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Wikipedia

Polish Americans

Polish Americans (Polish: Polonia amerykańska) are Americans who either have total or partial Polish ancestry, or are citizens of the Republic of Poland. There are an estimated 8.81 million self-identified Polish Americans, representing about 2.67% of the U.S. population, according to the 2021 American Community Survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau.[1] Polish Americans are the second-largest Central European ethnic group after German Americans, and the eighth largest ethnic group overall in the United States.

Polish Americans
Polonia amerykańska
Americans with Polish Ancestry by state according to the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey in 2019
Total population
8,810,275 (2.7%) alone or in combination

2,744,941 (0.8%) Polish alone

U.S. Census ACS 2021 estimates, self-reported[1][2]
Regions with significant populations
Northeast (New York · New Jersey · Maryland · Connecticut · Massachusetts · Pennsylvania (Luzerne County and Lackawanna County))
Midwest (Michigan · Illinois · Wisconsin · Ohio · Minnesota · Indiana · North Dakota  · Nebraska  · Iowa (Sioux City)  · Some in Kansas  · Missouri)  · California  · Growing in Arizona · Florida · Colorado
Languages
English (American English dialects· Polish
Religion
Predominantly Roman Catholicism · Protestantism · Judaism[3]
Related ethnic groups
Polish diaspora · Polish Canadians · Polish Jews

The first eight Polish immigrants to British America came to the Jamestown colony in 1608, twelve years before the Pilgrims arrived in Massachusetts. Two Polish volunteers, Casimir Pulaski and Tadeusz Kościuszko, led armies in the Revolutionary War and are remembered as American heroes. Overall, around 2.2 million Poles and Polish subjects immigrated into the United States between 1820 and 1914, chiefly after national insurgencies and famine.[4] They included former Polish citizens of Roman Catholic, Protestant, Jewish or other minority descent. Exact immigration figures are unknown. Many immigrants were classified as "Russian", "German" or "Austrian" by the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service as many former territories of Poland were under German, Austrian-Hungarian and Russian control between the late 18th and early 20th century. Complicating the U.S. Census figures further is the high proportion of Polish Americans who married people of other national descent. In 1940, about 50 percent married other American ethnics and a study in 1988 found that 54% of Polish Americans were of mixed ancestry from three generations or longer. The Polish American Cultural Center places a figure of Americans who have some Polish ancestry at 19–20 million.

In 2000, 667,414 Americans over five years old reported Polish as the language spoken at home, which is about 1.4% of the census groups who speak a language other than English or 0.25% of the U.S. population.

History

Polish speakers in the U.S.
Year
Speakers
1910a
943,781
1920a
1,077,392
1930a
965,899
1940a
801,680
1960a
581,936
1970a
419,912
1980[5]
820,647
1990[6]
723,483
2000[7]
667,414
2011[8]
607,531
^a Foreign-born white population only[9]
 
Tadeusz Kościuszko was a Polish military engineer and statesman who served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War. He designed and oversaw the construction of fortifications, including those at West Point, New York.
 
Kazimierz Pułaski was a Polish nobleman and military commander who fought in the American Revolution, he is credited with saving the life of George Washington at the Battle of Brandywine.

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 of Panna Maria. Texas founded in the 1850s. For instance, Polish settlers came to the Virginia Colony as skilled craftsmen as early as 1608.[10][11] Some Jews from Poland even assimilated into cities which were Polish (and also other Slavic, and sometimes additionally Jewish) bastions in order to conceal their Jewish identities.[12]

In the second stage from 1870 to 1914, Poles and Polish subjects formed a significant part of the wave of immigration from Germany, Imperial Russia, and Austria Hungary. The Poles and Polish Jews in particular came in family groups, settled in and/or blended into largely Polish neighborhoods and other Slavic bastions, and aspired to earn relatively high wages compared to what they could earn back in Europe (thus why 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 the Catholic 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 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 liberal New 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 often Democratic.[13] Outside of Republican and Democratic politics, politics such as those of Agudath Israel of America have heavily involved Polish-Jewish Americans.

Demographics

Number of Polish Americans
(self-reported) as per U.S. Census
Year Number
1900[14]
1,903,000
1970[15]
5,105,000
1980[16]
8,228,037
1990[17]
9,366,106
2000[18]
8,977,444
2010[19]
9,569,207
2020[1]
8,810,275

Helena Lopata (1976) argues that Poles differed from most other ethnic groups in America in several ways. They did not plan to remain permanently and become "Americanized." Instead, they came temporarily to earn money, invest, and wait for the right opportunity to return. Their intention was to ensure a desirable social status in the old world for themselves. However, many of the temporary migrants decided to become permanent Americans.

Many found manual labor jobs in the coal mines of Pennsylvania and the heavy industries (steel mills, iron foundries, slaughterhouses, oil and sugar refineries), of the Great Lakes cities of Chicago, Pittsburgh, Detroit, Buffalo, Milwaukee, Cleveland, and Toledo.

 
Polish-American grocery, 1922, Detroit, Michigan

The U.S. Census asked Polish immigrants to specify Polish as their native language beginning in Chicago in 1900, allowing the government to enumerate them as an individual nationality when there was no Polish nation-state.[20] No distinction is made in the American census between ethnically Polish Americans and descendants of non-ethnic Poles, such as Jews or Ukrainians, who were born in the territory of Poland and considered themselves Polish nationals. Therefore, some say, of the 10 million Polish Americans, only a certain portion are of Polish ethnic descent. On the other hand, many ethnic Poles when entering the US from 1795 to 1917, when Poland did not exist, did not identify themselves as ethnic Poles and instead identified themselves as either German, Austrian or Russian (this pertained to the nations occupying Poland from 1795 to 1917). Therefore, the actual number of Americans of at least partial Polish ancestry, could be well over 10 million. In the 2011 United States Census Bureau's Population Estimates, there are between 9,365,239 and 9,530,571 Americans of Polish descent, with over 500,000 being foreign-born.[21]

Historically, Polish-Americans have assimilated very quickly to American society. Between 1940 and 1960, only 20 percent of the children of Polish-American ethnic leaders spoke Polish regularly, compared to 50 percent for Ukrainians.[22] In the early 1960s, 3,000 of Detroit's 300,000 Polish-Americans changed their names each year. Language proficiency in Polish is rare in Polish-Americans, as 91.3% speak "English only."[21] In 1979, the 8 million respondents of Polish ancestry reported that only 41.5 percent had single ancestry, whereas 57.3% of Greeks, 52% of Italians and Sicilians, and 44% of Ukrainians had done so (clarification needed). Polish-Americans tended to marry exogamously in the postwar era in high numbers, and tended to marry within the Catholic population, often to persons of German (17%), Italian (10%), East European (8%), Irish (5%), French (4%), Spanish-speaking (2%), Lithuanian (2%), and English (1%) ancestry.[23]

Polish-born population

Polish-born population in the U.S. since 2010:[24]

Year Number
2010 475,503
2011  461,618
2012  440,312
2013  432,601
2014  424,460
2015  419,332
2016  424,928
2017  418,775

Communities

 
A Polish coal miner in Capels, McDowell County, West Virginia, 1938

The vast majority of Polish immigrants settled in metropolitan areas, attracted by jobs in industry. The minority, by some estimates, only ten percent, settled in rural areas.

Historian John Bukowczyk noted that Polish immigrants in America were highly mobile, and 40 to 60 percent were likely to move from any given urban neighborhood within 10 years.[25] The reasons for this are very individualistic; Bukowczyk's theory is that many immigrants with agricultural backgrounds were eager to migrate because they were finally freed from the local plots of land they had owned in Poland. Others ventured into business and entrepreneurship, and the majority of them opened small retail shops such as bakeries, butcher shops, saloons, and print shops.[26]

Polish American Heritage Month is an event in October by Polish American communities, first celebrated in 1981.

Chicago

 
Polish shops at Milwaukee Avenue in Chicago, Illinois

One of the most notable in size of the urban Polish American communities is in Chicago and its surrounding suburbs. Chicago is a city sprawling with Polish culture, billing itself as the largest Polish city outside of Poland, with approximately 185,000 Polish speakers,[27] making Polish the third most spoken language in Chicago. The influence of Chicago's Polish community is demonstrated by the numerous Polish-American organizations: the Polish Museum of America, Polish Roman Catholic Union of America (the oldest Polish American fraternal organization in the United States), Polish American Association, Polish American Congress, Polish National Alliance, Polish Falcons, Polish Highlanders Alliance of North America, and the Polish Genealogical Society of America. In addition, Illinois has more than one million people that are of Polish descent, the third largest ethnic group after the German and Irish Americans. The Chicago area has many Polish delis, restaurants, and churches.

Chicago's Polish community was concentrated along the city's Northwest and Southwest Sides, along Milwaukee and Archer Avenues, respectively. Chicago's Taste of Polonia festival is celebrated at the Copernicus Foundation, in Jefferson Park, every Labor Day weekend. Nearly 3 million people of Polish descent live in the area between Chicago and Detroit, including Northern Indiana, a part of the Chicago metropolitan area. The community has played a role as a staunch supporter of the Democratic machine, and has been rewarded with several congressional seats. The leading representative has been Congressman Dan Rostenkowski, one of the most powerful members of Congress (1959 to 1995), especially on issues of taxation, before he went to prison.[28]

New York City Metropolitan Area

The New York City Metropolitan Area, including the borough of Brooklyn in New York City as well as Northern New Jersey, is home to the second largest community of Polish Americans[29] and is now closely behind the Chicago area's Polish population. Greenpoint, New York in Brooklyn is home to the Little Poland of New York City, while Williamsburg, Maspeth and Ridgewood also contain vibrant Polish communities. In 2014, the New York metropolitan area surpassed Chicago as the metropolitan area attracting the most new legal immigrants to the United States from Poland.[30][31][32]

Linden, Elizabeth, and Newark, New Jersey

Linden, New Jersey in Union County, near Newark Liberty International Airport, has become heavily first-generation Polish in recent years.[when?] 15.6% of the residents five years old and above in the city of Linden primarily speak Polish at home and a variety of Polish-speaking establishments may be found by the Linden station, which is a direct line to Manhattan. St. Theresa's Roman Catholic Church offers masses in Polish.[citation needed]

In the early part of the 20th century, up to and immediately following the second World War, Newark, New Jersey and Elizabeth, New Jersey were the primary, historic centers of 'Polonia' as Polish-Americans of that era thought of themselves. Castle Garden and Ellis Island generation immigrants and those that followed them found employment in the industries of these two cities as well as Linden which housed oil refineries and auto manufacturing. Initial settlements were in Newark, primarily the "Ironbound" section, where St. Stanislaw Roman Catholic Church, followed by Casimir's Parish were the first parish churches founded and built by the communities there. In Elizabeth, the first parish serving the Polish community is St. Adalbert's Roman Catholic Church. All these parishes are over 100 years old, dating from the late 1800s, with churches constructed in the early 20th century. Post-war prosperity allowed many Polish Americans to disperse from the original core in New Jersey's industrial areas to the surrounding suburban communities. Documentation of their early history may be found on individual parkish websites. Other significant centers of Polish settlement in New Jersey included Garfield, New Jersey, Manville in Somerset County, Trenton, New Jersey, and Camden, New Jersey.[citation needed]

Other areas

In Hudson County, New Jersey, Bayonne houses New Jersey's largest Polish American community, while Wallington in Bergen County contains the state's highest percentage of Polish Americans and one of the highest percentages in the United States, at over 40%. However, within New Jersey, Polish populations are additionally increasing rapidly in Clifton, Passaic County as well as in Garfield, Bergen County.

Riverhead, New York, located on eastern Long Island, contains a neighborhood known as Polish Town, where many Polish immigrants have continued to settle since the World War II era; the town has Polish architecture, stores, and St. Isidore's R.C. Church, and Polish Town hosts an annual summer Polish Fair. LOT Polish Airlines provides non-stop flight service between JFK International Airport in the Queens borough of New York City, Newark and Warsaw.[33]

The Kosciuszko Foundation is based in New York.

Wisconsin and Minnesota

 
Basilica of St. Josaphat in Milwaukee, Wisconsin exemplifies the so-called Polish Cathedral style of church architecture found in the Great Lakes region.

