Władysław Stesłowicz ID: 185

Władysław Stesłowicz ID: 185

1867-1940

Polish politician, public figure, economist.  Government commisioner of Lviv in 1918-1919.

Władysław Stesłowicz was a  Polish politician, public figure, economist, Government commisioner of Lviv in 1918-1919.

Władysław Stesłowicz was born on June 9, 1867 in the village of Sydoriv (now – Husiatyn district, Ternopil region) – died in 1940 in Lviv. His parents were Wojcech Stesłowicz (property manager of Vyshnivchyk in Halychyna Podillia) and Albina Szydlowska.

He studied at the high school in Ternopil and graduated in 1885. He continued his education at the Law Faculty of Lviv University. During his studies, he served one year in the Austro-Hungarian Army (Artillery Regiment 11). He studied law history at the workshop of Ksawery Liske and ancient Polish law under the supervision of Oswald Balzer. In 1890, he received the degree of Doctor of Laws at the University. Later, he studied economics and statistics in Berlin and Vienna.

In Lviv, he lived at 10 Bohdan Lepky Str. (Brajerowska).


Political career in Austria-Hungary

In 1892, Stesłowicz became an official in Halychyna governorship. In politics, he was associated with the Polish Democratic Party (Polskie Stronnictwo Demokratyczne).  From 1906, he was a long-time deputy of Lviv City Council. He belonged to the Democratic Club and the Second (financial) section. On behalf of the City Council, he became a member of the supervisory board of the City Industrial Museum (Miejski Muzeum Przemysłowy) in 1907.

In 1911, he became a Member of the Austrian State Council. He belonged to the Polish Democratic Party and the Democratic Club, headed by the President of Cracow, Juliusz Leo.

At the beginning of World War I, Stesłowicz participated in the meetings of Halychyna politicians in Cracow (August 10-16, 1914) and entered the Eastern Section (Sekcja Wschodnia) of the Chief National Committee (Naczelny Komitet Narodowy). He returned to Lviv and dealt with the city’s current issues during the Russian occupation.

 

Government commissioner in Lviv

From March 19, 1918, to February 6, 1919, Stesłowicz served as Government Commissioner of Lviv. He governed the city after Tadeusz Rutowski, but his was to getting this post was different  than it was with his predecessors. During his stay in Vienna at the end of 1917, the then governor of Halychyna, Karl Georg Reichsgraf von Huyn offered him the position at the premise of the Polish circle, to which Stesłowicz belonged as a member of the Austrian State Council. He refused because of the hope that Rutowski’s health will improve. When it didn’t, Stesłowicz agreed to occupy the post for two reasons. First, a member of the Austrian Parliament could not resign during war, as new elections would not be announced. Thus, the Polish circle had to keep all his deputies. Second, the post of Government Commissioner was temporary until the election of new city authorities. 

During the period the activities of the Commissioner and his Deputies Marceli Chlamtacz, Filip Schleicher and Jozef Neumann as well as of the City Council were limited by current needs of the city. There were problems caused by the war. The local authorities, however, tried to prepare the way for solving urgent problems after the war. Following a proposal from the Government Commissioner, the Council elected two separate commissions, one for the development and the future of the city, another – for residential affairs.

Stesłowicz participated in the battles for Lviv with Ukrainians as a member of the Committee of Citizens (Komitet Obywatelski) and the Interim Management Committee (Tymczasowy Komitet Rządzący).

In February 1919, he left Lviv, because he became a member of the Polish Parliament and had to move to Warsaw.

 

The political career in the Second Polish Republic

In 1919-1922, he was a Member of Parliament. He belonged to the Club of Constitutional Labour (Klub Pracy Konstytucyjnej). From July 24, 1920 to June 6, 1922, he served as Minister of Post and Telegraph and deputy of the Prime Minister in the governments of Wincenty Witos and Antoni Ponikowski. He belonged to the National Right Party (Stronnictwo Prawicy Narodowej).

