The Untold Story of Poland’s Forces in World War II
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 The Dawn of Darkness: Prelude to World War II
2 French Misfortunes: The Phony War and the Defense of France
3 Everything Was in Secret: The Underground War
4 On Wings of Eagles: The Polish Air Force
5 Warriors from a Wasteland: The Birth of the Polish 2nd Corps
6 A Bloody Job Well Done: 1st Armored Division
7 A Bridge Not Far Enough: The 1st Polish Independent Parachute Brigade
8 Poles Under Soviet Command: Berling’s Army
9 Glory and Heartbreak: The Warsaw Uprising, 1944
10 For your Freedom: A Costly Victory for Poland
Notes
Further Reading
This book is dedicated to the men and women of Poland who fought for freedom and paid for it with their own.
I would like to thank those veterans who helped with this project, especially Helena Konwiak, Professor Anna Dadlez, Jerzy Zagrodzki, Bohdan Grodzki, Czeslaw Korzycki, Ed Kuczynski, Wieslaw Chodorowski, Edward Alt and Leonard Mieckiewicz, Kazimierz Olejarczyk and Juliusz Przesmycki and those who sadly did not live to see this project fulfilled, including Zygmunt “Ziggy” Kornas, Ed Bucko, and Antoni Szmenkowicz. I can only hope my modest words have done justice and honor to their incredible lives.
I would also like to thank Miraslawa Zawadzka for her invaluable help establishing contact with many veterans, Ken Kornas and Virginia Bucko for adding their stories and allowing the use of their prized family photographs. Thanks to Monsignor Roman Nir (retired) and Marcin Chumiecki for allowing access to the valuable resources available at the Polish Mission as well as the archives and Polish 2nd Corps, Polish 1st Armored, Polish Air Force and Polish Home Army museum rooms at Orchard Lake Schools, Orchard Lake, Michigan.
Thank you to Amy Massey for rescuing this project from a serious computer issue. Thank you to my mom and dad for instilling pride in my Polish heritage, for teaching me to work hard and for always telling me I could accomplish anything I set my mind to. Finally, thank you to my daughter Leigha. You are my inspiration.
Tobruk, the Battle of Britain, Monte Cassino, the Falaise Pocket, Arnhem, Berlin; the names are instantly recognizable as some of the most brutal and desperate battles in history. Each was a decisive turning point in an epic struggle that would permanently scar nearly every corner of the globe, and each helps to define common perceptions about World War II. The battles and the stories of the gallant men who fought them are now legendary. Yet a little-known thread is woven deeply through the fabric of these and nearly every other major battle and campaign that made up the Allied war effort in Europe; the story of the men who fought in these desperate struggles, yet whose fundamental role in the battles remains still strangely anonymous, even forgotten.
Today’s popular historical mythology informs us that Britain dueled alone with the mighty Luftwaffe over the English Channel, that the French underground was the Allies’ only tie to occupied Europe, that the Soviet Union fought a noble war against the Germans alone in the East,1 and that it was just the Americans who marched up the boot of Italy in 1943 and then, with the British, opened up the second front in Europe with the Normandy invasion in 1944. Yet, during the course of World War II, only one nation’s soldiers ever stood entirely alone in opposition to Hitler’s evil designs on Europe. It fielded armies at home and abroad and fought from the moment the first shots were fired until the final victory. It helped defend and liberate nearly every European nation that found itself under the heel of Nazi Germany. This single nation produced the largest, most organized and most effective underground resistance of the war.2 And then, at the war’s end, this nation, which had been hailed for its unmatched heroism, was casually discarded for the sake of political expediency. This lone nation is Poland.
Poland stood alone in 1939, and then fought shoulder to shoulder with the Allies through the darkest days of the war, only to be cruelly forsaken when Stalin’s sinister aims became clear in the wake of the Red Army’s bloody march across Europe. It may surprise even the most scholarly student of history, and shock the casual observer, to know that during Britain’s “finest hour” Poles came to the aid of the RAF (Royal Air Force); that when the United States had been fought to a stalemate in Italy and France it was Poles who helped lead the breakouts; and that Poles fought alongside the Red Army on the Eastern Front. The British government’s vital codebreaking establishment, Bletchley Park, owed arguably the single most crucial piece of intelligence of the war – the initial steps toward deciphering the Enigma code in 1934 – to the Poles. Virtually everywhere the Allies fought, Polish forces played a pivotal role.
