His grand-parents, Marianna and Julian Kurzynowski emigrated from Poland and came to settle in Jackson. The story from my Dad was that they came here because my Great-Grandmother Marianna Kurzynowski had two uncles who were already settled here. Their names were John Chlebus and Stan Laski.
My
Dad’s family is very large and intertwined with many other families in
Jackson’s Polish community. Tracking all those families through the generations
became overwhelming pretty quickly. So when I discovered that John Chlebus was identified in
several different places as the first Polish immigrant to permanently settle in
Jackson, I decided to focus my work on him and his story.
Many
of those early immigrants were related in one way or another. Poles saved their money and sent for their
family members or others from their village in Poland. They knew each other. Prominent Polish families got their start in
what was considered an area of the city filled with derelicts and “foreigners”. "Muttonville" was made up of the neighborhoods that surrounded and were north of what is now
the Keeley Park. Somewhere behind the Park, near the
railroad tracks and the river there was a meat processing plant. Hence the
nickname.
"John
Chlebus was a practical man. He was
ignorant at first of the peculiar methods of business and society employed
here. Fortunately, he was blessed with
plenty of shrewdness which eventually made him the most outstanding pole in the
city. He arrived in 1877 and started a
grocery on the corner of Blackstone and the northern Polish community of
Jackson was in the first period of formation.
Chlebus was a plunging pioneer who quickly
learned the ways of eking out an existence.
Within 10 years he had a solid group of Polish families living around
him. His grocery business had prospered
and he started a saloon. A few years later he established a bakery a few blocks
from his home.
Now he was the motivating factor in the
social, political and business life of his community. New Polish residents went to him for advice. He gave it freely. They wanted money to build their homes. He loaned unselfishly. He got new arrivals jobs in factories, in coal
mines, in business places.
He was a philanthropist. No charitable cause ever suffered because John Chlebus was among the first to contribute. Broken down, homeless poles in the city were always certain of a warm spot in Chlebus’ home. He fed them and sent them away with money to buy clothes."
William Kulesa 1937