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History of Ukrainians in Baltimore

The history of Ukrainians in Baltimore dates back to the mid-19th century. Baltimore, Maryland and Washington, D.C. have the largest Ukrainian-American communities in the Mid-Atlantic.[1]

Demographics edit

 
St. Michael's, a Ukrainian Catholic parish in Baltimore, January 2016.
 
Ze Mean Bean Café, Fell's Point, June 2014.
 
National Slavic Museum in Fell's Point, June 2014.
 
Ukrainian-American Youth Association, Inc. in Patterson Park, January 2016.
 
Alexander Onischuk, a chess grandmaster.

The Ukrainian community in the Baltimore metropolitan area numbered 10,806 as of 2000, making up 0.4% of the area's population.[2] In the same year, Baltimore city's Ukrainian population was 1,567, which is 0.2% of the city's population.[3]

In 1920, 151 foreign-born White people in Baltimore spoke the Ukrainian language, then referred to as the Ruthenian language.[4]

In 1940, 14,670 immigrants from the Soviet Union lived in Baltimore, many of whom were of Ukrainian descent. These immigrants comprised 24.1% of the city's foreign-born white population.[5]

In 2013, an estimated 808 Ukrainian-Americans resided in Baltimore city, 0.1% of the population.[6]

As of September 2014, immigrants from Ukraine were the twentieth largest foreign-born population in Baltimore.[7]

History edit

19th century edit

Ukrainians began settling in Baltimore during the 1880s, mostly in East Baltimore and Southeast Baltimore and especially in the Highlandtown neighborhood.[8] Other Ukrainians settled in Washington Hill and Fell's Point, where there was a Ukrainian store.[9] Most of these immigrants came from Western Ukraine and were Catholic. By the 1890s, Ukrainian Catholic priests were traveling from Pennsylvania to Baltimore to serve the Ukrainian Catholic community. St. Michael the Archangel Ukrainian Catholic Church was founded as a parish in 1893 and the church was built in 1912.[10]

While many immigrants from Western Ukraine identify simply as Ukrainian Americans, others identify as Rusyn American. Rusyns also sometimes describe themselves as Carpatho-Rusyns, Carpatho-Russians or Ruthenians. Some of the Western Ukrainians that established St. Michael the Archangel Ukrainian Catholic Church identified as Rusyns. Rusyns also helped establish Sts. Peter & Paul Ukrainian Catholic Church. Many Rusyn and Western Ukrainians have settled in the neighborhoods of Fell's Point[11] and Patterson Park. Western Ukrainians began immigrating to Baltimore during the 1880s.[12]

20th century edit

During the early 1900s, many Ukrainian immigrants to Baltimore worked for steel- and glass-makers.[13]

From the 1920s to the 1970s, the Ukrainian American Citizen's Club and Ukrainian National Home was the focal point of the Ukrainian-American community in Baltimore. Coalescing as an informal association in the 1920s, the club was legally incorporated in 1931. The club owned a property at 3101 O'Donnell Street, which became the Ukrainian National Home. The home included a school for the Ukrainian language and culture, the Vasile Avramenko School of Ukrainian Dancing, the Ukrainian American Citizen's Club Choir, and a softball team for Ukrainian-Americans. The space was also used by multiple community organizations and after World War II it was used as accommodations for displaced refugees.[14]

By the 1940s, the Ukrainian community in Highlandtown numbered around 1,200.[8]

Many Ukrainians fled to Baltimore from the 1930s to the 1950s in order to escape political persecution, labor camps, the Holodomor famine, or deportation to Siberia. Every year Ukrainian refugees and their children and grandchildren celebrate their good fortune on Thanksgiving Day by giving a toast and playing a game of football in Patterson Park.[15] On 29 May 2008, the city of Baltimore held a candlelight commemoration for the Holodomor at the War Memorial Plaza in front of City Hall. This ceremony was part of the larger international journey of the "International Holodomor Remembrance Torch", which began in Kyiv and made its way through thirty-three countries. Twenty-two other US cities were also visited during the tour. Then-Mayor Sheila Dixon presided over the ceremony and declared 29 May to be "Ukrainian Genocide Remembrance Day in Baltimore". She referred to the Holodomor as "among the worst cases of man's inhumanity towards man".[16]

