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37th Łęczyca Infantry Regiment

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37th Łęczyca Infantry Regiment
37 Łęczycki Pułk Piechoty
ActiveFebruary 25, 1919–1939
Country Poland
Allegiance4th Infantry Division
26th Infantry Division
Typeinfantry
Garrison/HQGrodno, Ostrołęka (1920–1921)
Kutno and Łęczyca (1921–1939)
Powązki [pl] (1923)
PatronJózef Poniatowski
AnniversariesSeptember 9
May 26
EngagementsPolish–Ukrainian War
Polish–Soviet War
Battle of the Niemen River
Invasion of Poland
Battle of the Bzura
Commanders
First commanderLieutenant Colonel Adam Jaroszewski
Last commanderLieutenant Colonel Stanisław Kurcz

The 37th Łęczyca Infantry Regiment of Polish Armed Forces, named after Prince Józef Poniatowski, was a military unit that traced its heritage to the 4th Infantry Regiment of the Duchy of Warsaw [pl]. Its origins date back to November 1918 in Przemyśl, and it officially became the 37th Infantry Regiment on 25 February 1919. From 1920 to 1937, it was known as the 37th Łęczyca Infantry Regiment.

During the Polish–Ukrainian War, the regiment fought to open the route to the besieged Lviv, capturing Horodok and later participating in the battles for Sambir, Drohobych, and Stanyslaviv, as well as actions along the Dniester and Zbruch rivers. In the Polish–Soviet War, it engaged in battles under Korosten, Koziatyn, and Żukowiec, and fought on the Berezina, Neman, and Bug rivers. The regiment also participated in the victorious battle of Baboszewo in August 1920 and later took part in heavy fighting near Rohatyn and Vyshnivets during the advance toward Lviv.

In the May Coup of 1926, the regiment supported Marshal Józef Piłsudski during the battles in Warsaw.

In 1939, during the September Campaign, the regiment was part of the Poznań Army and later Pomeranian Army. It fought through Wągrowiec, Inowrocław, and the Kutno area, reaching the battlefield near the Bzura river, where it fought until September 18. The remnants of the regiment crossed the Bzura river, moving through the Kampinos Forest to Warsaw. After the September Campaign, the regiment was disbanded.

Formation of the 37th Infantry Regiment and early combat

[edit]
Military operations of the regiment (1918–1920)

After the collapse of Austria-Hungary on 28 October 1918, the Polish Liquidation Committee was formed in Kraków to organize Polish military and administrative structures in Galicia.[1] On 1 November 1918, the Governing Council and Garrison Command were created in Przemyśl to begin organizing Polish military forces and administration. In the barracks of the former Austro-Hungarian 45th Infantry Regiment, scattered military units were gathered, forming the foundation for the 37th Infantry Regiment.[1] The first commander of the regiment was Lieutenant Leon Kazubski [pl], who had been released from a local prison on 3 November 1918.[1] He became the commander of Polish forces and the garrison of Przemyśl on 5 November 1918.[2]

By 7 November 1918, an infantry regiment was established in Przemyśl, which was renamed the 18th Rifle Regiment on November 9.[3][4] The battalion commanders at that time were: 1st Battalion – Second Lieutenant Zając, 2nd Battalion – Second Lieutenant Dudziński, 3rd Battalion – Marian Doskowski.[5] The regiment gained its first combat experience during clashes with Ukrainian forces from 9 to 11 November 1918 in the Zasań district of Przemyśl. On November 13, the regiment was renamed the 10th Infantry Regiment.[6]

In November 1918, the regiment's reserve battalion, formerly part of the Austro-Hungarian 10th Infantry Regiment [pl], was commanded by Captain Wilhelm Zwonarz [pl], who was appointed as the temporary commander of the "Children of Przemyśl" 10th Infantry Regiment.[7][8] On 30 November, Lieutenant Kazubski was replaced by Lieutenant Colonel Adam Jaroszewski [pl] as the commander of the regiment.[9]

Part of the regiment fought to open the road to the besieged Lviv as part of Colonel Michał Tokarzewski-Karaszewicz's group, while the rest engaged in combat near Nyzhankovychi, Siedliska, Medyka, and Khyriv.[10] The regiment captured Stodółki, Uhry, Czerlany, and Velykyi Liubin. It also held Horodok and defended the Lviv-Przemyśl railway line from Ukrainian forces.[10]

