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Map, References / Sources found on intro.
Displaced Persons -Researching DP Camps in the British Zone March 3,2010
 Ukrainian DPs in the British Zone 
        Latest Info:
        Jan-Hinnerk Antons paid
        a two-day flying visit to the International Tracing Service (ITS) in Bad
        Arolsen viewing material for his dissertation on the subject “The life situation of Ukrainian Displaced Persons (DPs) in
        the British zone”. In a first step, he concentrated his name research
        on those about 200 former Ukrainian DPs who had a role to play in camp council
        and camp committee or acted as camp “chief”. “I could discover
        interesting documents from the post-war era at ITS”, so the historian. 
The DPs’ topic had already preoccupied Antons’ mind when he wrote his Master’s degree thesis focussing on the DP camp for Ukrainians at Heidenau. “It was not only the professors who gave me a positive feedback, but in particular the residents of Heidenau and the former Ukrainian DPs themselves who motivated me to conduct further research”, so 29-year-old Antons. The historian has already gone to see the most various archives inside and outside of Germany. Last year for instance he went to the Ukraine and learned the native language enabling him to evaluate Ukrainian documents’ sources.
Centring his research mainly on both the “universe” the displaced persons lived in and their daily camp routine, Antons finds the reports delivered by contemporary witnesses most relevant. “I intend to draw a clear picture of life in the camp. Just evaluating documents and newspaper reports hardly suffices to that end”, knows the historian. “The angle from which the former DPs see or consider their situation is most essential for an authentic depiction.” He has already established contact with German contemporary witnesses. “The attitude the German neighbours of the camps assumed towards the DPs had mainly been a hostile one. Being stuck in the situation and unable to emigrate, the aged, the people in poor health and the single mothers had to endure xenophobic discrimination besides“, so Antons.
The Ukrainian DPs had either been taken forcibly to Germany during the Nazi era to perform forced or slave labour there or had hastily left the Ukraine fleeing the Red Army towards the end of the war. “The Ukrainians found it hard, if not impossible, to live together with Polish DPs”, relates Antons. “The national pride of the Ukrainians played a crucial role in their conduct and made them try to support the fight for a Ukrainian nation-state using their temporary lodgings in Germany as base.” Considering that a part of the Ukrainians had been resettled to Western countries by the “International Refugee Organisation (IRO)” at the time, the accurate figures of Ukrainian nationals staying in Germany at war end are not known.
 Jan-Hinnerk Antons is searching for further eye witnesses who may contribute
        to his research work. Whoever was a DP himself or herself or knew DPs is
        encouraged herewith to get in touch with him by mail. 
        http://www.its-arolsen.org
Some general
        information on Ukrainians classified as German POW 
        from Alan
        Newark braveheart562002@yahoo.com
On 5/7/10 Dear Researcher
        A letter to the local paper for that
      area might produce useful results, might find some elder soul who remembers
      your dad. 
After 1947 many Ukrainians who decided to stay in the UK were chiefly employed on farms and in the coal mines. You could check the Cambridgeshire County Agricultural Board archives. These might be held locally or, even, therefore needing physical consultation, c/o the National Archives in Kew, Surrey.
In 1947 thousands of Ukrainian Waffen SS troops were brought to the UK from Rimini in Italy. Most were eventually released and allowed to settle here. Many went to Canada, America, Australia, etc.
A soldier of some other German Army unit might have been classed as a Pole by some sympathetic Allied tribunal officer and allowed to come to the UK. In late-1945 the British 21 Army Group HQ issued an order saying that the Ukrainian nationality was no longer recognised and that Ukrainian Displaced Persons in Occupied Germany in the British Zone, including POWs, were to be classed as Soviet citizens and, like 2 million other Soviet nationals, compulsorily repatriated (forced) to the USSR.
Otherwise, if he was lucky and got to the UK, the International Committee of the Red Cross archives in Geneva might have a reference card stating which Allied Displaced Persons / POW camps in which he was held in, where he was born, etc. A surname is needed to search International Tracing Service at Arolson in Germany.
I know one or two military historians who are recognised authorities on German Army / Waffen SS Ukrainian forces. However, they would need some firm information such as a surname and / or unit. Also, this is a long shot but if a Ukrainian POW was forced to serve in the German Army, the Berlin military personnel records centre is another option.
Also, the British Government, in the 1960's, transferrred to the German Red Cross the records of tens of thousands of German POW files. Until a few years ago enquirers to the old Public Record Office were routinely told that these records had been destroyed in the 1960's and that enquirers would have to either visit the Kew archives or employ a commercial researcher to do so and to trawl the general - and not helpful or containing names - POW classes of documents.
When I followed up complaints made to me and others the PRO gave me the same answer. I, as a freelance journalist, said that that was not good enough. Precisely when and where were these documents destroyed? What classes of documents and in what numbers? Where had these been previously stored and on whose authority had they been destroyed?
 I urged the PRO to launch an internal
        investigation. They did so and lo and behold..they discovered that
        the files had not been destroyed after all, that they now lie in the Berlin
        military archives, WAst Dienstelle, and are mostly available
        to relatives and bona fide researchers. The
        PRO duly wrote to me confirming this and revised the intro paragraphs
        of the on-line and printed info about POWs leaflet.
        Best Alan Newark
        braveheart180203@yahoo.com
      
