Tadeusz Kościuszko: Difference between revisions
m →Notes |
|||
Line 223: | Line 223: | ||
<ref name="Billingsport">{{cite news|first= Edward|last= Colimore|url= http://www.philly.com/inquirer/home_region/20071210_Fighting_to_save_remains_of_a_fort.html|title= Fighting to save remains of a fort|work=[[Philadelphia Inquirer]]|date= December 10, 2007}}</ref> |
<ref name="Billingsport">{{cite news|first= Edward|last= Colimore|url= http://www.philly.com/inquirer/home_region/20071210_Fighting_to_save_remains_of_a_fort.html|title= Fighting to save remains of a fort|work=[[Philadelphia Inquirer]]|date= December 10, 2007}}</ref> |
||
<ref name="Catholics and the American Revolution">{{cite book| url=http://books.google.com/?id=-OdphE7yhXwC&pg=PA133&lpg=PA133&dq=deane+kosciusko| page=133| title=Catholics and the American Revolution | author=Martin I.J. Griffin| isbn=9781428628434| date=2006-06 }}</ref> |
|||
<ref name="Engendering Slavic literatures">{{cite book|title=Engendering Slavic literatures|author=Pamela Chester, Sibelan Elizabeth S. Forrester|year=1996|publisher=[[Indiana University Press]]|url=http://books.google.com/?id=KQD57bf5g0AC&pg=PA57&dq=Chester+Ko%C5%9Bciuszko#v=onepage&q=|isbn=9780253210425|page=57}}</ref> |
<ref name="Engendering Slavic literatures">{{cite book|title=Engendering Slavic literatures|author=Pamela Chester, Sibelan Elizabeth S. Forrester|year=1996|publisher=[[Indiana University Press]]|url=http://books.google.com/?id=KQD57bf5g0AC&pg=PA57&dq=Chester+Ko%C5%9Bciuszko#v=onepage&q=|isbn=9780253210425|page=57}}</ref> |
Revision as of 20:19, 1 January 2012
Tadeusz Kościuszko | |
---|---|
Born | February 4, 1746 Mereczowszczyzna, near Kosava, then in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, a part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, now Belarus |
Died | October 15, 1817 Solothurn, Switzerland | (aged 71)
Years of service | 1765–1794 |
Rank | U.S. Brigadier General by brevet, October 1783;[1] Generał dywizji |
Battles / wars | American Revolutionary War, Polish–Russian War of 1792, Kościuszko Uprising |
Signature |
Andrzej Tadeusz Bonawentura Kościuszko ([taˈdɛuʂ kɔɕˈt͡ɕuʂkɔ] ; February 4, 1746 – October 15, 1817) was a Polish–Lithuanian[2][3][4][5][6][7] and American general and military leader during the Kościuszko Uprising. He is a national hero of Poland, Lithuania, the United States[8] and Belarus.[9][10] He led the 1794 Kościuszko Uprising against Imperial Russia and the Kingdom of Prussia as Supreme Commander of the Polish National Armed Force (Najwyższy Naczelnik Siły Zbrojnej Narodowej).[11]
Before commanding the 1794 Uprising, he fought in the American Revolutionary War as a colonel in the Continental Army. In 1783, in recognition of his dedicated service, he was brevetted by the Continental Congress to the rank of brigadier general and became a naturalized citizen of the United States.
There are several Anglicized spellings of Kościuszko's name. Perhaps the most frequently occurring is Thaddeus Kosciusko, though the full "Andrew Thaddeus Bonaventure Kosciusko" is also seen. In Lithuanian, Kościuszko's name is rendered as Tadas Kosciuška[12] or Tadeušas Kosciuška. In Belarusian it is Tadevuš Kaściuška (Тадэвуш Касцюшка).
Early life
Kościuszko was born in the village of Mereczowszczyzna (Template:Lang-be, Merachoushchyna), now abandoned, near the present-day town of Kosava, Belarus. The area lay within the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, a part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.[13]
Kościuszko was the son of a local Polish[citation needed] noble, Ludwik Tadeusz Kościuszko, and Tekla, née Ratomska. He was the youngest child in a family whose lineage traced partly to Lithuanian and Ruthenian (Belarusian[14][15]) nobility[16] and to a 15th–16th–century courtier of Polish King Sigismund I the Old, Konstanty Fiodorowicz Kostiuszko.[17][18][19] At the time of Tadeusz Kościuszko's birth, the family possessed modest holdings in the Grand Duchy.[16] He was christened in both Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic religions.[20] As a result of the dual baptisms, he bore the names Andrzej and Tadeusz.[20]
In 1765 Poland's King Stanisław August Poniatowski created a Corps of Cadets (Template:Lang-pl), on the grounds of present-day Warsaw University, to educate military officers and government officials. Kościuszko enrolled on 18 December 1765, becoming a member of the Corps of Cadets. Since the school emphasized both military subjects and the liberal arts, his courses included world history, the history of Poland, philosophy, Latin, the Polish, German and French languages, and law, economics, geography, arithmetic, geometry and engineering. Upon graduation, he was promoted to captain.[13]
France
In 1768 a civil war arose in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, when the Bar Confederation sought to depose King Stanisław August Poniatowski. Faced with a difficult choice between the rebels and his sponsors, the King and the Czartoryski family — who favored a gradualist approach to shedding Russian domination — Kosciuszko chose to emigrate.[21] In 1769 he and his colleague Orłowski were granted royal scholarships, and on October 5 they set off for Paris. While both sought to gain further military education, they were barred as foreigners from enrolling in any French military academy, and instead enrolled in the Royal Academy of Fine Arts and Sculpture.[21] For five years, however, Kościuszko educated himself as an extern, frequenting lectures and the libraries of the Paris military academies. His exposure to the Enlightenment there, coupled with the religious tolerance practiced in the Commonwealth, would have a strong influence on his later career.[22] The theory of Physiocracy made a particularly strong impression on his thinking.[21]
Return home
By the First Partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, in 1772, the adjoining countries of Russia, Prussia and Austria annexed large swaths of Polish-Lithuanian territory and acquired influence over the internal politics of the reduced Poland and Lithuania. The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was forced to cut back its Army to 10,000 men, and when Kościuszko finally returned home in 1774, there was no place for him in the Army. He took a position as tutor in the family of a provincial governor and fell in love with his pupil Ludwika Sosnowska. They eloped but were overtaken by her father's retainers.[16] Kościuszko received a thrashing at their hands — an event which may have led to his later antipathy to class distinctions.[16] In autumn of 1775 he decided to emigrate.