On 25 February 1919, the regiment was renamed the 37th Infantry Regiment. In the spring of 1919, the regiment captured Sambir and Drohobych and participated in the conquest of Stanyslaviv. From 13 to 16 June 1919, it defended crossings over the Dniester river.[10]

From June 28, the regiment fought along the Zbruch river, and in July 1919, it was transferred to the Volhynian front, where it battled Ukrainian units. From August 5, the regiment took on a defensive role. On 3 April 1920, Major Józef Kuś became the commander of the 37th Infantry Regiment.[10]

In December 1919, the regiment's reserve battalion was stationed in Łęczyca.[10]

Regimental personnel in 1920

[edit]
Position[11] Rank and name[11]
Commander Lieutenant Colonel Michał Remizowski
Adjutant Second Lieutenant Alfred Łuczyński
Intelligence officer Second Lieutenant Eugeniusz Fieldorf
Weapon officer Second Lieutenant Ludwik Sklenarz
Communication officer Second Lieutenant Bronisław Sitarski
Supply officer Second Lieutenant Adolf Kozubal
Doctor Second Lieutenant Dr. Mieczysław Henoch
Chaplain Father Tadeusz Borzęcki
Transport commander Second Lieutenant Marian Bukowski
Assault company commander Second Lieutenant Otton Jiruszka
1st battalion commander Captain Franciszek Gwizdak
Adjutant Second Lieutenant Franciszek Kielar
Doctor Second Lieutenant Dr. Józef Eisenbruch
1st company commander Second Lieutenant Jan Wójciak (killed on September 9)
Platoon leader Second Lieutenant Bronisław Nowakowski
2nd company commander Second Lieutenant Aram Mantel
3rd company commander Second Lieutenant Józef Markiel (killed on September 7)
Platoon leader Second Lieutenant Zachariasz Rucker
Platoon leader Second Lieutenant Kazimierz Wacławski
4th company commander Second Lieutenant Roman Szlapa
Platoon leader Second Lieutenant Roman Wojnar
1st machine gun company commander Second Lieutenant Antoni Kulesza
Platoon leader Second Lieutenant Jan Koszykiewicz
2nd battalion commander Second Lieutenant Marian Żelnio, later Captain Michał Drzystek
Adjutant Second Lieutenant Michał Maćkowiak
Logistics officer Second Lieutenant Władysław Maryniak
Supply officer Second Lieutenant Rudolf Linscheid
Doctor Second Lieutenant Dr. Jan Czernik
5th company commander Second Lieutenant Wojciech Gil
6th company commander Second Lieutenant Michał Ciesielski
Platoon leader Second Lieutenant Bernard Tepper
7th company commander Second Lieutenant Beniamin Kotarba
Platoon leader Second Lieutenant Filip Feli
8th company commander Second Lieutenant Jerzy Tramer
Platoon leader Second Lieutenant Bogusław Bilik (killed on September 10)
2nd machine gun company commander Second Lieutenant Alfred Rycerz
Platoon leader Second Lieutenant Franciszek Gęsior
3rd battalion commander Major Józef Kuś
Adjutant Second Lieutenant Mieczysław Kowalski
Supply officer Second Lieutenant Władysław Rogalski
Doctor Second Lieutenant San. Stanisław Komarnicki
9th company commander Second Lieutenant Roman Leeg (killed on September 7)
Platoon leader Second Lieutenant Karol Rydel
10th company commander Second Lieutenant Jan Dyszkiewicz
Platoon leader Second Lieutenant Tadeusz Szymański
11th company commander Second Lieutenant Stanisław Kukla
12th company commander Second Lieutenant Jan Szymański
3rd machine gun company commander Second Lieutenant Mieczysław Jus
Regimental officer Officer Candidate Józef Cajgier (killed on September 12)

Participation in the Polish–Soviet War

[edit]

The regiment was part of the 4th Infantry Division, tasked with capturing the city of Korosten during the Polish offensive.[12] The 37th Infantry Regiment secured the railway junction and other designated areas, then fortified its position, remaining in reserve until Kyiv was taken.[12]

Due to the Soviet counteroffensive, the 1st and 3rd Battalions moved to the Berezina river on 21 May 1920, holding off Soviet attacks toward Minsk. The regiment inflicted significant losses in battles at Borowina and Zhukovets (26 May 1920).[12] Until 7 June 1920, it fought along the Berezina, engaging in battles at Murava, Chernivtsi, and Wielki Stachów (3 June 1920). From there, the regiment marched through Zamosze, Zawidne, and Minsk to the Grodzianka station.[12] A week later, it was transported to the Ratmirovicze station and subordinated to the commander of the 14th Infantry Division for planned operations near Bobruisk. However, these actions were canceled due to a breach in the front by the Bolsheviks, prompting a retreat on 7 July 1920.[12]

