Kashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum

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Kashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum
Kashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum logo.png
Polish Museum corner.jpg
Viewed from the intersection of Liberty Street and Second Street
Kashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum
Established1979 (1979)
Location102 Liberty Street, Winona, Minnesota 559873, United States
Coordinates 44°03′03″N91°37′41″W / 44.05075°N 91.628°W / 44.05075; -91.628
TypeEthnographic history
Executive directorJeff Turkowski
Website polishmuseumwinona.org

The Kashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum is a cultural and historical museum, founded in 1979 to preserve the Polish and Kashubian heritage of Winona, Minnesota. Known locally as the Polish Museum, it is housed in a lumber yard office built by the Laird-Norton Lumber Company in 1890, located at 102 Liberty Street in Winona, Minnesota, United States. [1] The museum was formerly known as the Polish Cultural Institute and Museum, but has since updated its name to expand upon the highlights of the Kashubian culture within Winona.

Contents

The Kashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum

The front of the Kashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum 102LibertyStreetWinonaMN.jpg
The front of the Kashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum

The Laird-Norton Building was purchased in 1979 by Father Paul Breza, a Winona-born priest of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Winona. It was intended to store historical materials pertaining to Polish immigrants in Winona, but disagreements within Winona's Polish community led to the formation of two separate organizations: the Polish Heritage Society and the Polish Cultural Institute. Under Fr. Breza's leadership, the Polish Cultural Institute was formally incorporated in 1979 to continue renovating the Polish Museum and to otherwise foster an appreciation of Polish contributions to the Winona community. [2] The status of Winona as "Kashubian Capital of America" [3] is also recognized by the Polish Museum, and has since been developed further with Winona's Sister City Program with Bytów, Poland.

In 2010, the Polish Heritage Society inducted Fr. Breza into its Polish Heritage Hall of Fame, formalizing a reconciliation between the two organizations. [4] Another Kashubian-American activist associated with the Kashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum was the writer and educator Anne Pellowski, who was born in Trempealeau County, Wisconsin, but attended high school in Winona and lived there in her retirement.

The Polish Museum

The first floor of the Museum building [5] contains exhibits and other materials relating to Polish and Kashubian immigrant life in Winona and the surrounding areas. [6] A gift shop offers for sale books, clothing, music and other items, many of which are imported from Poland. In recent years, two nearby buildings have been acquired: the Schultz House is being renovated to serve as a heritage house, and the Morrison Annex Event Center serves as a site for cultural events, such as dances and musical performances. The Morrison Annex Event Center also features a 165-foot mural illustrating the lives and contributions of Polish and Kashubian immigrant families in Winona.

The Diocesan Collection

The second floor of the Museum building is devoted to a collection of artifacts recovered from churches in the Diocese of Winona, such as the Basilica of Saint Stanislaus Kostka. While this collection has been acquired and curated by Fr. Breza, the items themselves remain the property of the Diocese. The collection is extremely extensive and includes statuary, sanctuary furniture, vestments, and other semi-forgotten accoutrements of nineteenth-century Polish Catholicism in the United States. Occasionally, items from the collections are lent out to area Catholic churches seeking to enhance the historicity of their worship spaces.

Cultural Activities

The Kashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum has always been active in fostering an understanding of Polish and Kashubian culture, whether the immigrant culture of Winona or that of modern Poland. In recent years, as appreciation of Kashubian-American culture has increased, the Kashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum has featured Kashubian customs (such as the Blessing of Flowers and "Smaczne Jablka" or Apple Fest) and reached out to Kashubian Poles, especially in the town of Bytów, which is one of Winona's sister cities. One regular activity is the exchange of high school students between Bytów and Winona. [7] Another is musical presentations at the Annex, which range from local polka bands to the performance of recently discovered music written by Polish immigrants. [8]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kashubians</span> West Slavic ethnic group

The Kashubians, also known as Cassubians or Kashubs, are a Lechitic ethnic group native to the historical region of Pomerania, including its eastern part called Pomerelia, in north-central Poland. Their settlement area is referred to as Kashubia. They speak the Kashubian language, which is classified as a separate language closely related to Polish.

Kashubian or Cassubian is a West Slavic language belonging to the Lechitic subgroup.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Winona, Minnesota</span> City in Minnesota, United States

Winona is a city in and the county seat of Winona County, Minnesota, United States. Located in bluff country on the Mississippi River, its most noticeable physical landmark is Sugar Loaf. The population was 25,948 at the 2020 census.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kościerzyna</span> Place in Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland

Kościerzyna is a town in Kashubia in Gdańsk Pomerania region, northern Poland, with 23,327 inhabitants as of June 2023. It has been the capital of Kościerzyna County in Pomeranian Voivodeship since 1999; previously it was in Gdańsk Voivodeship from 1975 to 1998.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bytów</span> Place in Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Polish Americans</span> Ethnic group; Americans of Polish ancestry

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wiele, Pomeranian Voivodeship</span> Village in Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland

Wiele is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Karsin, within Kościerzyna County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 5 kilometres (3 mi) north-west of Karsin, 23 km (14 mi) south of Kościerzyna, and 71 km (44 mi) south-west of the regional capital Gdańsk. It is located in the Zabor Land, a southern part of the ethnocultural region of Kashubia in the historic region of Pomerania.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pine Creek, Wisconsin</span> Unincorporated community in Wisconsin, United States

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Basilica of Saint Stanislaus Kostka</span> Historic church in Minnesota, United States

The Basilica of Saint Stanislaus Kostka is a historic church of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Winona in Winona, Minnesota, United States, and a prominent fixture on the city's skyline. Within the diocese it is known as Saint Stan's. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984 as Church of St. Stanislaus–Catholic. It was designated as a Minor Basilica of the Roman Catholic Church on November 10, 2011 by Pope Benedict XVI.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jan Romuald Byzewski</span>

Jan Romuald Byzewski, better known in America as Father Romuald Byzewski, was born in the Kaszubian village of Karwia, in the Prussian jurisdiction of Danzig (Gdansk), on October 10, 1842.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jakub W.J. Pacholski</span>

Jakub Wałenty Jan Pacholski, better known in America as Monsignor James W.J. Pacholski, was born on May 24, 1862, in the village of Pączewo, located in the Polish region of Kociewie.