Dresden and Paris
In late 1775 Kościuszko arrived in Dresden, where he wanted to join either the Saxon court or the Elector's army. However, he was refused and decided to travel back to Paris. There he was informed of the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War, in which the British colonies in North America had revolted against the crown and begun their struggle for independence. The first American successes were well publicized in France, and the revolutionaries' cause was openly supported by the French people and government.
American Revolution
After American diplomats appealed to the French revolutionary and arms dealer Pierre Beaumarchais, the French government loaned Beaumarchais one million livres on June 10, 1776 to establish a fake shell corporation under the alias Roderigue Hortalez & Co.[23] The faux corporation was intended to smuggle weapons and ammunition to the Continental Army. In late June, Kościuszko sailed on a Hortalez & Co. ship to the colonies in the company of other foreign officers.[24]
On August 30, 1776 he presented a Memorial to Congress. He initially served as a volunteer, but on October 18, 1776, Congress commissioned him a Colonel of Engineers in the Continental Army. He was assigned a black orderly named Agrippa Hull. At the recommendation of Prince Adam Kazimierz Czartoryski and General Charles Lee, Kościuszko was named head engineer of the Continental Army.
Kościuszko was sent to Pennsylvania to work with the Continental Army. Shortly after arriving, he read the United States Declaration of Independence. Kościuszko was moved by the document because it encompassed everything in which he believed; he was so moved, in fact, that he decided to meet Thomas Jefferson, the principal author of the Declaration. The two met in Virginia a few months later. After spending the day discussing philosophy and other things they shared in common, they became very close friends. Kościuszko was a guest at Monticello on many occasions, and spent prolonged visits there.
War in the north
Kościuszko's first task in America was the fortification of Philadelphia. His first structure was the construction of Fort Billingsport.[25] On September 24, 1776, Kościuszko was ordered to fortify the banks of the Delaware River against a possible British crossing. In the spring of 1777 he was attached to the Northern Army under Maj. Gen. Horatio Gates where he directed the construction of several forts and fortified military camps along the Canadian border.
Subsequently posted at Fort Ticonderoga, he worked to restore the defenses of what had once been one of the most formidable fortresses in North America. His surveys of the landscape prompted him to strongly recommend the construction of a battery on Sugar Loaf Mtn. overlooking the fort. Though a prudent suggestion, and one that carried the agreement of Kościuszko's fellow engineers, garrison commander Brigadier Gen. Arthur St. Clair ultimately declined to carry it out, citing logistical difficulties. This turned out to be an egregious tactical blunder, as, when the British Army under General John Burgoyne arrived in July, he did exactly what Kościuszko would have done and had his engineers place artillery on the hill.
With the British in complete control of the high ground, the Americans realized their situation was hopeless and abandoned the fortress with hardly a shot fired in the Siege of Ticonderoga. The British advance force nipped hard on the heels of the outnumbered and exhausted Continentals as they fled southward. Maj. Gen. Philip Schuyler, desperate to put distance between his men and their pursuers, ordered scorched earth tactics along the route of retreat. In his crucial rearguard role, Kościuszko carried out these orders by directing the felling of trees, damming of streams, and destruction of all bridges and causeways to deny the British use of the roadway. Encumbered by their vast supply train, the British slowly began to bog down, giving the Americans the time needed to safely withdraw across the Hudson River.
Shortly thereafter, General Gates relieved Schuyler, regrouping his forces to try and prevent the British from taking Albany. He tapped Kościuszko to survey the countryside between the opposing armies, choose the most defensible position he could, and fortify it. Finding just such a position near Saratoga, overlooking the Hudson at Bemis Heights, Kościuszko proceeded to lay out an excellent array of defenses; nearly impregnable to attack from any direction. His excellent judgment and meticulous attention to every detail in the American defense frustrated the British Army attack during the final battle on October 7, 1777. Added to the checking action at Freeman's Farm two weeks prior, the dwindling British army was dealt a sound tactical defeat, the combination turning the tide of the campaign to an American advantage.