United Kingdom Public Record Office displaced persons' files 
        "After the cessation of hostilities there were an estimated 11 million ex-PoWs, displaced persons, former slave labourers and concentration camp inmates in Northern Europe, of which nearly 2.5 million were within the British Zone." more
        see sec 8 of http://catalogue.pro.gov.uk/
Thank you for contacting the Public Record Office.
Records of the Control Commission for Germany (CCG) (British Element) can be seen here, and we can give you advice on how to investigate them. However, we cannot undertake research for you. To consult the records, you (or someone acting on your behalf) will need to come here.Many of the files of the CCG were not selected for preservation: surviving files are generally about administration, and do not contain details of individuals.
There are no surviving comprehensive lists of those employed by the CCG (or similar organisations), or of detainees, displaced persons, or those who were released, of whatever nationality. Occasionally, confirmation of a release or transfer can be found in individual camp records, or in regional camp administration records. The reasons behind detention are also rarely recorded, but this information is sometimes mentioned in camp administrative records, or as the result of separate investigations into an individual's wartime activities.
To investigate the surviving records, you need to start off by looking at the excellent catalogue and index compiled and edited by Birke Booms and Merter, Akten der Britischen Militarregierung in Deutschland (11 vols., K E Saur 1993: ISBN 3-598-22910-0). The Akten gives brief details of the documents, as well as their PRO references: for full details you will need to look at the documents themselves. A reference copy of the Akten can be seen here. If you can get to see this work through a major library near you, or by inter-library loan, it may indicate whether it is worth visiting the PRO.
Once you identified records you have three ways to find out more: 1. Come and visit us to see the documents yourself. Staff on duty will be happy to show you how to set about identifying relevant material.Research Information Leaflets cover many of our most popular records, and some unusual ones as well. Browse the index to get some idea of the range of subjects. Please click the link to http://www.pro.gov.uk Click on this link for the most relevant leaflet http://www.pro.gov.uk/
After reading a leaflet or if there is none covering your enquiry, try exploring our Online Catalogue, http://catalogue.pro.gov.uk/
Because of the many varied and competing demands placed on its staff resources, the Public Record Office, (PRO) is unable to undertake research on your behalf.
We are able to offer general guidance in respect of the PRO's holdings, and can make general suggestions about possible record classes but we cannot identify specific records or mark up documents for copying.
If you are able to visit the Office, staff on duty will be happy to show you how to set about identifying relevant material.
Please check the PRO's web pages for details about how and where to visit us and for details of our holdings. There are also copies of the information leaflets available at: http://www.pro.gov.uk/
An online catalogue has been placed on our website at: http://www.pro.gov.ukPlease read the introductory notes carefully before using it.
 INDEPENDENT RESEARCHERS 
        If you are unable to attend the office yourself, or to arrange for someone
        to do so on your behalf, you may wish to put the matter into the hands of an
        independent professional researcher. We can supply you with subject based
        lists of researchers automatically please follow the link to http://www.pro.gov.uk/
 Yours Sincerely
        
