[1] In 1905, he got involved in the organization of the Muza Society and performs in a staging of Pan Tadeusz and in 1908 he worked for one year as a teach at the School of Commerce.
Following the regaining of independence and the establishment of the Second Polish Republic he occupied the prominent position of deputy government commissioner of the eastern territories.
[1] As the front of the Polish–Soviet War was approaching to the city, on 13 June 1920, the Citizens' Committee for National Defence (Polish: Obywatelski Komitet Obrony Narodowej) was established.
After the end of his term he worked at the Białystok power plant until the outbreak of the war, holding the position of chief accountant.
[3] He was married to Maria Dąbrowska (1888-1969) and had a son, Janusz, who died shortly after his birth and a daughter, Halina (1911-1981)[2][2].