The Americans were then free and able to pursue and bottle up the tattered remnants of the disintegrating British expedition. Having all but cut off the last means of escape, Gates accepted General Burgoyne's surrender of his entire force at Saratoga on October 16, 1777. This complete and total American victory marked the turning point of the entire war, leading directly to the alliance with France (concluded on February 6, 1778). Kościuszko's work at Saratoga received great praise from Gen. Gates, who later told his friend Dr. Benjamin Rush "...the great tacticians of the campaign were hills and forests, which a young Polish engineer was skillful enough to select for my encampment".
Thereafter, Kościuszko was regarded as one of the best engineers in American service. George Washington immediately took notice, tasking him with the command of improving defensive works at the stronghold in West Point. Here he was posted until being granted his request for transfer to the Southern Army in August 1780. It was Kościuszko's defenses at West Point that General Benedict Arnold attempted to pass to the British when he turned traitor the following month. It was later revealed that the original blueprints had been destroyed before either Arnold or Gen. Washington could get their hands on them.
War in the south
Traveling southward through rural Virginia, Kościuszko eventually reported to his former commander Gen. Gates in North Carolina in October. However, following the disastrous defeat at the Battle of Camden on August 16, Congress selected Washington's choice of Maj. Gen. Nathanael Greene to replace the disgraced Gates as commander of the Southern Department. When Gen. Greene formally assumed command on December 3, 1780, Kościuszko's services were retained, employed as Greene's chief engineer. In this capacity, he made substantial contributions towards the planning and execution of the general's overall strategy that culminated in the reconquest of the Carolinas and Georgia two years later.
Over the course of this campaign, he was placed in charge of constructing bateaux, siting camps, scouting river crossings, fortifying positions, and developing intelligence contacts. Many of his contributions were instrumental in preventing the destruction of the Southern Army. This was especially true during the famous "Race to the Dan", where Cornwallis and his exhausted troops chased Greene through 200 miles of rough backcountry terrain in the dead of winter. Thanks largely to a combination of Greene's tactics, and Kościuszko's bateaux and accurate scouting of the rivers ahead of the main body, the Continentals safely crossed each one in its path, including the Dan River. Cornwallis, having no boats of his own, and finding no way to cross the swollen Dan, finally gave up the chase and withdrew back into North Carolina, while the Continentals regrouped south of Halifax, VA, where Kościuszko had earlier established a fortified depot at Greene's request.
During the "Race to the Dan", Kościuszko had contributed to the selection of the site where Gen. Greene eventually returned to fight Cornwallis at Guilford Courthouse. Though tactically defeated, the Americans all but destroyed Cornwallis' army as an effective fighting force and gained a permanent strategic advantage in the South. Thus, as Greene began his reconquest of South Carolina in the spring of 1781, he recalled Kościuszko to rejoin the main body of the Southern Army. It wasn't long before he was back in his engineering element at Ninety Six where, from May 22 - June 18, he conducted the longest siege of the Revolutionary War. Kościuszko suffered his only wound in seven full years of service during the unsuccessful siege, as he was bayonetted in his hindquarters during an assault by the Star Fort's defenders on the approach trench he was preparing.
As the combined forces of the Continentals and Southern militia gradually forced the British from the backcountry into the coastal ports during the latter half of 1781, Kościuszko began participating in more direct action. There exists evidence he saw limited action in the major battles at Hobkirk's Hill (2nd Camden) in April and Eutaw Springs in September. However, he was most active throughout the final year of hostilities in much smaller actions focused on harassing British foraging parties near Charleston. His only known battlefield command of the war occurred at James Island on November 14, 1782. In what is believed by many to be the Continental Army's final armed action of the war, he was very nearly killed as his small force was soundly routed. A month later, he was among the first Continental troops to reoccupy Charleston following the British evacuation of the city. Kościuszko spent the rest of the war there, allegedly conducting a fireworks display to celebrate news of the signing of the Treaty of Paris in April, 1783.
Mustering-out
After seven years of faithful, uninterrupted service to the American cause, on October 13, 1783, Kościuszko was promoted by Congress to the rank of brigadier general. He also received American citizenship and a grant of land near present-day Columbus, Ohio, and was admitted to both the prestigious Society of the Cincinnati and the American Philosophical Society. When he was leaving America, he wrote a last will, naming Thomas Jefferson the executor and leaving his property in America to be used to buy the freedom of black slaves, including Jefferson's, and to educate them for independent life and work.[26] Several years after Kościuszko's death, Jefferson pled an inability to act as executor, an action deprecated by the abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison and Jefferson historian Merrill Peterson. The U.S. Supreme Court awarded the estate to Kościuszko's descendants in 1852,[27] ruling that he had died intestate despite the four wills he had made.[28] During the legal proceedings between the date of his death and the Supreme Court decision, the value of his estate decreased substantially; this was attributed by a case attorney to Colonel George Bomford's use of the estate for his own purposes.[28] None of the monies that Kościuszko had earmarked for the manumission and education of African-Americans were ever used for that purpose.[28]
Return to Commonwealth
In July 1784 Kościuszko set off for Poland, where he arrived on August 12. He settled in Siechnowicze (Template:Lang-be, now in Belarus as Sehnovichi). The property, administered by his brother-in-law, brought a small but stable income, and Kościuszko decided to limit the servitude of his peasants (corvée) to two days a week, while completely exempting female serfs. This move was seen by local szlachta (nobility) as a sign of Kościuszko's dangerous liberalism.
