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Detailed Information
  • Place Types Tourist attraction
  • Address Świętego Antoniego 28, 97-200 Tomaszów Mazowiecki, Poland
  • Coordinate 51.5287784,20.0110489
  • Website Unknown
  • Rating 5
  • Compound Code G2H6+GC Tomaszow Mazowiecki, Poland
Photos
Pałacyk rodziny Koralów
Pałacyk rodziny Koralów
Pałacyk rodziny Koralów
Reviews
Krystian Fiszbach (12/22/2020)
The inhabitants of Tomaszów, worth commemorating it, will associate him only with a dentist.
A Google User (02/01/2020)
Following Jan Pampuch from the text from 2011: "It was built at the end of the 19th century by an industrialist of Jewish origin, Benedykt Koral, who died in 1906. Koral was married to Dorota Landsbergówna from the well-known family of Tomaszów. According to the Book of Factory Industry in the Kingdom of Poland from 1906, he was not only the son-in-law of Hilary Landsberg (died in 1898), but also a member of the board of the Joint Stock Society (company) Fabryka Fabna H. Landsberg, headed by Hilary's brother - Alexander. It can be assumed that Benedict and Dorota Koral's children were born in the palace. Maryla (born in 1896), Stefania (born in 1898), Jan Krzysztof (born in 1899) and Bolek (died as a child in 1902). Coral Children were not always faithful to the Mosaic religion. Son Jan Krzysztof became a Reformed Protestant, and Stefania accepted the Anglican denomination. Dorota Koral survived her husband Benedict by 28 years (died in 1934). Their common red granite tombstone (huge cube) lies overturned at the Jewish cemetery in Tomaszów. It is not known which of the children lived in the villa at the outbreak of World War II. It is known, however, that the building was occupied by the German occupiers and at the end of 1940 they organized the Poviat Museum (Tomaszów then became the seat of an extensive poviat in the Radom district of the General Government). The museum was falsely testified to the German pedigree of the city of clothiers. After the liberation in 1945, the building became the seat of the PPR City Committee, headed by Roman Tuchowski (an interesting figure, a boy scout and scout in his youth, Piłsudski's legionary, and in the interwar period a KPP activist). After the merger of the Polish Workers 'Party and the Polish Socialist Party in 1948, the Villa Koralów became the seat of the Polish United Workers' Party. In the early 1970s, the committee got too tight in a historic building and was rebuilt by adding a floor and a wing from the back room. The villa has lost its beautiful, original, neoclassical appearance. PZPR operated in the building until its dissolution in 1990. At the same time, district offices were established, Tomaszów installed in a "white house". In 1998, the Sejm Act restored the poviats, and Tomaszów was promoted to the rank of the capital of the newly created poviat (not counting the years of war, when he was also a poviat city, but by the will of the occupier). Poviats began operating in 1999, and the former coral house became the seat of the eldership (main) " Also until 2011 it was still communal and as representative, now the privateers have changed to a dental office :) No longer pay, they will probably want to get rid of again. Well, it's still one of the prettiest buildings in Tomaszów, let's enjoy it until it is run over by bulldozers for a new block of flats in the city center like what was erected on the site of a historic brewery.
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