When the guns of the German battleship Schleswig-Holstein fired the first volley of the war into the port city of Gdansk on September 1, 1939, Poland on its own took the first blows from the mighty German war machine. The nation fought valiantly while awaiting Britain’s and France’s promised intervention, which never came. Putting up a heroic defense in the face of overwhelming technological, tactical and numerical superiority, the armies of Poland capitulated only after the Soviets, who had days earlier signed the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact with Germany including a secret clause allowing for the joint division of Poland, attacked the rear of the Polish forces from the east. Unable to fight a two-front war with an army not yet regrouped from the retreat eastward, and seeing no sign of the help promised by the French and the English, much of the Polish Army surrendered to the Germans and Soviets. However, the Polish government never formally surrendered.
The numbers of human casualties and material losses during the Polish campaign on both German and Polish sides are staggering. Given these numbers, it is astounding how the battle for Poland is routinely dismissed as inconsequential, merely the precursor to the real war in Europe. As recently as 1989, the Atlas of the Second World War’s opening sentence regarding the Polish campaign reads: “The Polish campaign was the shortest and most decisive German aggression of World War II.”3 This is true only if one considers the German victories over all other western European mainland nations combined as a single campaign, and if one discounts the fact the Germans occupied just over half of Poland in 1939, while the Soviets occupied eastern Poland. Taken individually, every other nation in western mainland Europe including France fell faster than Poland.4 Also, in order to conclude that the defeat of Poland was the most decisive action of the war, one must discount the fact that during the battle for France the Wehrmacht defeated the entire French Army as well as the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), some 300,000 men strong. The French Army in 1940 numbered 94 divisions and outnumbered German tanks 3,000 to 2,500, and some 1.9 million French soldiers were taken prisoner, nearly twice the total Polish fighting force of 1939.5 In yet another example of a German action that was faster and more decisive than the fall of Poland, the German invasion of the Soviet Union, codenamed Barbarossa which began on June 22, 1941, had reached Minsk by July 22. In the period of one month the Germans overran Soviet territory that dwarfed that of Poland in terms of area.
Despite its defeat, Poland fought on. Those not killed or captured, though cut off from the rest of the world, began almost immediately to form an army under the noses of their German and Soviet occupiers called the Home Army (Armia Krajowa or AK), by far the largest underground resistance force in the war. This secret army was unknown to most of the rest of the world, but it continued the fight in Poland. Much of the Polish Army, Air Force and Navy escaped and re-formed abroad to fight again, in France, North Africa, in the skies over Britain, the Netherlands and some who did not escape, but found themselves as Soviet prisoners, would ultimately fight all the way into the heart of the German Fatherland. The most victorious fighter squadron of the Battle of Britain, 303 Kosciuszko Polish Fighter Squadron (303 dywizjon mysliwski Warsawski im Tadeusz Kosciuszko), was Polish, and Poles comprised nearly 20 percent of the RAF. The Polish 2nd Corps took the most strategic objective in the Italian campaign, and a Polish armored division put the cork in the Falaise bottleneck during the Allied breakout of Normandy. When Hitler invaded the Soviet Union, the imprisoned Polish Army and thousands of deported Polish civilians (at least those who survived their imprisonment) formed an army on Russian soil. Tens of thousands departed for the Middle East and engaged the Germans in Italy. Others formed Polish divisions that fought alongside the Soviets all the way to Berlin, and took part in the vicious hand-to-hand fighting there.
World War II in Europe took a terrible toll on the world. Men and women from many nations fought and died for the freedom of others, but the contribution and sacrifice Poland made for the free world is forgotten. Throughout the war, despite their desperate struggle at home and their valor on foreign soil, the Polish military and the Polish nation were let down by the Allies time and time again. In the end, it would not be the enemies, but the friends of Poland who sealed the country’s fate. Poland was offered up as a sacrifice by the Allied powers, particularly by a sick American president and a British Prime Minister, each representing their own war-weary nations and neither willing to stand up to the menacing Soviet empire emerging from the rubble of war-torn Europe.6 Poland was left to a hungry regime more powerful than the vanquished Third Reich.