Some units retreated to Miratycze via Minsk and the Neman river. After attempting to take Slonim, the 1st and 3rd Battalions withdrew west with the 4th Infantry Division. Under Captain Mieczysław Jus [pl], the 3rd Battalion captured Kamyenyets[13] and, after fierce fighting near Wierzchy, reached Stawy near the Bug river, reuniting with the 1st Battalion. The battalions soon separated again, with the 1st joining the 8th Infantry Brigade and the 3rd joining the 2nd Cavalry Brigade reserve.[12] On 4 August 1920, the regiment achieved successes in pushing Bolsheviks across the Bug during the 4th Army’s counteroffensive. The regiment was then withdrawn to the Siedlce area.[12]

The 2nd Battalion, under Lieutenant Beniamin Kotarba, had been detached from the regiment since 21 May 1920. Initially stationed in Korosten, it retreated to Koziatyn and later participated in an ultimately unsuccessful assault on Korets.[12] Under pressure from the Soviets, particularly Semyon Budyonny's 1st Cavalry Army, the 2nd Battalion, acting as a rear guard, was encircled and destroyed. 10 officers and 374 soldiers were killed or captured.[12] The remnants of the battalion regrouped in Siedlce on 22 July 1920 and later reorganized in Łęczyca and Kutno. On 13 August 1920, the battalion joined the 1st and 3rd Battalions in Góra Kalwaria.[12]

While the Battle of Warsaw concluded with a decisive Polish victory and Polish forces pursued the retreating enemy, heavy fighting continued on the southern front near Lviv.[14] To prevent a potential Soviet offensive, the 4th Infantry Division, including the 37th Regiment, was transferred to the Chodorów area. On 7 September 1920, the regiment engaged in intense battles with Soviet units threatening the Lviv–Chodorów railway line, capturing Knihynicze, Nowosielce, and Okrześnice.[15] The next day, the regiment crossed the Stryi river, aiming to secure Rohatyn, which it achieved on 9 September 1920.[15]

The regiment commemorated the Rohatyn battle, its first in the Polish–Soviet War where all battalions fought together, by designating September 9 as its regimental holiday.[16] Over the following days, it continued defending Rohatyn from Soviet counterattacks. Reinforced with three marching companies on September 13, the regiment, as part of the 4th Infantry Division, pursued the enemy to Vyshnivets.[15] On September 25, it was transported to Grodno as a reserve unit for the high command. Redirected by the 2nd Legion Infantry Division, the regiment moved via Grodno and Łomża to Ostrołęka on 12 November 1920. It served in border protection there until 28 April 1921, after which it returned to Kutno and Łęczyca.[15]

Recipients of the Virtuti Militari Order

[edit]
Order Virtuti Militari
Order Virtuti Militari
Soldiers of the 37th Infantry Regiment awarded the Silver Cross of the Virtuti Militari for their service during the 1918–1921 war[17][18]
Sergeant Marian Danielewicz Sergeant Henryk Daszkowski[19] Lieutenant Franciszek Dudziński [pl]
† Colonel Adam Jaroszewski [pl] (8022) Sergeant Karol Jelonek Captain Mieczysław Jus [pl]
Sergeant Roch Konarski † Lieutenant Józef Kowalski (8023) Second Lieutenant Antoni Kulesza
Lieutenant Stanisław Kukla [pl] Corporal Wincenty Landa † Lieutenant Józef Markiel (8024)
Second Lieutenant Władysław Nosowicz Lieutenant Bolesław Pędzikiewicz [pl] (4504) Lieutenant Władysław Pokorny [pl]
Lieutenant Colonel Michał Remizowski [pl] † Second Lieutenant Kazimierz Schaller [pl] (8026) Corporal Jan Siusta
Sergeant Tomasz Smyczyński Lieutenant Bolesław Feliks Stachoń [pl] Captain Władysław Starzecki [pl]
Lieutenant Roman Szłapa [pl] Senior Sergeant Ludwik Szuba Lieutenant Jerzy Tramer
Lieutenant Czesław Wawrosz [pl] † Cadet Officer Kazimierz Winiarski (8027)[20] Corporal Jan Wójcik
† Lieutenant Jan Wójciak (8028)[20][21]