By that time the internal situation in Poland was changing rapidly. A strong, if still informal, group of politicians advocated for reforms and for strengthening the state. Notable political writers such as Stanisław Staszic and Hugo Kołłątaj argued for granting the serfs and burghers more rights and for strengthening the central authorities. These ideas were supported by a large part of the szlachta, who also wanted to curb foreign meddling in Poland's internal affairs.
Finally the Great Sejm of 1788–92 opened the necessary reforms. One of its first acts was to approve the creation of a 100,000-man army to defend the Commonwealth's borders against its aggressive neighbors. Kościuszko saw this as a chance to return to military service and serve his country in the field that he knew best. He applied to the army and on October 12, 1789, received a royal commission as a major general. As such, he began receiving the high salary of 12,000 złotys a year, which ended his financial difficulties.
The Commonwealth's internal situation and the reforms initiated by the Constitution of May 3, 1791, the first constitution written in the modern era in Europe and second in the world after the American, were seen by the surrounding powers as a threat to their influence over Polish politics. On May 14, 1792, conservative magnates created the Targowica Confederation, which asked Russian Tsarina Catherine II for help in overthrowing the constitution. On May 18, 1792, a 100,000-man Russian army crossed the Polish border and headed for Warsaw, thus opening the Polish-Russian War of 1792.
Defense of Constitution
Although the plan to create a 100,000-man Polish Army was not accomplished due to economic problems and general unpreparedness of the system to field and equip such number of soldiers in very short time, however the Polish (Lithuanian and Crown) Army had well-trained young officers corps and artillery, but the newly trained soldiers were not prepared for the rigors of war, nor the eastern Poland's unfinished fortresses and under-supplied military depots were ready to offer supplies and refugium to the Polish troops.
Before the Russians invaded Poland, Kościuszko had been appointed deputy commander of Prince Józef Poniatowski's 3rd Crown Infantry Division. When the Prince became Commander in Chief of the entire Polish (Crown) Army on May 3, 1792, Kościuszko automatically assumed the command of the Division.
After Prussia's betrayal of her Polish ally, the Army of Lithuania under the traitorous Duke Louis of Württemberg did not oppose the advancing Russians and only after a change of the commander tried to stand and fight the Russians while withdrawing towards Brześć. The Crown Army was judged too weak to oppose the four columns of enemy armies advancing into Polish Ukraine and begun a fighting withdrawal to the western side of the Southern Bug River, where it regrouped and countered the Russian advance in a pitched battle, when Prince Poniatowski was victorious in the Battle of Zieleńce (June 18, 1792), while Kościuszko's division took part only in some artillery exchange at the end of the battle, the general was among the first to receive the newly created Virtuti Militari medal, Poland's highest military decoration even today. The Polish withdrawal, however, was continued in face of Russian superiority and relentless tactics of pursuit and encircle, i.e., numerous attempts to encircle the regiments of Polish army around the military supply camps. Upon reaching the northern Bug River the Polish army was divided into 3 divisions in order to hold the river defense line yet weakening their numerical superiority in one point countering the advice of one strong, concentrated army group advocated by general Kościuszko, who had opposed this division of the Polish forces on the Bug River.
In the ensuing battles of Włodzimierz (July 17, 1792, now Volodymyr-Volynskyi) and Dubienka (July 18) Kościuszko repulsed the numerically superior enemy, using skillfully the terrain obstacles and field fortifications, and came to be regarded as one of Poland's most brilliant military commanders of the time. On August 1, 1792, King Stanisław August promoted him to Lieutenant General. But before the nomination arrived at Kościuszko's camp in Sieciechów, on July 24, 1792 the King had betrayed the army by formally announcing his access to the Targowica Confederation and ordered the Polish-Lithuanian armies to cease hostilities against the Russians. Final battle occurred at Markuszów on July 26, 1792, and Polish cavalry under prince Poniatowski was victorious against the Russian cavalry.
Emigré
The King's capitulation was a hard blow for Kościuszko, who had not lost a single battle in the campaign. Together with many other notable Polish commanders and politicians he fled to Dresden and then to Leipzig, where the émigrées began preparing an uprising against Russian rule in Poland. The politicians, grouped around Ignacy Potocki and Hugo Kołłątaj, sought contacts with similar opposition groups formed in Poland and by spring 1793 had been joined by other politicians and revolutionaries, including Ignacy Działyński.
On August 26, 1792, the French Legislative Assembly awarded Kościuszko honorary citizenship of France in honor of his fight for freedom of his fatherland and the ideas of equality and liberty. After two weeks in Leipzig, Kościuszko set off for Paris, where he tried to gain French support of the planned uprising in Poland.
