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History of Slovaks in America
CHRONOLOGY
1695
Isaac Ferdinand Sarosi (also spelled Sarissky, Scharossy,
Saarossy, Sarossy, Saroschi, and Sarossi) arrived in the Pennsylvania religious
colony of Germantown (originally Germanopolis), founded by Mennonite preacher Francis
Daniel Pastorius, to serve as a teacher and a preacher. Sarosi returned to
Europe after two years.
1754
Andrej Jelik fled Slovakia to escape military conscription.
After much travel in Europe, he eventually reached American shores, via the
West Indies, on a Dutch trading ship.
1775
After being proclaimed emperor in Madagascar, and bearing
letters of recommendation from Benjamin Franklin and funds from a descendant of
Ferdinand Magellan, (Matus) Moric Benovsky came to America and fought with
American troops in the War for Independence. He joined a cavalry corps led by
General Pulaski and fought in the siege of Savannah. He died in Madagascar in
1786, but his wife, Zuzana Honschova, spent the years from 1784 until her death
in 1815 in the United States.
1780
Major Jan Polerecky, who trained at the French Royal
Military Academy of St. Cyr, came to America from France to fight with George
Washington's army in the War for Independence. He was in the company of the 300
"Blue Hussars" to whom the British formally surrendered their weapons
after the defeat of Cornwallis at Yorktown. When the war was over, Polerecky
settled in Dresden, Maine, where he served in a number of public positions.
1861
Geza Mihalotzy (Mihaloci), a former military officer of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire who emigrated to Chicago, wrote to President Abraham
Lincoln requesting his authorization to organize a military company named the
"Lincoln Riflemen of Sclavonic Origin." Lincoln granted his approval,
allowing this first volunteer unit from Chicago, which included many Slovaks,
to fight in the Civil War. The unit was eventually incorporated into the 24th
regiment of the Illinois infantry.
1868
(Frantisek) Samuel Figuli received his first papers for
naturalization. Figuli fought in the Civil War, owned a plantation in Virginia,
and later joined an exploratory expedition to the North Pole.
1873
A cholera epidemic and subsequent widespread crop failures
set in motion large-scale emigration from the eastern regions of Slovakia. This
wave of emigration was also fueled by hardships connected to the coming of
industrialization, the scarcity of available land, and a campaign of forced
magyarization. The immigrants were predominantly men coming to find work.
1877
Daniel Sustek, a world traveler, purchased some eighty acres
of land in Iowa, where he hoped to develop a Slovak colony.
1879
Slovaks in Passaic, New Jersey, welcomed the first group of
women who came to their community from Slovakia. When Hungarian authorities
legislated that all men under the age of 50 must remain in the country to
fulfill military service, the number of women emigrating increased markedly.
1883
The first Slovak beneficial society was formed in New York
when a group of Slovaks, mostly from the eastern counties of Slovakia, met in a
private home and organized The First Hungarian-Slovak Sick Benefit Society. The
society's by-laws contained the provision that the eastern Slovak dialect be
used as long as there were seven members in the society. Beneficial societies
were formed as insurance societies and unions, but they also played cultural,
social, and political roles.
1886
The first printed Slovak newspaper, the Amerikanszko-szlovenszke
noviny (Amerikansko-slovenske noviny), was published by Jan Slovensky.
Circulation reached 30,000 at the end of the century under editor Peter V.
Rovnianek. This was a larger circulation than that of any other Slovak paper of
the time, even in Slovakia.
1887
The First Coopers' Beneficial Society was founded in
Bayonne, New Jersey. It was the first Slovak society to uphold the interests of
workers and even negotiated with factory owners.
Americky tlumac (American interpreter), the first
Slovak-English dictionary serving the needs of the immigrants, was published by
Jan Slovensky, in an eastern dialect. It readily became very popular because it
aided the immigrants with their English language problems. Several other such
works were published in subsequent years.
1889
Anton S. Ambrose (Ambrosi), a journalist who never completed
his high school studies, founded the newspaper Slovak v Amerike, the oldest
Slovak newspaper still in print in the United States.
The first Slovak school in America was established by St.
Stephen's Parish in Streator, Illinois.
1890
The First Catholic Slovak Union of America, Jednota, was
founded in Cleveland, under a constitution drafted by the Reverend Stefan
Furdek.
The National Slovak Society (Narodny slovensky spolok) was
founded in Pittsburgh by Peter V. Rovnianek. The society was the first
supraregional, nondenominational association of Slovaks in the United States,
and is still active today.
1891
About 18,000 Slovaks were among the miners who went on
strike in the Connellsville, Pennsylvania, region, protesting exploitation and
a cut in wages.
1894
The Slovak Colonization Society organized about 300 Slovaks
to leave the labor-troubled region of Connellsville, Pennsylvania, and
establish a Slovak colony in Arkansas, named Slovaktown. The society was
organized by Peter V. Rovnianek and his associates.
1896
The Slovak Gymnastic Union "Sokol" was founded in
Chicago, modeled after the Czech "Sokol" gymnastic movement begun in
Europe in the 19th century.
Reverend Jozef Murgas, born in Tajov, Slovakia, came to
America. He was active in founding several Slovak groups and was a pioneer of
radiotelegraphy as well as a scholar, artist, scientist, and writer. He held
twelve U.S. patents and was a signatory of the 1918 Pittsburgh Agreement.
1899 - 1915
During this period, close to half a million Slovaks
emigrated to the United States.
1901
Peter V. Rovnianek launched Slovensky dennik, the first
Slovak daily newspaper outside Slovakia and Hungary.
1905
52,368 Slovak immigrants arrived in the United States,
making this the peak year of Slovak immigration.