Milwaukee's Polish population has always been overshadowed by the city's more numerous German American inhabitants. Nevertheless, the city's once numerous Polish community built a number of Polish Cathedrals, among them the magnificent Basilica of St. Josaphat and St. Stanislaus Catholic Church. Many Polish residents and businesses are still located in the Lincoln Village neighborhood. The city is also home to Polish Fest, the largest Polish festival in the United States, where Polish Americans from all over Wisconsin and nearby Chicago, come to celebrate Polish Culture, through music, food and entertainment.[34] Polonia in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul is centered on Holy Cross Church in the Northeast Neighborhood of Minneapolis, where a vibrant Polish ministry continues to care for the Polish Roman Catholic Faithful.

Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Nebraska represent a different type of settlement with significant Polish communities having been established in rural areas. Historian John Radzilowski estimates that up to a third of Poles in Minnesota settled in rural areas, where they established 40 communities, that were often centered around a Catholic church.[35] Most of these settlers came from the Polish lands that had been taken by Prussia during the Partitions, with a sub-group coming from Silesia. The Kaszub minority, from Poland's Baltic coast, was also strongly represented among Polish immigrants to Minnesota, most notably in Winona. Despite relative isolation from Poland and larger urban Polonian communities, due to strong community integration these communities continued speaking Polish into the 1970s in some cases and continue to have a strong Polish identity.

Michigan

 
Houses in a Polish neighborhood in Detroit, Michigan

Michigan's Polish population of more than 850,000 is the third-largest among U.S. states, behind that of New York and Illinois. Polish Americans make up 8.6% of Michigan's total population. The city of Detroit has a very large Polish community, which historically settled in Poletown and Hamtramck on the east side of Detroit, the neighborhoods along Michigan Avenue from 23rd street into east Dearborn, the west side of Delray, parts of Warrendale and several sections of Wyandotte downriver. The northern part of Poletown was cleared of residents, to make way for the General Motors Detroit/Hamtramck Assembly plant. Today it contains some of the most opulent Polish churches in America like St. Stanislaus, Sweetest Heart of Mary, St. Albertus, St. Josephat and St. Hyacinthe. Michigan as a state has Polish populations throughout. In addition to metropolitan Detroit, Grand Rapids, Bay City, Alpena and the surrounding area, the thumb of Michigan, Manistee, and numerous places in northern lower Michigan and south-central Michigan also have sizable Polish populations.

The Polish influence is still felt throughout the entire metropolitan Detroit area, especially the suburb of Wyandotte, which is slowly emerging as the major center of Polish American activities in the state. An increase in new immigration from Poland is helping to bolster the parish community of Our Lady of Mount Carmel and a host of Polish American civic organizations, located within the city of Wyandotte. Also, the Detroit suburb of Troy is home to the American Polish Cultural Center, where the National Polish-American Sports Hall of Fame has over 200 artifacts on display from over 100 inductees, including Stan Musial and Mike Krzyzewski.[36] St. Mary's Preparatory, a high school in Orchard Lake with historically Polish roots, sponsors a popular annual Polish County Fair that bills itself as "America's Largest High School Fair."

Outside of Metro Detroit, Polish Americans retain a strong presence in Northern Michigan. The town of Cedar in Leelanau County retains a large Polish presence, and is home to a Polish Art Center, as well as an annual polka festival.[37] The counties of Alpena, Presque Isle, and Huron also have a large percentage and population of families of Polish immigrants.

Ohio

 
Inside view of St. Stanislaus Church in Slavic Village in Cleveland, Ohio

Ohio is home to more than 440,000 people of Polish descent, their presence felt most strongly in the Greater Cleveland area, where half of Ohio's Polish population resides.[38] The city of Cleveland, Ohio has a large Polish community, especially in historic Slavic Village, as part of its Warszawa Section. Poles from this part of Cleveland migrated to the suburbs, such as Garfield Heights, Parma and Seven Hills. Parma has even recently been designated a Polish Village commercial district.[39] Farther out, other members of Cleveland's Polish community live in Brecksville, Independence and Broadview Heights. Many of these Poles return to their Polish roots by attending masses at St. Stanislaus Church, on East 65th Street and Baxter Avenue.

Cleveland's other Polish section is in Tremont, located on Cleveland's west side. The home parishes are St. John Cantius and St. John Kanty.

Other Polish language churches in Cleveland city include St. Casimir, St. Barbara, and Immaculate Heart of Mary. Outside of annual church festivals, other major city celebrations include Dyngus Day and the Slavic Village Harvest Festival, celebrating with Polish food, customer, and Polka music.[40] Cleveland is home to the Polka Hall of Fame.

Poles in Cleveland were instrumental in forming the Third Federal Savings and Loan in 1938. After seeing fellow Poles discriminated against by Cleveland's banks, Ben Stefanski formed Third Federal. Today the Stefanski family still controls the bank. Unlike Cleveland's KeyBank and National City Corp., which have their headquarters in Downtown Cleveland, Third Federal is on Broadway Avenue in the Slavic Village neighborhood. Third Federal Savings and Loan is in the top 25 saving and loan institutions in the United States. In 2003, they acquired a Florida banking company and have branches in Florida and Ohio.

Texas

 
Polish American recruitment WWI

Panna Maria, Texas, was founded by Upper Silesian settlers on Christmas Eve in 1854. Some people still speak Texas Silesian. Silesian is regarded as either a dialect of Polish, or a distinct language. Cestohowa, Kosciusko, Falls City, Polonia, New Waverly, Brenham, Marlin, Bremond, Anderson, Bryan, and Chappell Hill were either founded or populated by the Poles.[citation needed]

Others

 
Marker of immigration from Silesia into Texas, located in Indianola, Texas

Other industrial cities, with major Polish communities, include: Buffalo, New York; Boston; Baltimore; New Britain, Connecticut; Dallas, Houston, Portland, Oregon; Minneapolis; Philadelphia; Columbus, Ohio; Erie, Pennsylvania; Rochester, New York; Syracuse, New York; Los Angeles; San Francisco; Seattle; Pittsburgh; South Bend, Indiana; central/western Massachusetts; and Duluth, Minnesota. There is a relatively large Polish population in Saint Louis, Missouri in addition to the area's many German-Americans.

Luzerne County, in northeastern Pennsylvania, is the only county in the United States, where a plurality of residents state their ancestry as Polish. (See: Maps of American ancestries) This includes the cities of Wilkes-Barre, Pittston, Hazleton, and Nanticoke. Many of the immigrants were drawn to this area, because of the mining of Anthracite coal in the region. Polish influences are still common today, in the form of church bazaars, polka music, and Polish cuisine. It is widely believed that Boothwyn, Pennsylvania, has one of the fastest growing Polish communities in the United States.

In 2007, at the urging of Attorney Adrian Baron and the local Polonia Business Association, New Britain, Connecticut officially designated its Broad Street neighborhood as Little Poland, where an estimated 30,000 residents claim Polish heritage. Visitors can do an entire day's business completely in Polish including banking, shopping, dining, legal consultations, and even dance lessons. The area has retained its Polish character since 1890. There is also a Polish community in Las Vegas.[41]

By state totals

 
Distribution of Americans claiming Polish Ancestry by county in 2018

As of the 2021 American Community Survey, the distribution of Polish Americans across the 50 states and DC is as presented in the following table:

 Estimated Polish American population by state [42][1]
State Number Percentage
  Alabama 28,557 0.57%
  Alaska 13,693 1.86%
  Arizona 153,023 2.16%
  Arkansas 22,785 0.76%
  California 452,019 1.15%
  Colorado 133,378 2.33%
  Connecticut 240,390 6.67%
  Delaware 39,254 4.00%
  District of Columbia 15,330 2.24%
  Florida 478,483 2.24%
  Georgia 108,837 1.02%
  Hawaii 12,894 0.89%
  Idaho 21,739 1.20%
  Illinois 825,037 6.43%
  Indiana 197,807 2.93%
  Iowa 38,951 1.23%
  Kansas 37,188 1.27%
  Kentucky 40,899 0.91%
  Louisiana 20,842 0.45%
  Maine 30,038 2.21%
  Maryland 172,300 2.80%
  Massachusetts 283,050 4.05%
  Michigan 784,200 7.79%
  Minnesota 236,895 4.18%
  Mississippi 11,882 0.40%
  Missouri 97,813 1.59%
  Montana 18,912 1.75%
  Nebraska 61,910 3.17%
  Nevada 52,563 1.72%
  New Hampshire 53,939 3.93%
  New Jersey 470,082 5.09%
  New Mexico 20,065 0.95%
  New York 866,242 4.31%
  North Carolina 148,987 1.44%
  North Dakota 16,032 2.07%
  Ohio 414,587 3.52%
  Oklahoma 29,735 0.75%
  Oregon 68,963 1.64%
  Pennsylvania 757,627 5.84%
  Rhode Island 36,411 3.33%
  South Carolina 74,893 1.47%
  South Dakota 13,600 1.54%
  Tennessee 74,289 1.08%
  Texas 287,928 1.00%
  Utah 25,477 0.79%
  Vermont 23,234 3.62%
  Virginia 151,996 1.77%
  Washington 126,400 1.66%
  West Virginia 28,241 1.57%
  Wisconsin 481,126 8.19%
  Wyoming 9,752 1.69%
  United States 8,810,275 2.67%

Religion

 
St. Stanislaus Kostka Church in Chicago, Illinois, the city's first Polish parish

As in Poland, the majority of Polish immigrants are Roman Catholic. Historically, less than 5% of Americans who identified as Polish would state any other religion but Roman Catholic. Jewish immigrants from Poland, largely without exception, self identified[43] as "Jewish," "German Jewish," "Russian Jewish," or "Austrian Jewish" when inside the United States, and faced a historical trajectory far different from that of the Polish Catholics.[44]

Polish Americans built dozens of Polish Cathedrals in the Great Lakes and New England regions and in the Mid-Atlantic States. Chicago's Poles founded the following churches: St. Stanislaus Kostka, Holy Trinity, St. John Cantius, Holy Innocents, St. Helen, St. Fidelis, St. Mary of the Angels, St. Hedwig, St. Josaphat, St. Francis of Assisi (Humboldt Park), St. Hyacinth Basilica, St. Wenceslaus, Immaculate Heart of Mary, St. Stanislaus B&M, St. James (Cragin), St. Ladislaus, St. Constance, St. Mary of Perpetual Help, St. Barbara, SS. Peter & Paul, St. Joseph (Back of the Yards), Five Holy Martyrs, St. Pancratius, St. Bruno, St. Camillus, St. Michael (South Chicago), Immaculate Conception (South Chicago), St. Mary Magdalene, St. Bronislava, St. Thecla, St. Florian, St. Mary of Częstochowa (Cicero), St. Simeon (Bellwood), St. Blase (Summit), St. Glowienke (Downers Grove), St. John the Fisherman (Lisle), St. Isidore the Farmer (Blue Island), St. Andrew the Apostle (Calumet City) and St. John the Baptist (Harvey), as well as St. Mary of Nazareth Hospital, on the Near West Side.

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

Poles established approximately 50 Roman Catholic parishes in Minnesota. Among them: St. Wojciech (Adalbert) and St. Kazimierz (Casimir) in St. Paul; Holy Cross, St. Philip, St. Hedwig (Jadwiga Slaska) and All Saints, in Minneapolis; Our Lady Star of the Sea, St. Casimir's, and SS. Peter and Paul in Duluth; and St. Kazimierz (Casimir) and St. Stanislaw Kostka in Winona. A few of the parishes of particular note, founded by Poles elsewhere in Minnesota, include: St. John Cantius in Wilno; St. Jozef (Joseph) in Browerville; St. John the Baptist in Virginia; St. Mary in Częstochowa; St. Wojciech (Adalbert) in Silver Lake; Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Opole; Our Lady of Lourdes in Little Falls; St. Stanislaus B&M in Sobieski; St. Stanislaus Kostka in Bowlus; St. Hedwig in Holdingford; Sacred Heart in Flensburg; Holy Cross in North Prairie; Holy Cross in Harding; and St. Isadore in Moran Township.

Poles in Cleveland established St. Hyacinth's (now closed), Saint Stanislaus Church (1873), Sacred Heart (1888–2010) Immaculate Heart of Mary (1894), St. John Cantius (Westside Poles), St. Barbara (closed), Sts Peter and Paul Church (1927) in Garfield Heights, Saint Therese (1927) Garfield Heights, Marymount Hospital (1948) Garfield Heights, and Saint Monica Church (1952) Garfield Heights. Also, the Polish Community created the Our Lady of Częstochowa Shrine on the campus of Marymount Hospital.[45]

Poles in South Bend, Indiana, founded four parishes: St. Hedwig Parish (1877), St. Casimir Parish (1898), St. Stanislaus Parish (1907), and St. Adalbert Parish, South Bend (1910).

Circa 1897, in Pittsburgh's Polish Hill, Immaculate Heart of Mary, modeled on St. Peter's Basilica in Rome was founded.[46]

Polish Americans preserved their longstanding tradition of venerating the Lady of Czestochowa in the United States. Replicas of the painting are common in Polish American churches and parishes, and many churches and parishes are named in her honor. The veneration of the Virgin Mary in Polish parishes is a significant difference between Polish Catholicism and American Catholicism; Polish nuns in the Felician Order for instance, took to Marianism as the cornerstone of their spiritual development, and Polish churches in the U.S. were seen as "cult-like" in their veneration of Mary.[47] Religious catechism and writings from convents found that Polish nuns in the Felician Sisters and The Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth were taught to have "a sound appreciation of Mary's role in the mystery of the Redemption” and “a filial confidence in her patronage," more explicitly, “to be . . . a true daughter to the immaculate Virgin Mary." The Marianism that was taught in Polish parish schools in the United States was done independent of the Catholic Church, and demonstrated autonomy on the part of the nuns who taught Polish American youths. It is notable that there was a concurrent movement in Poland that eventually led to a separatist Catholic church, the Mariavite Church, which greatly expanded the veneration of the Virgin Mary in its doctrine. In Poland, the Virgin Mary was believed to serve as a mother of mercy and salvation for Catholics, and throughout the Middle Ages, Polish knights prayed to her before battle. Polish American churches featured replicas of the Lady of Częstochowa, which was on feature at the Jasna Góra Monastery and holds national and religious significance because of its connection to a victorious military defense in 1655. Several towns in America are named Częstochowa, in commemoration of the town in Poland.[47]

Though the majority of Polish Americans remained loyal to the Catholic Church, a breakaway Catholic church was founded in 1897 in Scranton, Pennsylvania. Polish parishioners founded the church to assert independence from the Catholic Church in America. The split was in rebellion from the church leadership, then dominated by Irish bishops and priests, and lacking Polish speakers and Polish church leaders. It exists today with 25,000 parishioners and remains independent from the authority of the Roman Catholic Church.

Poland is also home to followers of Protestantism and the Eastern Orthodox Church. Small groups of both of these groups also immigrated to the United States. One of the most celebrated painters of religious icons in North America today is a Polish American Eastern Orthodox priest, Fr. Theodore Jurewicz, who singlehandedly painted New Gračanica Monastery in Third Lake, Illinois, over the span of three years.[48]

A small group of Lipka Tatars, originating from the Białystok region, helped co-found the first Muslim organization in Brooklyn, New York, in 1907, and later, a mosque, which is still in use.[49]

Social status

In 1969, the median family income was $8,849 for Polish Americans. The median family income for all families in the United States in 1968 was $7,900. Leonard F. Chrobot summarizes the Census data for 1969:[50]

The typical Polish American male was born in the United States, spoke Polish in his home when he was a child, but speaks English now, is 38.7 years old (female: 40.9), and is married to a Polish wife. If he is between 25 and 34 years of age, he completed 12.7 years of school, and if he is over 35, he completed 10.9 years. His median family income is $8,849. The male works as a craftsman, foreman, or kindred occupation, and his wife is employed as a clerical worker.

In 2017, by educational attainment, the U.S. Census estimates that 42.5% have bachelor's degrees or higher, whereas the American population as a whole is 32.0%.[51] The median household income for Americans of Polish descent is estimated by the U.S. Census as $73,452, with no statistically significant differences from other Slavic-American groups, Czech, Slovak, and Ukrainian. The median household income for those of Russian ancestry has been reported as higher on the U.S. Census, at $80,554.[21]

Socioeconomic indicators: 2017[21]
Ethnicity Household Income College degrees (%)
Russian $80,554 60.4
Polish $73,452 42.5
Czech $71,663 45.4
Serbian $79,135 46.0
Slovak $73,093 44.8
Ukrainian $75,674 52.2
White non-Hispanic $65,845 35.8
Total U.S. Population $60,336 32.0

Politics

Polish-Americans comprise a large voting bloc sought after by both the Democratic and Republican parties. Polish Americans comprise 3.2% of the United States population, but were estimated at nearly 10% of the overall electorate as of 2012.[52] The Polish-American population is concentrated in several Midwestern swing states that make issues important to Polish-Americans more likely to be heard by presidential candidates. According to John Kromkowski, Polish-Americans make up an "almost archetypical swing vote".[53] The Piast Institute found that Polish Americans are 36% Democrats, 33% Independents, and 26% are Republicans as of 2008. Ideologically, they were categorized as being in the more conservative wing of the Democratic Party, and demonstrated a much stronger inclination for third-party candidates in presidential elections than the American public.[52]

Historically, Polish-American voters have swung from the Democratic and Republican parties depending on economic and social politics. In the 1918 election, Woodrow Wilson courted Poles through his promises of Polish autonomy. They gave strong support to the wet Catholic Al Smith in 1928. They gave even more enthusiastic support to the New Deal Coalition and President Franklin D. Roosevelt. In World War II they were fiercely against Nazi Germany. FDR consistently won over 90% of the Polish vote during his four terms.

Polish-Americans founded the Polish American Congress (PAC) in 1944 to create strong leadership and represent Polish interests during World War II. FDR met with the PAC and assured Poles of a peaceful and independent Poland following the war. When this did not come to fruition, and with the publication of Arthur Bliss Lane's I Saw Poland Betrayed in 1947, Polish-Americans came to feel that they had been betrayed by the United States government.[54] John F. Kennedy won a majority of the Polish vote in 1960, owing in part to his Catholicism and connection to ethnic communities and the labor movement. Since then, Polish voters have been tied to the more conservative wing of the Democratic Party, but shifted away from the Democrats over social issues such as abortion. Poland's liberation from Soviet occupation during the 1980s was championed to Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush, but Bill Clinton seized Polish voters through his expansion of NATO. The relevance of the "Polish-American vote" has been in question in recent elections, as Americans of Polish descent have assimilated to U.S. society and increased their rate of exogamous marriages.[citation needed]

In modern politics, the Polish-American vote continues to have influence in the United States. The American Polish Advisory Council, a politically involved network of Polish organizations, has created a political platform and convention, and has shared its agenda with politicians, both at the state and federal level. In the 2012 elections, Polish-Americans have been courted by both the Republican and Democratic parties.

Anti-Polonism

The Polish community was long the subject of anti-Polish sentiment in America. The word Polack has become an ethnic slur. This prejudice was partially associated with anti-Catholicism, and early 20th century worries about being overrun by Central European immigrants.

Culture

The cultural contributions of Polish Americans span a broad spectrum, including in media, in the publishing industry, in religion, art, food, museums, and festivals.

Media

Among the most notable Polish American media groups are Hippocrene Books (founded by Polish American George Blagowidow); TVP Polonia; Polsat 2 International; TVN International; Polvision; TV4U New York; WEUR Radio Chicago; Polish Radio External Service (formerly Radio Polonia); Polonia Today and the Warsaw Voice. There are also Polish American newspapers and magazines, such as the Dziennik Związkowy, PL magazine,[55] Polish Weekly Chicago, the Super Express USA and Nowy Dziennik in New York and Tygodnik Polski and The Polish Times in Detroit, not to mention the Ohio University Press Series in Polish American Studies,[56] Przeglad Polski Online, Polish American Journal,[57] the Polish News Online,[58]Am-Pol Eagle Newspaper,[59] and Progress for Poland,[60] among others.

Cultural identity

Even in long-integrated communities, remnants of Polish culture and vocabulary remain. Roman Catholic churches built by Polish American communities often serve as a vehicle for cultural retention.

During the 1950s–1970s, the Polish wedding was often an all-day event. Traditional Polish weddings in Chicago metropolitan area, in areas such as the southeast side of Chicago, inner suburbs like Calumet City and Hegewisch, and Northwest Indiana suburbs, such as Whiting, Hammond and East Chicago, always occurred on Saturdays. The receptions were typically held in a large hall, such as a VFW Hall. A polka band of drums, a singer, accordion, and trumpet, entertained the people, as they danced traditional dances, such as the oberek, "Polish Hop" and the waltz. The musicians, as well as the guests, were expected to enjoy ample amounts of both food and drink. Foods, such as Polish sausage, sauerkraut, pierogi and kluski were common. Common drinks were beer, screwdrivers and highballs. Many popular Polish foods became a fixture in the American cuisine of today, including kiełbasa (Polish sausage), babka cake, kaszanka, pierogi, and, especially around the time of Ash Wednesday and the beginning of Lent, pączki doughnuts.

Polish American cultural groups include Polish American Arts Association and the Polish Falcons.

Among the many Polish American writers are a number of poets, such as Phil Boiarski, Hedwig Gorski, John Guzlowski, John Minczeski, Linda Nemec Foster, Leonard Kress (poet and translator), Cecilia Woloch, Kim Kikel and Mark Pawlak (poet and editor), along with novelists Leslie Pietrzyk, Thad Rutkowski, Suzanne Strempek Shea[61] and others.

Museums

 
The Polish Museum of America in Chicago

Among the best known Polish American museums are the Polish Museum of America in Chicago's old Polish Downtown; founded in 1935, the largest ethnic museum in the U.S. sponsored by the Polish Roman Catholic Union of America. The Museum Library ranks as one of the best outside of Poland. Equally ambitious is the Polish American Museum located in Port Washington, New York, founded in 1977. It features displays of folk art, costumes, historical artifacts and paintings, as well as bilingual research library with particular focus on achievements of the people of Polish heritage in America.[62][63] There is also the Polish Cultural Institute and Museum of Winona, Minnesota, known informally as "The Polish Museum of Winona." Formally established in 1979 by Father Paul Breza, the Polish Museum of Winona features exhibits pertaining to Winona's Kashubian Polish culture and hosts a wide range of events celebrating America's Polish-American heritage in general.

Festivals

 
Polish-American parade in New York City, 2017

There are a number of unique festivals, street parties and parades held by the Polish American community. The Polish Fest in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, which is a popular annual festival, takes place at the Henry Maier Festival Park. It is also the largest Polish festival in the United States. It attracts Polish Americans from all over Wisconsin and nearby Chicago, who come to celebrate Polish culture through music, food and entertainment. New York City is home to the New York Polish Film Festival, an annual film festival showcasing current and past films of Polish cinema. NYPFF is the only annual presentation of Polish films in New York City and the largest festival promoting and presenting Polish films on the East Coast.[64]

 
Polish Constitution Day Parade in Chicago, 1985

The Polish Festival in Syracuse's Clinton Square has become the largest cultural event in the history of the Polish community in Central New York. There's also the Taste of Polonia festival held in Chicago every Labor Day weekend since 1979 at the Copernicus Cultural and Civic Center in the Jefferson Park area. The Polish Festival in Portland, Oregon is reported to be the largest in the Western United States.[65] One of the newest and most ambitious festivals is the Seattle Polish Film Festival organized in conjunction with the Polish Film Festival in Gdynia, Poland. Kansas City, Kansas is home to a large Polish population and for the last 31 years, All Saints Parish has hosted Polski Day [2]. And last, but not least, there's the Pierogi Fest in Whiting, Indiana with many more attractions other than Polish pierogi, and the Wisconsin Dells Polish Fest.[61]

Holidays

Polish Americans carried on celebrations of Constitution Day throughout their time in the United States without political suppression. In Poland, from 1940 to 1989, the holiday was banned by Nazi and Soviet occupiers.[66]

Contributions to American culture

 
Polish Army Veterans' Association in America, Branch #57 in Elizabeth, New Jersey, 1928
 
Polish-Americans who fought in the Blue Army. Image taken in Detroit, Michigan (1955) and featured in Life magazine.

