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Happy Pulaski Day!

Posted in:

* Mark Brown

For many if not most Chicagoans, Pulaski Day is that quirky bonus Illinois holiday that nobody else gets: an opportunity perhaps to take the kids for a three-day weekend getaway to the Dells without having to fight the crowds unleashed on a real holiday.

Not so for our political leaders, who in a fitting payback for this blatant sop to Polish-American voters, must stick close to home.

That’s because no current or aspiring officeholder dare miss the command appearance at the annual Pulaski Day celebration at the Polish Museum of America, 984 N. Milwaukee Avenue.

On most Pulaski Days, you will find at least one U.S. senator, several Congressmen, the governor, the mayor, the county board president and numerous lesser figures seated on the stage of the museum’s Great Hall.

* Tribune reporter…


Illinois State Sen. ⁦@robertmartwick⁩ says he and State Rep. Diane Pappas are forming first Polish-American legislative caucus. To join, you have to represent at least one person of Polish descent. Not too exclusive. pic.twitter.com/ny1CsZTxlh

— Mary Wisniewski (@marywizchicago) March 2, 2020

Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs and Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi leading so far in speaking the most Polish at the Pulaski Day celebration, among politicians. @FritzKaegi @ILTreasurer @PRCUA maybe they’ll get the leftover paczki as a prize!

— Mary Wisniewski (@marywizchicago) March 2, 2020

* It’s not a state day-off holiday, so that’s why I’m working today…


It may be Casimir Pulaski day in Chicago, but @ILDeptofRevenue offices are OPEN today

(painting by Jan Styka) pic.twitter.com/3NJlVFEdM9

— ILDeptOfRevenue (@ILDeptofRevenue) March 2, 2020

* Related…

* Who was Casimir Pulaski and why does he have his own holiday? 9 things to know about a Poland-born American hero

* Celebrate Casimir Pulaski Day At The Polish Museum of America

posted by Rich Miller
Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 12:44 pm

Comments

  1. Great song by Sufjan Stevens, although it teachers you nothing about the man.

    Comment by City Zen Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 12:48 pm

  2. Casimir Pulaski gets the big play, but here’s a shout out for Ed Pulaski a hero during the hellish 1910 fires in northern Idaho. He is credited with inventing the specialized tool used to this day by wildfire fighters. Anyone who’s been on the fire line knows how handy the pulaski is.

    Comment by Flapdoodle Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 1:08 pm

  3. I remember only one school year with the day off. It was optional to take it off but the
    school year still had to be 181 days. Teachers negotiated to not take it off since our spring break was the last week in March. I think the ruling we got from the state board of ed or somewhere was if you didn’t take the day off your school had to teach about him. I purchased a video about Casimer Pulaski for the school to use from the Polish Museum. It was a VHS videocassette. I think it was checked out maybe two times if that.

    Comment by Nearly Normal Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 1:11 pm

  4. Here is an article about some interesting research about Pulaaki.

    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/was-revolutionary-war-hero-casimir-pulaski-intersex-180971907/

    Comment by Huh? Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 1:12 pm

  5. Its worth noting that recent research indicates that Casimir Pulaski was likely Intersex rather than male.

    Comment by City Guy Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 1:14 pm

  6. A number of years ago my community college asked me to do a presentation on Pulaski for his day. I did a fair amount of research and put together, I thought, a nice 35 minute talk. Nobody showed up.
    From then on if the college asked me to give a talk I asked for the cash up front.

    Comment by G'Kar Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 1:17 pm

  7. Flapdoodle - Ed Pulaski never patented the tool he invented. He wanted it available for anyone to make and use. The abandoned mine to which he led his men to safety is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The historical society in Wallce, ID has his original tool.

    He was my great uncle. Never met him but heard the family stories.

    Comment by Huh? Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 1:31 pm

  8. https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/films/burn/

    This is a PBS show about the 1910 fire in Idaho and Ed Pulaski.

    Comment by Huh? Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 1:34 pm

  9. I remember when the Casimir Pulaski Day legislation was first proposed (I was the Elementary Education analyst at the then-Bureau of the Budget, now GOMB). I attended the committee hearing; several students from different districts all over the State were in town and testified before the committee. To a person, they all asked that the bill not pass because “we don’t need more days off from school.” The sponsor told them he understood what they were saying, but “I gotta do what my constituents want, and they want a holiday just like Columbus Day.” Today, I think most school districts treat it as a commemorative holiday, but few still take the day off (even though it is still an official school holiday). Springfield 186 still takes the day off, if you can believe it.

    Comment by Silent Budgeteer Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 2:02 pm

  10. Sadly, none of the bigwigs managed to make it to Abraham Lincoln’s Tomb on February 12th for the American Legion’s Lincoln Pilgrimage. One or two sent surrogates, but the rest were conspicuous by their absence on February 12th.

    Comment by Practical Politics Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 2:30 pm

  11. I agree with Silver Budgeteer; keep the kids in school and teach them about the honored person’s history and contribution to American society.

    As for Ed Pulaski, his brains and guts saved many men, and the tool he never patented helped to save lives and property as well. A story on the Pulaski here: https://wildfiretoday.com/2019/08/19/the-true-story-of-the-pulaski-fire-tool/

    Comment by revvedup Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 2:39 pm

  12. If I recall State Senator Leroy Lemke was sponsor of the legislation at the time. I think I recall him destroying his mic (tearing the cord from the outlet) during one of the more “spirited” debates.

    Comment by Stones Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 2:43 pm

  13. I always viewed the holiday as a reaction to Rev. Martin Luther King’s Birthday becoming a federal holiday in 1986 and Gov. Thompson lining up Polish votes for the 1986 election.

    Comment by City Guy Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 2:43 pm

  14. @ Huh? — Cool about Ed Pulaski being your uncle. Understand he was quite a man’s man, which is saying something for Idaho at that time. Visited Wallace and the mine site when living in Moscow, ID, years ago. Rugged country, makes the story all the more impressive. Thanks for tip on PBS video.

    Comment by Flapdoodle Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 3:00 pm

  15. I’m old, it wasn’t a holiday when I was in school. It was, though, when I got my first right out of college job at the Chicago Board of Education. I spent my first Pulaski Day holiday calling everyone I knew at work and telling them why I had a 3 day weekend.

    Comment by Cheryl44 Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 3:11 pm

  16. ” It’s not a state day-off holiday, so that’s why I’m working today…”
    Are you still working the con that this is “work”
    Surely you don’t believe it

    Comment by Annonin' Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 3:14 pm

  17. I have a proposal. That is, Pulaski Day should be paczki day 2. I mean, why not????? holiday = food.

    Comment by Amalia Monday, Mar 2, 20 @ 3:39 pm

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