Am-Pol Eagle Citizen of the Year Award explained

The Am-Pol Eagle Citizen of the Year Award is given out by the weekly Polish American newspaper the Am-Pol Eagle. The award is given to individuals and organizations in the Polish American community "in recognition of outstanding service and unselfish contributions on the behalf of the Polish-American cause" in various fields. There are 25 different categories but each category may not have a winner every year. The award is considered to be one of the highest honors given within the Polish-American community.[1] The Am-Pol Eagle, published in Buffalo, New York, was founded in 1960 by Matthew Pelczynski who was known as "the voice of the Polish-American community."[2] [3]

Am-Pol Eagle Citizen of the Year Award recipients

National

Art/Drama

Business

Civic Leader

Community Leader (Non Pole)

Community Organization

Culture

Education

Fraternal

Good Neighbor

Government

Health/Medicine

Heritage

Humanitarian

Human Rights

Individual in Organizations

Labor

Law

Media

Military/Veteran

Music

Politics

Religion

Science

Sports

Youth

Notes

  1. page 51. Polish American Studies, 1968.
  2. Web site: 5 November 1993 . Matthew Pelczynski Dies; Polish-American Leader . subscription . The Buffalo News.
  3. Polish American studies (2002), Vols 59-60, p. 44

External links