MB Researcher Spotlight – Kovacs Collection

Archives & Special Collections hosted William Smith, a researcher from Manitoba, in our reading room more than ten times in the last two years. William kindly shared the following statement about the work that keeps bringing him back to Archives:

The Trail of the Kovacs by William Smith (Kovacs)

I am working on a publication that aims to follow a trail first discovered by Andrew H. Marchbin of Ottawa. Marchbin encountered Paul d’Esterhazy’s correspondence with the Government of Canada’s Department of Interior records somewhere around 1930. This led him to ask the Department to donate the records to Archives Canada, which became the “90895” files, and corresponds to the number assigned to the first letter received from Count Esterhazy in 1885. The title of the file was “Paul d’Esterhazy Hungarian Colonization Scheme”.

In 1934, Marchbin summarized his findings by writing papers that appeared in the Slavonic and East European review. He gave numerous references to the collection he had found in Ottawa and formed strong opinions of those who initiated colonization schemes with Sir. John A MacDonald, Prime Minister of the Conservative government at the time. He stated before the Canadian Historical Society at McGill University that “Count Paul O de Esterhazy sowed the first seeds of Colonization of Canada of Southeast Europeans”.  (2002-2 box 1, book 1, p.52.1) 

This brings us to Martin Kovacs, a history professor at the University of Regina of Hungarian descent. Kovacs followed in Marchbin’s footsteps and proceeded to collect all the records pertaining to “Count” Esterhazy from the Public Archives of Canada. This material enabled him to write numerous manuscripts, papers and three publications throughout his career about his “Magyar” heritage.  

In 1981, I became aware of the Martin Kovacs research material and contacted him in Regina. Correspondence led to the two of us meeting in Winnipeg during a conference he was attending, and he asked that I bring my father as well. Martin critiqued Marchbin’s writings for me so I could proceed with the writing of our own local history of Huns Valley, Manitoba. Martin said he recalled seeing an interview of my Great Grandfather, Joseph Kovacs, at the time before he anglicized his name to Smith. Martin was able to give a detailed recollection, including the point of place that my Great Grandfather was born, how many children he had, and that he was a baker in Hungary. These details lined up directly with my own personal research on him. Martin offered to find the interview and share it with me.
Unfortunately, he was never able to locate it, but that may have been a blessing in disguise as it brought me to Regina to find the article myself.

In my retirement, I finally found time for a long-delayed trip to Regina to locate the interview in the Kovacs’ collection with my Great Grandfather. I tracked it down at the University of Regina Archives and established e-mail correspondence with both the University Archivist and the Archives Assistant for Private Records. By this time Martin had passed away and most of his research was in the care of his wife, Anna, who had intentions of donating her late husband’s records to the Archives. This material amounts to approximately 10 linear feet, including textual records and audio material along with hundreds of photographs.

In 2022, the task began to find Martin’s reference to that interview with my Great Grandfather. My searching was rewarded on about the fourth of my monthly visits to the archives, with all the staff, due to this momentous occasion, receiving my gratitude by way of flowers and chocolates!

This shallow dive into the University’s archival records, however, also exposed me to all of Martin’s research on Count Esterhazy and the treasure trove of material related to this mysterious gentleman. That is how the adventure for the book I’m writing began. 

Additional notes:

The Martin Kovacs collection is a great resource for anyone doing family research and genealogy. His detailed material covers the communities of:
Bekosvar (Kipling, SK)
Esterhaz, Kaposvar (Esterhazy, SK)
Stockholm, SK
Otthon, SK
Plunkett, SK
Lethbridge, AB

His material also covers many of the “one room schoolhouses” in these areas too numerous to mention. And last but not least, a priceless collection of pictures and family letters.

For more information on this collection, see https://www.uregina.ca/library/services/archives/collections/faculty-staff/kovacs%20.html

William Smith researching at the U of R Archives, 2022. Photo: Crista Bradley
Count Esterhazy’s attendance of church service during his official visit from New York. University of Regina Archives and Special Collections, Martin Kovacs Fonds, 2005-29, Box 2, File 19, Scrapbook of Photographs, Image 1