Polish-Americans have influenced American culture in various ways. Most prominent among these is that Jefferson drafting the Constitution of the United States was inspired by religious tolerance of the Warsaw Confederation,[67] which guaranteed freedom of conscience.

The Polish culture left also culinary marks in the United States – the inclusion of traditional Polish cuisine such as pierogi, kiełbasa, gołąbki. Some of these Polish foods were tweaked and reinvented in the new American environment, such as Chicago's Maxwell Street Polish Sausage.

Polish Americans have also contributed to altering the physical landscape of the cities they have inhabited, erecting monuments to Polish-American heroes such as Kościuszko and Pulaski. Distinctive cultural phenomena such as Polish flats or the Polish Cathedral style of architecture became part and parcel of the areas where Polish settlement occurred.

Poles' cultural ties to Roman Catholicism have also influenced the adoption of such distinctive rites like the blessing of the baskets before Easter in many areas of the United States by fellow Roman Catholics.

Architectural influence

Early Polish immigrants built houses with high-pitched roofs in the United States. The high-pitched roof is necessary in a country subject to snow, and is a common feature in Northern and Eastern European architecture. In Panna Maria, Texas, Poles built brick houses with thick walls and high-pitched roofs. Meteorological and soil data show that region in Texas is subject to less than 1 inch of snow[68] and a meteorological study conducted 1960-1990 found the lowest one-day temperature ever recorded was 5 degrees Fahrenheit on January 21, 1986, highly unlikely to support much snow.[69] The shaded veranda that was created by these roofs was a popular living space for the Polish Texans, who spent much of their time there to escape the hot temperatures of subtropical Texas. The Poles in Texas added porches to these verandas, often in the southward windy side, which is an alteration to traditional folk architecture.[70] According to oral histories recorded from descendants, the verandas were used for "almost all daily activities from preparing meals to dressing animal hides."[70] The Poles in Texas put straw thatching on their roofs until the early 1900s, another European influence. The first house built by a Pole in Panna Maria is the John Gawlik House, constructed in 1858. The building still stands and is visited as a historical attraction in the cultural history of Texas. In 2011, the San Antonio Conservation Society financed a replacement of the building's roof, identifying it as a "historically and architecturally significant building."[71]

Military

Organizations like the Polish Legion of American Veterans were organized to memorialize the Polish contribution to the American military.[72] Those who contributed to the Polish military created Polish Army Veterans' Association in America.[73]

See also

Lists

Citations

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Sources and further reading

  • Bukowczyk, John J. A history of the Polish Americans (2nd ed. Routledge, 2017) online
    • first edition published as Bukowczyk, John J. (1986). And My Children Did Not Know Me: A History of the Polish-Americans. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-30701-5. OCLC 59790559.
  • Bukowczyk, John J. (1996). Polish Americans and Their History: Community, Culture, and Politics. Pittsburgh, Pa: University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 0-8229-3953-3. OCLC 494311843.
  • Erdmans, Mary Patrice. "Immigrants and ethnics: Conflict and identity in Chicago Polonia." Sociological Quarterly 36.1 (1995): 175-195. online
  • Erdmans, Mary Patrice (1998). Opposite Poles: Immigrants and Ethnics in Polish Chicago, 1976–1990. University Park, Pa: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 0-271-01735-X. OCLC 37245940.
  • Esslinger, Dean R. . Immigrants and the city: Ethnicity and mobility in a nineteenth century Midwestern community (Kennikat Press, 1975); focus on demography and social mobility of Germans, Poles, and other Catholics in South Bend
    • PhD version  University of Notre Dame ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  1972. 7216267.
  • Gladsky, Thomas S. (1992). Princes, Peasants, and Other Polish Selves: Ethnicity in American Literature. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 0-87023-775-6. OCLC 24912598.
  • Greene, Victor. "Poles" in Thernstrom, Stephan; Orlov, Ann; Handlin, Oscar, eds. Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. ISBN 0674375122. (Harvard University Press, 1980) pp 787–803
  • Gurnack, Anne M., and James M. Cook. "Polish Americans, Political Partisanship and Presidential Elections Voting: 1972-2020." European Journal of Transformation Studies 9.2 (2021): 30-39. online
  • Jackson, David J. (2003). "Just Another Day in a New Polonia: Contemporary Polish-American Polka Music". Popular Music & Society. 26 (4): 529–540. doi:10.1080/0300776032000144986. ISSN 0300-7766. OCLC 363770952. S2CID 194105509.
  • Jaroszyńska-Kirchmann, Anna D. The exile mission: The Polish political diaspora and Polish Americans, 1939-1956 (Ohio University Press, 2004).
  • Jones, J. Sydney. "Polish Americans." Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 3, Gale, 2014), pp. 477–492.[1]
  • Lopata, Helena Znaniecka (1976). Polish Americans: Status Competition in an Ethnic Community. Ethnic groups in American life series. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0-13-686436-8. OCLC 1959615.
  • Majewski, Karen (2003). Traitors and True Poles: Narrating a Polish-American Identity, 1880–1939. Ohio University Press Polish and Polish-American studies series. Athens: Ohio University Press. ISBN 0-8214-1470-4. OCLC 51895984.
  • Mello, Caitlin. "Polish Immigration to Chicago and the Impact on Local Society and Culture." Language, Culture, Politics. International Journal 1.5 (2020): 183-193. online
  • Nowakowski, Jacek (1989). Polish-American Ways. New York: Perennial Library. ISBN 0-06-096336-0. OCLC 20130171.
  • Pacyga, Dominic A. "Poles," in Elliott Robert Barkan, ed., A Nation of Peoples: A Sourcebook on America's Multicultural Heritage (1999) pp 428–45
  • Pacyga, Dominic A. "To live amongst others: Poles and their neighbors in industrial Chicago, 1865-1930." Journal of American Ethnic History 16#1 (1996): 55-73.online
  • Pacyga, Dominic A. Polish immigrants and industrial Chicago: Workers on the south side, 1880-1922 (University of Chicago Press, 2003).
  • Pacyga, Dominic A. American Warsaw: the rise, fall, and rebirth of Polish Chicago (University of Chicago Press, 2019).
  • Pienkos, Donald E. PNA: A Centennial History of the Polish National Alliance of the United States (Columbia University Press, 1984) online
  • Pienkos, Donald E. For your freedom through ours : Polish-American efforts on Poland's behalf, 1863-1991 (1991) [https://archive.org/details/foryourfreedomth0000pien online\
  • Pienkos, Donald E.. "Of Patriots and Presidents: America's Polish Diaspora and U.S. Foreign Policy since 1917," Polish American Studies 68 (Spring 2011), 5–17.
  • Pula, James S. (1995). Polish Americans: An Ethnic Community. Twayne's immigrant heritage of America series. New York: Twayne Publishers. ISBN 0-8057-8427-6. OCLC 30544009.
  • Pula, James S. (1996). "Image, Status, Mobility and Integration in American Society: The Polish Experience". Journal of American Ethnic History. 16 (1): 74–95. ISSN 0278-5927. OCLC 212041643.
  • Pula, James S. "Polish-American Catholicism: A Case Study in Cultural Determinism", U.S. Catholic Historian Volume 27, #3 Summer 2009, pp. 1–19; in Project MUSE
  • Radzilowski, John. "A Social History of Polish-American Catholicism", U.S. Catholic Historian – Volume 27, #3 Summer 2009, pp. 21–43 online
  • Silverman, Deborah Anders (2000). Polish American Folklore. Urbana: Univ. of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-02569-5. OCLC 237414611.
  • Sugrue, Thomas. Origins of the Urban Crisis: Race and Inequality in Postwar Detroit (Princeton University Press, 2005). online
  • Swastek, Joseph. "The Poles in South Bend to 1914." Polish American Studies 2.3/4 (1945): 79–88.
  • Tentler, Leslie Woodcock. “Who Is the Church?: Conflict in a Polish Immigrant Parish in Late Nineteenth-Century Detroit.” Comparative Studies in Society and History vol. 25 (April 1983): 241-276.
  • Thomas, William Isaac; Znaniecki, Florian Witold (1996) [1918–1920]. The Polish Peasant in Europe and America: A Classic Work in Immigration History. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-06484-4. OCLC 477221814.
  • Wrobel, Paul. Our Way: Family, Parish, and Neighborhood in a Polish-American Community (University of Notre Dame Press, 1979).

Memory and historiography

  • Jaroszynska-Kirchmann, Anna D., "The Polish American Historical Association: Looking Back, Looking Forward," Polish American Studies, 65 (Spring 2008), 57–76.
  • Pietrusza, David Too 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. 5–35 in JSTOR
  • Zurawski, Joseph W. (1975). Polish American History and Culture: A Classified Bibliography. Chicago: Polish Museum of America. OCLC 1993061.

External links

  • , immigration records to United States between 1834 through 1897
  • Chicago Foreign Language Press Survey: English translations of 120,000 pages of newspaper articles from Chicago's foreign-language press from 1855 to 1938, many from Polish papers
  1. ^ "Polish Americans - Document - Gale Power Search". go.gale.com. Retrieved September 15, 2021.