On January 13, 1793, Prussia and Russia signed the Second Partition of Poland, which was ratified by the Sejm of Grodno on June 17. Such an outcome was a giant blow for the members of Targowica Confederation who saw their actions as a defense of centuries-old privileges of the magnates, but now were regarded by the majority of the Polish population as traitors. After the partition Poland became a small country of roughly 200,000 square kilometres and a population of approximately 4 million. The economy was ruined and the support for the cause of an uprising grew significantly, especially since there was no serious opposition to the idea after the Targowica Confederation was discredited.
In June 1793 Kościuszko prepared a plan of an all-national uprising, mobilization of all the forces and a war against Russia. The preparations in Poland were slow and he decided to postpone the outbreak. However, the situation in Poland was changing rapidly. The Russian and Prussian governments forced Poland to again disband the majority of her armed forces and the reduced units were to be drafted to the Russian army. Also, in March the tsarist agents discovered the group of revolutionaries in Warsaw and started arresting notable Polish politicians and military commanders. Kościuszko was forced to execute his plan earlier than planned and on March 15, 1794 he set off for Kraków.
Kościuszko Uprising
During the Uprising, Kościuszko was named Naczelnik (Commander-in-Chief) of all Polish-Lithuanian forces fighting against Russian occupation, and issued his Proclamation of Połaniec. After initial successes following the Battle of Racławice, Kościuszko was wounded at Maciejowice and captured by the Russians. He was imprisoned at Saint Petersburg in Prince Orlov's Marble Palace. Soon afterward, the uprising ended with the Battle of Praga.
Music
In 1777 Kościuszko composed a polonaise and scored it for the harpsichord. It was named after him and became popular among Polish patriots at the time of the 1830 Uprising, with lyrics by Rajnold Suchodolski.[29]
Later life
In 1796 Tsar Paul I of Russia pardoned Kościuszko and set him free. In exchange for his oath of loyalty, Paul I also freed some 20,000 Polish political prisoners held in Russian prisons and forcibly settled in Siberia. The Tsar granted Kościuszko 12,000 roubles, which the Polish leader attempted in 1798 to return; the Tsar refused to accept it back as "money from a traitor".
Kościuszko emigrated to the United States, but the following year returned to Europe and in 1798 settled in Breville, near Paris. Still devoted to the Polish cause, he took part in creating the Polish Legions. Also, on October 17 and November 6, 1799 he met with Napoleon Bonaparte. However, he failed to reach any agreement with the French leader, who regarded Kościuszko as a "fool" who "overestimated his influence" in Poland (letter from Napoleon to Fouché, 1807).
Kościuszko remained politically active in Polish émigré circles in France and in 1799 was a founding member of the Society of Polish Republicans. However, he did not return to the Duchy of Warsaw and did not join the reborn Polish Army allied with Napoleon. Instead, after the fall of Napoleon's empire in 1815 he met with Russia's Tsar Alexander I in Braunau. In return for his prospective services, Kościuszko demanded social reforms and territorial gains for Poland, which he wished to reach as far as the Dvina and Dnieper Rivers in the east.
Alexander asked him to go to Warsaw. However, soon afterwards, in Vienna, Kościuszko learned that the Kingdom of Poland created by the Tsar would be even smaller than the earlier Duchy of Warsaw. Kościuszko called such an entity "a joke";[30] and when he received no reply to his letters to the Tsar, he left Vienna and moved to Solothurn, Switzerland, where his friend Franciszek Zeltner was mayor. Suffering from poor health and old wounds, on October 15, 1817 Kościuszko died there of typhoid fever.[31] Two years earlier, he had emancipated his serfs.
Kościuszko's body was embalmed and placed in a crypt at Solothurn's Jesuit Church. His viscera, removed in the process of embalming, were separately interred in a graveyard at Zuchwil, near Solothurn, except for the heart, for which an urn was fashioned. In 1818 Kościuszko's body was transferred to Kraków, Poland, and placed in a crypt at Wawel Cathedral, a pantheon of Polish kings and national heroes. Kościuszko's heart, which had been preserved at the Polish Museum in Rapperswil, Switzerland, was in 1927, along with the rest of the Museum's holdings, repatriated to Warsaw, where the heart now reposes in a chapel at the Royal Castle. Kościuszko's other viscera remain interred at Zuchwil, where a large memorial stone was erected in 1820 and can be visited today, next to a Polish memorial chapel.[32][33]
Memorials
As a national hero of Poland, Lithuania, Belarus, and the United States, Kościuszko has given his name to many places and monuments around the world.
Poland: In Poland, nearly every major town has a street or square named for Kościuszko.
Between 1820 and 1823, the people of Kraków erected the Kościuszko Mound (Template:Lang-pl) to commemorate the Polish leader. A similar mound was erected in 1861 at Olkusz.
He is the patron of Kraków University of Technology, Wrocław Military University, and countless other schools and gymnasia (secondary schools) throughout Poland.
He was the patron of the 1st Regiment of the Polish 5th Rifle Division, and of the 1st Division of the Polish 1st Army. After World War I the Kościuszko Squadron, and during World War II the 303rd Polish Squadron, were named for him. Two ships have been named for him: SS Kościuszko, and ORP Generał Tadeusz Kościuszko (a former United States Navy frigate that was transferred to Poland).