Today, while the West enjoys a well-deserved rekindling of romance and reverence for the generation that saved the world, the contribution of a heroic people struggling against impossible odds falls deeper and deeper into the abyss of history. While many of a new generation learn to appreciate the struggles and sacrifices of their grandparents and great-grandparents, which are championed by books and movies about D-Day, Pearl Harbor and the like, the feats of grandparents and great-grandparents of another group has become a footnote at best. In histories of World War II, Poland’s role is not often discussed in depth. If anything is taught at all, it is merely that Hitler’s armies rolled over an unsuspecting Poland in a matter of weeks. Most believe that is where the history of Poland in World War II ends. In truth, it was only the beginning of the iron-willed defiance by a people and an army that fought in every way and every place possible from the very first salvo of the war until the final days and beyond. For most of Europe, 1945 marked the end of five years of a horrific struggle the likes of which the world had never seen. For the United States, 1945 ended three and a half years of fighting far from home. For Poland, however, after nearly six years of constant war, brutality and starvation, 1945 merely marked the transition from one brutal and hostile occupation that had left almost the entire nation in ruins to another hostile occupation that would last 40 years.
This is the forgotten story of a nation that faced unspeakable atrocities at the hands of her enemies and unthinkable betrayals by her allies; a nation that contributed immeasurably to the Allied effort and in return was forsaken; a nation that survived two assaults on the very soul of her identity only to be denied a place of honor in the collective memory of the world she helped to save. Now, as tales of heroism and sacrifice unknown to today’s generations are retold, history should no longer ignore the monumental contributions Poland and her people made to the world’s freedom. This book is not a detailed analysis of the unit history and combat tactics of Poland in World War II; instead it is a comprehensive overview of the extensive combat history of a major military power. It is also a hard look at what the war did to the nation and its people and how the world simply forgot them. It is an attempt to shine some long-overdue light on the often forgotten or intentionally ignored military accomplishments of a country that should be a celebrated ally. It is the story of the Polish nation in general and of 12 people in particular: Edward Alt, Ed Bucko, Anna Dadlas, Bohdan Grodzki, Halina Konwiak, Czeslaw Korzycki, Edward Kuczynski, Kazimierz Olejarczyk, Juliusz Przesmycki, Antoni Szmenkowicz, Jerzy Zagrodzki, and Zygmunt Kornas. These 12 Poles, from various walks of life, would make heroic yet unheralded contributions to the Allied victory. When the war began, some were soldiers, others mere schoolchildren. Some were the sons of peasant farmers, others were from prominent families; one was the son of a physician and another the daughter of an attorney. Under the worst of circumstances, these very different people all played their parts in the Polish fight for freedom.
The final outcome of the war may not have been different had Poland not been there to help turn the tide in many crucial battles. But the war would have lasted much longer and the lives of countless thousands of American, French, British and Russian men, women and children would have been lost had it not been for the price paid by the unknown soldiers of Poland.
Poland began to fall victim to enemy propaganda and Allied abandonment soon after the first shots were fired. Today a widespread perception persists of an unsuspecting, inept Poland which mounted little more than a “Charge of the Light Brigade” saber defense against the German juggernaut, and that was overrun in a few short weeks and relegated to insignificance for the remainder of the war.1 The reality of history paints a very different picture. The attack on Poland was no surprise and its defense was tenacious and costly to the Germans. Its defeat was anything but complete.
Located in the heart of central Europe, nestled between two of her most ardent enemies, who happened also to be two of the greatest industrial powers in Europe, Poland could hardly afford to ignore its precarious situation. Poland had been a major power in central Europe for centuries, and its people had always considered themselves ethnic Poles. However, after a series of partitions of Polish territory to Austria, Prussia and Russia between 1772 and 1795, the country ceased to exist as an independent nation until after World War I. Following that conflict, the Treaty of Versailles recognized Polish independence and established borders for a new sovereign Poland. After the 1919–21 Russo-Polish War, anxious to protect her independence after 123 years of subjugation, Poland, far from sitting idle and unprepared, began in the early 1920s to form alliances and plan possible defenses against Germany and the Soviet state. Barely in its infancy, the nation found itself struggling to mature and in need of support in a turbulent period.