polish, americans, polish, polonia, amerykańska, americans, either, have, total, partial, polish, ancestry, citizens, republic, poland, there, estimated, million, self, identified, representing, about, population, according, 2021, american, community, survey, . Polish Americans Polish Polonia amerykanska are Americans who either have total or partial Polish ancestry or are citizens of the Republic of Poland There are an estimated 8 81 million self identified Polish Americans representing about 2 67 of the U S population according to the 2021 American Community Survey conducted by the U S Census Bureau 1 Polish Americans are the second largest Central European ethnic group after German Americans and the eighth largest ethnic group overall in the United States Polish AmericansPolonia amerykanskaAmericans with Polish Ancestry by state according to the U S Census Bureau s American Community Survey in 2019Total population8 810 275 2 7 alone or in combination2 744 941 0 8 Polish alone U S Census ACS 2021 estimates self reported 1 2 Regions with significant populationsNortheast New York New Jersey Maryland Connecticut Massachusetts Pennsylvania Luzerne County and Lackawanna County Midwest Michigan Illinois Wisconsin Ohio Minnesota Indiana North Dakota Nebraska Iowa Sioux City Some in Kansas Missouri California Growing in Arizona Florida ColoradoLanguagesEnglish American English dialects PolishReligionPredominantly Roman Catholicism Protestantism Judaism 3 Related ethnic groupsPolish diaspora Polish Canadians Polish JewsThe first eight Polish immigrants to British America came to the Jamestown colony in 1608 twelve years before the Pilgrims arrived in Massachusetts Two Polish volunteers Casimir Pulaski and Tadeusz Kosciuszko led armies in the Revolutionary War and are remembered as American heroes Overall around 2 2 million Poles and Polish subjects immigrated into the United States between 1820 and 1914 chiefly after national insurgencies and famine 4 They included former Polish citizens of Roman Catholic Protestant Jewish or other minority descent Exact immigration figures are unknown Many immigrants were classified as Russian German or Austrian by the U S Immigration and Naturalization Service as many former territories of Poland were under German Austrian Hungarian and Russian control between the late 18th and early 20th century Complicating the U S Census figures further is the high proportion of Polish Americans who married people of other national descent In 1940 about 50 percent married other American ethnics and a study in 1988 found that 54 of Polish Americans were of mixed ancestry from three generations or longer The Polish American Cultural Center places a figure of Americans who have some Polish ancestry at 19 20 million In 2000 667 414 Americans over five years old reported Polish as the language spoken at home which is about 1 4 of the census groups who speak a language other than English or 0 25 of the U S population Contents 1 History 2 Demographics 2 1 Polish born population 3 Communities 3 1 Chicago 3 2 New York City Metropolitan Area 3 2 1 Linden Elizabeth and Newark New Jersey 3 2 2 Other areas 3 3 Wisconsin and Minnesota 3 4 Michigan 3 5 Ohio 3 6 Texas 3 7 Others 3 8 By state totals 4 Religion 5 Social status 6 Politics 6 1 Anti Polonism 7 Culture 7 1 Media 7 2 Cultural identity 7 3 Museums 7 4 Festivals 7 5 Holidays 8 Contributions to American culture 8 1 Architectural influence 8 2 Military 9 See also 9 1 Lists 10 Citations 11 Sources and further reading 11 1 Memory and historiography 12 External linksHistory EditMain article History of the Poles in the United States Polish speakers in the U S Year Speakers1910a 943 7811920a 1 077 3921930a 965 8991940a 801 6801960a 581 9361970a 419 9121980 5 820 6471990 6 723 4832000 7 667 4142011 8 607 531 a Foreign born white population only 9 Tadeusz Kosciuszko was a Polish military engineer and statesman who served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War He designed and oversaw the construction of fortifications including those at West Point New York Kazimierz Pulaski was a Polish nobleman and military commander who fought in the American Revolution he is credited with saving the life of George Washington at the Battle of Brandywine 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 of Panna Maria Texas founded in the 1850s For instance Polish settlers came to the Virginia Colony as skilled craftsmen as early as 1608 10 11 Some Jews from Poland even assimilated into cities which were Polish and also other Slavic and sometimes additionally Jewish bastions in order to conceal their Jewish identities 12 In the second stage from 1870 to 1914 Poles and Polish subjects formed a significant part of the wave of immigration from Germany Imperial Russia and Austria Hungary The Poles and Polish Jews in particular came in family groups settled in and or blended into largely Polish neighborhoods and other Slavic bastions and aspired to earn relatively high wages compared to what they could earn back in Europe thus why 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 the Catholic 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 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 liberal New 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 often Democratic 13 Outside of Republican and Democratic politics politics such as those of Agudath Israel of America have heavily involved Polish Jewish Americans Demographics EditSee also List of Polish Americans Number of Polish Americans self reported as per U S Census Year Number1900 14 1 903 0001970 15 5 105 0001980 16 8 228 0371990 17 9 366 1062000 18 8 977 4442010 19 9 569 2072020 1 8 810 275Helena Lopata 1976 argues that Poles differed from most other ethnic groups in America in several ways They did not plan to remain permanently and become Americanized Instead they came temporarily to earn money invest and wait for the right opportunity to return Their intention was to ensure a desirable social status in the old world for themselves However many of the temporary migrants decided to become permanent Americans Many found manual labor jobs in the coal mines of Pennsylvania and the heavy industries steel mills iron foundries slaughterhouses oil and sugar refineries of the Great Lakes cities of Chicago Pittsburgh Detroit Buffalo Milwaukee Cleveland and Toledo Polish American grocery 1922 Detroit MichiganThe U S Census asked Polish immigrants to specify Polish as their native language beginning in Chicago in 1900 allowing the government to enumerate them as an individual nationality when there was no Polish nation state 20 No distinction is made in the American census between ethnically Polish Americans and descendants of non ethnic Poles such as Jews or Ukrainians who were born in the territory of Poland and considered themselves Polish nationals Therefore some say of the 10 million Polish Americans only a certain portion are of Polish ethnic descent On the other hand many ethnic Poles when entering the US from 1795 to 1917 when Poland did not exist did not identify themselves as ethnic Poles and instead identified themselves as either German Austrian or Russian this pertained to the nations occupying Poland from 1795 to 1917 Therefore the actual number of Americans of at least partial Polish ancestry could be well over 10 million In the 2011 United States Census Bureau s Population Estimates there are between 9 365 239 and 9 530 571 Americans of Polish descent with over 500 000 being foreign born 21 Historically Polish Americans have assimilated very quickly to American society Between 1940 and 1960 only 20 percent of the children of Polish American ethnic leaders spoke Polish regularly compared to 50 percent for Ukrainians 22 In the early 1960s 3 000 of Detroit s 300 000 Polish Americans changed their names each year Language proficiency in Polish is rare in Polish Americans as 91 3 speak English only 21 In 1979 the 8 million respondents of Polish ancestry reported that only 41 5 percent had single ancestry whereas 57 3 of Greeks 52 of Italians and Sicilians and 44 of Ukrainians had done so clarification needed Polish Americans tended to marry exogamously in the postwar era in high numbers and tended to marry within the Catholic population often to persons of German 17 Italian 10 East European 8 Irish 5 French 4 Spanish speaking 2 Lithuanian 2 and English 1 ancestry 23 Polish born population Edit Polish born population in the U S since 2010 24 Year Number2010 475 5032011 461 6182012 440 3122013 432 6012014 424 4602015 419 3322016 424 9282017 418 775Communities Edit A Polish coal miner in Capels McDowell County West Virginia 1938The vast majority of Polish immigrants settled in metropolitan areas attracted by jobs in industry The minority by some estimates only ten percent settled in rural areas Historian John Bukowczyk noted that Polish immigrants in America were highly mobile and 40 to 60 percent were likely to move from any given urban neighborhood within 10 years 25 The reasons for this are very individualistic Bukowczyk s theory is that many immigrants with agricultural backgrounds were eager to migrate because they were finally freed from the local plots of land they had owned in Poland Others ventured into business and entrepreneurship and the majority of them opened small retail shops such as bakeries butcher shops saloons and print shops 26 Polish American Heritage Month is an event in October by Polish American communities first celebrated in 1981 Chicago Edit Main article Poles in Chicago Polish shops at Milwaukee Avenue in Chicago IllinoisOne of the most notable in size of the urban Polish American communities is in Chicago and its surrounding suburbs Chicago is a city sprawling with Polish culture billing itself as the largest Polish city outside of Poland with approximately 185 000 Polish speakers 27 making Polish the third most spoken language in Chicago The influence of Chicago s Polish community is demonstrated by the numerous Polish American organizations the Polish Museum of America Polish Roman Catholic Union of America the oldest Polish American fraternal organization in the United States Polish American Association Polish American Congress Polish National Alliance Polish Falcons Polish Highlanders Alliance of North America and the Polish Genealogical Society of America In addition Illinois has more than one million people that are of Polish descent the third largest ethnic group after the German and Irish Americans The Chicago area has many Polish delis restaurants and churches Chicago s Polish community was concentrated along the city s Northwest and Southwest Sides along Milwaukee and Archer Avenues respectively Chicago s Taste of Polonia festival is celebrated at the Copernicus Foundation in Jefferson Park every Labor Day weekend Nearly 3 million people of Polish descent live in the area between Chicago and Detroit including Northern Indiana a part of the Chicago metropolitan area The community has played a role as a staunch supporter of the Democratic machine and has been rewarded with several congressional seats The leading representative has been Congressman Dan Rostenkowski one of the most powerful members of Congress 1959 to 1995 especially on issues of taxation before he went to prison 28 New York City Metropolitan Area Edit The New York City Metropolitan Area including the borough of Brooklyn in New York City as well as Northern New Jersey is home to the second largest community of Polish Americans 29 and is now closely behind the Chicago area s Polish population Greenpoint New York in Brooklyn is home to the Little Poland of New York City while Williamsburg Maspeth and Ridgewood also contain vibrant Polish communities In 2014 the New York metropolitan area surpassed Chicago as the metropolitan area attracting the most new legal immigrants to the United States from Poland 30 31 32 Linden Elizabeth and Newark New Jersey Edit Linden New Jersey in Union County near Newark Liberty International Airport has become heavily first generation Polish in recent years when 15 6 of the residents five years old and above in the city of Linden primarily speak Polish at home and a variety of Polish speaking establishments may be found by the Linden station which is a direct line to Manhattan St Theresa s Roman Catholic Church offers masses in Polish citation needed In the early part of the 20th century up to and immediately following the second World War Newark New Jersey and Elizabeth New Jersey were the primary historic centers of Polonia as Polish Americans of that era thought of themselves Castle Garden and Ellis Island generation immigrants and those that followed them found employment in the industries of these two cities as well as Linden which housed oil refineries and auto manufacturing Initial settlements were in Newark primarily the Ironbound section where St Stanislaw Roman Catholic Church followed by Casimir s Parish were the first parish churches founded and built by the communities there In Elizabeth the first parish serving the Polish community is St Adalbert s Roman Catholic Church All these parishes are over 100 years old dating from the late 1800s with churches constructed in the early 20th century Post war prosperity allowed many Polish Americans to disperse from the original core in New Jersey s industrial areas to the surrounding suburban communities Documentation of their early history may be found on individual parkish websites Other significant centers of Polish settlement in New Jersey included Garfield New Jersey Manville in Somerset County Trenton New Jersey and Camden New Jersey citation needed Other areas Edit In Hudson County New Jersey Bayonne houses New Jersey s largest Polish American community while Wallington in Bergen County contains the state s highest percentage of Polish Americans and one of the highest percentages in the United States at over 40 However within New Jersey Polish populations are additionally increasing rapidly in Clifton Passaic County as well as in Garfield Bergen County Riverhead New York located on eastern Long Island contains a neighborhood known as Polish Town where many Polish immigrants have continued to settle since the World War II era the town has Polish architecture stores and St Isidore s R C Church and Polish Town hosts an annual summer Polish Fair LOT Polish Airlines provides non stop flight service between JFK International Airport in the Queens borough of New York City Newark and Warsaw 33 The Kosciuszko Foundation is based in New York Wisconsin and Minnesota Edit Basilica of St Josaphat in Milwaukee Wisconsin exemplifies the so called Polish Cathedral style of church architecture found in the Great Lakes region Milwaukee s Polish population has always been overshadowed by the city s more numerous German American inhabitants