Regiment in peacetime

[edit]
Honor guard with a new banner, alongside the banner of the Scouting Assault Company of the 37th Infantry Regiment
Regiment's courtyard in the 1930s
Buildings of the former barracks of the 37th Infantry Regiment in Kutno

The regiment’s headquarters, staff, and battalions I and II were stationed in the Kutno area of Corps District IV, occupying the former Russian 4th Rifle Regiment’s barracks. The III Battalion was quartered in Łęczyca in a former monastery building.[22] The barracks were cramped and lacked many basic facilities, including a sewage system, exercise grounds, proper storage, and a shooting range, which was only 100 meters long.[22] In late 1921, the regiment's assignment changed, and it was incorporated into the 26th Infantry Division (alongside the 10th Infantry Regiment, 18th Infantry Regiment, and 26th Light Artillery Regiment), an arrangement that remained until the outbreak of World War II.[22] Among the annual recruits, a significant percentage were illiterate, prompting the regiment to organize an educational program conducted by professional officers and non-commissioned officers.[22] The regiment's holiday was initially celebrated on 9 September to commemorate the victory at Rohatyn, but from 1934, it was celebrated on May 26, marking the victorious battle at Żukowiec in 1920.[22]

Amid social tensions, the regiment was stationed in Warsaw from October to December 1923 (at the former Russian warehouses in Powązki), performing guard duties.[23]

A significant event in the regiment’s history was its participation in Marshal Józef Piłsudski's May Coup. Most of the regiment, commanded by Colonel Władysław Bortnowski, supported the Marshal.[23] On the afternoon of 13 May 1926, battalions I and II arrived in Warsaw by train and engaged in combat with government forces in Mokotów and the city center. During the transport and at the unloading site, the units were bombarded by aviation.[23] Nine soldiers died in the clashes: Sergeant Michał Łuc, Corporal Jan Iwan, Private First Class Jan Moskaluk, Private First Class Wacław Złotowski, and Privates Józef Cholewa, Lajzer Gutenberg, Leon Siermiński, Wilhelm Tom, and Szurek Kalman. Thirty-two soldiers were wounded.[23]

Following the 1930 executive order by the Ministry of Military Affairs to the Infantry Department on peacetime infantry organization (PS 10-50), three types of infantry regiments were introduced into the Polish Armed Forces.[23] The 37th Infantry Regiment was classified as a Type I ("normal") infantry regiment. It received approximately 610 recruits annually. Its personnel comprised 56 officers and 1,500 non-commissioned officers and soldiers.[23] During winter, the regiment operated with a senior-year battalion, a training battalion, and a skeleton battalion, while in summer, it comprised a senior-year battalion and two conscript battalions.[23] After the reorganization in 1930, the regiment also trained recruits for the Border Protection Corps.[24]

Personnel and organizational structure of March 1939[a][25]
Position Rank and name
Command
Regiment commander Lieutenant Colonel Roman Umiastowski
I deputy commander Lieutenant Colonel Stanisław Ignacy Kurcz
Adjutant Lieutenant Zygmunt Klekowicki
Senior doctor Lieutenant Colonel Doctor Józef Michał Kuś
Junior doctor vacant
At the commander’s disposal Major Józef Mandzenko
II deputy commander (quartermaster) Major Jan Władysław Smoter
Mobilization officer Captain Stanisław Skierski
Deputy mobilization officer Captain Teodor Dziedzic
Administrative-material officer Lieutenant Kazimierz Blajer
Logistics officer Captain Jakub Król
Food officer Lieutenant Jan Strzelecki
Transport officer Lieutenant Jan Wojtal [pl]
Bandmaster Lieutenant Eugeniusz Wiltos
Signal platoon commander Lieutenant Julian Henryk Dzięciołowski
Pioneer platoon commander Lieutenant Stanisław Synoradzki
Infantry artillery platoon commander Captain Piotr Kamiński
Anti-tank platoon commander Lieutenant Stanisław Kaczor
Reconnaissance unit commander Second Lieutenant Damian Edward Silski
I battalion
Battalion commander Major Stanisław Molenda
1st company commander Lieutenant Antoni Sawczenko
Platoon commander Second Lieutenant Stanisław Janusz Purr
2nd company commander Captain Leon Owadiuk
Platoon commander Second Lieutenant Eugeniusz Bronisław Iwański
Platoon commander Second Lieutenant Rudolf Józef König
3rd company commander Lieutenant Jerzy Grabski
Platoon commander Second Lieutenant Jan Józef Urbański
1st machine gun company commander Captain Witold Marian Jachimowicz
Platoon commander Second Lieutenant Franciszek Kuncyusz
II battalion
Battalion commander vacant
4th company commander Captain Henryk Leon Machnowski
Platoon commander Second Lieutenant Leopold Jan Karol Manz
45h company commander Captain Brunon Kaliński
Platoon commander Lieutenant Wiktor Mikiszko
Platoon commander Lieutenant Stanisław Bronisław Sabor
Platoon commander Second Lieutenant Albin Mrall
6th company commander Captain Zygmunt Gajewski
Platoon commander Lieutenant Edward Mataczyński
Platoon commander Second Lieutenant Władysław Olkowski
2nd machine gun company commander Acting Lieutenant Lieutenant Marian Sroka
Platoon commander Second Lieutenant Jerzy Krünes
III battalion
Battalion commander Major Henryk Tomasz Reymann
7th company commander Captain Mieczysław Bobrownicki-Libchen
Platoon commander Lieutenant Stefan Szczepan Jerzy Miller
8th company commander Lieutenant Wacław Kieża
Platoon commander Second Lieutenant Roman Jan Mazur
9th company commander Captain Mieczysław Antoni Roszkiewicz
Platoon commander Second Lieutenant Eugeniusz Jaworski
Platoon commander Second Lieutenant Teodor Szwacki
3rd machine gun company commander Captain Józef Kozieł
On course Second Lieutenant Adam Tadeusz Podolak
On course Captain Józef II Tenerowicz
Lieutenant Władysław Kozal
37th District of Military Training "Kutno"
District commander Major Józef Kazimierz Skwarnicki
County commander (Kutno) Lieutenant Jerzy Gajewski
County commander (Łęczyca) Captain Stanisław Stefaniak