During the interwar years from 1918 through 1926, Poland had a series of 13 governments, resulting in a great deal of political instability and stagnation. The new Poland was on the verge of collapse. Jozef Pilsudski, then Naczelnik (Head of State), had led the successful defense of Poland against the Bolsheviks in 1920, when his forces had driven the invading Russian Army from the gates of Warsaw all the way back to Moscow. This unlikely victory had garnered Pilsudski a great deal of international respect and political clout. On May 12, 1926, Pilsudski and a group of loyal army officers marched with a military force on Warsaw and demanded that President Stanislaw Wojciechowski step down. Street skirmishes threatened to erupt into civil war. After a few days, Wojciechowski, lacking military and political support, stepped down. Pilsudski declined the office of president, and became instead Marshal of the Polish Armed Forces, de facto the country’s military dictator. With stability restored in Poland, Pilsudski turned his attention to international threats, and sought alliances with European powers further west, particularly France. Czechoslovakia and Lithuania disputed some of the territorial boundaries granted to Poland in the Treaty of Versailles, leaving their political disposition at odds with the Polish government.2 This left Romania as Poland’s only ally with a common border and common threats. Romania, however, with its economy in a worse shape than that of Poland and an army that could field only 25 poorly equipped infantry divisions, could hardly be considered a formidable military force.
An alliance with France was therefore Poland’s only realistic option. France was considered the preeminent military power in Europe at the time and had a mutual distrust with Poland of Germany and Russia following World War I. France and Poland also shared a long-standing tradition of military cooperation dating back hundreds of years, and Polish cavalry had been among the elite of Napoleon Bonaparte’s mounted forces during the 19th century. So, from necessity and tradition, Polish and French leaders devised numerous plans to fight a war with Germany as well as with the Soviet Union. Poland, having only a fraction of the industrial and economic resources for military spending of many of her European neighbors, due in part to the difficulties involved in combining the three previously partitioned areas during the 1920s, relied heavily on defense treaties. Plans involving immediate French military intervention in the event of hostilities with Germany were crucial to Poland’s defenses.
After World War I, the German economy had been in a shambles. In the 1920s, prior to Hitler’s rise to power, conventional wisdom of the day considered it impossible that Germany could challenge the massive French military. In the words of Winston Churchill, “Germany was disarmed… The French Army, resting on its laurels, was incomparably the strongest military force in Europe, and it was for some years believed that the French Air Force was also of a high order.”3 The Treaty of Versailles had limited the German Army to 100,000 troops and forbade the formation of an air force. So, in 1926, with the German economy still recovering from World War I, the Nazi threat not yet having materialized, and realizing that with its limited military resources a two-front war would be impossible, the Poles under Marshall Pilsudski considered the Soviets the most immediate threat and focused planning for defense accordingly. However, watching Hitler’s rise to power in Germany, Marshal Edward Rydz-Smigly, Poland’s new military leader following the death of Pilsudski in 1935, realized that Poland could no longer ignore the German threat and began again to draft plans for defense against a German invasion. Polish plans still relied heavily on the military might of France. In addition, Poland had signed a nonaggression pact with the Soviet Union in 1932 and reinforced this again in 1938. This gave Poland a degree of security on its eastern frontier and allowed for more resources to be focused on defense against Germany.
Confidence in the promises made by France was shaken when in March of 1938 German armor rolled into Czechoslovakia unopposed. French and British officials, particularly the then British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, essentially stood by as Hitler seized the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia, believing the Nazi leader had no further ambitions in Europe. When Hitler was allowed to occupy the rest of Czechoslovakia Polish leadership began to take matters into their own hands. The Poles developed two plans for mobilizing the military: a general, publicly-announced mobilization, and a secret mobilization that would not draw unwanted attention in an uneasy political climate. By early 1939 Polish intelligence estimated that in excess of 70 German divisions could be deployed in an invasion of Poland. In defense, Poland could muster only 37 divisions.4 Each full-strength German division was larger than each full-strength Polish division in numbers of men, machine guns, heavy weapons and motorized vehicles. While the leaders in Poland were fully aware of the need for diplomacy and could not afford to alienate France and Great Britain, they had to prepare for the attack that was, at least to the Poles, clearly becoming inevitable.
Any lack of readiness on the part of the Polish defenders was due in large part to the foreign policies of France and Great Britain. Political leaders from both nations lobbied incessantly for Poland to refrain from doing anything that might increase tension with Germany in an already delicate diplomatic situation. Specifically, France and Great Britain worried that the mobilization of the Polish armed forces would be seen as provocation for a German invasion. However, with her entire western frontier exposed to enemy invasion, Poland could not allow herself to sit idle in the face of an impending clash. Czechoslovakia had already been sacrificed and while France and Britain clearly wished to avoid war at all costs, Poland was not going to allow itself to be the next silent victim in Europe.