Nevertheless the city s once numerous Polish community built a number of Polish Cathedrals among them the magnificent Basilica of St Josaphat and St Stanislaus Catholic Church Many Polish residents and businesses are still located in the Lincoln Village neighborhood The city is also home to Polish Fest the largest Polish festival in the United States where Polish Americans from all over Wisconsin and nearby Chicago come to celebrate Polish Culture through music food and entertainment 34 Polonia in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St Paul is centered on Holy Cross Church in the Northeast Neighborhood of Minneapolis where a vibrant Polish ministry continues to care for the Polish Roman Catholic Faithful Wisconsin Minnesota and Nebraska represent a different type of settlement with significant Polish communities having been established in rural areas Historian John Radzilowski estimates that up to a third of Poles in Minnesota settled in rural areas where they established 40 communities that were often centered around a Catholic church 35 Most of these settlers came from the Polish lands that had been taken by Prussia during the Partitions with a sub group coming from Silesia The Kaszub minority from Poland s Baltic coast was also strongly represented among Polish immigrants to Minnesota most notably in Winona Despite relative isolation from Poland and larger urban Polonian communities due to strong community integration these communities continued speaking Polish into the 1970s in some cases and continue to have a strong Polish identity Michigan Edit See also History of the Polish Americans in Metro Detroit Houses in a Polish neighborhood in Detroit MichiganMichigan s Polish population of more than 850 000 is the third largest among U S states behind that of New York and Illinois Polish Americans make up 8 6 of Michigan s total population The city of Detroit has a very large Polish community which historically settled in Poletown and Hamtramck on the east side of Detroit the neighborhoods along Michigan Avenue from 23rd street into east Dearborn the west side of Delray parts of Warrendale and several sections of Wyandotte downriver The northern part of Poletown was cleared of residents to make way for the General Motors Detroit Hamtramck Assembly plant Today it contains some of the most opulent Polish churches in America like St Stanislaus Sweetest Heart of Mary St Albertus St Josephat and St Hyacinthe Michigan as a state has Polish populations throughout In addition to metropolitan Detroit Grand Rapids Bay City Alpena and the surrounding area the thumb of Michigan Manistee and numerous places in northern lower Michigan and south central Michigan also have sizable Polish populations The Polish influence is still felt throughout the entire metropolitan Detroit area especially the suburb of Wyandotte which is slowly emerging as the major center of Polish American activities in the state An increase in new immigration from Poland is helping to bolster the parish community of Our Lady of Mount Carmel and a host of Polish American civic organizations located within the city of Wyandotte Also the Detroit suburb of Troy is home to the American Polish Cultural Center where the National Polish American Sports Hall of Fame has over 200 artifacts on display from over 100 inductees including Stan Musial and Mike Krzyzewski 36 St Mary s Preparatory a high school in Orchard Lake with historically Polish roots sponsors a popular annual Polish County Fair that bills itself as America s Largest High School Fair Outside of Metro Detroit Polish Americans retain a strong presence in Northern Michigan The town of Cedar in Leelanau County retains a large Polish presence and is home to a Polish Art Center as well as an annual polka festival 37 The counties of Alpena Presque Isle and Huron also have a large percentage and population of families of Polish immigrants Ohio Edit Inside view of St Stanislaus Church in Slavic Village in Cleveland OhioOhio is home to more than 440 000 people of Polish descent their presence felt most strongly in the Greater Cleveland area where half of Ohio s Polish population resides 38 The city of Cleveland Ohio has a large Polish community especially in historic Slavic Village as part of its Warszawa Section Poles from this part of Cleveland migrated to the suburbs such as Garfield Heights Parma and Seven Hills Parma has even recently been designated a Polish Village commercial district 39 Farther out other members of Cleveland s Polish community live in Brecksville Independence and Broadview Heights Many of these Poles return to their Polish roots by attending masses at St Stanislaus Church on East 65th Street and Baxter Avenue Cleveland s other Polish section is in Tremont located on Cleveland s west side The home parishes are St John Cantius and St John Kanty Other Polish language churches in Cleveland city include St Casimir St Barbara and Immaculate Heart of Mary Outside of annual church festivals other major city celebrations include Dyngus Day and the Slavic Village Harvest Festival celebrating with Polish food customer and Polka music 40 Cleveland is home to the Polka Hall of Fame Poles in Cleveland were instrumental in forming the Third Federal Savings and Loan in 1938 After seeing fellow Poles discriminated against by Cleveland s banks Ben Stefanski formed Third Federal Today the Stefanski family still controls the bank Unlike Cleveland s KeyBank and National City Corp which have their headquarters in Downtown Cleveland Third Federal is on Broadway Avenue in the Slavic Village neighborhood Third Federal Savings and Loan is in the top 25 saving and loan institutions in the United States In 2003 they acquired a Florida banking company and have branches in Florida and Ohio Texas Edit Polish American recruitment WWIPanna Maria Texas was founded by Upper Silesian settlers on Christmas Eve in 1854 Some people still speak Texas Silesian Silesian is regarded as either a dialect of Polish or a distinct language Cestohowa Kosciusko Falls City Polonia New Waverly Brenham Marlin Bremond Anderson Bryan and Chappell Hill were either founded or populated by the Poles citation needed Others Edit Main article List of U S cities with large Polish American populations Marker of immigration from Silesia into Texas located in Indianola TexasOther industrial cities with major Polish communities include Buffalo New York Boston Baltimore New Britain Connecticut Dallas Houston Portland Oregon Minneapolis Philadelphia Columbus Ohio Erie Pennsylvania Rochester New York Syracuse New York Los Angeles San Francisco Seattle Pittsburgh South Bend Indiana central western Massachusetts and Duluth Minnesota There is a relatively large Polish population in Saint Louis Missouri in addition to the area s many German Americans Luzerne County in northeastern Pennsylvania is the only county in the United States where a plurality of residents state their ancestry as Polish See Maps of American ancestries This includes the cities of Wilkes Barre Pittston Hazleton and Nanticoke Many of the immigrants were drawn to this area because of the mining of Anthracite coal in the region Polish influences are still common today in the form of church bazaars polka music and Polish cuisine It is widely believed that Boothwyn Pennsylvania has one of the fastest growing Polish communities in the United States In 2007 at the urging of Attorney Adrian Baron and the local Polonia Business Association New Britain Connecticut officially designated its Broad Street neighborhood as Little Poland where an estimated 30 000 residents claim Polish heritage Visitors can do an entire day s business completely in Polish including banking shopping dining legal consultations and even dance lessons The area has retained its Polish character since 1890 There is also a Polish community in Las Vegas 41 By state totals Edit Distribution of Americans claiming Polish Ancestry by county in 2018As of the 2021 American Community Survey the distribution of Polish Americans across the 50 states and DC is as presented in the following table Estimated Polish American population by state 42 1 State Number Percentage Alabama 28 557 0 57 Alaska 13 693 1 86 Arizona 153 023 2 16 Arkansas 22 785 0 76 California 452 019 1 15 Colorado 133 378 2 33 Connecticut 240 390 6 67 Delaware 39 254 4 00 District of Columbia 15 330 2 24 Florida 478 483 2 24 Georgia 108 837 1 02 Hawaii 12 894 0 89 Idaho 21 739 1 20 Illinois 825 037 6 43 Indiana 197 807 2 93 Iowa 38 951 1 23 Kansas 37 188 1 27 Kentucky 40 899 0 91 Louisiana 20 842 0 45 Maine 30 038 2 21 Maryland 172 300 2 80 Massachusetts 283 050 4 05 Michigan 784 200 7 79 Minnesota 236 895 4 18 Mississippi 11 882 0 40 Missouri 97 813 1 59 Montana 18 912 1 75 Nebraska 61 910 3 17 Nevada 52 563 1 72 New Hampshire 53 939 3 93 New Jersey 470 082 5 09 New Mexico 20 065 0 95 New York 866 242 4 31 North Carolina 148 987 1 44 North Dakota 16 032 2 07 Ohio 414 587 3 52 Oklahoma 29 735 0 75 Oregon 68 963 1 64 Pennsylvania 757 627 5 84 Rhode Island 36 411 3 33 South Carolina 74 893 1 47 South Dakota 13 600 1 54 Tennessee 74 289 1 08 Texas 287 928 1 00 Utah 25 477 0 79 Vermont 23 234 3 62 Virginia 151 996 1 77 Washington 126 400 1 66 West Virginia 28 241 1 57 Wisconsin 481 126 8 19 Wyoming 9 752 1 69 United States 8 810 275 2 67 Religion Edit St Stanislaus Kostka Church in Chicago Illinois the city s first Polish parishAs in Poland the majority of Polish immigrants are Roman Catholic Historically less than 5 of Americans who identified as Polish would state any other religion but Roman Catholic Jewish immigrants from Poland largely without exception self identified 43 as Jewish German Jewish Russian Jewish or Austrian Jewish when inside the United States and faced a historical trajectory far different from that of the Polish Catholics 44 Polish Americans built dozens of Polish Cathedrals in the Great Lakes and New England regions and in the Mid Atlantic States Chicago s Poles founded the following churches St Stanislaus Kostka Holy Trinity St John Cantius Holy Innocents St Helen St Fidelis St Mary of the Angels St Hedwig St Josaphat St Francis of Assisi Humboldt Park St Hyacinth Basilica St Wenceslaus Immaculate Heart of Mary St Stanislaus B amp M St James Cragin St Ladislaus St Constance St Mary of Perpetual Help St Barbara SS Peter amp Paul St Joseph Back of the Yards Five Holy Martyrs St Pancratius St Bruno St Camillus St Michael South Chicago Immaculate Conception South Chicago St Mary Magdalene St Bronislava St Thecla St Florian St Mary of Czestochowa Cicero St Simeon Bellwood St Blase Summit St Glowienke Downers Grove St John the Fisherman Lisle St Isidore the Farmer Blue Island St Andrew the Apostle Calumet City and St John the Baptist Harvey as well as St Mary of Nazareth Hospital on the Near West Side Church of St Casimir in Saint Paul Minnesota built in 1904Poles established approximately 50 Roman Catholic parishes in Minnesota Among them St Wojciech Adalbert and St Kazimierz Casimir in St Paul Holy Cross St Philip St Hedwig Jadwiga Slaska and All Saints in Minneapolis Our Lady Star of the Sea St Casimir s and SS Peter and Paul in Duluth and St Kazimierz Casimir and St Stanislaw Kostka in Winona A few of the parishes of particular note founded by Poles elsewhere in Minnesota include St John Cantius in Wilno St Jozef Joseph in Browerville St John the Baptist in Virginia St Mary in Czestochowa St Wojciech Adalbert in Silver Lake Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Opole Our Lady of Lourdes in Little Falls St Stanislaus B amp M in Sobieski St Stanislaus Kostka in Bowlus St Hedwig in Holdingford Sacred Heart in Flensburg Holy Cross in North Prairie Holy Cross in Harding and St Isadore in Moran Township Poles in Cleveland established St Hyacinth s now closed Saint Stanislaus Church 1873 Sacred Heart 1888 2010 Immaculate Heart of Mary 1894 St John Cantius Westside Poles St Barbara closed Sts Peter and Paul Church 1927 in Garfield Heights Saint Therese 1927 Garfield Heights Marymount Hospital 1948 Garfield Heights and Saint Monica Church 1952 Garfield Heights Also the Polish Community created the Our Lady of Czestochowa Shrine on the campus of Marymount Hospital 45 Poles in South Bend Indiana founded four parishes St Hedwig Parish 1877 St Casimir Parish 1898 St Stanislaus Parish 1907 and St Adalbert Parish South Bend 1910 Circa 1897 in Pittsburgh s Polish Hill Immaculate Heart of Mary modeled on St Peter s Basilica in Rome was founded 46 Polish Americans preserved their longstanding tradition of venerating the Lady of Czestochowa in the United States Replicas of the painting are common in Polish American churches and parishes and many churches and parishes are named in her honor The veneration of the Virgin Mary in Polish parishes is a significant difference between Polish Catholicism and American Catholicism Polish nuns in the Felician Order for instance took to Marianism as the cornerstone of their spiritual development and Polish churches in the U S were seen as cult like in their veneration of Mary 47 Religious catechism and writings from convents found that Polish nuns in the Felician Sisters and The Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth were taught to have a sound appreciation of Mary s role in the mystery of the Redemption and a filial confidence in her patronage more explicitly to be a true daughter to the immaculate Virgin Mary The Marianism that was taught in Polish parish schools in the United States was done independent of the Catholic Church and demonstrated autonomy on the part of the nuns who taught Polish American youths It is notable that there was a concurrent movement in Poland that eventually led to a separatist Catholic church the Mariavite Church which greatly expanded the veneration of the Virgin Mary in its doctrine In Poland the Virgin Mary was believed to serve as a mother of mercy and salvation for Catholics and throughout the Middle Ages Polish knights prayed to her before battle Polish American churches featured replicas of the Lady of Czestochowa which was on feature at the Jasna Gora Monastery and holds national and religious significance because of its connection to a victorious military defense in 1655 Several towns in America are named Czestochowa in commemoration of the town in Poland 47 Though the majority of Polish Americans remained loyal to the Catholic Church a breakaway Catholic church was founded in 1897 in Scranton Pennsylvania Polish parishioners founded the church to assert independence from the Catholic Church in America The split was in rebellion from the church leadership then dominated by Irish bishops and priests and lacking Polish speakers and Polish church leaders It exists today with 25 000 parishioners and remains independent from the authority of the Roman Catholic Church Poland