, served in theContinental Army during theAmerican Revolutionary War. Casimir Pulaski created and led thePulaski's Legion of cavalry. He was mortally wounded at theSiege of Savannah.Fort Pulaski is named in his honor.[60] Tadeusz Kosciuszko designed and oversaw the construction of state-of-the-art fortifications, including those at West Point.[61] The National Monument Audit is an inventory of public monuments in the United States. It counts 51 monuments of Pulaski and 22 of Kosciuszko.[62]

During theAmerican Civil War the58th New York Infantry Regiment was known as the Polish Legion.

Polish American recruitmentWWI

Polish Americans who served in theUnited States Armed Forces duringWorld War I created three different veterans associations after the war. These associations merged in 1931 to form thePolish Legion of American Veterans.[63] Polish Americans who served in theBlue Army during World War I created the Polish Army Veterans Association of America in 1921.[64] Many of the soldiers in the Blue Army, also known as Haller's Army, were members of thePolish Falcons of America.[65] Poland regained its independence in 1918 and the Blue Army merged into thePolish Land Forces.

After the end of theCold War, theNational Guard created theState Partnership Program. TheIllinois National Guard has been partnered with thePolish Armed Forces since 1993.[66] TheUnited States Navy commissioned Naval Support Facility Redzikowo in 2020.[67] This facility supports theAegis Ashore missile defense system, which NATO announced as operational in 2024.[68] In 2023 theUnited States Army established its eighth garrison in Europe and first in Poland.[69] U.S. Army Garrison Poland is headquartered atCamp Kosciuszko.

Benefit Societies

[edit]

Fraternal benefit societies are mutual insurance companies whose profits are devoted to a specific social mission.[70] TheAmerican Fraternal Alliance is the umbrella organization forbenefit societies in the United States and Canada. There are several societies with a Polish American characteristic. The oldest is thePolish Roman Catholic Union of America, also known as PRCUA Life, which was founded in 1873.[71] As its name indicates, its original mission was to build Roman Catholic churches and schools with an emphasis on Polish traditions. ThePolish National Alliance of the United States of North America, often referred to as the PNA or Alliance, was established in 1880. It was founded to promote Polish independence and to integrate Polish immigrants into the civic culture of the United States.[72] Today both organizations offer scholarships and operate Polish language and dance schools.[73][74] Another benefit society is thePolish Falcons of America. This organization was started in 1887 but did not become a fraternal benefit society until 1928.[75] It emphasizes physical fitness and Polish patriotism due to its heritage in theSokol movement.

First Catholic Slovak Ladies Association, also known as FCSLA Life, is a benefit society focused on Catholic values and Slavic traditions that was founded in 1892.[76] It purchased both the Polish Union of U.S.A and the Polish Women's Alliance of America in 2017.[77][78]Catholic Financial Life is an amalgamation of many benefit societies. In 2017 it merged with Degree of Honor Protective Association which had purchased the Polish White Eagle Association in 2001.[79] TheKnights of Columbus, which was established in 1882 to unite Catholic men and to help families of the deceased, expanded into Poland in 2006.[80]

Culture

[edit]

American Council for Polish Culture is an alliance of Polish American clubs, associations, and institutes that was established in 1948.[81] The council is focused on promoting Polish culture, history, and traditions. There are 42 affiliate and supporting organizations as of 2025.[82]

Cuisine

[edit]

Kiełbasa is commonly marketed in the United States as Polish sausage. It comes in fresh and smoked varieties. In Chicago the sausage is the meat in the sandwich known asMaxwell Street Polish. Likewise, in Cleveland there is thePolish Boy.

Polish Jews brought thebagel to the United States. Christians eatpączki doughnuts before Lent. Other baked goods includebabka,rugelach,bialy, and placek.

Pierogi are stuffed dumplings that are shared with other Eastern European cuisines.Kluski are another type of dumplings.