Regimental symbols

[edit]

Standards

[edit]
Soldier of the 37th Regiment with the standard

A "banner committee" was formed by the residents of the Łęczyca Land, which obtained permission to name the regiment the 37th Łęczyca Infantry Regiment and funded a banner. The ceremony of its presentation took place on 23 May 1920.[26] At that time, the regiment was in the field, so the banner was received by a delegation of officers, non-commissioned officers, and privates from the hands of the Minister of Military Affairs, General Józef Leśniewski [pl].[26] Until the regiment returned from the war, the banner was stored at the reserve battalion command.[26] In 1921, on the regimental holiday, the banner was decorated with an insignia funded by the citizens of Kutno and the Kutno branch of the Red Cross, in the form of a silver ring with the Kutno coat of arms and an appropriate inscription.[26] In July 1933, it was transferred to the Polish Army Museum.[27]

On 26 June 1933, during a ceremony at the Piaski sports field in Kutno, President Ignacy Mościcki presented the regiment with a new banner, funded by the citizens of the Łęczyca Land. The banner's godparents were the Łódź Voivode Aleksander Hauke-Nowak [pl] and Mrs. Maria Pajdakowa, wife of the Łęczyca County Starosta Zygmunt Pajdak.[28] On 28 January 1938, the regimental banner began to be officially referred to as the standard.[29] During the Battle of the Bzura, near Iłów, the standard was handed over for safekeeping to a local farmer, and its whereabouts have remained unknown since then.[28]

Commemorative insignia

[edit]

On 22 December 1928, the Minister of Military Affairs, Marshal Józef Piłsudski, approved the design and regulations for the commemorative insignia of the 37th Infantry Regiment.[30] The insignia, measuring 43x43 mm, is in the shape of the Virtuti Militari Cross, with the arms enameled in navy blue. A shield with the coat of arms of Łęczyca Land is placed on the cross, inscribed with the initials . The shield is topped with a crown. The arms of the cross bear the regiment’s number and initials 37 PP, as well as its formation date 3 XI 1918. The officer's insignia is two-part, made from gilded and silver-plated tombac, and enameled.[30] The designers of the insignia were Paweł Bobkowicz and Bronisław Grabski, both from Łódź.[30] During the regimental holiday on 9 September 1931, the insignia was awarded to officers and allied units: the 10th Infantry Regiment, 18th Infantry Regiment, 4th Field Artillery Regiment, and 26th Field Artillery Regiment.[31]

Soldiers of the regiment

[edit]
Stanisław Synoradzki – platoon commander of pioneers

Regimental commanders[b][32]