By the spring of 1939 Polish intelligence had located and identified 36 German divisions moving to within striking distance of Poland’s western frontier.5 Hampered by pressure from France and Great Britain not to activate her military in order to not “provoke” Hitler, yet facing an obvious threat, Poland began in March of 1939 to activate the secret mobilization planned the previous year. Under the guise of summer maneuvers, reserves were called up via color-coded postcards sent by mail. Slowly, over the summer, some Polish divisions began to reach combat readiness.
One major asset the Poles possessed in abundance was brilliant academic minds. Poland had a proud and longstanding tradition of intellectual pursuits, particularly in mathematics, dating back to the astronomer Copernicus (1473–1543). So, recognizing their country’s economic and industrial shortcomings, Polish military and government officials endeavored to use this particular resource to its fullest. During the early 1930s Polish mathematicians had been contracted by the military to provide intelligence. By 1933, a group of three Polish mathematicians, Marian Rejewski, Henryk Zygalski and Jerzy Rozycki made the breakthrough that would arguably decide the outcome of the war. They broke the German Enigma system of codes.
“Enigma” was the name the Nazis had given to the top-secret encryption and cipher machine they had developed to send and decode secret messages. The Enigma machines were devices about the size of a typewriter and operated in much the same way. A typewriter-style keyboard was connected by electric wires to a series of disks inside the machine. The keyboard sent electronic impulses to the disks and the disks rotated, printing a seemingly random series of letters and numbers. The coded messages were sent to military and diplomatic locations throughout the world and could be unscrambled only by the machine on the receiving end. The codes were constantly changed and the machines offered an almost infinite number of possibilities. The machine and the system were so advanced and so complicated the Nazis believed the code to be unbreakable. Rejewski theorized about how the machine worked and assembled a team to break the code. By 1933 the team had broken the code in use at the time. Later, based on the formulas they developed, the Polish mathematicians built working replicas of the German machines. In July 1939, as war approached, the Poles provided the French and English governments with working Enigma machines. Until recently, British scientists and mathematicians at the famous Bletchley Park intelligence center had been credited with this monumental feat. The Polish mathematicians and scientists in the intelligence community fled to Britain after the outbreak of the war and continued to work with the British at the top-secret Bletchley Park facility. As the Nazis updated Enigma, the Poles along with British intelligence personnel worked constantly to keep up with the changes. Many years before Bletchley Park existed, the Poles had provided the Allies with the platform on which critical codebreaking was based throughout the war.
Meanwhile, however, in 1939 Poland was about to face a daunting enemy with little in the way of any real assistance. Codes would not help deflect bullets. Knowing an attack would come and stopping it when it came were two vastly different things. By late spring, Great Britain and France finally began to realize Hitler’s aggressive posturing posed a real and imminent threat to European stability and pledged military aid to Poland. A treaty of mutual defense between Britain, France and Poland was signed in the spring of 1939. Key to the agreement was the pledge that if any one of the signing parties was attacked the other two were immediately to aid in its defense. This was considered a great achievement in diplomacy and was thought to be a major deterrent to Hitler’s aggression.
Of the three signatory nations, Poland faced the most immediate threat from Germany at the time. In the event Poland was attacked, France agreed to begin a full mobilization of its military and to launch a full-scale attack within 15 days against the Germans along Germany’s western border, and Britain promised RAF bombing of German military targets.6 The intervention was offered only in the event of actual military engagements. With vast territories exposed, Poland feared the Germans might seize Polish territory unopposed as they had in Czechoslovakia, giving the British and French a way out of their commitments. Therefore, undermanned, ill-equipped units were rushed to the field and spread hopelessly thin to cover as much ground as possible in order to increase the odds of engagement, and therefore the likelihood of immediate military aid from the French and British.
Despite the German military build-up along the Czechoslovakian border, as late as August 30 the British and French formally pleaded with the Poles not to announce a full military mobilization. Ironically, after learning of the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact of August 1939 and while pleading for Poland to continue negotiations, Britain was itself beginning to mobilize:
The Lord Privy Seal was authorized to bring The Regional Organisation onto a war footing. On August 23, the Admiralty received Cabinet authority to requisition twenty-five merchantmen for conversion to armed merchant cruisers (AMC), and thirty-five trawlers to be fitted with Asdics. Six thousand reservists for the overseas garrison were called up. The anti-aircraft defense of the radar stations and the full deployment of the anti-aircraft forces were approved. Twenty-four thousand reservists of the air force and all the air auxiliary forces, including the balloon squadrons, were called up. All leave was stopped throughout the fighting services. The Admiralty issued warnings to stop merchant shipping. Many other steps were taken.7
Yet Poland was asked not to prepare for war with the enemy at her doorstep.
