Here is a collection of images and brief stories (in rough chronological order) illustrating five generations of the Kashubian Polish community of Winona, Minnesota and Pine Creek/Dodge, Wisconsin.
- Two Settlements, One Community: Winona and Pine Creek/Dodge
- Kashubian Home Towns and Villages
- Life in the Old Country
- Marcin and Magdalena (Stoltman) Bambenek
- Franciszek and Anna (Kajzer) Pelowski
- Antoni and Marianna (Niemczyk) Pehler
- Marianna Mandra and her Daughters
- Andrzej and Anna (Rudnik) Losinski
- Sacred Heart-Saint Wenceslaus Parish
- The Saint Stanislaus Society of Winona
- Monsignor Jakub Walenty Jan Pacholski
- Signatures from Pine Creek 1869
- Working for a Living
- Row Houses on Winona's East End
- The Kukowski Orphans
- Emigration from Winona and Pine Creek/Dodge 1872
- Saint Stanislaus Kostka School
- The Polish Stock Company
- The Polish Dramatic Society
- Jakub and Franciszka (Zabinska) Pellowski
- Winona's Polish Newspaper, Wiarus
- The Marching Bands of Winona and Pine Creek/Dodge
- The Rosary Society of Sacred Heart-Saint Wenceslaus Parish
- Karol and Franciszka (Burandt) Bambenek
- The Battle of Saint Stanislaus Kostka Parish
- Jake Pellowski's Saloon
- Miss Monika Brom
- 500th Anniversary of the Battle of Grunwald, 1910
- Monsignor Pacholski's Parish Census
- Invitation to a Wedding, 1914
- Monica (Kowalewska) Krawczyk
- The Glowacki Sisters and the Bambenek Sisters
- The Third Generation Goes to School
- Winona's "Polish Embassy" - the Athletic Club
- Bootlegging in Winona and Pine Creek/Dodge
- The Hot Fish Shop
- Polish Constitution Day, 1973
- The Polish Museum and Cultural Institute
- Winona and Bytow: Sister Cities
- Holiday in Kashubia 2016