In 1969, the Ukrainian American Citizen's Club granted usage and maintenance of the Ukrainian National Home to the Dnipro Ukrainian Club.[14]

Beginning in the 1970s, large numbers of Ukrainian Jews immigrated to Baltimore in order to escape antisemitism in the then Soviet Union. In the early 1980s, about 70% of the Soviet Jews in Baltimore had immigrated from the then Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. One-third came from Odesa, Baltimore's sister-city at the time.[17]

Ze Mean Bean Café in Fell's Point opened in 1995. It is a restaurant which offers Ukrainian cuisine, as well as other Slavic and Eastern European fare.[18] The restaurant was founded by Yvonne Dornic as an ode to Ivan Dornic, her Czechoslovakian-born Carpatho-Rusyn father.[19]

21st century edit

The National Slavic Museum opened in 2012. The museum focuses on the Slavic history of Baltimore, including Baltimore's Ukrainian history.[20]

In light of the 2014 Ukrainian revolution and the Russian intervention in Crimea, Ukrainians in Baltimore have mobilized to support the pro-Ukrainian cause.[21][22]

The Lemko House, an apartment complex on South Ann Street, provides housing for Eastern European immigrants. Founded in 1983 by Ivan Dornic, an Eastern Rite priest, the complex is named after Dornic's ethnic group, the Lemkos. The Lemkos are a Rusyn ethnic group inhabiting Lemkivshchyna, a part of Transcarpathia that spans parts of Slovakia, Poland, and Ukraine. Lemko House has opened its doors to low-income residents of any ethnicity, but is still home to many Slavic and Eastern European immigrants.[23]

Little Ukrainian Village edit

A corridor of Baltimore's Patterson Park neighborhood is referred to by locals as "The Little Ukrainian Village in Baltimore" and "Little Ukraine." The village is home to St. Michael the Archangel Ukrainian Catholic Church and Baltimore's Ukrainian-American festival, as well as organizations for Ukrainians, such as the SelfReliance Baltimore Federal Credit Union, the Ukrainian-American Youth Association, and the Dnipro Ukrainian Club, a sports club and cultural organization.[1]

The Ukrainian Festival was founded in 1976 and is organized by the Baltimore Ukrainian Festival Committee, a non-profit affiliated with the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America (UCCA). The festival lasts two days and features traditional Ukrainian music, dancing, crafts, and cuisine.[1][24]