        Vivienne Bales
        E-Mail Duty Officer
        Reader Information Services Department
        Public Record Office,  Kew,  Richmond,  Surrey, 
        TW9 4DU
        Telephone: +44 (0)20 8392 5200 
        Fax: +44 (0) 20 8392 5286 
        Minicom: +44 (0)20 8392 9198
The National Archives welcome visitors. If you search yourself, their staff will give you advice free of charge. If you visit them, you will need to register as a researcher. Bring with you some proof of identity. If you are a citizen of the UK or Republic of Ireland, bring either driving license, banker's card or passport. If you are a citizen of another country, bring a passport or national identity card. Telephone 0209 8392 5200 before you visit. You can register in advance as a reader at: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
 You can carry out some initial research by accessing the research guides and
        an on-line catalogue at:
        http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
        http://www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk
 Ex-PoWs and Displaced
        Persons, 1945 onwards
        After the cessation of hostilities there were an estimated 11 million ex-PoWs,
        displaced persons, former slave labourers and concentration camp inmates in
        Northern Europe, of which nearly 2.5 million were within the British Zone.
        Between 1945 and 1949 Allied authority in Germany was exercised by the Commanders-in-Chief
        of the various Allied military zones, and jointly through a Control Council.
        In 1949, that authority was transferred from the military governors to Civil
        High Commissioners. In London, the department responsible for the exercising
        of British control in Germany and Austria was the Control Office, which in
        1947 became the German Section of the Foreign Office.
Most of the records were generated by the Control Commission for Germany British Element (CCG) and its predecessors, of these an estimated 29,000 files have survived. Initially, it should be noted that The National Archives does not hold nominal rolls of detainees (except No. 3 Civilian Internment Camp Fallingbostel) displaced persons (DPs), former forced labourers or comprehensive lists of those released. Nor does it hold any nominal lists or the personnel files of those employed by the CCG or similar organizations. Occasionally, confirmation of a release or transfer can be found in individual camp records or regional camp administration records. The reasons behind detention are also scarce, however, this is sometimes mentioned in camp administrative records, usually in connection with incidents occurring within the camp, or as the result of separate investigations into an individual's wartime or post-war activities.
 Files of the Displaced
        Persons Section are to be found in FO 945/359 -404 and 541 -773 and material
        on the resettlement of displaced persons exists in pieces FO945/460 -527.
      The financial aspects of DP administration in Austria and Germany are documented
        in the Control Office Finance files in FO 944. In addition a few files
        concerning travel into and out of Germany by ex-PoWs and DP holders of
        Ministry of Labour permits is in the Control Office Travel files in FO
        940.
Write to The Secretary, Historical Manuscripts Commission, Quality House, Quality Court, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP, or Fax 020-7831-3550, or E-mail nra@hmc.gov.uk.
"Patrols roamed the area in an attempt to control Displaced Persons (formerly German slave labour of many nationalities). These had become the vagabonds of Germany, eating, sleeping, and taking revenge as they wished. In an attempt to control this gypsy life, the Ems River was made a stop line where all DP's attempting to cross were diverted to proper reception camps and preparations were made to seal off Germany by closing the Dutch / German frontier."..."more 9th Battalion Royal Tank Regiment
 Book about postal addresses in the British Zone:
        
        Post der befreiten Zwangsarbeiter (Displaced Persons Mail Paid in Deutschland) 1945-1949 written in German by Wolfgang
        Strobel. 160 pages. May be ordered from the author W. Strobel, Nietzschestrasse 23, 53177 Bonn, Germany. Postpaid for $24 U.S. cash.  Book review by Walter Farber in German Postal Specialist, June 2001 
        
        There were millions
        of Displaced Persons in Germany at the end of World War II, most of whom
        had been brought in for forced labor during the war effort. Surviving
        Jews were also subsumed under this designation. The repatriation or emigration
        of these people was one of the most daunting tasks faced by the Allies
        after the liberation of the camps. This was exacerbated by the fact that
        many of the DPs from Eastern Europe (mainly Russia, Ukraine, Poland and
        the Baltic republics) did not wish to go back to their countries of origin,
        fearing rataliation by the new Communist regimes there. The process thus
        continued well into the 1950s, when finally all remaining DPs were granted
        the status of "expatriate residents" in
        Germany.
      