There is a Kościuszko Monument at the entrance to Kraków's Wawel Castle, where he was laid to rest.[34] Its replica was erected in Detroit, Michigan in 1978 (pictured in gallery below). A replica of the Brigadier General Thaddeus Kosciuszko monument in Washington DC by Antoni Popiel was erected in 2010 in Warsaw, Poland.
France: Polish political refugees in Montigny-sur-Loing settled in La Genevraye at Castle Berville and participated actively in the life of the commune and that of La Genevraye, including establishing a brickworks. In 1814 Kościuszko intervened to stop the Cossacks after the Russians had penetrated into Champagne-sur-Seine. Subsequently a monument was built, Ancienne chapelle de Kosciusko. This symbolic tomb still stands at the edge of the Forest of Fontainebleau, where it receives an annual tribute of flowers.
United States: A plethora of sites are dedicated to Kosciuszko in the United States. Both Kosciusko, Mississippi and Kosciusko, Texas are named in his honor, as is Kosciusko County, Indiana and Kosciusko Island in Alaska. Monmouth, Illinois, was originally to be called Kosciuszko after that name was drawn from a hat around 1831, until it was decided that Kosciuszko would be too hard to pronounce, so Monmouth was selected as an alternative.
Kosciuszko's Philadelphia, Pennsylvania home is preserved as Thaddeus Kosciuszko National Memorial, administered as part of Independence National Historical Park; and a monument to him stands at the corner of Benjamin Franklin Parkway and 18th Street. Chicago.
New York State possesses two Kosciuszko Bridges- one (in Latham on I-87 just north of Albany as well as on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway) with an accompampanying subway stop on the Kosciuszko Street (BMT Jamaica Line). There is another Kosciuszko Bridge that crosses the Naugatuck River in Naugatuck, Connecticut.
There are Kosciuszko Streets in Brooklyn, New York, Rochester, New York, Toledo, Ohio, Manchester, New Hampshire, Nanticoke, Pennsylvania, South Bend, Indiana, Woburn, Massachusetts, and Bay City, Michigan. Kosciuszko Way can be found in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Kosciusko Avenue in Cleveland, Ohio and General Thaddeus Kosciusko Way in downtown Los Angeles, California. There are two highways named in his honor; the Thaddeus Kosciuszko Memorial as part of Route 9 in New Britain, Connecticut, the other as General Thaddeus Kosciusko Memorial Highway as part of State Route 257.
There are Thaddeus Kosciuszko Parks in Dublin, Ohio and Stamford, Connecticut. Both the Logan Square neighborhood of Chicago, and the village of East Chicago, Indiana possess public parks with the surrounding neighborhoods bearing Kosciuszko's name.
Equestrian statues of him can be found at Kosciuszko Park in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, across from the Polish Basilica of St. Josaphat, Chicago's Museum Campus on Solidarity Drive and in Detroit on Michigan Ave. Other statues can be found in Boston Public Garden; Scranton, Pennsylvania; a bust in the U.S. Capitol[35] as well as a statue Lafayette Park in Washington, D.C.; the United States Military Academy at West Point; Williams Park in St. Petersburg, Florida; and Red Bud Springs Memorial Park in Kosciusko, Mississippi; in Kosciuszko Park in East Chicago, Indiana; and (with Kazimierz Pułaski) in Poland, Ohio, a township and village named in honor of the two heroes of the American Revolution.
The Kościuszko Polish Patriotic Social Society in Natrona, Pennsylvania, is named after Kościuszko. Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania has a Polish Falcons Sportsman's Club named after Kosciuszko. In Grand Rapids, Michigan, there is a club called Kosciuszko Hall.
Hamtramck, Michigan, has a Kosciuszko Middle School; Winona, Minnesota has Washington-Kosciuszko Elementary School; School in East Chicago. There is also a Polish school named after Tadeusz Kosciuszko, Polska Szkola im. Tadeusza Kosciuszki or the or the Thaddeus Kosciuszko School of Polish Language. In 1951 Mrs. Maria Zamora established the first classroom and now its one of the oldest and largest Polish language schools in the United States.
Switzerland: The Solothurn house that was Kościuszko's last residence, now houses a Kościuszko Museum, open to the public at certain stated times.
There is also a road named for him in Vezia (canton Ticino, near Lugano), where his embalmed heart rested for some decades following his death, Kościuszko having in his will left it to Emilia Morosini, née Zeltner-Peri. His heart was later moved to the Polish Museum in Rapperswil through the engagement of Arrigo Boito, composer and librettist to Giuseppe Verdi, both of whom were friends of the Morosini-Negroni family.
Australia: Polish explorer Count Paweł Edmund Strzelecki named the highest mountain in Australia, Mount Kosciuszko. The mountain is the central feature of Kosciuszko National Park.
There is a Kosciusko Avenue in Geelong, and one in Canberra, the capital of Australia.
Elsewhere: There are also streets named for Kościuszko in Saint Petersburg, Russia; downtown Belgrade, Serbia (Ulica Tadeuša Košćuška); Budapest, Hungary (Kosciuszkó Tádé utca); and Vilnius, Lithuania (Kosciuškos gatvė).