is also home to followers of Protestantism and the Eastern Orthodox Church Small groups of both of these groups also immigrated to the United States One of the most celebrated painters of religious icons in North America today is a Polish American Eastern Orthodox priest Fr Theodore Jurewicz who singlehandedly painted New Gracanica Monastery in Third Lake Illinois over the span of three years 48 A small group of Lipka Tatars originating from the Bialystok region helped co found the first Muslim organization in Brooklyn New York in 1907 and later a mosque which is still in use 49 Social status EditIn 1969 the median family income was 8 849 for Polish Americans The median family income for all families in the United States in 1968 was 7 900 Leonard F Chrobot summarizes the Census data for 1969 50 The typical Polish American male was born in the United States spoke Polish in his home when he was a child but speaks English now is 38 7 years old female 40 9 and is married to a Polish wife If he is between 25 and 34 years of age he completed 12 7 years of school and if he is over 35 he completed 10 9 years His median family income is 8 849 The male works as a craftsman foreman or kindred occupation and his wife is employed as a clerical worker In 2017 by educational attainment the U S Census estimates that 42 5 have bachelor s degrees or higher whereas the American population as a whole is 32 0 51 The median household income for Americans of Polish descent is estimated by the U S Census as 73 452 with no statistically significant differences from other Slavic American groups Czech Slovak and Ukrainian The median household income for those of Russian ancestry has been reported as higher on the U S Census at 80 554 21 Socioeconomic indicators 2017 21 Ethnicity Household Income College degrees Russian 80 554 60 4Polish 73 452 42 5Czech 71 663 45 4Serbian 79 135 46 0Slovak 73 093 44 8Ukrainian 75 674 52 2White non Hispanic 65 845 35 8Total U S Population 60 336 32 0Politics EditMain article Polish American vote Further information Poland United States relations Polish Americans comprise a large voting bloc sought after by both the Democratic and Republican parties Polish Americans comprise 3 2 of the United States population but were estimated at nearly 10 of the overall electorate as of 2012 52 The Polish American population is concentrated in several Midwestern swing states that make issues important to Polish Americans more likely to be heard by presidential candidates According to John Kromkowski Polish Americans make up an almost archetypical swing vote 53 The Piast Institute found that Polish Americans are 36 Democrats 33 Independents and 26 are Republicans as of 2008 Ideologically they were categorized as being in the more conservative wing of the Democratic Party and demonstrated a much stronger inclination for third party candidates in presidential elections than the American public 52 Historically Polish American voters have swung from the Democratic and Republican parties depending on economic and social politics In the 1918 election Woodrow Wilson courted Poles through his promises of Polish autonomy They gave strong support to the wet Catholic Al Smith in 1928 They gave even more enthusiastic support to the New Deal Coalition and President Franklin D Roosevelt In World War II they were fiercely against Nazi Germany FDR consistently won over 90 of the Polish vote during his four terms Polish Americans founded the Polish American Congress PAC in 1944 to create strong leadership and represent Polish interests during World War II FDR met with the PAC and assured Poles of a peaceful and independent Poland following the war When this did not come to fruition and with the publication of Arthur Bliss Lane s I Saw Poland Betrayed in 1947 Polish Americans came to feel that they had been betrayed by the United States government 54 John F Kennedy won a majority of the Polish vote in 1960 owing in part to his Catholicism and connection to ethnic communities and the labor movement Since then Polish voters have been tied to the more conservative wing of the Democratic Party but shifted away from the Democrats over social issues such as abortion Poland s liberation from Soviet occupation during the 1980s was championed to Ronald Reagan and George H W Bush but Bill Clinton seized Polish voters through his expansion of NATO The relevance of the Polish American vote has been in question in recent elections as Americans of Polish descent have assimilated to U S society and increased their rate of exogamous marriages citation needed In modern politics the Polish American vote continues to have influence in the United States The American Polish Advisory Council a politically involved network of Polish organizations has created a political platform and convention and has shared its agenda with politicians both at the state and federal level In the 2012 elections Polish Americans have been courted by both the Republican and Democratic parties Anti Polonism Edit Main article Antipolonism The Polish community was long the subject of anti Polish sentiment in America The word Polack has become an ethnic slur This prejudice was partially associated with anti Catholicism and early 20th century worries about being overrun by Central European immigrants Culture EditThe cultural contributions of Polish Americans span a broad spectrum including in media in the publishing industry in religion art food museums and festivals Media Edit Among the most notable Polish American media groups are Hippocrene Books founded by Polish American George Blagowidow TVP Polonia Polsat 2 International TVN International Polvision TV4U New York WEUR Radio Chicago Polish Radio External Service formerly Radio Polonia Polonia Today and the Warsaw Voice There are also Polish American newspapers and magazines such as the Dziennik Zwiazkowy PL magazine 55 Polish Weekly Chicago the Super Express USA and Nowy Dziennik in New York and Tygodnik Polski and The Polish Times in Detroit not to mention the Ohio University Press Series in Polish American Studies 56 Przeglad Polski Online Polish American Journal 57 the Polish News Online 58 Am Pol Eagle Newspaper 59 and Progress for Poland 60 among others Cultural identity Edit Even in long integrated communities remnants of Polish culture and vocabulary remain Roman Catholic churches built by Polish American communities often serve as a vehicle for cultural retention During the 1950s 1970s the Polish wedding was often an all day event Traditional Polish weddings in Chicago metropolitan area in areas such as the southeast side of Chicago inner suburbs like Calumet City and Hegewisch and Northwest Indiana suburbs such as Whiting Hammond and East Chicago always occurred on Saturdays The receptions were typically held in a large hall such as a VFW Hall A polka band of drums a singer accordion and trumpet entertained the people as they danced traditional dances such as the oberek Polish Hop and the waltz The musicians as well as the guests were expected to enjoy ample amounts of both food and drink Foods such as Polish sausage sauerkraut pierogi and kluski were common Common drinks were beer screwdrivers and highballs Many popular Polish foods became a fixture in the American cuisine of today including kielbasa Polish sausage babka cake kaszanka pierogi and especially around the time of Ash Wednesday and the beginning of Lent paczki doughnuts Polish American cultural groups include Polish American Arts Association and the Polish Falcons Among the many Polish American writers are a number of poets such as Phil Boiarski Hedwig Gorski John Guzlowski John Minczeski Linda Nemec Foster Leonard Kress poet and translator Cecilia Woloch Kim Kikel and Mark Pawlak poet and editor along with novelists Leslie Pietrzyk Thad Rutkowski Suzanne Strempek Shea 61 and others Museums Edit The Polish Museum of America in ChicagoAmong the best known Polish American museums are the Polish Museum of America in Chicago s old Polish Downtown founded in 1935 the largest ethnic museum in the U S sponsored by the Polish Roman Catholic Union of America The Museum Library ranks as one of the best outside of Poland Equally ambitious is the Polish American Museum located in Port Washington New York founded in 1977 It features displays of folk art costumes historical artifacts and paintings as well as bilingual research library with particular focus on achievements of the people of Polish heritage in America 62 63 There is also the Polish Cultural Institute and Museum of Winona Minnesota known informally as The Polish Museum of Winona Formally established in 1979 by Father Paul Breza the Polish Museum of Winona features exhibits pertaining to Winona s Kashubian Polish culture and hosts a wide range of events celebrating America s Polish American heritage in general Festivals Edit Polish American parade in New York City 2017There are a number of unique festivals street parties and parades held by the Polish American community The Polish Fest in Milwaukee Wisconsin which is a popular annual festival takes place at the Henry Maier Festival Park It is also the largest Polish festival in the United States It attracts Polish Americans from all over Wisconsin and nearby Chicago who come to celebrate Polish culture through music food and entertainment New York City is home to the New York Polish Film Festival an annual film festival showcasing current and past films of Polish cinema NYPFF is the only annual presentation of Polish films in New York City and the largest festival promoting and presenting Polish films on the East Coast 64 Polish Constitution Day Parade in Chicago 1985The Polish Festival in Syracuse s Clinton Square has become the largest cultural event in the history of the Polish community in Central New York There s also the Taste of Polonia festival held in Chicago every Labor Day weekend since 1979 at the Copernicus Cultural and Civic Center in the Jefferson Park area The Polish Festival in Portland Oregon is reported to be the largest in the Western United States 65 One of the newest and most ambitious festivals is the Seattle Polish Film Festival organized in conjunction with the Polish Film Festival in Gdynia Poland Kansas City Kansas is home to a large Polish population and for the last 31 years All Saints Parish has hosted Polski Day 2 And last but not least there s the Pierogi Fest in Whiting Indiana with many more attractions other than Polish pierogi and the Wisconsin Dells Polish Fest 61 Holidays Edit Kosciuszko Day February 4 Casimir Pulaski Day March Illinois regional Feast of the Annunciation March 25 Paczki Day Fat Tuesday Constitution Day May 3 Dyngus Day Easter Monday Feast of Our Lady of Czestochowa August 26 Dozhinki September General Pulaski Memorial Day October 11 Feast of the Immaculate Conception December 8 Wigilia December 24 Polish Americans carried on celebrations of Constitution Day throughout their time in the United States without political suppression In Poland from 1940 to 1989 the holiday was banned by Nazi and Soviet occupiers 66 Contributions to American culture Edit Polish Army Veterans Association in America Branch 57 in Elizabeth New Jersey 1928 Polish Americans who fought in the Blue Army Image taken in Detroit Michigan 1955 and featured in Life magazine Polish Americans have influenced American culture in various ways Most prominent among these is that Jefferson drafting the Constitution of the United States was inspired by religious tolerance of the Warsaw Confederation 67 which guaranteed freedom of conscience The Polish culture left also culinary marks in the United States the inclusion of traditional Polish cuisine such as pierogi kielbasa golabki Some of these Polish foods were tweaked and reinvented in the new American environment such as Chicago s Maxwell Street Polish Sausage Polish Americans have also contributed to altering the physical landscape of the cities they have inhabited erecting monuments to Polish American heroes such as Kosciuszko and Pulaski Distinctive cultural phenomena such as Polish flats or the Polish Cathedral style of architecture became part and parcel of the areas where Polish settlement occurred Poles cultural ties to Roman Catholicism have also influenced the adoption of such distinctive rites like the blessing of the baskets before Easter in many areas of the United States by fellow Roman Catholics Architectural influence Edit Early Polish immigrants built houses with high pitched roofs in the United States The high pitched roof is necessary in a country subject to snow and is a common feature in Northern and Eastern European architecture In Panna Maria Texas Poles built brick houses with thick walls and high pitched roofs Meteorological and soil data show that region in Texas is subject to less than 1 inch of snow 68 and a meteorological study conducted 1960 1990 found the lowest one day temperature ever recorded was 5 degrees Fahrenheit on January 21 1986 highly unlikely to support much snow 69 The shaded veranda that was created by these roofs was a popular living space for the Polish Texans who spent much of their time there to escape the hot temperatures of subtropical Texas The Poles in Texas added porches to these verandas often in the southward windy side which is an alteration to traditional folk architecture 70 According to oral histories recorded from descendants the verandas were used for almost all daily activities from preparing meals to dressing animal hides 70 The Poles in Texas put straw thatching on their roofs until the early 1900s another European influence The first house built by a Pole in Panna Maria is the John Gawlik House constructed in 1858 The building still stands and is visited as a historical attraction in the cultural history of Texas In 2011 the San Antonio Conservation Society financed a replacement of the building s roof identifying it as a historically and architecturally significant building 71 Military Edit Organizations like the Polish Legion of American Veterans were organized to memorialize the Polish contribution to the American military 72 Those who contributed to the Polish military created Polish Army Veterans Association in America 73 See also Edit United States portal Poland portalEuropean Americans Kashubian Americans Kashubian Diaspora Polish American Football League Polish Australians Polish Brazilians Polish British Polish Canadians Polish Cathedral style Polish American organized crime Polish American voteLists Edit List of Polish Americans List of place names of Polish origin in the United States List of U S cities with large Polish American populationsCitations Edit a b c d Table B04006 People Reporting Ancestry 2021 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on December 12 2022 Retrieved March 6 2023 IPUMS USA University of Minnesota Retrieved