From Poland to Pullman:  One Mans Journey

Photos of the Pullman Housing

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Following in the footsteps of thousands who had gone before him and followed by thousands who would come after,  Jacob Dyrek's story is a classic tale of the experiences shared by more than 350,000 Polish immigrants to America between 1890 and 1920.

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jacob dyrek holding jack dyrek, his grandson, on the porch of pullman housing

Illustration: Fig 1: 

Jacob Dyrek sitting on front porch with his grandson, Jack A. Dyrek, in his lap.  1945. 

Photo provided by Mildred Dyrek

In 1913, at the age of 30,  Jacob Dyrek, a Pole, embarked on a journey that would carry him across the globe. 

Following in the footsteps of thousands who had gone before him and followed by thousands who would come after,  Jacob Dyrek's story is a classic tale of the experiences shared by more than 350,000 Polish immigrants to America between 1890 and 1920.

 Jacob's journey began in his hometown of Limo Nova, Poland and was typical of the journey taken by thousands of other Polish immigrants during that decade.  Jacob and the others were fleeing from war-torn Poland, sensing that a major Polish revolution was to be soon at hand.  Russia, Germany and Polish freedom activists had been squabbling for more than 100 years over the rule of this area, and the ineffectual rule of Czar Nicholas offered little hope of protection to the Polish citizens.  The Jewish religion was practiced only in secrecy in some areas because of the fear of political reprisal and persecution.  Poverty was a wide spread reality to many farmers like Jacob who had to obtain work in the factories of German "occupied" Poland to gather enough money for the trip to America.

 

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More about the Dyrek Family from the McDonough Voice Newspaper 2011

 

 

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Pullman-Portrait of a Landmark Community 
by Fred Leavitt 
Hardcover (June 1989)

opposite poles, immigrants and ethnics in polish chicago
Opposite Poles :

Immigrants and Ethnics in Polish Chicago, 
1976-1990 
by Mary Patrice Erdmans 


Touring Pullman : A Study in Company Paternalism :

A Walking Guide to the Pullman Community in Chicago, Illinois  by William Adelman 

  

 


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