——————————————— as s— ions Je Polish= Americans ELMO SCOTT WATSON HE issuance by the post office de- partment of a special five-cent stamp which will be placed on sale in Chicago, Detroit and Boston on October 18 and at other post of- fices on October 19 serves to re- call the name of a distinguished foreigner who, In the words of Postmaster General Farley, “will be forever perpetuated in the hearts of the American people™ For this stamp commemorates the 150th anniver sary of the admission to American citizenship of Gen. Thaddeus Kosciuszko, the Polish soldier who is known as “the great champion of liberty,” and this stamp is another tribute to his memory by the nation whose liberty he helped to estab lish. Monuments have been erected to him in Chicago, Boston and Washington, and at the United States Military academy at West roint, N. Y.; a county in Indiana and streets In sev- eral of our cities bear his name; but the every- day use of the commemorative stamp during Oe. tober by thousands of Americans will recall his name and fame to more of our citizens than any of these other memorials have ever done. October is a month which Is peculiarly ciated with the history of Kosciuszko S80 It was on October 18, 1776, that he came to Washington's camp near New York, bearing a letter of intro- duction from Benjamin Franklin to the com- mander-in-chief : it was during October of that year that he was made a colonel of engineers in the Continent became a member of Washington's military family and began the as- sociation with the great American which enabled Kosciuszko in later years to call himself proudly “a friend of Washington”; and it was on October 15, 1817, that the Polish champion met his death by a fall from his horse, an event which the Poet Campbell has made historic with his army, “Hope for a season bade the world farewell And Freedom shriek’d as Kosciuszko fell !™ Also significant in the relationship of Washing. tou and Kosciuszko Is the fact that they were born In the same month, Washington on Feb. ruary 11 (old style), 1732, and Kosciuszko on February 12, 1746. He grew up on his father's estate, a remote spot In Lithuania. Though of noble birth, the elder Kosciuszko was a man of property, and his children lived like other chil dren of their class. Thaddeus seems to have been a diligent, conscientious boy, with a keen sense of responsibility. He attended the Jesuit eollege in his home town, and in 1704 entered the corps of cadets In the Royal School of Warsaw, Later he went to France, where he studied military engineering, especially French fortifl- cations. Sketches made by Kosciuszko while he was studying architecture in Brest and Paris are to be seen in Poland's national museums, At the age of twenty-eight he returned home, to find the family fortunes sadly depleted. Just why at this time Kosciuszko made up his mind to go to America is not entirely clear. Some attribute it to an unhappy love affair: others assert he was stirred by the story of a young country fighting for its Independence, At all events, he sailed for the New world and landed at Philadelphia In the summer of 1776, having mortgaged his patrimony and borrowed 400 ducats to get there, He seems to have made the acquaintance of Franklin either in France or in Philadelphia, for we next hear of him presenting the letter of in- troduction from Franklin, previously referred to, to Washington in October, 1776. “What can you do? asked Washington, according to the familiar story. “Try me and we shall see!” was the Pole’s modest reply. So Washington made him a colonel of engineers and he soon proved what he could de. From October, 1778, to April, 1777, he was busy fortifying Philadelphia, continuing the work which he had undertaken upon his arrival there before his services had been accepted by Washingt on. Then he joined Gates’ army in the North and It was Kosciuszko who selected and planned the fortification of Bemis Heights, near Saratoga, and his contribution was a material one to the success of the operations which led to the surrender of Burgoyne at Saratoga, Shortly afterwards, Kosciuszko planned (he fortifications on the Hudson at West Point, gen- erally rated as his greatest achievement In the War for American Independence. Koscluszko ar. Kosciuszko Monument in KOSCIUSZKO Statue at west Point rived at West Point in March, 1778, and lald out additional forts to protect West Point, which then controlled the principal line of communica. tion from New England to the central and the southern colonies, In case the British should send an expeditionary force from New York. He also strengthened the existing defenses, So much general satisfaction was there with Kosciuszko's work, that Washington in a dispatch says, “To his care and sedulous appreciation the American people are indebted for the defenses of West Point.” It was this Polish soldier who urged that West Point be chosen when it was later decided to found a training school for American youth, He spent two of the six years he was in this country at West Point, where a monument was erected in his memory in 1828, Kosciuszko's next service was In the Carolinas campaign with General Greene and it is said that Greene's