[edit]
  • 2nd Lieutenant Leon Kazubski [pl] (approx. 7–30 November 1918)
  • Colonel Adam Jaroszewski [pl] (30 November 1918 – 1 July 1919)
  • Major Józef II Kuś (5 July – 18 August 1919)
  • Colonel Adam Jaroszewski (19 August – 9 September 1919)
  • Major Józef II Kuś (10 September 1919 – 2 January 1920)
  • Colonel Adam Jaroszewski (3 January – 19 March 1920)
  • Captain Karol Koziarowski (20 March – 3 April 1920)
  • Major Józef II Kuś (4 April – 16 May 1920)
  • Captain Michał Remizowski [pl] (17 May – 6 June 1920)
  • Major Józef II Kuś (7–13 June 1920)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Michał Remizowski (14 August 1920 – 16 March 1925)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Albin Skroczyński [pl] (acting, 16 March – 3 May 1925)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Julian Żaba (acting, 4 May – 25 July 1925)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Albin Skroczyński (26 July – 9 October 1925)
  • Colonel Edward Nowak (10 – 30 October 1925)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Albin Skroczyński (acting, 16 March – 3 May 1925)
  • Major Stefan Lewicki (acting, 31 October – 1 December 1925)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Albin Skroczyński (acting, 2 – 30 December 1925)
  • Colonel Władysław Bortnowski (31 December 1925 – 19 June 1926)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Albin Skroczyński (acting, 20 June – 7 September 1926)
  • Colonel Jerzy Trojanowski [pl] (8 September 1926 – 31 December 1930)
  • Major Jan Palewicz (acting, 1 – 15 January 1931)
  • Colonel Józef Sas-Hoszowski [pl] (16 January 1931 – 2 September 1937)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Roman Umiastowski (3 September 1937 – March 1939)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Stanisław Ignacy Kurcz (March – 19 September 1939)

Deputy commanders

[edit]
  • Lieutenant Colonel Wiktor Łapicki (10 July 1922 – 1923)[33]
  • Lieutenant Colonel Julian Żaba (1924)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Albin Skroczyński (January 1925 – 24 July 1928 → commander of 64th Infantry Regiment)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Stanisław Trzebunia [pl] (24 July 1928 – 12 March 1929 → commander of Kutno Recruitment Area Command)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Józef II Kuś (12 March 1929 – 31 March 1930 → commander of Równe Recruitment Area Command)[34]
  • Major Jan Palewicz (acting, 31 March 1930[34] – 23 March 1932 → conscription training in Jarosław Recruitment Area Command)[35]
  • Lieutenant Colonel Julian Dadlez [pl] (23 March 1932 – 1937 → commander of Rawa Ruska Recruitment Area Command)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Stanisław Ignacy Kurcz (until March 1939 → commander of 37th Infantry Regiment)[36]
    • Quartermaster (Second Deputy)
  • Major Jan Władysław Smoter

Soldiers of the 37th Infantry Regiment – victims of the Katyn Massacre[37][38]

[edit]

Further details on the soldiers' biographies can be accessed through resources provided by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage[39] and the Katyn Museum.[40]

Name Rank Profession Pre-mobilization workplace Place of execution
Jan Bejgier Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Teacher School in Pilichówek Katyn
Mieczysław Bigoszewski Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Lawyer Katyn
Kazimierz Feliga Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Teacher School in Ciachcin Katyn
Piotr Jankowski Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Teacher School No. 17 in Łódź Katyn
Stanisław Kodymowski Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Teacher School in Krośniewice Katyn
Jakub Landsberg Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Physician Katyn
Wiktor Mikurda Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Mechanical technician Katyn
Stanisław Okoński Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Clerk Post Office in Sulejów Katyn
Roman Orłowski Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Teacher Headmaster in Chojnice Katyn
Teodor Orzechowski Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Katyn
Edmund Pawłowski Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Teacher School in Lućmierz Katyn
Czesław Zapłata Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Agricultural technician Świerczyn Estate Katyn
Roman Zwierzchowski Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Teacher School in Strachnów Katyn
Henryk Bednarek Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Mechanical technician Elektrobudowa Company in Łódź Kharkiv
Jerzy Fidala Lieutenant (Reserve) Kharkiv
Roman Jędrzejczak Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Technician Polish State Railways in Poznań Kharkiv
Józef Komicz Lieutenant (Reserve) Agricultural technician Landowner Kharkiv
Tadeusz Kozłowski Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Teacher Primary School Kharkiv
Józef Kuś Lieutenant Colonel (Doctor of Medicine) Career soldier Senior Doctor of the 37th Regiment Kharkiv
Wacław Pakulski Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Teacher School in Bodzanów Kharkiv
Marian Skibiński Second Lieutenant (Reserve) Merchant Kharkiv

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The list contains the personnel of the unit according to its status immediately before the mobilization of the first Polish military units on 23 March 1939, but after the last promotions, which were announced on 19 March 1939 (Rybka & Stepan (2006, p. 6)).
  2. ^ The regimental commander personally oversaw the training of officers and was responsible for combat readiness, overall training, logistical services, and the internal affairs of the regiment (Firich (1923, p. 49)).