Finally on August 31, a formal general mobilization was announced in Poland, a move which Britain and France worried might be seen by Hitler as provocation for war. The Germans, however, already had plans to fabricate their own justification for war. On August 31, 1939, SS men dressed in Polish uniforms took over a radio station inside Germany and broadcast messages urging Poles living in eastern Germany to rebel against the Nazis. The bodies of prison inmates were dressed in Polish uniforms and left on site as if they had perpetrated the act and had been killed by German police.8 The transparent ploy would be cited as a preemptive Polish hostile action by Germany. Despite this, British and French diplomats begged the Polish high command to retract the mobilization order. The next morning German troops stormed across the border and World War II in Europe began.
Understrength divisions were only part of Poland’s demise. Economies of scale played an enormous role in the September campaign. Although Poland had made great strides developing industrial production capabilities, building a nation’s economy takes time and money, two resources of which Poland had very little. Poland’s entire military budget from 1935 to 1939 was only a fraction of Germany’s expenditure on the Luftwaffe in 1939 alone.9 The reality was stark; the Polish command knew that it had no hope of winning a war with Germany on its own. Poland hoped only to defend and delay the Germans long enough for France and Britain to invade Germany’s lightly-defended western border. When that happened, the Poles were confident they could hold off the reduced German forces.
Further tipping the scale for the Germans were the weapons and tactics they had developed despite the limitations the Treaty of Versailles had placed on them. The attack Germany unleashed on Poland was the first taste the world had of the blitzkrieg or “lightning war,” a fast-moving, concentrated aerial and mechanized ground attack designed to drive spearheads deep into defending territories and surround and cut off entire enemy armies. Most of the world’s militaries, including those of France, the United States, Germany and the Soviet Union, still maintained large cavalry forces and horse-drawn wagons were a mainstay in supply and troop transport. The “dig in and hold on” mindset of most of Europe’s military leaders was carried over from World War I. It was not until after the fall of Poland that the world really took notice of the true military significance of fast-moving mechanized infantry and armor.
Like the Germans, Polish military commanders recognized the importance of speed and maneuverability on the modern battlefield. However, due to economics, shortsighted leadership and stubborn tradition, Poland relied far too heavily on cavalry to provide that mobility, giving rise to the unfortunate myth discussed earlier of the Polish cavalry mounting saber charges against German armor.10 Partly owing to a long and proud tradition of Polish cavalry dating back to the Winged Hussars and Lisowski’s Cossacks of the 15th century, Polish military leadership was slower than most nations to adopt an aggressive policy toward the development of armored equipment and tactics.
Poland was not oblivious to the need for armor. However, an anemic economy allowed for the production of only 50 tanks in 1938. Germany produced in excess of 1,100 tanks that same year.11 To combat enemy armor, the Poles would rely on the state-of-the-art Bofors 37mm antitank gun and a recently developed antitank rifle. The armor of 1939 was rudimentary compared with that developed later in the war, so in 1939 the antitank rifle was a very effective weapon. In 1939, most Polish armor was actually in the form of two-man tankettes, lightly armed and lightly armored and used primarily for reconnaissance. Most of the tankettes were armed with Hotchkiss machine guns and a handful had a 20mm cannon for armament. Poland had however begun to modernize. By 1938 two infantry brigades had been fully mechanized and fielded two battalions of 7TP light tanks. The performance and firepower of the 7TP was equal to any tank in the German arsenal, but again precious few were available for action.12 In mid-1939 Poland had ordered tanks from Britain and France. Unfortunately for Poland, only a battalion of 50 Renault R35s, a few Hotchkiss H38s and a single British Matilda tank had arrived before the outbreak of war. Without proper training and with constantly changing lines of battle, it was decided that even if personnel could be trained and these tanks could reach the front in time, the new armor would have little effect on the battle, so most were withdrawn to Romania without seeing action.13
In fact, none of the branches of the Polish military was taking a “wait and see” approach to the German threat. Prior to the invasion, most of the Polish Navy, hopelessly outnumbered, had already withdrawn to Britain. It was no match for the Schleswig-Holstein and her supporting vessels, and chose to live to fight another day. A handful of submarines, a few minelayers, a single destroyer, and various smaller craft were left to defend Poland’s Baltic coast and inland waterways. The Polish Air Force, contrary to popular belief, was not destroyed on the ground in the first hours of battle. The Polish air command had foreseen an encounter in which it would be outnumbered and on August 30 had ordered most of its tactical combat squadrons away from forward air bases to small secret airfields scattered throughout the countryside. They would operate from these, scoring significant victories until being withdrawn to Romania and Hungary. Later in the war the Polish Air Force would play a major and glorious role in the air war in Europe.
