- Iwan Pylypow
Iwan Pylypow ( _uk. Iван Пилипiв, "Ivan Pylypiv",
September 28 1859 -October 10 1936 ) andWasyl Eleniak were the first Ukrainian immigrants toCanada in 1891–93.Pylypow was born in the village of
Nebyliv in Kalush county ("povit") in Austrian Galicia. He was a peasant logging contractor, and after falling on hard times considered finding a better life abroad, like many other Galicians of the time. Pylypow had heard about free lands in Canada from German neighbours, and after corresponding with former classmate Johan Krebs, who had settled nearMedicine Hat, Alberta , he set off for Canada with his friends Eleniak and Tyt Ziniak in the fall of 1891.Ziniak was turned back at the Austrian border, but Pylypow and Eleniak travelled via Halifax to
Winnipeg, Manitoba , where they met several German loggers who had worked for Pylypow. They visited the loggers' homesteads nearLangenburg, Saskatchewan , and went as far west asCalgary, Alberta . Unimpressed with the land near the railway, they went back to Manitoba, where a visit to aMennonite settlement at Gretna convinced Pylypow that Canada was a viable destination. Eleniak, out of money, stayed to work for the winter, while Pylypow returned to Galicia for their families before settling in Canada permanently.When he arrived back in
Austro-Hungary his account of vast, unsettled lands prompted both excitement and skepticism. When some learned that Pylypow expected to receive a commission from a Hamburg steamship company and accused him of swindling, he was arrested for sedition, solicitingemigration , and fraud. After awaiting trial for three months in jail, onMay 12 ,1892 , he was sentenced to another month. Although Pylypow's efforts at promotion were doused, his arrest and trial had generated publicity, and seven families led by Anton Paish and Mykola Tychkowsky set off for theCanadian Prairies . A few stopped to work briefly with Eleniak in Gretna, and then continued on to meet the rest in Alberta. With the help of Krebs, the families found homesteads near a German-speaking colony, north-east of Edmonton.Pylypow and his family finally caught up with the group in 1893, settling at
Edna-Star, Alberta , in the vicinity ofFort Saskatchewan .His farmhouse is now a part of the
Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village , located east of Edmonton, Alberta. The "Pylypow Industrial" subdivision of Edmonton, and Pylypow Lake in Saskatchewan are also named after him.See also
*
Ukrainian Canadian
*Josef Oleskow , another early promoter of Ukrainian emigration to CanadaReferences
* Martynowych, Orest (1991). "Ukrainians in Canada: The formative period, 1891–1924", pp. 60–61. Edmonton: Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies. ISBN 0-920862-76-4.
* Nay, Marshall A. (1997). "Trailblazers of Ukrainian emigration to Canada: Wasyl Eleniak and Ivan Pylypow", Brightest Pebble. ISBN 0-9699669-6-2.
*External links
* [http://www.abheritage.ca/albertans/articles/ukrvillage.html Seeds in Their Pockets: Real-time borshch and chichky at the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village] by Marilynn McAra
* [http://www.abheritage.ca/pasttopresent/settlement/aa_Ivan_Pylypow.html Pylypow's story] at "Alberta: Home, Home on the Plains"
* [http://collections.ic.gc.ca/ukrainian/overview/13/building.htm Pylypow house] at the "Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village Guided Tour"
* [http://www.albertaheritage.net/article/articles/historic_gardens.html Historic Gardens Bloom Again at Ukrainian Village] at Alberta Heritage
* [http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?linkPath=pagesELEleniakWasyl.htm Wasyl Eleniak] at the Encyclopedia of Ukraine
* [http://www.albertasource.ca/alphabet/article.php?article_id=133 Wasyl Eleniak] at the Alberta Heritage Alphabet
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