A small street is named for Kościuszko in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
A Kościuszko monument in Minsk, Belarus, was dedicated in 2005.[20]
Gallery
-
Kościuszko swears oath, Kraków, 24 March 1794
-
Kościuszko bust, U.S. Senate
-
Kościuszko statue, Detroit — copy of Marconi's Wawel sculpture, a gift from the people of Kraków, Poland.[36]
-
Kościuszko statue, Boston Public Garden
-
Kosciuszko Park, Milwaukee South Side
-
Kościuszko statue, Chicago
-
General Thaddeus Kosciusko, by Benjamin West, 1797
-
Manhattan plaque honoring Kościuszko
-
Kosciuszko Park is located by the intersection of Diversey and Pulaski in the Chicago neighborhood of the same name
-
1994 Belarusian Kościuszko stamp
Quotes about Kościuszko
This section needs additional citations for verification. (August 2011) |
- Napoleon Bonaparte called Kościuszko “the hero of the North.”[37]
- Thomas Jefferson called him "as pure a son of liberty as I have ever known."
- French historian Jules Michelet called him “the last knight.”
- Jewish cavalry commander Berek Joselewicz called Kościuszko “a messenger from God Almighty.”
- Lord Byron: “That sound that crashes in the tyrant’s ear – Kosciuszko!”
- Catherine the Great called him a "beast.”
- Mikael Dziewanowski asserts that Kościuszko was a "pioneer of emancipation and a spokesman for racial democracy and justice in eighteenth-century America."[38]
See also
- Kazimierz Pułaski (Anglicized as "Casimir Pulaski"), another Polish commander in the American Revolutionary War
- Kosciuszko Foundation
- List of Poles
- Mount Kosciuszko, the highest mountain in Australia; named in Tadeusz's honour by Paweł Edmund Strzelecki
Notes
- ^ Alex Storozynski (2009). The Peasant Prince: Thaddeus Kosciuszko and the Age of Revolution. Macmillan. p. 114. ISBN 9780312388027.
- ^ "Tadeusz Kościuszko". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2009-11-08.
- ^ Aušra Paulauskienė (2007). Lost and found: the discovery of Lithuania in American fiction. Rodopi. p. 23. ISBN 9789042022669.
Both Kościuszko and Mickiewicz are known to have identified themselves as Lithuanian.
- ^ Pamela Chester, Sibelan Elizabeth S. Forrester (1996). Engendering Slavic literatures. Indiana University Press. p. 57. ISBN 9780253210425.
- ^ R Morfill. The Story of Poland. 2009, p.239
- ^ Aleksandra Piłsudska, Jennifer Ellis. Pilsudski. 1971, p.72
- ^ Gordon McLachlan. Lithuania. 2008, p.20
- ^ Belarusian review. Vol. 16-19, 2004 p.CX
- ^ Радаводы Касцюшкаў // Анатоль Бензярук. Касцюшкі-Сяхновіцкія. Гісторыя старадаўняга роду. — Брэст: Издательство «Академия», 2006. — 132 с.
- ^ Тадэвуш Касцюшка — ганаровы грамадзянін Францыі, нацыянальны герой ЗША, Польшчы і Беларусі // Звязда. — 1994. — 23 сак.
- ^ Bartłomiej Szyndler, Powstanie kościuszkowskie 1794, Warszawa 1994, passim.
- ^ Alfredas Bumblauskas. "Lithuania's Millennium – Millennium Lithuaniae, Or what Lithuania can tell the world on this occasion" (PDF). Retrieved 2010-01-20.
- ^ a b "Tadeusz Kosciuszko: A man of unwavering principle". The Institute of World Politics. Retrieved 2009-07-03.
- ^ Касцюшкі // Беларусь: энцыкл. даведнік / Рэдкал. Б. І. Сачанка (гал. рэд.) і інш. — Мінск: БелЭн, 1995. P. 379
- ^ 88. Хто такі Тадэвуш Касцюшка? // Іван Саверчанка, Зьміцер Санько. 150 пытанняў і адказаў з гісторыі Беларусі. — Менск: 1999; 150 пытанняў і адказаў з гісторыі Беларусі. — Вільня: Наша Будучыня, 2002. ISBN 9986-9229-6-1
- ^ a b c d Lituanus. 32 (1 - Spring 1986) http://www.lituanus.org/1986/86_1_03.htm. Retrieved 2009-02-24.
{{cite journal}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - ^ Tadeusz Korzon, Kościuszko, biografia z dokumentów wysnuta. Kraków, Warszawa, 1894.
- ^ "?".
- ^ "?".
- ^ a b c George A. Krol. "Tadeusz Kosciuszko Monument Unveiled in Minsk". Belarusan-American Association, Inc. Retrieved 2009-02-24.
- ^ a b c Alex Storozynski (2009). The peasant prince: Thaddeus Kosciuszko and the age of revolution. Macmillan. pp. 9–12. ISBN 9780312388027.
- ^ "Comprehensive Plan - Liberty in My Name" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2009-07-03.
- ^ Kite, Elizabeth S. (1918). Beaumarchais and the War of American Independence. Boston: Gorham Press. p. 82.
- ^ Storozynski, Alex (2009). The Peasant Prince: Thaddeus Kosciuszko and the Age of Revolution. New York: St. Martin's Press. pp. 17–18.
- ^ Colimore, Edward (December 10, 2007). "Fighting to save remains of a fort". Philadelphia Inquirer.