This book is the first comprehensive study of the free mailing privilege granted to Displaced Persons in the British Zone of Germany in 1945-49. Mail service for Displaced Persons mail was allowed by the British and Americans long before similar services became available again for the German populace. As an added complication, the British Military Government assigned coded addresses to the camps located in their zone, and until now it had been virtually impossible to decode this system.
Strobel has finally been able to do so through intensive study of formerly inaccessible documents in German and British archives. The book has charts listing all kown camps and centers in the British Zone of Occupation by code number, alphabetically by location, and by the numbers of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, the International Refugee Organization und private relief teams responsible for them.
In addition, a list of British Field Post Office numbers in Germany, as well as of unit numbers of the Britsh Army of the Rhine help to make the history of Displaced Persons and their mails far clearer and easier to understand than they ever were before.
Headquarters British Forces Germany Health Service R02 Clinical Admin Medico Legal & Complainst Manager Whittingham Crescent 41179 Monchengladbach British Forces Post office 40 Tel 0049 2161 908 2234 Fax 0049 2161 908 2420, E-mail bill.roche310@land.mod.uk
Hamsterley Hall DP Camp - housed about 300-400 men from Ukraine, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Poland and even East Germany, countries then occupied by soviet Union. If these men had returned home, they wuld have ended up in the Siberian Labour Camps (gulags). Large numers of DPs were allowed into English during 1947, provided they agreed to work for four years eeither on the farms or in the mines:....
There were a large number of similar camps including Villa Real (Consett), Gainford, Firtree and Windlestone Hall, three miles east of Bishop Auckland. Firtree DP Camp was previously the Harperley POW Camp
There were DP Hostel at Old Hexham Road, Ryton and others at Pelaw Bank (Chester-le-Street) and New Kyo (Annfield Plain).
More of this on http://www.bpears.org.uk near the bottom of the page.My name is Benjamin Karp. I am working on a book about the DP Camps after WWII. I have been trying to interview people who were there in a greater understanding of this time period.
At the present time, I still have several areas that need to be address. More specifically, views from the British and Soviet Zones about life and daily activities in those camps. Is there a way that this can be posted on your website, and/or could you direct me to someone who could help with my research questions.
I want to thank you in advance for your help.  It is greatly appreciated.
      Kind regards, 
      Benjamin E. Karp
        3 Versailles Blvd.
        New Orleans, LA 70125
        tel: (504) 451-3467
      e-mail: bekarp13@gmail.com
2/5/2007 Dear Olga Kaczmar
        
        Greetings, I am currently involved in a piece of PhD research and
        am interested in contacting any British based volunteers (especially
        Quakers and non-Quakers who were in the Friends Relief Service
        or Friends Service Council) who undertook work in the Displaced
        Person Camps in Germany after 1945. I am further interested in
        contacting any individuals who had contact with the volunteer
        relief teams (FRS, British Red Cross, UNRRA or any other British
        based relief teams), including any displaced persons to whom
        they provided assistance. If anyone has any information, please
        do not hesitate to contact me at volunteersabroad@yahoo.co.uk 
        Thank you for your assistance. Jenny 
      
 March 9, 2008 
        The Polish airforce Association
        in the UK is trying to track the 17,000 plus former Polish
        airmen - there is still over 9,000 names of airmen about who we don't
        know what happened after the war
We of the descendant of Polish airmen email group are trying the help Mr Tadeusz Krzysztek who has this undertaking. The gentleman is nearly 90 and is connected to the internet. If you know of the fate of a former Polish airman - if he has died , when and where, or if someone has settled somewhere --- PLEASE EMAIL ME - I have the full list and can forward the information to Mr Krzystek.
We have identified that some airmen often migrant to one country and then subsequently migrated to another country. Some of the details on the list are not current SO please help us maintain the records and help us trace the Polish airmen - pass this message on to others who may have information Lucyna Artymiuk lucyna.artymiuk@bigpond.com5/20/08 Hello Olga, 
        I have just spent some time looking
        at your wonderful site which I discovered whilst looking for
        some information on Lemgo.
        I wondered whether it would be possible
        to post a request? 
        I am researching a PhD on European
        Volunteer Workers, the title given to DPs recruited from DP
        camps and brought to England to work in the essential industries from 1946
        to 1951. 
        I would particularly
        like to get in touch with recruits for ‘Westward Ho!’,
        the second stage of the scheme which brought men and women
        to England and placed them within mining, textiles, brickmaking
        and my particular area of interest, agriculture. 
        If any visitors to this site would
        be interested in contributing their memories of their new lives
        in Britain, I would very much like to hear from them 
        Their memories would then become part
        of a lasting, historical recording of a scheme which has been
        largely marginalised in history to this point 
        Initial contact would be welcomed
        via e mail at deborah252@ntlworld.com
        Many thanks, Deborah Green 
      
