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Edwin Bandurski
by Ellen C.Warren, photograph by Melody R. Carranza
Some people just like it where
they are.
“I was born October 14, 1921
downstairs, in the bedroom,” Edwin
Bandurski reports with a little chuckle.
This month he will celebrate his 85th
birthday upstairs from the Polish flat
where he first entered this life in the
house built by his maternal grandfather,
Vincent Lassa, in 1907. “It will be
one hundred years old next year!” he
proudly notes.
It’s not only the house he feels so at home
in, it’s the area his family emigrated to
near the end of the 19th century. They
all came from Poland, established
themselves in the area of Riverwest that
was then referred to as Polish Town,
and blended fully and happily into the
community.
Edwin hasn’t always lived in the home
in the 3100 block of Bremen Street he’s
owned since 1959, but nearly always
within a few blocks. There were some
years, when he was between the ages of
6 and11, when the family left the Polish
flat and crossed the river to Kane Place.
His mother opened a grocery store and
they attended St. Hedwig’s Church.
Edwin received his first communion
there. But the church where he’d been
baptized and returned to at 11, St. Mary
Czestochowa, is where he declares he’s
been “a continual parishioner.” It’s been
a cornerstone in his life.
Edwin’s family moved back to the
partially below-ground apartment of his
earliest years in 1932, when his parents
purchased the house from his uncle. The
school at St Mary Czest., a block from
his home, was where he attended fifth,
sixth and seventh grades. His education
took a turn toward the technical fields
when his parents next sent him to
the Kilbourn Junior Trade School. A
large school, it filled the area between
Humboldt Boulevard and Dousman
Street on the south side of Auer Avenue.
Interspersed with the usual academic
studies were shop classes in printing,
woodworking and metalworking as
well as art. Edwin’s lifelong interest in
mechanical things led him to finish off
his formal education in a one-day per
week program at a vocational school on
11th and Highland.
During his last couple years of school
from 1940 to 1942, he worked at a
Phillips 66 filling station on Holton and
Concordia. On Oct. 7, 1942, a week
short of twenty-one years old, Edwin
enlisted in the Army Air Force. The
US was fully engaged in WWII, and
Edwin used his mechanical skills as
an airplane mechanic. “We serviced
bombers,” he says, maintaining them
and performing repairs as needed.
He remained on American turf for
the entirety of his enlistment and was
honorably discharged in early ’46.
Back home on Bremen Street he was
rehired by the gas station owner,
Lawrence Cookson, who had moved his
establishment to Holton and Burleigh
in the same building we see at that
corner today. Soon he was engaged to
his sister’s friend, Dorothy Platt, who
worked at Globe Union on Holton
St. (Globe Union would later become
Johnson Controls.) They were married
four days after his birthday that year.
Dorothy had been living with her two
married sisters, one of whom had a
young child. The other was her fraternal
twin. After Edwin and Dorothy tied
the knot he moved into their house
on Townsend and Weil. In those days
this sort of arrangement was not
uncommon. “It was a three bedroom
house,” Edwin explains. “We each had
a bedroom.”
1949 was an eventful year. Edwin took
over the Phillips 66 station and became
a father to their first child, Jane. There
would be two more to follow, Diane in
1953 and David in 1955.
Edwin had to give up his business in
1970 when the Phillips 66 Company
decided to close the location due to low
sales. Edwin remembers, “I never made
a lot of money, but a lot of people used
to think…you know. At that time we
used to make 3 cents on a gallon. When
I was in the business, gasoline was 38
cents for regular and 40 cents for ethyl,
the premium gasoline. The profit was
on the oil and doing the mechanical
work.”
A fellow St. Mary Czestochowa
parishioner came to Edwin’s aid after
his station closed. A machinist for
Reliable Knitting in the Third Ward,
he helped Edwin secure employment
in the maintenance and repair of the
many knitting machines used by the
company. Edwin retired in 1985 after
14 years in their service.
He had 15 more years with his beloved
Dorothy in the house on Bremen before
her death in 2000. After his parents’
deaths they’d bought out his brothers’
and sister’s interest in the home where
he still resides.
These days the cozy, well-kept dwelling
is entirely inhabited by family members.
Edwin’s on the first floor. His daughter,
Diane, lives in the attic apartment,
available to help her dad who’s been
wheelchair-bound since 1999. The
Polish flat, downstairs, is home to Jane’s
son, David.
The warm, lively lavender kitchen
and corral-colored dining room
demonstrate Edwin’s philosophy
regarding why he’s still pleased to live
in his Riverwest home. “I’m attached to
it here. Everybody says, ‘Go buy a new
house.’ But I just paint!”
Some people just like it where they are.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, EDWIN!
Riverwest Currents online edition - October, 2006
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