[Golaski  Picture] ------ [Golaski  Picture]

Walter Golaski with wife Alexandra (1978)
and children (l. to. r) Johnpaul, Alexandra, Edmund

Walter Golaski Historical Marker Ceremonies [Arrow Picture]

Golaski, Walter M.
(August 12, 1913 - September 22, 1996)
scientist, engineer, Polonia activist

Walter Golaski (born: 1913 in Torrington, Connecticut; died: in Wynewood, PA in 1996 at the age of 83) was an American Mechanical-Bio-Medical Engineer best known for developing Dense Knit Dacron Vascular Prostheses, which were the first practical artificial blood vessel replacements.

Early life and education

At 16, during the Great Depression, he took a job as a needle mechanic at the Torrington Company, a knitting needle manufacturer, where he soon developed new ideas for the automatic needle manufacturing industry. In 1939, Torrington transferred him to Philadelphia and promoted him to manager, and he enrolled in Drexel University's (then known as Drexel Institute of Technology) Mechanical Engineering evening school. He graduated in 1946; Drexel later honored him with many alumni awards. In 1968 he received an honorary degree from Alliance College.

Inventions

In 1940, Golaski developed a process for rebuilding hosiery machines to enable the knitting industry to make the switch from silk to nylon. In 1945 he opened the Bearing Products Company and with the profits later in 1956 bought and reorganized the Overbrook Knitting Corporation in order to convert existing machinery to produce full fashioned knitted sweaters. He was granted 10 American, 1 British and 2 Canadian patents. In 1956 he acquired the manufacturing facilities of the Charles Cooper Company and the Acme Needle Company; in 1962 he became the owner of the Royersford Needle Works.

Golaski is best known for the product he developed next, the densely knit Dacron arteries, which he sold through his company Golaski Laboratories. Until this invention, the available replacement blood vessels were stiff, woven, and not sufficiently porous. The Golaski graft offered patients longer life expectancy than any other on the market.

Golaski's business flourished after his invention, but he never forgot his ancestral heritage (he was born and raised in Connecticut but his parents immigrated to the US from Poland). He served as Chairman of the Kosciuszko Foundation (1973-1982). In "which [he] encouraged the exchange of students and scholars between the United States and Poland." He helped show Poland in a positive light to America in that "Americans of all ethnic backgrounds were encouraged to participate in the Foundation's programs and experience Polish culture directly."

Personal life

Golaski had a wife named Helene Dolores (Ambrose) Golaski who died in 1968. They had a daughter named Michelle. Michelle married Bob Wilmoth and had two children: Jessica and Michael. Jessica and Bill Slayton are the parents of Ryan.

After Helene died, he donated a painting called "Young Lady at the Fireplace" (signed 1882, Wladyslaw Czachorski) to the Kosciusko Foundation. He later married Alexandra (Budna) Golaski with whom he had three children, Alexandra, John Paul and Edmund.

From: Post Eagle, March 6, 1974; Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia;
"My Name is Million" by Wieslaw S. Kuniczak, Doubleday and Co.; Garden City, NY, 1978