Gołąbki andbigos are available sometimes in Polish American communities.

Festivals and Holidays

[edit]
Polish-American parade in New York City, 2017

Polish Fest in Milwaukee claims to be the largest Polish festival in the United States. The festival encompasses food and drink, music and dance, arts and crafts, genealogy, and religion.[83] It occurs in June and was started in 1982. Another festival vying for the title of the largest in the United States is theTaste of Polonia festival in Chicago. This festival includes food and beverage, music and dance, gambling, and carnival rides.[84] It began in 1980 and is held every Labor Day weekend. Just east of Chicago in Whiting, Indiana there isPierogi Fest. This annual food festival for Eastern European cuisine was first held in 1993.[85] One of the oldest cultural festivals, dating back to 1954, is the Syracuse Polish Festival. This festival focuses on cuisine and activities for children since the festival raises money for a scholarship fund.[86] The Polish Festival in Portland, Oregon began in 1993.[87]

Easter Monday isDyngus Day. This ancient holiday has been celebrated in South Bend since the 1950s.[88] The largest celebration occurs in the Buffalo metropolitan area. There is a parade, a run, music, folk dancers, food, and drink in the historic Polonia neighborhood as well as other venues in the city and its suburbs.[89] TheNational Shrine of Our Lady of Czestochowa holds its Polish American Festival & Country Fair near the feast day of its patroness at the end of August. This five-day celebration of culture and tradition was started in 1966.[90]

Polish Constitution Day Parade in Chicago, 1985

TheSeattle Polish Film Festival was founded in 1992 and is organized by the Seattle-Gdynia Sister City Association.[91] Another film festival is theNew York Polish Film Festival which was started in 2005.[92]

Constitution Day is a holiday that remembers theConstitution of 3 May 1791. This agreement codified the constitutional dual monarchy of thePolish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. After the collapse of Poland it became a rallying cry for the restoration of sovereignty. It became an official holiday in Poland in 1919 after the establishment of theSecond Polish Republic. However, the holiday was banned by Nazi and Soviet occupiers during World War II and by thePolish People's Republic.[93] It was restored as a holiday in 1990 after the end of communism. In the United States the oldest and largest celebration is the parade in Chicago which was started in 1891.[94]

Media

[edit]

Polvision is a Polish language television station that was founded in 1987.[95] It broadcasts throughout the Chicago metropolitan area.Dziennik Związkowy, also known as Polish Daily News, is a Polish language newspaper in Chicago that was started in 1908. Another Polish language newspaper isNowy Dziennik. It serves the New York City metropolitan area and was first published in 1971.[96] A bi-lingual news publication is Tygodnik Polski/The Polish Weekly which continues the tradition of a newspaper founded in 1904 in Detroit.[97] A digital bi-lingual news portal is the Polish News Online which began in 1997.[98] The Polish American Journal was started in 1911 and switched to printing only in English in 1948.[99] Am-Pol Eagle is an English language newspaper that was first published in 1960.[100] It serves the Buffalo metropolitan area.

Hippocrene Books is a publishing house with a specialty in Polish-interest books.[101]Ohio University Press has published 19 books in its Polish and Polish-American Studies Series.[102]

Sports

[edit]

TheU.S. Open Cup is the national championship for soccer. It was started in 1914. Two Polish American teams have won the championship:Chicago Falcons in 1953 andA.A.C. Eagles in 1990.[103]

TheNational Polish-American Sports Hall of Fame was founded in 1973 to recognize competitors in the field of sports. The majority of the inductees have been in baseball and American football.[104]

Architecture

[edit]
Basilica of St. Josaphat in Milwaukee is an example of the Polish Cathedral style of architecture.

Polish cathedral style refers to large churches built by Polish Americans that were equivalent in size to cathedrals but not necessarily cathedrals. These religious buildings were built according to architectural styles from different periods in Poland's history. This method of architecture is known ashistoricism. The largest number of examples of these churches are found in Chicago and Detroit.

