The Eighth Tribe, 1978 (5. évfolyam, 1-12. szám)

1978-08-01 / 8. szám

August, 1978 THE EIGHTH TRIBE Page 9 Out Heritage in America Column Editor: Joseph Széplaki HUNGARIANS IN AMERICA (continued from, previous issues) Reprinted from: The Hungarians in America 1583-1974; by Joseph Szép­laki. The book can be ordered from the editor. 1927 The first history of Hungarian- Ainericans was published in Hun­garian by the Szabadság newspa­per in Cleveland. Written by Géza Kende, it was entitled Magyarok Amerikában, Az amerikai magyar­ság története 1583-1927 (Hunga­rians in America: The History of Hungarians in America, 1583- 1927). Kende’s two-volume, 874- page book deserves much credit for his painstaking original research. 1928 March 15. Hungarians in New York erected a bronze statue of Kossuth on Riverside Drive. The memorial was unveiled in the pre­­senes of a delegation from the Hun­garian Parliament. Géza D. Berkó, editor of the largest American Hungarian-language newspaper, A- merikai Magyar Népszava (Amer­ican Hungarian People’s Voice), had spearheaded the drive for funds. 1929 August 22-24. The first Interna­tional Congress of Hungarians was held in Hungary. The avowed aim of the Congress was to try to unite the Hungarians scattered through­out the world. This seemed to be the first official recognition in Hungary proper of a Hungarian diaspora as well as of the immense energies and potentialities inher­ent in it. Fifty-two Hungarian American organizations sent 125 delegates to represent them at this Congress. The American Hungarian Fed­eration held a national meeting in Buffalo and discussed extensively the dismemberment of Hungary and the aims of reunification. Pre­viously there were two other meet­ings held in Cleveland and devoted to the same subject. 1930 Charles Feleky, the Hungarian­­born American musician, book col­lector, researcher, and the man­ager of the Martin Beck Theater, died this year. He was the first scholarly researcher of Hungarian materials in the United States. His library consisted of more than 10.000 magazine articles and over 6.000 volumes. Feleky also spent twenty-five years in compiling a bibliography of all works pertain­ing to Hungary and Hungarians. In 1930, the bibliography con­sisted of nineteen manuscript volumes. Unfortunately, his valu­able collection was distributed among American libraries, and the bibliography was lost. Only the catalogue of his library was micro­filmed by the Library of Congress. 1931 July 15-16. An airplane named “Justice for Hungary” crossed the Atlantic Ocean, piloted by two Hungarians (George Endrész and Alexander Magyar), to protest the Treaty of Trianon. 1935 Hungarian-born Adolph Zukor became the chairman of the Para­mount Pictures Corporation. He became one of the greatest film producers in Hollywood. 1938 August 16-19. Two hundred and eighty-three Hungarian-American delegates representing 283 Hunga­rian-American organizations at­tended the Second International Congress of Hungarians in Buda­pest. 1939 The delegation of Americans of Hungarian origin presented to the New York Historical Society a plaque of Colonel Kovats, the Hungarian-born hero of the War of Independence. The plaque had been executed by Alexander Finta, a Hungarian-born artist. The American Hungarian Peo­ple’s Voice (Amerikai Magyar Nép­szava) celebrated its fortieth an­niversary. A special jubilee edition contained congratulatory messages from President Roosevelt, Gover­nor Lehman, and a number of prominent Hungarian societies. Edmund Vasváry, a dedicated re­searcher of Hungarian materials in the United States, compiled a work entitled Lincoln s Hungarian He­roes: The Participation of Hun­garians in the Civil War. He has collected approximately 375 vol­umes of materials and compiled a card catalogue of biographical and bibliographical data arranged in about 12,000 entries. In 1974, he received the Abraham Lincoln Award of the American Hungarian Studies Foundation. 1940 Ferenc Molnár, the well-known Hungarian playwright and novelist, arrived in America. His best­­known play, Liliom, inspired both the musical and the film Carousel. Many of his witty and elegant comedies were successfully per­formed in America and England in English translation. The 42nd Anniversary “Press Day Festival” of the California Hungarians will be held on Sun­day, September 17, 1978 at the Croatian American Center, 11623 So. Budlong Ave., Los Angeles, Cal., from 11 a.m. till midnight. Plan to attend. Everyone cordially invited.

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