Olszowa, Łódź Voivodeship
Olszowa | |
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Village | |
Olszowa | |
Coordinates: 51°35′20″N 19°51′34″E / 51.58889°N 19.85944°E | |
Country | Poland |
Voivodeship | Łódź |
County | Tomaszów Mazowiecki |
Gmina | Ujazd |
Olszowa [ɔlˈʂɔva] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ujazd, within Tomaszów Mazowiecki County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland.[1] It lies approximately 5 kilometres (3 mi) west of Ujazd, 14 km (9 mi) north-west of Tomaszów Mazowiecki, and 35 km (22 mi) south-east of the regional capital Łódź.
A small creek of Pańkówka (later called Bielina) flows through Olszowa.
History
In 1406 Ścibor Bielina of Wola Drzazgowa bought Olszowa from Klemens of Wykno for 30 pieces of silver (grzywna).[2] Ścibor had three sons Michał, Wacław and Wojciech. They all were noted in 1420–1421 as owners of Olszowa. In 1924 king Jagiełło allowed the three brothers to transfer Olszowa rights to ius sredensis. Olszowa is also mentioned in 1429 when bishop Wojciech Jastrzębiec (on 5 September 1429 in Mnichowiec near Skierniewice) separated villages Olszowa and Popielawy from the parish of Małcz and on this basis and Ujazd, which newly obtained town rights (on 15 May 1428), created a new parish of Ujazd.[3]
Little is known about Olszowa in the medieval period. In a court record of Brzeziny district one can read that in 1471 Stanisław of Gutków and Olszowa was sentenced to reimburse Piotr the citizen of Ujazd with 43 grzywna, the value of cattle, horses, sown seeds and other things.[4] In 1488–1498 Marcin, a citizen of Ujazd, sued Wojciech of Olszowa and Gutków for compensation for his father's death of which Jakub Skórka a peasant of Olszowa was responsible.[5]
In the 17th century the owner of Olszowa was Walerian Olszowski (*1587–†1650) (coat of arms Prus II). His father was Mikołaj O., his grandfather Jan Mikołaj O. and great grandfather was Mikołaj Niczek Czchodorff O., who is recorded in documents in 1438.[6] It is not, however confirmed, if Walerian's ancestors resided in Olszowa. Walerian was also a grandson of Andrzej Frycz Modrzewski (*1503-†1572). Walerian served as podkomorzy of Wenden, podstoli of Wieluń and castellan of Spycimierz. With his second wife Zofia Dunin he had four sons: Andrzej, Hieronim, Zygmunt, Mikołaj and a daughter Katarzyna. His other sons also reached important ranks but Andrzej Olszowski (*2 Jan. 1621 – †29 Aug. 1677) reached the position of archbishop of Gniezno and primate of Poland (1674–1677). He was the one who crowned Jan III Sobieski for the king of Poland (at Wawel on 2 February 1676). Andrzej Olszowski was the founder of St. Adalbert church in Ujazd finished in 1680 (by his uncle's son Jan Olszowski, the castellan of Brzeziny), where a memorial plaque leaves no doubts about Andrzej's birthplace (Andream in Olszowa Olszowski ...Hic ob vicinitatem nativae Olszoviae fronte levatus basilicam hanc..). Walerian is buried at Stolec in the church of St. Lawrence where a sculptured tombstone in his memory is built in.
The next proven owner of Olszowa was Marcin Konstanty O. (*1643–†1687 or 1689), a son of Mikołaj O. and grandson of Walerian and then Andrzej Olszowski, starosta of Wieluń (16 July 1703 – 14 July 1719), a son of Hieronim O. and grandson of Walerian. He had no heir and Olszowa was taken over by Wiktor Olszowski the son of Stanisław, castellan of Wieluń and grandson of Walerian's brother.[6]
In 1817–1822 the property of Olszowa was split into five villages: Olszowa, Helenów, Maksymów, Stasiolas and Olszowa-Piaski.[7] In 1827 Olszowa had 17 houses and population of 159.[8] In 1886 the village of Olszowa had 16 houses and 112 dwellers and the folwark had 8 houses and 56 dwellers.[9]
In 1899 the owner of folwark Olszowa was Juliusz Szczesław Malcz.[10] In 1916 the owner was Bolesław Malcz,[11] the son of Juliusz. B. Malcz was an active citizen. In 1906, during martial law in guberniya of Piotrków, he was sentenced to three months of prison for dictating the resolution of gmina Łazisko council,[12] in 1916 he was a member of a Social Care Council of Łódź district (Łódzka Okręgowa Rada Opiekuńcza), a member of the Sienkiewicz memorial committee[13] then a chairman of the board of fire brigade Ujazd (9 Dec. 1917 – 1925). In 1928 he is also mentioned as the owner of the folwark Olszowa.[14] At that time in the folwark O. there was a grain distillery and a steam mill. In the 1930s the folwark was sold to a consortium of three owners (one of them was Leon Jabłoński). B. Malcz and his wife Leonia Zofia Wanda (born Moszyńska) had three children: son Zbigniew, son Stanisław who left to Warsaw and daughter Elżbieta who left to England.[15] After World War II the distillery and mill were nationalized and closed. All machinery was removed in 1956.[16] The remaining building was used for some time as a shelter for a mobile cinema and room for village gatherings. The building on the opposite side of the road housed GRN and a small post-office. Due to inadequate maintenance the buildings slowly went to ruins and now only a few walls remain.
