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Proletarec Archive 

  • Chicago, Illinois
  • 19061946

About

In 1905, Frank Petric and Joze Zavertnik began publishing in Chicago Glas Svobode ("Voice of Freedom"), a socialist newspaper intended for Slovene workers in the United States. A year later Petric and Zavertnik left the Svobode to publish Proletarec under the South Slavic Workers Publishing Co., becoming the first editors of a paper aimed at promoting socialism and the cultural values of the Slovenian population. Proletarec served the interests of the Slovenian members of the Yugoslav Socialist Federation (YSF), a political and cultural organization composed of Serbs, Croats, and other Slavic immigrants. Based in Chicago, Proletarec began circulation in January of 1906 as a monthly publication with only 100 subscribers. In 1908, Proletarec became a weekly publication under the direction of Ivan Molek, who acquired the position of editor-in-chief the previous year. In 1907, Proletarec increased its readership by publishing an additional section in Croatian, which effectively extended its ability to reach the Croat members of the YSF. Proletarec's conscious efforts to maintain and extend readership to immigrant Slovene socialists continued throughout its history.

Archive Info

  • 4,429
  • Chicago, Illinois
  • 19061946
0

Source Information

Proletarec, 1906–1946 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: July 5, 2022

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Sternberg Mfg. Co.

Sternberg Mfg. Co.

Proletarec
Chicago, Illinois
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Proletarec
Chicago, Illinois
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Proletarec
Chicago, Illinois
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Proletarec
Chicago, Illinois
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Proletarec
Chicago, Illinois
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Proletarec
Chicago, Illinois
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Archive Info

  • 4,429
  • Chicago, Illinois
  • 19061946
0

Source Information

Proletarec, 1906–1946 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: July 5, 2022