Notable Ukrainian-Americans from Baltimore edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Baltimore's Ukrainian-Americans entice visitors". The Washington Examiner. Retrieved 2014-03-13.
  2. ^ "Table DP-1. Profile of General Demographic Characteristics: 2000" (PDF). 2000 United States Census. Retrieved 2014-02-13.
  3. ^ "Social Statistics Baltimore, Maryland". Infoplease. Retrieved 2014-12-05.
  4. ^ Carpenter, Niles (1927). Immigrants and their children, 1920. A study based on census statistics relative to the foreign born and the native white of foreign or mixed parentage. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office. p. 380. Retrieved 2014-11-25.
  5. ^ Durr, Kenneth D. (1998). "Why we are troubled": white working-class politics in Baltimore, 1940-1980. Washington, D.C.: American University. p. 23. Retrieved 2015-05-31.
  6. ^ "2013 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates". American FactFinder. Archived from the original on 2020-02-12. Retrieved 2015-03-17.
  7. ^ (PDF). WBAL-TV. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-10-30. Retrieved 2014-10-31.
  8. ^ a b American Guide Series (1940). Maryland: A Guide to the Old Line State. United States: Federal Writers' Project. ISBN 0403021715. OCLC 814094.
  9. ^ Baum, Howell S. (1997). The Organization of Hope: Communities Planning Themselves. Albany, New York: State University of New York Press. p. 80. ISBN 0-7914-3193-2. Retrieved February 13, 2014.
  10. ^ Arnett, Earl; Brugger, Robert J.; Papenfuse, Edward C. (1999). Maryland: A New Guide to the Old Line State. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 322. ISBN 0-8018-5979-4. Retrieved February 13, 2014.
  11. ^ Yates, Francesca (2005). Baltimore, Maryland: A Photographic Portrait. Rockport, Massachusetts: Twin Light Publishers, Inc. ISBN 1-885435-54-1. Retrieved February 13, 2014.
  12. ^ Bell, Madison Smartt (2007). Charm City: A Walk Through Baltimore. New York City: Crown Journeys. ISBN 9780307342065. Retrieved February 13, 2014.
  13. ^ "A Philadelphia Ukrainian institution has stood strong long before Trump's impeachment put Ukraine in the spotlight". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 2020-08-25.
  14. ^ a b "Ukrainian American Citizens Club (Baltimore, Md.) Records". The Ukrainian History and Education Center. Retrieved 2020-08-25.
  15. ^ "Toasting tradition in the park". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2015-05-10.
  16. ^ Berg, Tabitha (6 June 2008). "International Holodomor Remembrance Torch in Baltimore Commemorates Ukrainian Genocide". eNewsChannels. Retrieved 2014-03-13.
  17. ^ Jacobs, Dan Norman; Paul, Ellen Frankel (1981). Studies of the Third Wave: Recent Migration of Soviet Jews to the United States. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, Inc. ISBN 0865311439. Retrieved 2014-03-13. According to figures from national HIAS, the percentage of Ukrainians in the national population of emigrés is almost exactly the same as in the Baltimore contingent, i.e., about 70%. This fact is of considerable importance because the Ukraine has been (and still is) an area of endemic anti-Semitism with deep roots in the past. In recent years, some of the most vicious examples of blatant anti-Semitic literature--some of it so offensive that it was eventually withdrawn--have been published by Ukrainian authors. As will be seen later, the presence of anti-Semitism is a major factor in the decision to emigrate.
  18. ^ "Baltimore's Favorite Old World Restaurant Debuts Hot New Look Inspired by Three Generations of Family-Owned Ze Mean Bean Café". Marketwired. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  19. ^ Patterson, Kathy Wielech; Patterson, Neal (2014). Baltimore Chef's Table: Extraordinary Recipes from Charm City and the Surrounding Counties. Lanham, Maryland: Lyons Press. p. 35. ISBN 9781493010530. Retrieved 2016-12-09.
  20. ^ Pamela Wood (June 16, 2013). "Slavic heritage celebrated at museum dedication". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2014-10-31.
  21. ^ "For Baltimore Ukrainian community, events a world away hit home". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2014-03-05.
  22. ^ "Baltimore's Ukrainians worry amid overseas crisis". WBAL-TV. Retrieved 2014-03-05.
  23. ^ "Searching for traces of Eastern Europe on a walking tour of Baltimore". The Calvert Journal. Retrieved 2020-08-25.
  24. ^ "Enjoy a Nostalgic Trip Back to the 2013 Baltimore Ukrainian Festival". UkrainianFestival.net. Retrieved 2020-08-25.

Further reading edit

  • Basarab, Stephen; Fenchak, Paul; Sushko, Wolodymyr C; Ukrainian Education Association of Maryland. "The Ukrainians of Maryland", Ukrainian Education Association of Maryland, 1977.
  • Ukrainian Congress Committee of America, Baltimore Branch (Maryland), Records, 1965-1966.

