John Radzilowski (born 1965) is an American historian, and author of numerous books and articles in the modern history of Poland and in the history of Polish-Americans. He is a professor of history at the University of Alaska Southeast.[1]
He is a professor of history at the University of Alaska Southeast, Department of Social Science, where teaches European, U.S. and world history, geography and art history.[1]
Out on the Wind. Poles and Danes in Lincoln County. (1992, 1995)[5]
Bells Over the Prairie. 125 Years of Holy Trinity Catholic Church. (1995)
To Call It Home. The New Immigrants of Southwestern Minnesota. (1996 co-author with Joseph Amato)[6]
Prairie Town. A History of Marshall, Minnesota 1872–1997. (1997)[7]
Community of Strangers. Change, Turnover, Turbulence and the Transformation of a Midwestern Country Town. (1999) (co-author with Joseph Amato)
Polish Immigrants, 1890–1920 with Rosemary Wallner. Coming to America Series. (2002)[8]
Poland’s Transformation. A Work in Progress. (2003) (co-author with Marek Jan Chodakiewicz i Dariusz Tołczyk)[9]
Spanish Carlism and Polish Nationalism. The Borderlands of Europe in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. (2003) (co-author with Marek Jan Chodakiewicz)[10]
The Eagle and the Cross. A History of the Polish Roman Catholic Union of America 1873–2000. (2003)[11]
^Walaszek, Adam (Winter 2005). "Review". Journal of American Ethnic History. 24 (2): 119–120. doi:10.2307/27501575. JSTOR27501575. S2CID254494118. His monograph is descriptive, informative, and it deeply enriches our knowledge about the PRCUA, as well as American and Chicago Polonia. The Eagle and the Cross is a well-written, informative book.