Poles have had a presence in Omaha since the late 1870s, when they started arriving to work in the
meatpacking,
stockyards,
smelting and
railroad industries. More arrived in the 1880s, but most after 1900. The state of Nebraska, and Omaha in particular, was advertised heavily in Poland as a destination for jobs starting in 1877 by the
Chicago-based
Polish Roman Catholic Union of America and the
Burlington and Missouri River Railroad.
Ralph Modjeski, a
Polish-American civil engineer, helped build the
Union Pacific Missouri River Bridge in Omaha in 1872. Poles continued to immigrate to Omaha, with most coming in the early 20th century, before immigration was reduced by
World War I and new laws in 1923. By the 1930s
South Omaha counted more than 10,000 Polish residents. As with other early 20th-century European immigrants, their industrial jobs contrasted with their traditional farming and rural pasts. Many were employed by the
Omaha Stockyards and the
meatpacking plants throughout the area. Numerous Polish immigrants lived in the
Burlington Road neighborhood Sheelytown, and the city's "Little Poland". This neighborhood extended west from South 25th to South 29th, F Street south to L Street. It eventually extended west to South 45th Street, earning the name Golden Hill. About 1895, only two hundred Polish families lived in Omaha. With close-knit ties to their families, the Polish community was
Roman Catholic. As their numbers grew, the immigrants and descendants supported three ethnic Polish parishes in the city. Few spoke
English well, and few were skilled laborers. Their social lives revolved around a number of heritage societies. They included the Polish Roman Catholic Union, the Polish Union of the United States, the National Alliance, the Pulaski Club, the Polish Welfare Club and the Polish Citizens' Club. Neighboring enclaves included concentrations of other immigrants, such as
Little Bohemia and
Greektown, as well as a
Jewish neighborhood. Immigrants tended to settle together where they were linked by language, culture and religion.
Nellie Tayloe Ross, the first woman to serve as governor of an American State, taught at a school in one of Omaha's Polish neighborhoods in the late 1890s.
St. Paul's incident In 1891 several Polish families constructed a Roman Catholic church at South 29th and Elm Streets in the
Sheelytown neighborhood. That year Father T. Jakimowicz arrived from
Elba, Nebraska, but left after a few years because of "misunderstandings" with the congregation. Dissidents within the congregation put forward Stephen Kaminski, a Polish nationalist and Franciscan friar, as their priest. The bishop did not agree with this choice (and at that time, parishioners did not have the right to choose). Those who supported Kaminski held title to the building and its land. The courts ruled on March 27, 1895, that the Roman Catholic bishop (or diocese) legally owned the church and land. Before the dispute was resolved, supporters took sides and burned down the church. The diocese reorganized the parish afterwards, distributing residents among other churches, including the
Immaculate Conception Church, which remains a congregation of primarily parishioners of Polish descent. ==20th century==