 20, Apr 2009, Dear Mrs. Kaczmar,
My name is Hinnerk Antons and I'm doing an PhD about "Lifeworlds
        of ukrainian DPs in the british Zone" at the University of Hamburg/Germany.
        I would like to ask you if you could publish a call for rememberances
        of former DPs and their descandants on your marvelous website. I'm interested
        in documents, diarys, photos and everything which is still remembered
        nowadays. I'm especially interested in everyday history, relations to
        germans, gender relations, "screenings" and political conflicts.
 In return I hope to be able to contribute something to your website as
        well. I could write something about the Ukrainian DP Camp Heidenau with
        up to 4,000 inhabitants, send pictures (there is still an ukrainan
        part of the cemetery) and help in finding relatives (there are lists
        of inhabitants in some local archives).
        Yours sincerely,
        Hinnerk Antons hinnerkantons@web.de
Re: German Army
        Soldier records in UK:  
      There
        are many possible sources of information about individual German
        Army soldiers. I can think of a couple of fellow researchers who
        might have ideas about specific sources:
WAst military personnel records centre in Berlin - Searches can take 6-12 months or longer.
The ICRC HQ Archives in Geneva
 The International Tracing Service in Arolsen
      I can say that thousands of index cards, Fragebogen, Death Records
        and other records pertaining to German, sic, prisoners in the UK were, in the
        1960's, transferred by tthe UK Public Record Office to the German Red Cross /
        DRK in Hamburg. They were eventually transferred to Berlin.
I know this because for many years the UK PRO printed / on-line POW research leaflets stated that in the 1960's thousands of these documents were DESTROYED, that little remains of POW camp inmates' rosters and that anyone seeking such info should either visit the PRO, in Kew near London, in person or employ a commercial researcher. I received complaints from several, mainly elderly with little money, correspondents saying that they felt that the PRO was ignoring their requests on such an important topic.
As a freelamce jourrnalist I wrote to the PRO, now the National Archives, and said that their attitude was not good enough. I wanted to know WHEN, WHERE, ON WHOSE ORDERS, IN WHAT NUMBERS AND IN WHICH CATEGORIES such records had been 'destroyed'? How, I asked, couldsuch a huge task have been undertaken and there be no paper trail? I demanded an internal investigation.
The PRO duly investigated, discovered the 1960's tranfer of records to the DRK
        and sent me an apology. They also altered their POW leaflets.
        Alan Newark braveheart180203@yahoo.com 
 13 Mar 2014 
        Submitted by Alan Newark braveheart180203@yahoo.com
        compiled from assorted Web sources, to be continued: The Greek Catholic Church in London and Yorkshire
Places of Worship :
      LONDON
      The Ukrainian Cathedral of The Holy Family In Exile
        Duke Street, (Off Oxford Street )
        Mayfair, London. W1. 
        Rev. Stephen Oracz, STD, Administrator
      
