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St. Joseph's Polish Immigrant Community
Item 3 of 7

In the 19teens the Southside of St. Joseph was home to a large Polish-speaking community. These families wanted their own church and school. They built their new church at 515 Alabama and named the parish after St. Stanislaus, the Polish bishop-martyr. For several decades St. Stanislaus was an important center for the Polish community. By the 1970s, the Polish population has disbursed throughout the city and the church was sold.


Paul Michalak, first parish priest assigned to St. Stanislaus

Forehead, Face, Chin, Eyebrow

St. Stanislaus today, an apartment building

Sky, Building, Window, Fixture

By the turn of the 20th century, many of the Polish families who had previously lived in Goosetown and worshipped at SS. Peter & Paul had moved to the southside to be closer to their work in the packing houses. Andrzej Barzan petitioned Bishop Burke for permission to organize a parish in South St. Joseph. Once the permission was granted, they purchased land on Alabama Street, in close proximity to the streetcar tracks, and soon had built a combination church and school building; it opened in 1914. The St. Joseph Journal described it: “It consists of a basement and two stories. In the basement there is a very beautiful auditorium. On the first floor are located two classrooms, a newly-built chapel and club-rooms for the youth of the parish. The church proper is on the second floor.” The first priest assigned to the parish was Father Paul Michalak, who served for six years and was followed by Rev. Michael Dyminski who served the parish for a decade before ill health necessitated his resignation. Rev. Simon Kaczmarek and Rev. John Zielinski were the next two parish priests. The parish school was operated by the Felician Sisters. When it opened in 1914 it served 86 students, but by 1925, enrollment had grown to 145.

By the late 1930s, the congregation was shrinking. In 1960, the school closed and in 1973 the building sold to a Baptist congregation. Remaining parishioners shifted to St. James Church and school. By 2004, the building was once again abandoned and falling into disrepair. It was purchased by a developer and redeveloped to serve as apartments. Though it is still a multi-family residence, the original front door and the name in Polish remains.

“St. Stanislaus Silver Jubilee,” St Joseph Journal, Oct. 20, 1939, pg. 1; “A bit about St. Stanislaus Parish History,” St. Joseph News Press, July 24, 1973, pg. 8; “Historic Church Turned into Homes,” St. Joseph News Press, July 6, 2004.

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St. Joseph News Press