1907
The Slovak League of America was formed to help prepare
Slovak immigrants for American citizenship and to promote the welfare of
Slovaks in the United States.
1910
For the upcoming census, Slovak and other ethnic leaders in
the United States sucessfully petitioned federal authorities to classify a
person by his or her language rather than country of origin. On the president's
orders, new forms replaced the old ones, and Slovaks were no longer classified
as "Austrians" or "Hungarians" in the 1910 U.S. Census.
1914
Stefan Banic, a Slovak inventor, constructed and tested a
prototype of a parachute in Washington, D.C., by jumping from a 41-floor building
and subsequently from an airplane. His patented parachute became standard
equipment for U.S. pilots during World War I. Banic worked in the United States
from 1907 to 1920, with two interruptions.
1915
The leaders of the Czech National Alliance and the Slovak
League of America signed the Cleveland Agreement, in which they pledged to
cooperate for the common goal of independent statehood for the Czechs and
Slovaks. The agreement's five articles laid out the basics of a future joint
state for the two nationalities.
Michal Bosak, once acclaimed as "the richest Slovak in
America," founded the Bosak State Bank in Scranton, Pennsylvania. Bosak
came to the U.S. in 1886 at age 16 and initially worked as a miner, going on to
become a businessman whose ventures included the Bosak Manufacturing Company (a
wine and liquor distribution business), the Bosak State Bank, a travel agency,
and several financial institutions in northeastern Pennsylvania. Bosak was also
a leader in the Slovak-American community, becoming a signatory to the
Pittsburgh Agreement and the publisher of the weekly newspaper {Slovenska
obrana}. All of Bosak's business and banking ventures ended during the Great
Depression.
1918
The Pittsburgh Agreement was concluded by representatives of
Czechs and Slovaks at a meeting of the American branch of the Narodni rada
ceskoslovenska (Czechoslovak National Council) in Pittsburgh. The agreement
endorsed a program for the struggle for a common state of Czecho-Slovakia and
agreed that the new state would be a democratic republic in which Slovakia
would have its own administration, legislature, and courts.
1923
Reverend Jaroslav Pelikan was born in Akron, Ohio. He is a
Lutheran theologian and one of the leading church historians of the 20th
century.
1933
Michael Novak, a prolific Roman Catholic theologian and
political writer, was born in Johnstown, Pennsylvania. In his works, he became
a spokesman not only for Slovaks, but for all ethnic groups in the United
States as well, in such works as Concepts of Ethnicity and Unmeltable Ethnics:
Politics and Culture in American Life.
1941
Out of This Furnace, the story of three generations of
Slovaks working in steel mills, was published by Thomas Bell (Belejcak), an
American-born writer who depicted the lives of Slovak immigrants in many of his
works.
1944
The U.S. Navy commissioned the USS Durik, a warship named in
honor of Joseph Edward Durik, a Slovak serviceman from Southwest, Pennsylvania,
who had died as a result of an accidental torpedo firing on the USS Meredith.
1945
Slovakia, which had been set up as an independent state by
Nazi Germany, was reincorporated into Czechoslovakia. This led to an exodus of
some 5,000 officials of the wartime Slovak Republic.
1948
The take-over of Czechoslovakia by the communists spurred
another wave of emigration. Many of these emigres were members of the
intelligentsia and post-war political figures.
1953
Jan Slezak, who had immigrated to the United States in 1914,
was appointed Assistant Secretary of Defense. Slezak was trained as an engineer
and spent much of his career in manufacturing, including the manufacture of
armaments. His was the highest political position achieved by a Slovak outside
of Slovakia.
1957
Historian Viktor Mamatey published The United States and
East Central Europe, for which he won the George Louis Beer Prize. Mamatey's
father was Albert Mamatey, a signer of the Pittsburgh Agreement.
1958
Two hundred intellectuals of Czech and Slovak origin founded
the Czechoslovak Society of Arts and Sciences in America.
1961
The Chicago Blackhawks professional hockey team won the
Stanley Cup with the help of star center Stan Mikita, born in Sokolce,
Slovakia, in 1940. During his career, Mikita won the Art Ross Trophy, the Hart
Memorial Trophy (twice), the Lady Byng Trophy, and the Lester Patrick Trophy.
1966
A Slovak room was established at the Immigration Archives of
the University of Minnesota.
1968
Another wave of Slovak immigration was fueled by the Soviet
Union's invasion of Czechoslovakia, the Soviet response to the cultural and
political liberalization of the Prague Spring. Many members of this wave
belonged to the intelligentsia. Unlike earlier immigrants, they generally did
not seek out Slovak immigrant groups.
1969
Joseph M. Gaydos, born in Braddock, Pennsylvania, was
elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, where he served for 24 years. He
was the first Slovak-American to serve in the U. S. Congress.
1970
The Slovak World Congress was founded in New York. It became
the leading organization of Slovaks living abroad, and represented
associations, institutions, and individuals.
1972
Astronaut Eugene A. Cernan was commander of the Apollo 17
lunar mission and the eleventh man to walk on the moon. Cernan was born in
Chicago, in 1934, to a Czech mother and a Slovak father. After the end of the
manned lunar missions, he acted as senior U.S. negotiator in discussions with
the Soviet Union on the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project.
1976
D. (Daniel) Carleton Gajdusek, born in 1923, in Yonkers, of
a Slovak father and a Hungarian mother, won the Noble Prize for Physiology or
Medicine together with Baruch S. Blumberg. The prize recognized his work on the
causal agents of various degenerative neurological disorders.
1991
A total of 1.8 million people identified themselves as being
of Slovak ancestry in the 1990 U.S. Census. After Slovakia, this is the world's
second largest concentration of people who are Slovak or of Slovak descent.
Source: The Library of Congress - European Reading Room
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