- ^ Kościuszko's American last will and testament, in English translation in Manfred Kridl, ed., For Your Freedom and Ours.
- ^ Gary B. Nash and Graham Russell Gao Hodges. "Why We Should All Regret Jefferson's Broken Promise to Kościuszko". History News Network. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
- ^ a b c Alex Storozynski (2009). The Peasant Prince: Thaddeus Kosciuszko and the Age of Revolution. Macmillan. p. 282. ISBN 9780312388027.
- ^ Margaret Anderton, "The Spirit of the Polonaise," Polish Music Journal vol. 5, no. 2, Winter 2002.
- ^ Feliks Koneczny - "Święci w dziejach Narodu Polskiego".
- ^ For your freedom and ours, the Kościuszko squadron, Olson&Cloud, pg 22, Arrow books ISBN 0-09-942812-1
- ^ Gemeinde Zuchwil (German)
- ^ Kościuszko Mound: Biography
- ^ Rick Steves, Cameron Hewitt, Rick Steves' Best of Eastern Europe 2007 by Avalon
- ^ "Tadeusz Kościuszko by Henry Dmochowski Saunders (1810 - 1863)". U.S. Senate Historical Office.
- ^ Zacharias, Pat, The Monuments of Detroit, September 5, 1999. Detroit News
- ^ Alex Storozynski, The Peasant Prince: Thaddeus Kosciuszko and the Age of Revolution, Macmillan, 2009, ISBN 9780312388027, p. 114.
- ^ Mikael Dziewanowski, "Tadeuz Kościuszko, Kazimierz Pułaski, and the American War of Independence," in Jaraslaw Pelenki, ed., The American and European Revolutions, 1776-1848: Sociopolitical and Ideological Aspects; Proceedings of the Second Bicentennial Conference of Polish and American Historians, September 29 — October 1, 1976, Iowa City, University of Iowa Press, 1980).
References
- Pula, James S. (1998). Thaddeus Kosciuszko: The Purest Son of Liberty. Hippocrene Books. ISBN 0781805767.
{{cite book}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help) - Niestsiarchuk, Leanid (2006). Андрэй Тадэвуш Банавентура Касцюшка: Вяртаннегероя нарадзіму (Andrzej Tadeusz Bonawentura Kosciuszko: Return of the Hero to his Motherland) (in Belarusian). ISBN 9856665930.
{{cite book}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help) - Nash, Gary B. (2008). Friends of Liberty: Thomas Jefferson, Thaddeus Kosciuszko, and Agrippa Hull. Basic Books. ISBN 9780465048144.
{{cite book}}
: Unknown parameter|coauthors=
ignored (|author=
suggested) (help) - Storozynski, Alex (2009). The Peasant Prince: Thaddeus Kosciuszko and The Age of Revolution, Thomas Dunne Books, ISBN 978-0-312-38802-7, ISBN 0-312-38802-0
- Manfred Kridl, ed., For Your Freedom and Ours.
External links
- The Peasant Prince (Unknown story of Kosciuszko’s life, liberty and pursuit of tolerance during the age of revolution)Storozynski, Alex (2009). The Peasant Prince: Thaddeus Kosciuszko and The Age of Revolution, Thomas Dunne Books, ISBN 978-0-312-38802-7, ISBN 0-312-38802-0
- Thaddeus Kosciuszko as an Artist (book about the Polish-American hero.)
- Kosciuszko by Monica Mary Gardner
- The Kosciuszko Foundation. (Polish-American cultural foundation named for General Tadeusz Kosciuszko.)
- Mount Kosciuszko Inc. Webpage of Australia's Mount Kosciuszko Association (named for Australia's highest mountain peak).
- About.com feature on Tadeusz Kosciuszko.
- Polish Embassy in the United States: a tribute page.
- US Kosciuszko National Monument web site.
- Kosciuszko Polish-American Historical Society, Inc., of the Valley Ansonia - Derby - Shelton - Seymour, Connecticut.
- Kosciuszko monuments gallery.
- Tadeusz Kościuszko at Find a Grave
- Unknown Kościuszko manuscript (Nieznany rękopis Tadeusza Kościuszki).
- Photographs of Mereszowszczyzna manor in Belarus.
- A humorous biographical comic about Kościuszko.
- Will of Thaddeus Kosciuszko.
- Henri La Fayette Villaume Ducoudray Holstein (1833). Le Glaneur Francais, Number One. pp. 251–252.
- 1746 births
- 1817 deaths
- People from Ivatsevichy Raion
- Members of the Society of the Cincinnati
- Polish nobility
- Belarusian nobility
- Polish generals
- Belarusian generals
- Polish generals in other armies
- Belarusian politicians
- Polish politicians
- Recipients of the Order of the White Eagle (Poland)
- Recipients of the Virtuti Militari
- Continental Army generals
- Polish people of the American Revolution
- Polish emigrants to the United States
- Naturalized citizens of the United States
- American people of Polish descent
- American people of Belarusian descent
- Kościuszko insurgents
- People of the Polish–Russian War of 1792
- Polish engineers
- Burials at the Chapel of the Royal Castle, Warsaw
- Generals of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
- Lithuanian politicians
- Burials at Archcathedral Basilica of Sts. Stanisław and Vaclav, Kraków