External links edit

  • Baltimore Ukrainian Festival
  • Baltimore Ukrainians react to plane crash
  • Dnipro Ukrainian Club
  • Percentage of Ukrainians in Baltimore, MD by Zip Code
  • SelfReliance Baltimore Federal Credit Union
  • Ze Mean Bean Café

history, ukrainians, baltimore, history, ukrainians, baltimore, dates, back, 19th, century, baltimore, maryland, washington, have, largest, ukrainian, american, communities, atlantic, contents, demographics, history, 19th, century, 20th, century, 21st, century. The history of Ukrainians in Baltimore dates back to the mid 19th century Baltimore Maryland and Washington D C have the largest Ukrainian American communities in the Mid Atlantic 1 Contents 1 Demographics 2 History 2 1 19th century 2 2 20th century 2 3 21st century 3 Little Ukrainian Village 4 Notable Ukrainian Americans from Baltimore 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDemographics edit nbsp St Michael s a Ukrainian Catholic parish in Baltimore January 2016 nbsp Ze Mean Bean Cafe Fell s Point June 2014 nbsp National Slavic Museum in Fell s Point June 2014 nbsp Ukrainian American Youth Association Inc in Patterson Park January 2016 nbsp Alexander Onischuk a chess grandmaster The Ukrainian community in the Baltimore metropolitan area numbered 10 806 as of 2000 making up 0 4 of the area s population 2 In the same year Baltimore city s Ukrainian population was 1 567 which is 0 2 of the city s population 3 In 1920 151 foreign born White people in Baltimore spoke the Ukrainian language then referred to as the Ruthenian language 4 In 1940 14 670 immigrants from the Soviet Union lived in Baltimore many of whom were of Ukrainian descent These immigrants comprised 24 1 of the city s foreign born white population 5 In 2013 an estimated 808 Ukrainian Americans resided in Baltimore city 0 1 of the population 6 As of September 2014 immigrants from Ukraine were the twentieth largest foreign born population in Baltimore 7 History edit19th century edit Ukrainians began settling in Baltimore during the 1880s mostly in East Baltimore and Southeast Baltimore and especially in the Highlandtown neighborhood 8 Other Ukrainians settled in Washington Hill and Fell s Point where there was a Ukrainian store 9 Most of these immigrants came from Western Ukraine and were Catholic By the 1890s Ukrainian Catholic priests were traveling from Pennsylvania to Baltimore to serve the Ukrainian Catholic community St Michael the Archangel Ukrainian Catholic Church was founded as a parish in 1893 and the church was built in 1912 10 While many immigrants from Western Ukraine identify simply as Ukrainian Americans others identify as Rusyn American Rusyns also sometimes describe themselves as Carpatho Rusyns Carpatho Russians or Ruthenians Some of the Western Ukrainians that established St Michael the Archangel Ukrainian Catholic Church identified as Rusyns Rusyns also helped establish Sts Peter amp Paul Ukrainian Catholic Church Many Rusyn and Western Ukrainians have settled in the neighborhoods of Fell s Point 11 and Patterson Park Western Ukrainians began immigrating to Baltimore during the 1880s 12 20th century edit During the early 1900s many Ukrainian immigrants to Baltimore worked for steel and glass makers 13 From the 1920s to the 1970s the Ukrainian American Citizen s Club and Ukrainian National Home was the focal point of the Ukrainian American community in Baltimore Coalescing as an informal association in the 1920s the club was legally incorporated in 1931 The club owned a property at 3101 O Donnell Street which became the Ukrainian National Home The home included a school for the Ukrainian language and culture the Vasile Avramenko School of Ukrainian Dancing the Ukrainian American Citizen s Club Choir and a softball team for Ukrainian Americans The space was also used by multiple community organizations and after World War II it was used as accommodations for displaced refugees 14 By the 1940s the Ukrainian community in Highlandtown numbered around 1 200 8 Many Ukrainians fled to Baltimore from the 1930s to the 1950s in order to escape political persecution labor camps the Holodomor famine or deportation to Siberia Every year Ukrainian refugees and their children and grandchildren celebrate their