In Milwaukee raised cottages are calledPolish flats.[105]

Polish settlers in Texas built houses with high-pitched roofs. The shadedveranda that was created by these roofs was a popular living space for the settlers. According to oral histories recorded from descendants, the verandas were used for "almost all daily activities from preparing meals to dressing animal hides."[106] The first house built by a Pole in Texas is the John Gawlik House which was constructed in 1858. The house is located in the central historic district of Panna Maria.[107][108]

Museums and Archives

[edit]
ThePolish Museum of America inChicago

ThePolish Museum of America in Chicago'sPolish Downtown was founded in 1935. It consists of a museum of Polish and Polish American artifacts, a library of books in both Polish and English, and an archives.[109] ThePolish Roman Catholic Union of America started the PMA and continues to sponsor it. Another sponsor is theMinistry of Culture and National Heritage of the Republic of Poland. ThePolish American Museum was established in 1977 and is located in Port Washington, New York. This museum focuses on military artifacts and folk art as its two partners are the Center for Military Studies and the Polish Art Center.[110] The Polish American Cultural Center, which is located in Philadelphia, is a museum of Polish history and culture.[111]

The Polish Heritage Center at Panna Maria is a museum dedicated to the first and oldest permanent Polish settlement in the United States.[112] This visitor center is located in thePanna Maria Historic District in Texas. A fifth museum of note is theKashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum located in Winona, Minnesota.Kashubians are a regional sub-culture from Poland who settled in Wisconsin and Minnesota.[113] The museum was established in 1979.

The Polish Music Center is an institute at theUSC Thornton School of Music.[114] It consists of a library and archives dedicated to classical music and folk dances from Poland. Cooperation with the Polish State Archives started in 2013.[115] Furthermore, the institute hosts concerts and initiated the annual Paderewski Festival in Paso Robles, California.[116]

See also

[edit]

Lists

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
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  3. ^Obst, Peter J. (2012-07-20)."Jamestown 1608 Marker".Poles in America Foundation. Retrieved2019-08-03.
  4. ^See the reference toAnusim. Additionally, refer to the similar case ofJohn Kerry's paternal grandfather, a non-Polish subject who immigrated toBoston and passed for aCzech-Austrian HungarianCatholic.
  5. ^Greene, Victor (1980)."Poles". InThernstrom, Stephan; Orlov, Ann;Handlin, Oscar (eds.).Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups.Harvard University Press. pp. 787–803.ISBN 0674375122.OCLC 1038430174.
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  7. ^Polish Americans, Status in an ethnic Community. by Helena Lopata, p. 89
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Sources and further reading

[edit]

Memory and historiography

[edit]
  • Jaroszynska-Kirchmann, Anna D., "The Polish American Historical Association: Looking Back, Looking Forward,"Polish American Studies, 65 (Spring 2008), 57–76.
  • Pietrusza, DavidToo Long Ago: A Childhood Memory. A Vanished World, Scotia (NY): Church and Reid Books, 2020.
  • Radzialowski, Thaddeus C. "The View From a Polish Ghetto. Some Observations on the First One Hundred Years in Detroit"Ethnicity 1#2 (July 1974): 125–150.online
  • Walaszek, Adam. "Has the" Salt-Water Curtain" Been Raised Up? Globalizing Historiography of Polish America."Polish American Studies 73.1 (2016): 47-67.
  • Wytrwal, Joseph Anthony (1969).Poles in American History and Tradition. Detroit: Endurance Press.OCLC 29523.
  • Zurawski, Joseph W. "Out of Focus: The Polish American Image in Film,"Polish American Studies (2013) 70#1 pp. 5–35in JSTOR
  • Zurawski, Joseph W. (1975).Polish American History and Culture: A Classified Bibliography. Chicago: Polish Museum of America.OCLC 1993061.

External links

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