Participants in the 7th convention of the National Slovak Society, held on May 21-26, 1899 in Chicago, Illinois. Included are portraits of the founding and leading members of the Society (established in 1890) such P.V. Rovnianek, A.S. Ambrose, A. Mamatey, M. Feriencik, I. Podkrivacky and others. The convention coinicided with a conference of a n...
Creator:
Scholl's Studio
Created:
1899
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives.
A letter from the First Catholic Slovak Union of America (FCSU) President, G. A. Hricko, to the FCSU Secretary General, John Sabol, Olyphant, Pennsylvania.
Creator:
Hricko, G. A.
Created:
1928-06-30
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives.
A section of a letter written by John Simuradik of the Slovak Roman and Greek Catholic Fraternal Society (FCSU lodge #306) to the FCSU Secretary General, Jan Sabol, Wharton, New Jersey.
Creator:
Simuradik, John
Created:
1928-06-30
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives.
Program cover illustration for a theatre performance of "O Tie Zeny" [Oh Those Women!], a comedy written by Ferka Urbanka, directed by Anna S. Rozbesky, sponsored by Klub Furdek, and performed at the Czecho-Slovak American Hall in Chicago, Illinois.
Contributor:
Klub "Furdek," Slovensky Kulturny Spolok
Created:
1932-05-15
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives.
Zuzana Kovac was mother of Paul Kovac, an early 20th century immigrant to the United States from Slovakia (before 1918 Upper Hungary in the Kingdom of Hungary, part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire). Paul Kovac lived in Connecticut and New York in the late 1910s and in the 1920s.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives.
Undated portrait of Paul T. Kovac, an early 20th century immigrant to the United States from Slovakia (then part of the Kingdom of Hungary and the Austro-Hunagrian Empire). Paul Kovac's known residences in the late 1910s and in the 1920s were in Bridgeport and Hawleyville, Connecticut, and in Hudson, New York.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives.