Saskatchewan Gen Web Project - SASKATCHEWAN AND ITS PEOPLE by JOHN HAWKES Vol 1I 1924 BR>


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Warm regards,

The Saskatchewan GenWeb Volunteer Team


SASKATCHEWAN AND ITS PEOPLE
1924



         

PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE OF THE EARLY EUROPEAN IMMIGRANT.

THE STORY OF A YOUNG POLISH SCHOOL TEACHER.

The following story of the progress of a bright Pole from a peasant boy to full Canadian citizenship has been widely circulated and will be read with interest by all who are interested in our European population. It is a long way from a little Austrian village snugly resting on a grassy slope of the Carpathian Mountains, to the fertile prairie lands of Canada. It is a great change from a neatly painted little cottage in Ga- licia to a sod shack in Saskatchewan. It is a still longer step from a seat in a little Austrian school house to a place in the graduating class of the University of Saskatchewan. About fifteen years ago John Niemczyk, a Pole, emigrated to Canada from Austria and settled in northeastern Saskatchewan, where he took up a homestead. A low, sod-roofed mud "shack" was built, and the new- comer with his wife and family of seven children settled down to lay the foundation of a new Canadian home. The struggle was hard for a few years. No member of the family knew a word of English, but the eldest son, Louis, then a robust lad of eight or nine, soon manifested a disposi tion to learn the new language. There was no school in the district, and the boy made little progress. After about five years other settlers came, and a school was opened. Louis was then about fourteen years of age. The teacher was a young Canadian, who entered heart and soul into the work of teaching English to half a hundred foreign children, the majority of whom knew absolutely nothing of the language. The young Polish lad attended regularly and made rapid progress in his studies. After two years he had advanced sufficiently to enter a high school. During the next summer, owing to the scarcity of qualified teach- ers, he was granted a permit to teach school in a non-English district. This he did with marked success, and in the fall he returned to high school. The following summer he was successful in passing part of the examinations for a third class teacher's diploma, and the next year he completed the work for this certificate. Several months were then spent in attendance at the normal school. After another year's successful ex- perience, he pursued studies leading to university entrance, and obtained his junior matriculation with a most creditable showing. Another year was spent in teaching in a Ruthenian settlement, after which he entered the provincial university, where he began work on a course leading to degrees in Arts and Agriculture. After graduating from the public school, he decided that in order to obtain a high school education, and at the same time assist his parents in erecting a new home he must practise rigid economy. With this end in view he purchased a small lot on the outskirts of the town of Yorkton, and here built a "shack". In this humble dwelling he lived simply during his life at high school, doing his own housework and even baking his own bread. But this was not all. For two winters he kept with him a younger brother and sister, whom he looked after in order that they, too, might obtain the educational advantages afforded by the public schools of the town. This story of thrift, perseverance. and conquest may best be told in Louis' own words: "I was born on the 17th of July, 1893, in a densely populated section of Austria called Trzynietz. This district is situated on the banks of the Olsa River, near the Beskiden Mountains, which separates the northern boundary of Hungary from East Silesia. "In this busy centre I spent my first nine years, enjoying the beautiful mountainous scenery, the blossoming fruit trees, the singing of birds, and the busy hum of bees. Not far to the north, high draught chimneys towered over large structures, where the smelting of iron ore, the making of railway rails, and the production of enamel-ware provided occupation for the people. The heaving, hissing, puffing, and groaning of the power- ful machines by day could be heard for miles around, while the nights were constantly illuminated by the reflection from the huge furnaces. "My public school education began when I was not quite six years old. The first year of my school life was very pleasant and interesting, because I was learning something about the elementary subjects in my maternal language, which was Polish. I had mastered probably the most difficult stage of my work, when my father became greatly interested in the widespread emigration to Canada. It was true that he was facing a serious problem. However, the letters from Canada, which he received from his countrymen, told him of a land where justice and liberty abound- ed. He worked in a factory and wished to escape the heel of oppression. He desired to break away from the landlordism, militarism, and high taxation. He longed to bring his family of seven to a land of freedom and greater opportunities. His desire became so strong that he finally decided to leave for the New World. Bibliography follows:


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THE STORY
OF
SASKATCHEWAN
AND ITS PEOPLE



By JOHN HAWKES
Legislative Librarian



Volume II
Illustrated



CHICAGO - REGINA
THE S.J. CLARKE PUBLISHING COMPANY
1924




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