good fortune on Thanksgiving Day by giving a toast and playing a game of football in Patterson Park 15 On 29 May 2008 the city of Baltimore held a candlelight commemoration for the Holodomor at the War Memorial Plaza in front of City Hall This ceremony was part of the larger international journey of the International Holodomor Remembrance Torch which began in Kyiv and made its way through thirty three countries Twenty two other US cities were also visited during the tour Then Mayor Sheila Dixon presided over the ceremony and declared 29 May to be Ukrainian Genocide Remembrance Day in Baltimore She referred to the Holodomor as among the worst cases of man s inhumanity towards man 16 In 1969 the Ukrainian American Citizen s Club granted usage and maintenance of the Ukrainian National Home to the Dnipro Ukrainian Club 14 Beginning in the 1970s large numbers of Ukrainian Jews immigrated to Baltimore in order to escape antisemitism in the then Soviet Union In the early 1980s about 70 of the Soviet Jews in Baltimore had immigrated from the then Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic One third came from Odesa Baltimore s sister city at the time 17 Ze Mean Bean Cafe in Fell s Point opened in 1995 It is a restaurant which offers Ukrainian cuisine as well as other Slavic and Eastern European fare 18 The restaurant was founded by Yvonne Dornic as an ode to Ivan Dornic her Czechoslovakian born Carpatho Rusyn father 19 21st century edit The National Slavic Museum opened in 2012 The museum focuses on the Slavic history of Baltimore including Baltimore s Ukrainian history 20 In light of the 2014 Ukrainian revolution and the Russian intervention in Crimea Ukrainians in Baltimore have mobilized to support the pro Ukrainian cause 21 22 The Lemko House an apartment complex on South Ann Street provides housing for Eastern European immigrants Founded in 1983 by Ivan Dornic an Eastern Rite priest the complex is named after Dornic s ethnic group the Lemkos The Lemkos are a Rusyn ethnic group inhabiting Lemkivshchyna a part of Transcarpathia that spans parts of Slovakia Poland and Ukraine Lemko House has opened its doors to low income residents of any ethnicity but is still home to many Slavic and Eastern European immigrants 23 Little Ukrainian Village editA corridor of Baltimore s Patterson Park neighborhood is referred to by locals as The Little Ukrainian Village in Baltimore and Little Ukraine The village is home to St Michael the Archangel Ukrainian Catholic Church and Baltimore s Ukrainian American festival as well as organizations for Ukrainians such as the SelfReliance Baltimore Federal Credit Union the Ukrainian American Youth Association and the Dnipro Ukrainian Club a sports club and cultural organization 1 The Ukrainian Festival was founded in 1976 and is organized by the Baltimore Ukrainian Festival Committee a non profit affiliated with the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America UCCA The festival lasts two days and features traditional Ukrainian music dancing crafts and cuisine 1 24 Notable Ukrainian Americans from Baltimore editJoseph H Flom a lawyer and pioneer of mergers and acquisitions Jacob Glushakow a painter known for his keen observations of life in the city of Baltimore Philip H Goodman the 42nd Mayor of the City of Baltimore and a member of the Maryland Senate Joseph Meyerhoff a businessman fundraiser and philanthropist Alexander Onischuk a chess grandmaster Nikolai Volkoff a professional wrestler See also edit nbsp Ukraine portal nbsp Baltimore portalUkrainian Americans History of the Russians in Baltimore National Slavic MuseumReferences edit a b c Baltimore s Ukrainian Americans entice visitors The Washington Examiner Retrieved 2014 03 13 Table DP 1 Profile of General Demographic Characteristics 2000 PDF 2000 United States Census Retrieved 2014 02 13 Social Statistics Baltimore Maryland Infoplease Retrieved 2014 12 05 Carpenter Niles 1927 Immigrants and their children 1920 A study based on census statistics relative to the foreign born and the native white of foreign or mixed parentage Washington D C United States Government Printing Office p 380 Retrieved 2014 11 25 Durr Kenneth D 1998 Why we are troubled white working class politics in Baltimore 1940 