Private Salesian Tailor Gymnasium functioned in Wroclaw post-elizabethan school-hospital complex at St. Andrew’s Church, in the years 1946 – 1951. As an educational post, it initially suited the needs of the forming authorities of the post-war Poland, both in the scope of educating craft industry employees as well as regulating or aiding the adaptation process of immigrants from all over the country in the territories incorporated into Poland after 1945. Political changes aiming at aggravating relations between the State and the Church resulted in a mass action of eradicating all forms of social activity of religious associations, especially in the field of education. The Wroclaw Tailor Gymnasium presented in the article constitutes one of many examples of the course of this process, being the more acute as its consequences last until the present day – for instance the ultimate takeover of most of monastery buildings, which are being put on sale as devastated historic buildings.