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Kozubal (1929, p. 3)
  2. ^ Adamowski (1929, pp. 8–9)
  3. ^ Zieliński (1934, pp. 14–15)
  4. ^ Adamowski (1929, p. 12)
  5. ^ Zieliński (1934, p. 15)
  6. ^ Adamowski (1929, p. 13)
  7. ^ "Kronika. Odezwa" [Chronicle. Proclamation]. Ziemia Przemyska (in Polish). 4 (16). 23 November 1928.
  8. ^ Kozubal (1929, p. 5)
  9. ^ Adamowski (1929, p. 15)
  10. ^ a b c d e Odziemkowski, Janusz (2010). Piechota polska w wojnie z Rosją bolszewicką 1919–1920 [Polish Infantry in the War with Bolshevik Russia 1919–1920] (in Polish). Warsaw: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Kardynała Stefana Wyszyńskiego. p. 226. ISBN 978-83-7072-650-8.
  11. ^ a b Tuliński, Arkadiusz (2020). 6 Armia Wojska Polskiego w wojnie polsko-bolszewickiej w 1920 r. [6th Army of the Polish Army in the Polish-Bolshevik War of 1920] (in Polish). Warsaw: Instytut Pamięci Narodowej. p. 834. ISBN 978-83-8229-062-2. OCLC 1318942900.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Kozubal (1929, p. 22)
  13. ^ "Jus Mieczysław" (PDF). wbh.wp.mil.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2024-11-25.
  14. ^ Fuglewicz, Jan (1929). Zarys historji wojennej 49-go pułku piechoty [Outline of the Military History of the 49th Infantry Regiment] (in Polish). Warsaw: Wojskowe Biuro Historyczne. p. 28.
  15. ^ a b c d Odziemkowski, Janusz (2004). Leksykon wojny polsko-rosyjskiej 1919-1920 [Lexicon of the Polish-Russian War 1919–1920] (in Polish). Warsaw: Rytm. ISBN 978-83-7399-096-8.
  16. ^ Kozubal (1929, p. 20)
  17. ^ Kozubal (1929, p. 26)
  18. ^ Dziennik Personalny (1930, pp. 616–617, 810–811)
  19. ^ Dziennik Personalny (1930, p. 462)
  20. ^ a b Lista strat Wojska Polskiego. Polegli i zmarli w wojnach 1918–1920 [List of Polish Army Casualties. Fallen and Deceased in the Wars of 1918–1920] (in Polish). Warsaw: Wojskowe Biuro Historyczne. 1934. pp. 971, 999.
  21. ^ Dziennik Personalny (1930, p. 26)
  22. ^ a b c d e Firich (1923, p. 51)
  23. ^ a b c d e f g Jagiełło (2007, pp. 63–65)
  24. ^ Jagiełło (2007, p. 64)
  25. ^ Rybka & Stepan (2006, pp. 592–593, 675)
  26. ^ a b c d Kozubal (1929, pp. 22–23)
  27. ^ Satora, Kazimierz (1990). Opowieści wrześniowych sztandarów [Tales of the September Banners] (in Polish). Warsaw: Pax. p. 82. ISBN 978-83-211-1104-9.
  28. ^ a b "P. Prezydent Rzeczypospolitej w Kutnie na święcie 37 p. s. k." [The President of the Republic in Kutno at the 37th Infantry Regiment Celebration]. Polska Zbrojna (in Polish). 175: 2. 26 June 1933.
  29. ^ "Dekret Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej z dnia 24 listopada 1937 r. o znakach wojska i marynarki wojennej" [Decree of the President of the Republic of Poland of 24 November 1937 on the Insignia of the Army and Navy]. isap.sejm.gov.pl (in Polish). 24 November 1937. Retrieved 2024-11-26.
  30. ^ a b c Sawicki, Zdzisław; Wielechowski, Adam (2007). Odznaki Wojska Polskiego 1918–1945: Katalog Zbioru Falerystycznego: Wojsko Polskie 1918–1939: Polskie Siły Zbrojne na Zachodzie [Badges of the Polish Army 1918–1945: Catalog of the Phaleristic Collection: Polish Army 1918–1939: Polish Armed Forces in the West] (in Polish). Warsaw: Pantera Books. pp. 73–75. ISBN 978-83-204-3299-2.
  31. ^ "Święto 37 P. P. Ziemi Łęczyckiej w Kutnie" [The Celebration of the 37th Infantry Regiment of Łęczyca Land in Kutno]. Wiarus (in Polish). 40. Wojskowy Instytut Naukowo-Wydawniczy: 863. 4 October 1931.