October 12 2022 One Nation Under God Religion in Contemporary American Society p 120 Polonia amerykanska p 40 Appendix Table 2 Languages Spoken at Home 1980 1990 2000 and 2007 United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 6 2012 Detailed Language Spoken at Home and Ability to Speak English for Persons 5 Years and Over 50 Languages with Greatest Number of Speakers United States 1990 United States Census Bureau 1990 Retrieved July 22 2012 Language Spoken at Home 2000 United States Bureau of the Census Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved August 8 2012 Detailed Languages Spoken at Home by English Speaking Ability for the Population 5 Years and Over 2011 PDF census gov US Census Bureau p 3 Archived from the original PDF on September 8 2019 Mother Tongue of the Foreign Born Population 1910 to 1940 1960 and 1970 United States Census Bureau March 9 1999 Archived from the original on September 8 2019 Retrieved August 6 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Arthur L Waldo 1977 True Heroes of Jamestown Miami Fla American Institute of Polish Culture 1977 https books google com books about True heroes of Jamestown html id kiESAAAAYAAJ last accessed July 17 2019 Obst Peter J July 20 2012 Jamestown 1608 Marker Poles in America Foundation Retrieved August 3 2019 See the reference to Anusim Additionally refer to the similar case of John Kerry s paternal grandfather a Non Polish subject whom immigrated to Boston and passed for a Czech Austrian Hungarian Catholic Greene Victor 1980 Poles In Thernstrom Stephan Orlov Ann Handlin Oscar eds Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups Harvard University Press pp 787 803 ISBN 0674375122 OCLC 1038430174 Waclaw Kruszka Historya Polska w Ameryce Milwaukee 1905 p 65 in Polish PDF The Polish American Liturgical Center Retrieved November 2 2015 Polish Americans Status in an ethnic Community by Helena Lopata p 89 Rank of States for Selected Ancestry Groups with 100 00 or more persons 1980 PDF United States Census Bureau Retrieved November 30 2012 1990 Census of Population Detailed Ancestry Groups for States PDF United States Census Bureau September 18 1992 Retrieved November 30 2012 Ancestry 2000 United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved November 30 2012 Total ancestry categories tallied for people with one or more ancestry categories reported 2010 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on January 18 2015 Retrieved November 30 2012 About the Population Census Flps newberry org Archived from the original on December 11 2014 Retrieved March 17 2015 a b c d Data Access and Dissemination Systems DADS U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved December 29 2018 Bukowczyck p 108 Bukowczyck p 109 American FactFinder Results Archived from the original on February 14 2020 Retrieved April 23 2018 Bukowczyk pg 35 Bukowczyk pg 36 The Polish Community in Metro Chicago A Community Profile of Strengths and Needs A Census 2000 Report published by the Polish American Association June 2004 p 18 Tomasz Inglot and John P Pelissero Ethnic Political Power in a Machine City Chicago s Poles at Rainbow s End Urban Affairs Review 1993 28 4 pp 526 543 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics 2011 Supplemental Table 2 U S Department of Homeland Security Retrieved November 2 2012 Supplemental Table 2 Persons Obtaining Lawful Permanent Resident Status by Leading Core Based Statistical Areas CBSAs of Residence and Region and Country of Birth Fiscal Year 2014 U S Department of Homeland Security Retrieved September 11 2016 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics 2013 Supplemental Table 2 U S Department of Homeland Security Retrieved September 11 2016 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics 2012 Supplemental Table 2 U S Department of Homeland Security Archived from the original on December 22 2014 Retrieved September 11 2016 POLISH AIRLINES LOT LOT POLISH AIRLINES Retrieved November 17 2012 Gauper Beth May 27 2007 Polish for a day MidwestWeekends com St Paul Pioneer Press Retrieved January 11 2008 John Radzilowski Poles in Minnesota St Paul Minnesota Historical Society 2005 p 6 National Polish American Sports Hall of Fame Artifacts on Display at the American Polish Cultural Center National Polish American Sports Hall of Fame Retrieved February 23 2009 dead link Polish Art Center Contact Us www polartcenter com Retrieved March 1 2022 Data Access and Dissemination Systems DADS American FactFinder Results Factfinder2 census gov Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved March 17 2015 Polish Village In Parma Ohio Facebook com Retrieved August 28 2017 The Cleveland Society of Poles Polish Foundation Cleveland Ohio Clevelandsociety com Retrieved September 10 2012 Simich Jerry L Wright Thomas C March 7 2005 The Peoples Of Las Vegas One City Many Faces ISBN 9780874176513 Table B04006 People Reporting Ancestry 2021 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates All States United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on March 6 2023 Retrieved March 6 2023 See Jewish Surnames Supposedly Explained in regards to name changes self identification amp c as pertaining to Jewish and other immigrants at Ellis Island Project MUSE A Social History of Polish American Catholicism Muse jhu edu doi 10 1353 cht 0 0018 S2CID 161664866 Retrieved March 17 2015 Our Lady of Czestochowa Shrine Marymount Hospital Retrieved October 14 2010 No Author Listed A History of Polish Hill and the PHCA Retrieved December 22 2006 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help a b Mary the Messiah Polish Immigrant Heresy and the Malleable Ideology of the Roman Catholic Church 1880 1930 John J Bukowczyk Journal of American Ethnic History Vol 4 No 2 Spring 1985 pp 5 32 Serbian Monastery of New Gracanica History Newgracanica com Archived from the original on February 21 2009 Retrieved August 28 2017 Religion Ramadan Time November 15 1937 Archived from the original on November 2 2007 Retrieved May 22 2010 Leonard F Chrobot The Elusive Polish American Polish American Studies 30 1 1973 pp 54 59 at p 58 online Data Access and Dissemination Systems DADS U S Census website Retrieved December 29 2018 a b No Polish jokes on Romney s tour Phillytrib com August 5 2012 Retrieved October 2 2012 Romney hopes Polish visit can pay dividends in swing states Political Hotsheet CBS News August 1 2012 Retrieved September 30 2012 Ubriaco Robert Jr Giving Credit where credit is due Cold War political culture Polish American politics the Truman Doctrine and the Victory Thesis The Polish Review Vol LI No 3 4 2006 263 281 PL polsko amerykanski dwujezyczny miesiecznik Polish American bilingual monthly Plmagazine net Archived from the original on October 13 2012 Retrieved September 10 2012 Ohio University Press amp Swallow Press Ohioswallow com Retrieved September 10 2012 Welcome to the Polish American Journal Polamjournal com Retrieved August 28 2017 Polsko Amerykanski portal Polish American portal Polishnews Com Retrieved September 10 2012 The Am Pol Eagle Ampoleagle com Retrieved August 28 2017 Progress for Poland Chicago Fakty Wiadomosci Opinie Progress for Poland Retrieved March 17 2015 a b Polish American Historical Association Resources and Supported Links Polishamericanstudies org Archived from the original on November 25 2017 Retrieved August 28 2017 Smithsonian Magazine Polish American Museum at Smithsonian com James Barron the New York Times If you re thinking of living in Port Washington Published August 8 1982 Swieto polskiego kina w Nowym Jorku in Polish Wirtualna Polska May 6 2009 Retrieved March 12 2012 Polish Festival Press Release Archived from the original on December 30 2011 Retrieved February 8 2016 May 3rd Polish Constitution Day Ampoleagle com Retrieved March 17 2015 Sandra Lapointe The Golden Age of Polish Philosophy Kazimierz Twardowski s Philosophical Legacy Springer 2009 pp 2 3 1 Intellicast Panna Maria Historic Weather Averages in Texas 78144 Intellicast com Retrieved March 17 2015 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 21 2009 Retrieved April 10 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Francis Edward Abernathy August 1 2000 Publications of the Texas Folklore Society University of North Texas Press pp 132 ISBN 978 1 57441 092 1 Retrieved April 10 2013 mySouTex com Grant will replace roof of 1858 Panna Maria house Mysoutex com Archived from the original on June 29 2013 Retrieved March 17 2015 PLAV History Plav org Retrieved August 28 2017 LACHOWICZ TEOFIL Juszczak Albert 2010 The Polish Army Veterans Association of America A Historical Outline The Polish Review 55 4 437 439 doi 10 2307 27920674 ISSN 0032 2970 JSTOR 27920674 S2CID 254449436 Sources and further reading EditBukowczyk John J A history of the Polish Americans 2nd ed Routledge 2017 onlinefirst edition published as Bukowczyk John J 1986 And My Children Did Not Know Me A History of the Polish Americans Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 30701 5 OCLC 59790559 Bukowczyk John J 1996 Polish Americans and Their History Community Culture and Politics Pittsburgh Pa University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 0 8229 3953 3 OCLC 494311843 Erdmans Mary Patrice Immigrants and ethnics Conflict and identity in Chicago Polonia Sociological Quarterly 36 1 1995 175 195 online Erdmans Mary Patrice 1998 Opposite Poles Immigrants and Ethnics in Polish Chicago 1976 1990 University Park Pa Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 0 271 01735 X OCLC 37245940 Esslinger Dean R Immigrants and the city Ethnicity and mobility in a nineteenth century Midwestern community Kennikat Press 1975 focus on demography and social mobility of Germans Poles and other Catholics in South Bend PhD version University of Notre Dame ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1972 7216267 Gladsky Thomas S 1992 Princes Peasants and Other Polish Selves Ethnicity in American Literature Amherst University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 0 87023 775 6 OCLC 24912598 Greene Victor Poles in Thernstrom Stephan Orlov Ann Handlin Oscar eds Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups ISBN 0674375122 Harvard University Press 1980 pp 787 803 Gurnack Anne M and James M Cook Polish Americans Political Partisanship and Presidential Elections Voting 1972 2020 European Journal of Transformation Studies 9 2 2021 30 39 onlineJackson David J 2003 Just Another Day in a New Polonia Contemporary Polish American Polka Music Popular Music amp Society 26 4 529 540 doi 10 1080 0300776032000144986 ISSN 0300 7766 OCLC 363770952 S2CID 194105509 Jaroszynska Kirchmann Anna D The exile mission The Polish political diaspora and Polish Americans 1939 1956 Ohio University Press 2004 Jones J Sydney Polish Americans Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America edited by Thomas Riggs 3rd ed vol 3 Gale 2014 pp 477 492 1 Lopata Helena Znaniecka 1976 Polish Americans Status Competition in an Ethnic Community Ethnic groups in American life series Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 686436 8 OCLC 1959615 Majewski Karen 2003 Traitors and True Poles Narrating a Polish American Identity 1880 1939 Ohio University Press Polish and Polish American studies series Athens Ohio University Press ISBN 0 8214 1470 4 OCLC 51895984 Mello Caitlin Polish Immigration to Chicago and the Impact on Local Society and Culture Language Culture Politics International Journal 1 5 2020 183 193 onlineNowakowski Jacek 1989 Polish American Ways New York Perennial Library ISBN 0 06 096336 0 OCLC 20130171 Pacyga Dominic A Poles in Elliott Robert Barkan ed A Nation of Peoples A Sourcebook on America s Multicultural Heritage 1999 pp 428 45 Pacyga Dominic A To live amongst others Poles and their neighbors in industrial Chicago 1865 1930 Journal of American Ethnic History 16 1 1996 55 73 online Pacyga Dominic A Polish immigrants and industrial Chicago Workers on the south side 1880 1922 University of Chicago Press 2003 Pacyga Dominic A American Warsaw the rise fall and rebirth of Polish Chicago University of Chicago Press 2019 Pienkos Donald E PNA A Centennial History of the Polish National Alliance of the United States Columbia University Press 1984 online Pienkos Donald E For your freedom through ours Polish American efforts on Poland s behalf 1863 1991 1991 https archive org details foryourfreedomth0000pien online Pienkos Donald E Of Patriots and Presidents America s Polish Diaspora and U S Foreign Policy since 1917 Polish American Studies 68 Spring 2011 5 17 Pula James S 1995 Polish Americans An Ethnic Community Twayne s immigrant heritage of America series New York Twayne Publishers ISBN 0 8057 8427 6 OCLC 30544009 Pula James S 1996 Image Status Mobility and Integration in American Society The Polish Experience Journal of American Ethnic History 16 1 74 95 ISSN 0278 5927 OCLC 212041643 Pula James S Polish American Catholicism A Case Study in Cultural Determinism U S Catholic Historian Volume 27 3 Summer 2009 pp 1 19 in Project MUSE Radzilowski John A Social History of Polish American Catholicism U S Catholic Historian Volume 27 3 Summer 2009 pp 21 43 online Silverman Deborah Anders 2000 Polish American Folklore Urbana Univ of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 02569 5 OCLC 237414611 Sugrue Thomas Origins of the Urban Crisis Race and Inequality in Postwar Detroit Princeton University Press 2005 online Swastek Joseph The Poles in South Bend to 1914 Polish American Studies 2 3 4 1945 79 88 Tentler Leslie Woodcock Who Is the Church Conflict in a Polish Immigrant Parish in Late Nineteenth Century Detroit Comparative Studies in Society and History vol 25 April 1983 241 276 Thomas William Isaac Znaniecki Florian Witold 1996 1918 1920 The Polish Peasant in Europe and America A Classic Work in Immigration History Urbana University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 06484 4 OCLC 477221814 Wrobel Paul Our Way Family Parish and Neighborhood in a Polish American Community University of Notre Dame Press 1979 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 David Too 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 35 in JSTOR Zurawski Joseph W 1975 Polish American History and Culture A Classified Bibliography Chicago Polish Museum of America OCLC 1993061 External links EditPolish Americans at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource PolishMigration org immigration records to United States between 1834 through 1897 Chicago Foreign Language Press Survey English translations of 120 000 pages of newspaper articles from Chicago s foreign language press from 1855 to 1938 many from Polish papers Polish Americans Document Gale Power Search go gale com Retrieved September 15 2021 Retrieved from https en 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