1980 Washington D C American University p 23 Retrieved 2015 05 31 2013 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates American FactFinder Archived from the original on 2020 02 12 Retrieved 2015 03 17 The Role of Immigrants in Growing Baltimore Recommendations to Retain and Attract New Americans PDF WBAL TV Archived from the original PDF on 2014 10 30 Retrieved 2014 10 31 a b American Guide Series 1940 Maryland A Guide to the Old Line State United States Federal Writers Project ISBN 0403021715 OCLC 814094 Baum Howell S 1997 The Organization of Hope Communities Planning Themselves Albany New York State University of New York Press p 80 ISBN 0 7914 3193 2 Retrieved February 13 2014 Arnett Earl Brugger Robert J Papenfuse Edward C 1999 Maryland A New Guide to the Old Line State Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press p 322 ISBN 0 8018 5979 4 Retrieved February 13 2014 Yates Francesca 2005 Baltimore Maryland A Photographic Portrait Rockport Massachusetts Twin Light Publishers Inc ISBN 1 885435 54 1 Retrieved February 13 2014 Bell Madison Smartt 2007 Charm City A Walk Through Baltimore New York City Crown Journeys ISBN 9780307342065 Retrieved February 13 2014 A Philadelphia Ukrainian institution has stood strong long before Trump s impeachment put Ukraine in the spotlight The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved 2020 08 25 a b Ukrainian American Citizens Club Baltimore Md Records The Ukrainian History and Education Center Retrieved 2020 08 25 Toasting tradition in the park The Baltimore Sun Retrieved 2015 05 10 Berg Tabitha 6 June 2008 International Holodomor Remembrance Torch in Baltimore Commemorates Ukrainian Genocide eNewsChannels Retrieved 2014 03 13 Jacobs Dan Norman Paul Ellen Frankel 1981 Studies of the Third Wave Recent Migration of Soviet Jews to the United States Boulder Colorado Westview Press Inc ISBN 0865311439 Retrieved 2014 03 13 According to figures from national HIAS the percentage of Ukrainians in the national population of emigres is almost exactly the same as in the Baltimore contingent i e about 70 This fact is of considerable importance because the Ukraine has been and still is an area of endemic anti Semitism with deep roots in the past In recent years some of the most vicious examples of blatant anti Semitic literature some of it so offensive that it was eventually withdrawn have been published by Ukrainian authors As will be seen later the presence of anti Semitism is a major factor in the decision to emigrate Baltimore s Favorite Old World Restaurant Debuts Hot New Look Inspired by Three Generations of Family Owned Ze Mean Bean Cafe Marketwired Retrieved 2014 08 12 Patterson Kathy Wielech Patterson Neal 2014 Baltimore Chef s Table Extraordinary Recipes from Charm City and the Surrounding Counties Lanham Maryland Lyons Press p 35 ISBN 9781493010530 Retrieved 2016 12 09 Pamela Wood June 16 2013 Slavic heritage celebrated at museum dedication The Baltimore Sun Retrieved 2014 10 31 For Baltimore Ukrainian community events a world away hit home The Baltimore Sun Retrieved 2014 03 05 Baltimore s Ukrainians worry amid overseas crisis WBAL TV Retrieved 2014 03 05 Searching for traces of Eastern Europe on a walking tour of Baltimore The Calvert Journal Retrieved 2020 08 25 Enjoy a Nostalgic Trip Back to the 2013 Baltimore Ukrainian Festival UkrainianFestival net Retrieved 2020 08 25 Further reading editBasarab Stephen Fenchak Paul Sushko Wolodymyr C Ukrainian Education Association of Maryland The Ukrainians of Maryland Ukrainian Education Association of Maryland 1977 Ukrainian Congress Committee of America Baltimore Branch Maryland Records 1965 1966 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ukrainian diaspora in Baltimore nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lemkos in Baltimore Baltimore Ukrainian Festival Baltimore Ukrainians react to plane crash Dnipro Ukrainian Club Percentage of Ukrainians in Baltimore MD by Zip Code SelfReliance Baltimore Federal Credit Union The Ukrainians of Maryland Ze Mean Bean Cafe Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Ukrainians in Baltimore amp oldid 1118803684, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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