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Rusyns in southern Illinois

  • 09 January 2023 7:57 AM
    Reply # 13049746 on 10196093
    Anonymous

    Before I came here to Western Pennsylvania in 2017, I visited St. Mary Orthodox Church in Benld, Illinois. I believe that church was founded by Rusyns (as are many of our churches here in PA). I chose to come to Western Pennsylvania instead. I serve St. John the Baptist Church here in Black Lick. The late Archbishop Job is buried behind the altar. He had hoped to retire here, where he had been rector before becoming a bishop. Sadly, he died before his sixty-fifth birthday, when he had planned on retiring.

  • 02 January 2022 5:03 PM
    Reply # 12233157 on 10196093
    Karen Varian

    I do not know if you can open this link or not - it is an article about the Rusyns of Streater, Illinois and it has an article about Nick Holoynak, the father of the LED, a Rusyn who was born in Ziegler, Illinois.

    Rusyns of Streater Illinois 2009.pdf

    If you can't open this, go to the Rusin Association website, rusinmn.org.  Under resources there are past articles of our Trembita newsletters with this article listed.

    Note:  we are in the process of redesigning our website.

  • 02 January 2022 3:55 AM
    Reply # 12231838 on 10196093

    Donna:  Hreblia is in Zakarpattya Oblast, Ukraine, 10 miles SE of Dorobratovo where my maternal grandfather Charles William BIDZILYA was born in 1892.

    I've taken Ancestry autosomal (non-gender) DNA test, Y paternal and MT maternal DNA tests.  Subscribe to Ancestry, My Heritage, Family Tree and GEDmatch.com.  Have you or relatives taken a DNA test that I could compare?



  • 01 January 2022 2:32 PM
    Reply # 12230668 on 10196093

    Hi Donna

    I'm continuing to find references to Rusyns in and around southern Illinois coal communities.  The culture doesn't seem to have been carried forward into modern times in the same way that it has in Pennsylvania.  For example, I've found a number of obituaries that reference Rusyn customs in Russian Orthodox churches that today don't seem to discuss these roots.

    Once I get enough information pulled together I'm going to try to publish it,


    Thanks,

    Charlie


  • 20 March 2021 1:19 AM
    Reply # 10216275 on 10196093
    Donna

    Hi Charlie,

    Both of my mother's parents are buried in the churchyard of St Marys Russian Orthodox church in Royalton IL.

    Her father migrated to the U.S. in 1907 from the village of Felso Karaslo in Austria-Hungary, a place now called Hreblja in western Ukraine. His name on the passenger list of the Slavonia was Vaszily Bilak, his nationality was given as 'Hungary' but his Race or People was 'Ruthenian'. He later anglicised his name to Charles Belik but I've seen lots of variation on the spelling of the surname. Young Vaszily/Charles was on his way to join his father, who arrived 2 years earlier, and I understand Charles had a brother, Nick, who also emigrated.

    According to family stories, they came to the U.S. for a couple of reasons: for better working conditions and to escape the draft. They were farm laborers and (again according to family stories) were not treated well on the estate where they were employed, and decided to try their luck elsewhere. In the U.S. they took jobs in the coal mines, first in Pennsylvania, later in Oklahoma, before Charles and Nick came to southern Illinois, to Royalton. In Royalton Charles met Marta Molnar Popovich, a young widow, and married her in 1919. My mother was born later that year. Marta was also from Felso Karaslo and came to the U.S. in 1911 with her older sister Anna; they joined their brother Janos in St Louis MO. Anna also married a coal miner and she also lived in Royalton.

    As to why Rusyn families went to southern Illinois, I've recently read a history of Williamson County (Bloody Williamson by Paul M. Angle) which mentioned that coal mines were being opened in Franklin County just north of Williamson during the period our families came into the area. They were following the jobs, most certainly. It was dirty and dangerous work but as migrants who probably didn't have much English, they had to take what they could get.

    Hope this helps your research.

    Donna

  • 14 March 2021 4:16 PM
    Message # 10196093

    Hello

    At some point around 1915 my family moved from Pittsburgh to Dowell, IL and continued working in mines in that area. 

    Until 1989 there was a Russian Orthodox church in Dowell, and one is active to this day in Royalton, IL.  Most of my family who lived in that area is buried in the Russian cemetery in Royalton.  However I think the origin of these churches may be Rusyn and I've found some clues to possibly support this.

    This article refers to the founders as "Carpatho-Russian" however the references are to Ruysn roots, and specifically call out their language as a "dialect of Ukranian"

    https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1041&context=ua_docs

    This is an article about one of the many now-gone churches in the region.  There is a photo caption referring to an inscription in "Rusyn/Ruthenian"

    https://www.springhousemagazine.com/featured_articles/v31_n6_muddy.pdfhttps://www.springhousemagazine.com/featured_articles/v31_n6_muddy.pdf

    Lastly, I found this reference to Carpatho-Ruysn clergy in Royalton.  The priest listed is the one who said the funeral service for my great-grandmother in 1938.

    http://carpatho-russian-almanacs.org/ROCMAS/ROCMAS1932/NorAmerPat.php

    Are others researching roots in southern IL?  I'm still trying to determine how and why Rusyn families moved there.

    Thanks

    Charlie



    Last modified: 14 March 2021 4:19 PM | Anonymous member
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