Despite Poland’s best efforts, the result of misguided French and British foreign policy, unfortunate economic circumstances, and shortsighted tacticians was a nation defended by a hopelessly outmanned and outgunned military. On the eve of war Poland had only been able to mobilize about 50 percent of its forces and only about half of the forces mobilized were actually combat ready and in position on September 1. Despite the deficits, trainloads of young soldiers shipped off, their spirits high, full of pride and confidence; many fully expected to be in Berlin by Christmas. They could not know how long and desperate their struggle would be.
For the people of Poland, used to the threat of war throughout their history, life was still relatively ordinary despite the mobilization when they went to sleep on August 31, 1939. Soldiers Edward Bucko and Jerzy Zagrodzki were both near the end of their compulsory service commitment. Bohdan Grodzki had enlisted in the army, but he had not yet been called to report for duty. Czeslaw Korzycki too had recently enlisted, but he thought that surely the Germans would not dare to attack. Edward Alt was also a soldier. Antoni Szmenkowicz was a farmer’s son. Zygmunt Kornas and Juliusz Przesmycki were boy scouts. Kazimierz Olejarczyk and Edward Kuczynski were students. Anna Dadlas and Halina Konwiak were schoolgirls. When they awoke, their lives, along with those of each and every Pole, would be changed forever. They were about to begin epic journeys through unimaginable hardships, heartaches and inhumane brutality. Somehow they and all of Poland would persevere and, through selfless acts of courage, accomplish seemingly impossible tasks against almost insuperable odds.
The German battleship Schleswig-Holstein had steamed into Gdansk harbor in late August 1939. The old ship cast an ominous shadow over the Polish harbor town. A diplomatic mission was the official reason given for the ship’s visit, but the real reason for the ship’s presence was far more sinister. Gdansk had been ceded to Poland by Germany as part of the Treaty of Versailles following World War I. The Germans had called it Danzig and had made no secret about their disappointment in having lost their claim to the city during the previous years. At dawn on September 1, the ship’s 11in. guns began to fire. The seaside town shook as the Germans started a bombardment of the Polish Westerplatte garrison and the shore batteries. The war had begun.
The German invasion of Poland, September 1, 1939 See key at end of final picture section
In the early hours of the fight for Poland, the iron resolve of the Polish nation began to form. Symbolic of the stubborn defenders across Poland, the Westerplatte garrison at Gdansk was pounded by a relentless heavy naval bombardment and dive-bomber attacks. The shore batteries were destroyed before they could answer the German battleship’s volleys. For six days the Westerplatte defenders, barely a company in strength, endured relentless ground attacks from various German formations totaling almost a division. The Polish positions were pounded for a week and only after their ammunition ran out and their concrete bunkers had been reduced to smoldering piles of rubble did they surrender. When the dust settled some 300 German soldiers lay dead.14 The Polish casualties amounted to 15 dead and 20 wounded, though the numbers were of little consolation.