 

Work in the economic sphere

Stesłowicz is a famous economist. From September 3, 1897, he worked in the management of the Chamber of Industry and Commerce in Lviv (Secretary and Chairperson of the Bureau, Chairperson of the Statutory Procedural Section). He was a member of Halychyna Industrial Commission (Komisja krajowa ds. Przemysłowych; June 5, 1902), Deputy Chairman of the Supervisory Board in Halychyna Credit Bank (Galicyjska Kasa Zaliczkowa, 1905), a member of the management of the Central Union of Halychyna Manufacturing Industry (Centralny Związek Galicyjskiego Przemysłu Fabrycznego, May 1905), Halychyna Regional Credit Bank (Galicyjski Ziemski Banku Kredytowy), Industrial Bank (Bank Przemysłowy). In 1920-1930, he was Director of the City Credit Society in Lviv (Towarzystwo Kredytowe Miejskie), Board Chairperson of the General Connections Bank (Powszechny Bank Związkowy), Joint Stock Oil Union "Premier" in Lviv; Deputy Chairman of the Central Union of Polish industry, mining, trade and finance (Centralny Związek Polskiego Przemysłu, Górnictwa, Handlu i Finansów); Member of the Chamber of Industry and Trade and of the Statistical Council in Warsaw; President of the Credit Bank for Cities in Lesser Poland  (Zakład kredytowy miast Małopolskich), Member of the Polish Economic Society (Polskie towarzystwo ekonomiczne) in Lviv. To his mind, the main task of the Polish economy was support for middle class. He also temporarily presided the "Initiative Circles for the economic reconstruction of middle class."


Related buildings and spaces

  • Pl. Rynok, 1 – The City Hall building

    The current building of the Lviv city hall was built in the years 1827-1835. The project was designed by architects Alois Wondraszka, Jerzy Glogowski, Joseph Markl, and Franz Trescher. In 1849-1851, after a fire, a reconstruction was carried out under a project by Johann Salzmann. The massive building is situated at the center of the Rynok square; it has four symmetrical Neo-Classicist façades. Its tower, which is square in plan, belongs to the most noticeable accents of Lviv’s architectural panorama and is one of the visual symbols of the city. The style of the building can be considered a typical one for the Austrian administration buildings of the 1830-1840s. The city hall is the administrative center of the city, the Lviv City Council is located there.

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  • Vul. Hrushevskoho, 4 – Lviv National Franko University building
    A former convent school, later – a Lviv University building. It was originally built in 18th century, one of the major reconstructions was carried out in 1842 according to design of Fidelis Stadler. It is an example of Neo-Classicism in Lviv. It was built for a Jesuit convent school for young people from noble families. Later it housed military barracks. In 1851 it was transferred to the ownership of Lviv Franz-Joseph I University. Today (2015) it is one of Lviv Ivan Franko National University, it's Biology Department is located here.
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  • Pl. Rynok, 1 – The City Hall building

    Pl. Rynok, 1 – The City Hall building
  • Vul. Hrushevskoho, 4 – Lviv National Franko University building

    Vul. Hrushevskoho, 4 – Lviv National Franko University building

Organizations

  • The Habsburg University

    The Habsburg University

    The University, founded in 1784 by Joseph II on the basis of the abolished Jesuit academy, was to become the main source of professional officials for the capital of the Galician province. Stress was laid not on research, but chiefly on the training of managers. After numerous changes, in particular, the demotion of the institution status to that of a lyceum, in 1817 the university was refounded by Emperor Francis II. The institution existed in this condition till the end of 1918.

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Sources

  1. „Jubileusz Dra. Władysława Stesłowicza, Szefa biura Izby handlowej i przemysłowej we Lwowie”, Wiadomości gospodarcze,  №22, (Lwów, 1927), 406–409;
  2. „Kto był kim w Drugiej Rzeczypospolitej”, ed. Jacek M. Majchrowski przy współpracy Grzegorza Mazura i Kamila Stepana. S. 69;
  3. Morawski W. Słownik historyczny bankowości Polskiej do 1939 roku. (Warszawa, 1998), S. 44, 66, 172;
  4. Parlament Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej 1919–1927, ed. Henryk Mościcki i W. Dzwońkowski, (Warszawa, 1928), S. 368–369;
  5. Stepan K. „Stesłowicz Władysław”, Polski słownik biograficzny, T. XLIII/ 4. Z. 179. S. 488–490;
  6. Stesłowicz W. „Relacja z czasu walk listopadowych o Lwów”, Obrona Lwowa 1-22 listopada 1918, T. II.  Relacje uczestników, S. 541–574.


Author(s): Roman Masyk