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Stanley GORNIK

[N18619]

8 MAY 1889 - 8 JUL 1967

  • RESIDENCE: 1942, 1024 W 8th, Mishawaka, IN
  • OCCUPATION: 1940, Factory Worker
  • RESIDENCE: 1918, 8704 Houston Ave, Chicago, IL
  • OCCUPATION: 1918, Factory Worker
  • BIRTH: 8 MAY 1889, Kolo, Poland
  • DEATH: 8 JUL 1967, South Bend, IN
Family 1 : Mary STAROSTA
  1.  Jennie GORNIK

INDEX

[N18619] Stanislaw Gornik

Birth 1890
Poland
Death 8 Jul 1967
South Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana, USA

Burial Saint Joseph Cemetery South Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana, USA
Plot P.C. 1 Memorial ID 186706400
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Koło is one of the oldest towns in Poland. It was granted town status in 1362 by King Casimir III.[2] It was situated in a safe place near the royal castle, on the island in the branches of the Warta River; the town had no walls but only two gates. It was a royal city and the seat of a land county (starostwo niegrodowe).[1][p. 16-18] In 1410 Koło was a gathering place of the Greater Poland nobility, which called for a war with the Teutonic Order (see Battle of Grunwald). In 1452 the Royal Castle in Koło was the place of meeting between King Casimir the Jagiellonian and the representatives of the Prussian Union (see: the Thirteen Years' War). Gothic castle in Koło, built in the 14th century on the river WartaFrom the early 15th century until 1716, Koło was the meeting place of the Provincial Parliament called Sejmik Generalny for the Greater Poland region, comprising the Poznań Voivodship, Kalisz, Sieradz, Łęczyca, Brześć Kujawski and Inowrocław Voivodeships. The town evolved into a regional hub of trade and crafts especially in metals and textiles, and as a centre of pottery. In 1571 a contract was drafted with regard to the status of the Jews in Koło, in which the city's Christians have undertaken to provide protection to the Jews, in return for which the Jews were required pay a special annual municipal tax.[3] Koło was destroyed twice, once in 1622 by the Lisowski forces, and in 1655 by the Swedes; the economy managed to revive only at the end of the 17th century. Until 1793 Koło belonged to Konin County of Kalisz Voivodeship. Following the partitions of Poland, in the years 1793-1806 it was occupied by Prussia, but during the Kościuszko insurrection in 1794 it was temporarily liberated by the insurgents. In the years 1807-1815 it belonged to the Duchy of Warsaw and later to Congress Poland.

20th century
After the return of Poland's sovereignty at the end of World War I, Koło was assigned to Łódź Voivodeship. A new railway line opened in 1921 from Kutno to Strzałkowo via Koło. In the early 20th century, the Jewish population of Koło made up almost 50 percent of the total population. When Nazi Germany invaded Poland, they captured Koło on September 18, 1939. On September 19, Jewish males over the age of 14 were rounded up and sent to forced labor. The Jewish synagogue was set on fire the following day.[4] The first Aktion, conducted by Wehrmacht soldiers and gendarmes, took place in December 1939, in which 100 Jews were executed.[5] In December 1940, the Jews were rounded up in a ghetto, which was liquidated the following year, in December 1941.[6] The remaining Jews were deported to Chełmno extermination camp, where they were killed in gas vans and buried in mass graves. Koło remained a transfer point for Jews deported to Łódź, and Nazi officials, including Heinrich Himmler, visited the town.[3][7]

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