Polish Canadians Explained

Group:Polish Canadians
Native Name:
Flag:
Pop:1,106,585
(by ancestry, 2016 Census)[1]
Popplace:Western Canada, Ontario
Langs:PolishCanadian EnglishCanadian French
Rels:Predominantly Roman CatholicismJudaism[2]
Related-C:Polish JewsPolish Americans

Polish Canadians (Polish: Polonia w Kanadzie) are citizens of Canada with Polish ancestry, and Poles who immigrated to Canada from abroad. At the 2016 Census, there were 1,106,585 Canadians who claimed full or partial Polish heritage.

History

The first Polish immigrant on record, was Dominik Barcz, came to Canada in 1752. He was a fur merchant from Gdańsk who settled in Montreal. He was followed in 1757 by Charles Blaskowicz, a deputy surveyor-general of lands. In 1776 arrived army surgeon, August Franz Globensky. His grandson, Charles Auguste Maximilien Globensky, was elected to the House of Commons in Ottawa in 1875.

Among the earliest Polish immigrants to Canada were members of the Watt and De Meuron military regiments from Saxony and Switzerland sent overseas to help the British Army in North America. Several were émigrés who took part in the November Uprising of 1830 and the 1863 insurrection against the Russian Empire in the Russian sector of partitioned Poland.[3]

In 1841, Casimir Stanislaus Gzowski arrived in Canada from partitioned Poland via the US, and for 50 years worked in the engineering, military and community sectors in Toronto and Southern Ontario, for which he was knighted by Queen Victoria. His great-great-grandson, Peter Gzowski, became one of Canada's famous radio personalities.

Charles Horecki immigrated in 1872. He was an engineer with the cross-Canada railway construction from Edmonton to the Pacific Ocean through the Peace River Valley. Today, a mountain and a body of water in British Columbia are named after him.

Polish immigration stopped during World War I and between the wars, over 100,000 Polish immigrants arrived in Canada.[4]

Group-settlers

The first significant group of Polish group-settlers were ethnic Kashubians from northern Poland, who were escaping Prussian and German oppression resulting from the occupation after the partitions. They arrived in Renfrew County of Ontario in 1858, where they founded the settlements of Wilno, Barry's Bay, and Round Lake.[5] By 1890 there were about 270 Kashubian families working in the Madawaska Valley of Renfrew County, mostly in the lumber industry of the Ottawa Valley.

The consecutive waves of Polish immigrants in periods from 1890–1914, 1920–1939, and 1941 to this day, settled across Canada from Cape Breton to Vancouver, and made numerous and significant contributions to the agricultural, manufacturing, engineering, teaching, publishing, religious, mining, cultural, professional, sports, military, research, business, governmental and political life in Canada.

Geographical distribution

Data from this section from Statistics Canada, 2021.[6]

Provinces & territories

Province / Territory Percent PolishTotal Polish
4.1% 169,925
2.7%134,635
6.0%78,860
0.5%3,815
0.3%1,290
1.5%615
1.2%11,295
0.4%135
3.3% 461,090
0.7%1,055
0.8%63,505
5.0%55,605
2.5%985
CanadaTotal 2.7% 982,820

Religious services

All Polish Canadians including their descendants are encouraged by organizations such as the Congress, to preserve their background and retain some ties with Poland and its people. In the past, the most significant role in the preservation of various aspects of Polish traditions and customs among the Polish communities in Canada fell for the Polish urban parishes, which retain the use of the Polish language during services.[7]

The first Polish Catholic priest visited Polish immigrants in 1862 in Kitchener. The first church serving Polish immigrants was built in 1875 in Wilno, Ontario. In Winnipeg, the Holy Ghost Church was built in 1899 with the church in Winnipeg publishing the first Polish newspaper in Canada, Gazeta Katolicka in 1908.[8] In Sydney, Nova Scotia, St. Mary's Polish Parish was established in 1913 by immigrant steelworkers and coal miners, many of whom had previously formed the St. Michael's Polish Benefit Society (est. 1909). The parish remains the only Polish parish in Atlantic Canada, although there is a Polish mission (St. Faustina) in Halifax.

The first Polish-Canadian Roman Catholic bishop is Reverend Mathew Ustrzycki, consecrated in June 1985, auxiliary bishop of the Hamilton Diocese. There are Polish-Canadian priests in many congregations and orders, such as the Franciscans, Jesuits, Redemptorists, Saletinians, Resurrectionists, Oblates, Michaelites, and the Society of Christ. In addition, 80 priests serve in 120 parishes.