Józef Franciszek Darzyn Ciemiński was a Polish-born Roman Catholic priest. He emigrated with his parents to the United States in 1881 and was ordained as a Priest in Saint Paul, Minnesota in 1895. He was involved with numerous Polish Catholic parishes during his lifetime including the now closed troubled Parish of Saints Peter and Paul in Duluth, Minnesota, and the parish of Holy Cross in Minneapolis.

The Kashubian diaspora resulted from the emigration of Kashubians mainly in two waves occurring in the second half of the 19th century. The majority of Kashubian emigrants settled in the United States; others emigrated to Canada and Brazil. An online genealogical project, "The Great Kashubian Migration," is devoted to tracking their settlement patterns. Their reasons for emigration varied. Until the Franco-Prussian War, Kashubians emigrated primarily for economic reasons. After the Franco-Prussian War and especially due to the Kulturkampf, Kashubian emigration accelerated as socio-political factors came into play. In his 1899 book, Statystyka ludnosci kaszubskiej, the Kashubophile linguist and sociologist Stefan Ramult estimated that 130,700 Kashubians were living in the Americas.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hieronim Derdowski</span> American poet

Hieronim Derdowski, Kashubian-Polish intellectual and activist, was born to Kashubian parents in the Pomeranian village of Wiele. By the time Derdowski emigrated to the United States in 1885, he had already studied for the Roman Catholic priesthood, been repeatedly incarcerated by the German authorities, and edited a newspaper in the city of Torun. At the time, however, Derdowski was better known as a poet. Within two years of reaching the United States he became editor of the Winona, Minnesota Polish-language newspaper Wiarus. In this role he gained a reputation as a strong voice for the Polish-American community, also known as Polonia.

Wiarus was the name of a Polish-language newspaper published in Winona, Minnesota from 1886 to 1893 and 1895 to 1919; in 1893 it was renamed Katolik, but reverted to its original name in 1895. Although Winona's Polish community was known at the time as the "Kashubian Capital of America," Wiarus was published in the "good" Polish spoken in Warsaw and Krakow. Wiarus also provided printing services for Winona's Kashubian Polish community. From 1886 to 1902, Wiarus was edited by the famed Kashubian-born poet and journalist Hieronim Derdowski. In its heyday, Wiarus was said to be the most widely circulated Polish-language newspaper in the United States.

Paul Joseph Breza, Roman Catholic priest and Kashubian American activist, was born in Winona, Minnesota on June 23, 1937, the son of Joseph Peter and Alice Seraphine (Pehler) Breza, both of whom were descendants of Kashubian immigrants from Bytów, Poland. He was educated at Saint Stanislaus Kostka School, Cotter High School and Saint Mary's University of Minnesota.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Antoni Klawiter</span> Polish Catholic priest

Antoni Klawiter, the Roman Catholic and, afterward, independent Polish Catholic priest, was born in Chojnice, in modern Poland, on November 12, 1836. The scholarly consensus is that he was the son of Polonized Germans; by virtue of his Kashubian birthplace and his later experience pastoring Kashubians in Winona, Minnesota, he will not have been unfamiliar with the Kashubian culture. In 1859, he was ordained a Roman Catholic priest in Włocławek, and became four years afterward one of many Polish priests who were involved with the Polish Insurrection of 1863. In late 1873 or early 1874, Father Klawiter emigrated to the United States.

Kashubian Americans are Americans of Kashubian descent.

The history of Winona, Minnesota as a settlement begins with the foundation in 1851 in what was then Minnesota Territory on the West side of the Mississippi River. The site was of the village of Keoxa of Dakota people. The name "Winona" (Wee-no-nah) was noted to be the name of a first-born daughter in the local Dakota language.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stefan Ramułt</span>

Stefan Ramułt was a Polish scholar who specialized in the language and culture of the Kashubians.

References

  1. "Laird-Norton Lumber Company".
  2. "Kashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum - The mission of the Kashubian Cultural Institute & Polish Museum is to collect, preserve, exhibit, interpret and disseminate the heritage of the Kashubian & Polish Culture". Polish Cultural Institute and Museum.
  3. "Kashubian Capital of America – Bambenek.org". bambenek.org. Retrieved 2017-07-21.
  4. "The Winona Post, April 8, 2010".
  5. "first floor of the Museum building".
  6. Olson, Dan (July 27, 2015). "Priest breathes life into Winona's Polish history". Minnesota Public Radio News. Winona, Minnesota. Retrieved July 27, 2015.
  7. Hansen, Nathan (August 2, 2012). "Students from Polish sister city getting taste of America". Winona Daily News.
  8. "Mid West Music Fest (MWMF): Polish Heritage Music and Polka!". midwestmusicfest2011.sched.com.