The villages' five last soltyses were Józef Adamus (shortly before and during the war), Józef Goździk, Władysław Ścieszko, Sławomir Socha and now Zofia Socha. Electricity was installed in the village in 1963–64. Earlier the only source of light was kerosene lamps. Kerosene was sold in a village store by volume. Running water pipes were installed in 2008 subsidized in part by the EU.
Education
The Public Primary School of Olszowa was built in 1927–28. The building design was the one duplicated in several villages of middle-war Poland. It contained three classrooms at ground floor, school office and two apartments of a schoolmaster and teacher upstairs. Initially it had three classes only. Among first teachers were Seredyńska and Woźniak (schoolmaster). Wójcik, Nowak, and Leon Sowa were the teachers of that period.[15] Other teachers were Ireneusz Gałecki and A. Gralak. L. Sowa was the last schoolmaster before World War II. He and his wife Kazimiera were teachers also under German occupation until early 1942. Both were arrested by the German occupants. Leon Sowa was imprisoned (number 44667) and died in Auschwitz on 13 August 1942.[17] Kazimiera Sowa was held in Ravensbrück. She was brought into Ravensbrück concentration camp on 21 June 1942.[18] She survived the war and taught shortly after the war in the same school. After the Sowas' arrest the teacher in Olszowa school was Helena Hekowa. The school returned to service after the war. In 1973 it was passed to gmina Ujazd. Halina Kula was the last schoolmaster. The school was dissolved in the 1980s. The building was sold by gmina Ujazd to a private owner.
Pre-war times
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School photo of 1928 - the first year of new school. Teacher unknown.
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School photo of 1930. Teachers: Seredyńska and Woźniak.
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School photo of 1936. Teachers: Leon Sowa (left), A. Gralak (right), Kazimiera Sowa (below).
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School photo of 1938. Teachers: Ireneusz Gałecki (left), Kazimiera Sowa (middle), Leon Sowa (right)
References
- ↑ "Central Statistical Office (GUS) – TERYT (National Register of Territorial Land Apportionment Journal)" (in Polish). 2008-06-01.
- ↑ T. Nowak, Własność ziemska w ziemi łęczyckiej w czasach Władysława Jagiełły, Wyd. UŁ, Łódź, 2004, 460
- ↑ Liber beneficiorum Łaskiego, II, 321-322
- ↑ Księgi ziemskie brzezińskie, ks.1-2, k. 441
- ↑ Księgi ziemskie brzezińskie, ks. 1-2, k. 393v, 547v, 561v, 567 v, 583
- 1 2 Herbarz Polski Niesieckiego, II, Gniezno 1881–1882
- ↑ Ks. W. Gliński, Dzieje parafii św. Wojciecha w Ujeździe, Archidiecezjalne Wyd. Łódzkie, Łódź, 2006, 81
- ↑ Tabela miast, wsi i osad Królestwa Polskiego z wyrażeniem ich położenia i ludności, Warszawa, 1927
- ↑ Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego, 1886, VII, 510
- ↑ Rozwój, 22 Jan. 1899
- ↑ Gazeta Łódzka, 27 Feb. 1916
- ↑ Rozwój, 1906, 23 May 1906
- ↑ Gazeta Łódzka, 23 Nov. 1916
- ↑ Księga adresowa Polski, Wyd. Towarzystwo Reklamy Międzynarod., Warszawa 1928, 885
- 1 2 Helena Wajszczyk (born in 1916), private comm., 2009
- ↑ Hubert Jabłoński, private comm., 2009
- ↑ "Baza danych częściowo zachowanych informacji o więźniach KL Auschwitz" (in Polish). 2009-12-31.
- ↑ "Wykaz imienny Polek więźniarek politycznych obozu Ravensbruck" (in Polish). 2009-12-15.
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Coordinates: 51°35′20″N 19°51′34″E / 51.58889°N 19.85944°E