Largest Polish Canadian communities

Polish Canadian organizations

Recognition

The Victoria Cross

Numerous Polish-Canadians have been recognized with awards and appointments by the Queen and the Canadian governments as well as universities and various organizations. One of the most notable recipients was Andrew Mynarski, pilot-gunner from Winnipeg, awarded the Victoria Cross posthumously for extreme valor in World War II.

The Order of Canada

Judges

Their Honours

Notable Polish Canadians

See also: List of Canadians of Polish descent.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Immigration and Ethnocultural Diversity Highlight Tables. 25 October 2017 . statcan.gc.ca.
  2. Web site: Database . The Canadian Jewish News, Toronto . The Polish-Jewish Heritage Foundation of Canada . Sep 15, 2004 . March 9, 2013 . Sheldon Kirshner . PDF file, direct download 351 KB . May 15, 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130515102612/http://www.pjhftoronto.ca/media/T14gtaCL.pdf . dead .
  3. Minister of Public Works and Government Services Canada, 2002, Archival Sources for the Study of Polish Canadians. Accessed 2008-01-03
  4. Book: Reczynska, Anna. For bread and a better future : emigration from Poland to Canada, 1918-1939. 1996. Multicultural History Society of Ontario. Toronto. 0-919045-70-7. 8.
  5. Blank, Joshua C. (2016). Creating Kashubia: History, Memory and Identity in Canada's First Polish Community. Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press. .
  6. Web site: Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population . 9 February 2022 .
  7. Henry Radecki, Ethnic organizational dynamics: the Polish group in Canada. Page 102  Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press, 1979 – 275 pages
  8. Heydenkorn. Benedykt. Polish press in Canada. Polyphony: The Bulletin of the Multicultural History Society of Ontario. Spring–Summer 1982. 4. 1. 35. 2 August 2013.
  9. Web site: Polonia Inclusive - Community supporting culture, diversity and advocacy in Canada, Poland and around the world . 2023-07-25 . Polonia Inclusive . en-US.
  10. Web site: Polonia Inclusive . 2023-07-25 . www.facebook.com . en.
  11. Web site: Polonia Inclusive (@poloniainclusive) • Instagram photos and videos . 2023-07-25 . www.instagram.com . en.
  12. Web site: Polonia Inclusive Mailing List . 2023-07-25 . Mail Chip.
  13. Web site: polish national union . polishnationalunion.ca . 29 April 2022 . en.
  14. Web site: Polish Organizations and Cultural Centers in Canada . Gov.PL . 29 April 2022.
  15. Web site: Polish Canadian Professionals . Konekt . 29 April 2022 . en-CA.
  16. Web site: Who We Are - History . Polycultural Immigrant and Community Services . 29 April 2022.
  17. Web site: Collecting and preserving the history, culture, and development of the Polish group in Canada . The Canadian Polish Research Institute . 29 April 2022 . en-CA.
  18. Web site: Poland in the Rockies: Looking back . Cosmopolitan Review . 29 April 2022.
  19. Web site: Resources :: Polish Community . Łowiczanie Polish Folk Ensemble . 29 April 2022.
  20. Web site: Poland in the Rockies . Polish Winnipeg . 29 April 2022.
  21. Web site: Websites for Polish Americans . Polish American Librarians Association . 29 April 2022 . en.
  22. Web site: about . Young Polish-Canadian Professionals Association . 29 April 2022.
  23. Web site: ABOUT . polish institute . 29 April 2022 . en.
  24. Web site: Polish Organizations (155) . Polish Canadians Network . 29 April 2022.
  25. Web site: Polish Canadian Women's Federation - Federacja Polek w Kanadzie . FederacjaPolek.ca . 29 April 2022.
  26. Web site: Polish Organizations in Canada . Polish Alliance of Canada . 29 April 2022.
  27. Web site: Federation of Polish Jews of Canada . Ontario Jewish Archives . 29 April 2022.
  28. Web site: Federation of Polish Jews of Canada . Canadian Jewish Heritage Network . 29 April 2022.
  29. Web site: Order of Canada. Government of Canada, Office of the Secretary to the Governor General, Information and Media. Services. Archive.gg.ca. 27 May 2018.
  30. Web site: Gonzalez . Ramon . Brilliant psychiatrist and Polish patriot dies . . 29 April 2022 . https://archive.today/20070810050140/http://www.wcr.ab.ca/news/2007/0115/wojcicki011507.shtml . 2007-08-10 . . January 11, 2007.
  31. Web site: FamilySearch. Familysearch.org. 27 May 2018.
  32. Web site: In the legal profession . Canadian Polish Congress . Contribution of Poles to the Canadian Society . June 15, 2013 . CPC.