  32. ^ Prugar-Ketling, Bronisław, ed. (1992). Księga chwały piechoty [The Book of Infantry Glory] (in Polish). Warsaw: Bellona Publishing House.
  33. ^ Dziennik Personalny (1930, p. 543)
  34. ^ a b Dziennik Personalny (1930, p. 103)
  35. ^ Dziennik Personalny (1930, p. 234)
  36. ^ Dziennik Personalny (1930, p. 232)
  37. ^ Rybka & Stepan (2006)
  38. ^ Wyrwa, Maciej (2015). Nieodnalezione ofiary Katynia? Lista osób zaginionych na obszarze północno-wschodnich województw II RP od 17 września 1939 do czerwca 1940 [Unfound Victims of Katyń? List of Missing Persons from the Northeastern Voivodeships of the Second Polish Republic from 17 September 1939 to June 1940] (in Polish). Warsaw: Centrum Polsko-Rosyjskiego Dialogu i Porozumienia. ISBN 978-83-64486-31-9.
  39. ^ "Katyń – miejsca pamięci" [Katyń – Sites of Remembrance]. katyn.miejscapamieci.gov.pl (in Polish). Archived from the original on 2021-12-19.
  40. ^ "Księgi Cmentarne" [Cemetery Books]. www.ksiegicmentarne.muzeumkatynskie.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2024-11-26.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • "Dziennik Personalny" [Personnel Journal]. Polska Zbrojna (in Polish). Warsaw: Ministerstwo Spraw Wojskowych. 1930.
  • Adamowski, Mieczysław (1929). "Początki 37 P. P. – listopad 1918 r. / Fragmenty wrażeń i epizody listopadowe" [The Beginnings of the 37th Infantry Regiment – November 1918 / Fragments of Impressions and November Episodes]. Jednodniówka 37 P. P. [One-Day Chronicle of the 37th Infantry Regiment] (in Polish). Przemyśl: D. O. K.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Firich, Karol (1923). "Almanach oficerski na rok 1923/24" [Officers' Almanac for the Year 1923/24]. Biblioteka Uniwersytecka W Poznaniu (in Polish). Warsaw: Wojskowy Instytut Naukowo-Wydawniczy.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Jagiełło, Zdzisław (2007). Piechota Wojska Polskiego 1918–1939 [Infantry of the Polish Army 1918–1939] (in Polish). Warsaw: Bellona. ISBN 978-83-11-10206-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Kozubal, Adolf (1929). Zarys historji wojennej 37-go pułku piechoty Ziemi Łęczyckiej [Outline of the Military History of the 37th Infantry Regiment of the Łęczyca Land] (in Polish). Warsaw: Wojskowe Biuro Historyczne.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Kukuła, Piotr Aleksander (1977). Piechurzy kutnowskiego pułku [Infantrymen of the Kutno Regiment] (in Polish). Łódź: Wydawnictwo Łódzkie.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Rybka, Ryszard; Stepan, Kamil (2006). Rocznik oficerski 1939. Stan na dzień 23 marca 1939 [Officers' Yearbook 1939. As of 23 March 1939] (in Polish). Kraków: Fundacja Centrum Dokumentacji Czynu Niepodległościowego. ISBN 83-7188-899-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Sawicki, Zdzisław; Wielechowski, Adam (2007). Odznaki Wojska Polskiego 1918–1945: Katalog Zbioru Falerystycznego: Wojsko Polskie 1918–1939: Polskie Siły Zbrojne na Zachodzie [Badges of the Polish Army 1918–1945: Catalog of the Phaleristic Collection: Polish Army 1918–1939: Polish Armed Forces in the West] (in Polish). Warsaw: Pantera Books. ISBN 978-83-204-3299-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Zieliński, Hugo (1934). Oswobodzenie Przemyśla w listopadzie 1918 roku (Zarys) [The Liberation of Przemyśl in November 1918 (Outline)] (in Polish). Warsaw: Wojskowe Biuro Historyczne.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)