Sisters Servants of Mary Immaculate
        22 Binney St., London W1Y 1YN
        Tel 0171 629 1534
BRADFORD
      The Holy Trinity And Our Lady Of Pochayer
        Wilmer Road, Bradford
        Basilian Fathers (OSBM):
        Rev Augustine Kuzma ( Parish Priest)
        Rev Pedro Paulena ( Assistant )
        26 Fairfield Road, BRADFORD, W YORKS BD8 8QQ
      Tel 01274-542307
 Sisters Servants of Mary Immaculate
        2 Park View Road, Heaton BD9 4PA
      Tel 01274-541931
 DEWSBURY
        Our Lady and Saint Paulinus
        Huddersfield Road
      Served from BRADFORD
DINNINGTON
        Saint Joseph's, 
        Lidgett Lane, SHEFFIELD
        Served from BRADFORD
DONCASTER
        Sacred Heart
        Warmsworth Road
        Served from BRADFORD
HALIFAX
        Our Lady of Perpetual Succour
        Lemon Street, Queen's Road HX1 0LN
        Served from BRADFORD
HUDDERSFIELD
        Saint James the Great
        New Hey Road
        Served from BRADFORD
HULL
        Our Lady Of Lourdes and Saint Peter Chanel
        Cottingham Road
        Served from BRADFORD
KEIGHLEY
        Saint Anne
        North Street
        Served from BRADFORD
LEEDS
        Saint Augustine
        Harehills Road
        Served from BRADFORD
ROCHDALE
        Saint Mary and Saint James
        Ukrainian Catholic Church
        Wardleworth
        Rev Ivan Hasiak, STB
        328 Yorkshire Street OL16 2DS
        Tel 01706-31241
SELBY
        Saint Mary
        Leeds Road
        Served from BRADFORD
SHEFFIELD
        Saint Catherine
        Burngreave Road
        Served from BRADFORD
TODMORDEN
        Saint Joseph
        Wellington Road
        Served from BRADFORD
WAKEFIELD
        Saint Austin
        6 Wentworth Terrace
        Served from BRADFORD
Bradford
      (Ukrainian Club)
      http://www.augb.co.uk/bradford.php Ukrainian Bazilian Fathers (Non-theistic)
      Address: 10 Park View Road 
      City: Bradford 
      County: West Yorkshire, UK 
      Postal Code: BD9 4PA 
      Telephone: 01274 542307 
      Fax: 01274 409093 Ukrainian Catholic Church
      10 Park View Rd
      Bradford
      West Yorkshire
      BD9 4PA
      Telephone: 01274 542307 Our Lady of Czestochowa (Polish Church) 
      29 Edmund Street, Bradford, BD5 0BH 
      Tel: 01274 720848
      http://www.dioceseofleeds.org.uk
Most Holy Trinity (Ukrainian Church)
        The Presbytery
        10 Park View Road
        Heaton Bradford BD9 4PA
        Deanery: Bradford
        Tel: 01274 542307
        Email: 01274 409093
        Notes: Ukrainian Rite
    
      
Our Lady & St Paulinus (Polish Church) 
        Cemetery Road, Dewsbury, WF13 2SE 
        Tel: 01924 465638
        Station: Dewsbury
        http://www.olasp.org.uk
      
Doncaster
      Association of Ukrainians in Great Britain
      Latest activities of at 2013-12-27 was found on the domain: augb.co.uk 
Association of Ukrainians in Great Britain 
        Secretary: Ewhen Bilous 
        Sacred Heart RC Church 
        Warmsworth Rd 
        Doncaster England DN4 0RR 
        Telephone: 01274 542307 
        Branches:Ashton, Bedford, Bolton, Bradford, Bury, Carlisle, Coventry, Derby, Doncaster, Edinburgh, Gloucester, Halifax 
      
 Halifax (Ukrainian Club)
        https://www.facebook.com
        http://www.yelp.co.uk
        http://www.calderdale.gov.uk
      http://www.ibegin.com/directory/uk
Gibbet Street, Halifax, HX1 5DH 
        Tel: 01422 352141
         http://www.stmaryshalifax.com/
 Hemsworth (Polish Church)
        Sacred Heart (Polish, second Sunday of month)
        Market Street, Hemsworth, WF9 4LB 
        Tel: 01977 610733
      Link to church website: http://www.hemsthorpe.org.uk/
 Huddersfield (Polish Church)
        Fitzwilliam Street. Huddersfield, HD1 5BB 
        (Polish language parish)
        Tel: 01484 420474
      http://www.dioceseofleeds.org.uk
 Leeds (Polish Church)
        Our Lady of Czestochowa & St Stanislaw Kostka (Leeds) 
        Newton Hill Road, Leeds, LS7 4EY 
        (Polish language parish)
        Tel: 0113 262 3220
        http://www.dioceseofleeds.org.uk
      
 Sheffield 
        Polish Catholic Centre
        518-520 Ecclesall Road, Sheffield, S11 8RL 
        Tel: 0114 266 5425
        Link to church website: http://www.hallam-diocese.com/index.php/find/parishes?pid=58&sid=151:Polish-Catholic-Centre-Sheffield http://www.hallam-diocese.com
      Last updated 8th December 2012 Report Corrections Sheffield (Polish Church)
 St. Marie Cathedral (Polish Church)
        Norfolk Row, Sheffield, S1 2JB 
        Tel: 0114 272 2522
        http://www.stmariecathedral.org/
Shipley
Ukranian Catholic Church
        10 Park View Rd, BD9 4PA 
        Tel: 01274 542307)
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