Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Lemko Hall (2337 W. 11th St.) - The historic hall served as a social gathering place for the one-time sizable concentration of East Slavic Lemko immigrants from the region of Lemkovina who lived in Tremont. Today it is a mixed use (retail and condominiums) structure and a city landmark.
Lemko Hall, 1046 Literary Road, Cleveland. ... It was filmed almost entirely on location at the former Ohio State Reformatory in Mansfield. The Gothic-style prison opened in 1896 as an ...
The Lemko Region, 1939–1947 War, Occupation and Deportation – Articles and Essays, editor Paul Best and Jarosław Moklak; Horbal, Bogdan (April 30, 2010). Lemko Studies: A Handbook. East European Monographs. ISBN 978-0-88033-639-0. OCLC 286518760. Laun, Karen (6 December 1999). "A Fractured Identity: The Lemko of Poland". Central Europe Review.
The reception scene was filmed at nearby Lemko Association [37] Hall. The amateur extras cast for the crowded wedding-dance sequences drank real liquor and beer. [38] The scenes were filmed in the summer, in 95 °F (35 °C) weather, [39] but were set in the fall. [22] To accomplish a fall look, individual leaves were removed from deciduous trees.
Given that the Lemko Republic was opposed to the West Ukrainian People's Republic, the Polish government expected the Lemko state to support them and offered them the former town hall of Grybów for its government headquarters. However, the Lemkos were not interested in joining the Polish state and desired to join Russia instead.
Lemko Hall was used mainly because of its close proximity to the church (it's like a 5 minute drive) and other filming locations in the area (and the the writers weren't Ukranian or Russian). Secondly, the church is St. Theodosius Russian Orthodox Church.
The Lemko Region (Rusyn: Лемковина, romanized: Lemkovyna; Polish: Łemkowszczyzna; Ukrainian: Лемківщина, romanized: Lemkivshchyna) is an ethnographic area in southern Poland and Northern Eastern Slovakia that has traditionally been inhabited by the Lemko people.
On 29 May 2008, the city of Baltimore held a candlelight commemoration for the Holodomor at the War Memorial Plaza in front of City Hall. This ceremony was part of the larger international journey of the "International Holodomor Remembrance Torch", which began in Kyiv and made its way through thirty-three countries. Twenty-two other US cities ...