escape from Cornwallis during his memorable retreat was due largely to the work of the Polish officer In constructing pontoon bridges which allowed Greene's army to cross rivers before the British could overtake it The close of the Revolution found Kosciuszko a brigadier-general and a member of the Society of the Cincinnati, By vote of congress American citizenship was conferred upon him in October, 1783, and he was granted 500 acres of land on the Scioto river In Perry county, Ohlo, which he later sold. American liberty having been won Kosciuszko decided to return to his own land and fight again for its freedom. To follow the activities of the Po- lish patriot after his return to his native land is to follow the stormy days of a Poland fight- ing for freedom against heavy odds. In 1701 Poland, under a new constitution, became a lim- ited monarchy with ministerial responsibility, Invidious class distinctions were done away with, But the new constitution could not stand against the old confederation. Polish territory wns a desirable corridor for surrounding powers, The little Polish army under Kosciuszko and Prince Joseph Poniantowskl did what it could, For three months it kept back all invaders, But King Stanislaus II of Poland, doubtful of sue- cess, ncceded to the demands of the confedera- tion, Poland was again parceled out to her neigh. borg and reduced to enethird her original di. mensions, Undismayed, Kosciuszko and his followers withdrew to Leipsic, There they Inid their plans for another battle, In this encounter they were partly victorious, recovering considerable lost territory. But the game of war against an enemy whose numbers far exceeded thelr own proved disastrous. Kosciuszko, seriously wounded, taken prisoner on the battlefield. For two years he was confined in the famous Russian fortress of St. Peter and Paul. He was released upon his request that he once more to visit America. be allowed After his second visit to America he settled down In a house near Paris, There he received many distinguished guests and worked for a fatheriand he was never to see again. The last few years of his life with friends in Solothurn, Switzerland, where he died In 1817. Closely connected with the month of October Is the story of another Polish champion of Uib- erty, a comrade In arms of Kosciuszko, and a man Americans delight to honor along with him—Count Casimir Pulaski Pulask! was born in Podolia, Poland, March 4. 1748. As a mere boy he threw himself into the struggle for Polish liberty. At twenty-one he stirred up a revolt In Lithuania against the ty. rannical Russians, who were gradualls gre out Poland's national life were spent whom Though elected commar lsh army of Indeg twenty-two years old and scored fallure have made an unsuccessful attem to ki I latter's Warsaw palace mishaps Pulaski was out his estates con- fiscated and a price set on his head Pulaski fled for his life to T way thence to France, a patriot without a coun- try. In Paris he met Benjamin Franklin, heard from him the story of America’s struggle der-in-chief of the Po- in 1770, he was defeated In battle He 1s sald to t the next year Poland As a result of various awed, endence when but after fallure King Stanislas of from the urkey, fugitive to strike another blow and Joined Washington's army as a volunteer. Washington appointed the Pole to a place on the of retreating Americans, snd so deployed them eral classes of men, Including serters. The count was made corps of 350 troops, which was known as the ried the Pritish and won new fame, grew tired of holding so small a command. There to Europe. energies, The southern summer's heat and the steaming, the Pole's health, He fell seriously {Il with ma- the British until another lliness laid him low. His health wrecked, he fought on, The Americans were planning. to march against the English forces that held Savannah, Ga. Pul- askl, acting as advance guard, fell ‘upon the un. prepared enemy, captured some of their outer fortifications and opened the road for communi- eation between the patriots and the reinforcing French fleet, The Americans then laid regular siege to Sa. vannah., Pulaski was ma 'e leader of both the American and the French cavalry and led an assault on the British lines on October 8, 1770, during which he was mortally wounded, He died two days later on the United States brig, the Wasp, and was buried at sea, The sesquicentennial of Pulaski's death was the occasion for a nation-wide observance on October 11, 1020, when commemorative services were held in many places throughout the coun. try and a tall shaft, honoring the Polish hero, was unveiled In Savannah, There was also a spe: clal stamp lesue in honor of the event. The next year a resolution was introduced Into congress to make October 11 of each year “Pulaski Me- morial day” and in 1081 this resolution was passed and President Hoover Issued a proclama- tion ealling for its observance, (© by Western Newspaper Union) COWARDLY SUBTERFUGE “Your parrot uses some of the worst language | ever listened to” “Yes. | had a quarrel with a man and there are a few things 1 think ought to be said to him. 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