The Polish postal workers in Gdansk also joined the fight on September 1, arming themselves and mounting a defense of the imposing, thick-walled post office. After a brief but heroic stand the postal workers surrendered. In reprisal for their efforts they were dragged into the streets and shot by German troops in a grim precursor of the unspeakable atrocities to come.15
Securing the Baltic port was an important objective for the Germans as it opened a supply route into northern Poland, but it was a relatively minor engagement. The main German offensive involved a two-pronged attack. The first element of this attack, Army Group North, consisted of the 4th Army attacking eastward between the Brda and Notec rivers, with northern elements cutting off the coastal defenses, and the 3rd Army attacking southward from East Prussia. The second attacking force, Army Group South, consisted of the 8th and 10th armies attacking eastward on a front from Rawicz to Katowice, and the 14th Army attacking north from Czechoslovakia toward Krakow. In all, the Germans threw some 56 full divisions and numerous supporting formations against Poland, leaving only 30 infantry divisions to defend Germany against any French attack.16 A quick French offensive would have spelled disaster for Hitler. However, basing his analysis on the experiences in Czechoslovakia, Hitler gambled the French would not launch an immediate invasion. The German defeat of Poland took longer than expected, but the gamble to leave Germany’s western frontier largely unguarded paid off. The French did launch what was known as the Saar Offensive on September 7, 1939 taking a mere 8 km of German territory by the 12th before halting, but the Fatherland was never seriously threatened by them.
Early on September 1, the fighting in the north saw few significant German advances. The main thrust of the German 4th Army came through the Tochula Forest. The Poles left the area lightly defended. They were expecting only a limited engagement and were aiming solely at preventing an uncontested seizure of the area, which would have absolved their allies’ obligation to intervene. In the face of three infantry divisions, a Panzer division and two motorized infantry divisions, the Poles withdrew most of the 27th Infantry Division (27 Dywizja Piechoty) and elements of the Pomorska Cavalry Brigade (Pomorska Brygada Kawalerii) southward to more defensible positions, leaving only the 9th Infantry Division (9 Dywizja Piechoty) and a few cavalry units to hold off the attacking German divisions. Fierce fighting saw heavy casualties on both sides, but the precariously thin Polish defensive lines held across almost the entire front. The 3rd Panzer Division (3.Panzer-Division) however managed to find a bridge over the Brda River defended by a single company, a situation that was all too common in the early days of the campaign when Polish units of brigade, regimental and even company strength found themselves staring straight into the jaws of entire German divisions, while Polish high command struggled to mobilize and deploy reserves over a front which seemed to envelop the entire country.17 With no way to destroy the bridge, the lightly armed infantry company had few options. There was no way they could hold the bridge for even a few minutes. If they stayed to fight they would all be killed and the Germans would take the bridge anyway. After a brief exchange of fire the Polish infantry were dislodged from their defensive positions around the bridge and men and armor from the German 3rd Panzer Division began to pour across.
Following a day of heavy fighting, the 18th Regiment of Pomeranian Uhlans, part of the Pomorska Cavalry Brigade, sent about half its strength through the heavily forested area near the Brda River in an attempt to maneuver to the rear of the German advance. The cavalry stumbled over German infantry grouped in a forest clearing. In a quick surprise attack the cavalry unit mounted a saber charge and wiped out the German infantry. Supporting German armored cars were called in, however, and opened fire on the Polish cavalry as they withdrew. Some 20 Polish cavalry, including the regimental commander, Colonel Kazimierz Mastalerz, were killed. The following day Italian journalists were brought to the scene and fed the lie that the Poles were killed while charging German armor.18 Polish cavalry units fielded horse-drawn 37mm antitank batteries and antitank rifle squads, and Polish cavalry rode horseback on the battlefield in order to maneuver quickly into suitable locations for dismounting and engaging enemy infantry. For these reasons Polish cavalry were often on the battlefields opposing enemy armor.
Aside from the Brda River crossing, the northern German offensive made few gains. The Polish 9th Infantry Division, though badly outnumbered, held and in some cases actually pushed back the German advances.19 German attacks on key railroad objectives were repulsed by defending Polish troops aided by railroad workers. Like the postal workers in Gdansk, railroad workers and any other civilians suspected of aiding the military defense were shot immediately upon falling into the hands of the Germans.20
The second prong of the northern attack from the German 3rd Army in East Prussia likewise had little initial success. The invaders attacked southward toward heavily fortified positions near Mlawa. The Polish 20th Division dug in and held the German 1st Infantry Division (1 Infanterie-Division) at bay. The German 12th Infantry Division (12 Infanterie-Division) and 1st Cavalry Brigade (1 Kavallerie-Brigade) engaged the Polish Mazowiecka Infantry Cavalry (Mazowiecka Brygada Kawalerii), forcing the badly outnumbered Poles to withdraw. The crack troops of the 21st “Children of Warsaw” Brigade (21 Warszawki Pulk Piechoty “Dzieci Warszawy”), under the command of Colonel Stanislaw Sosabowski, had taken up positions near the East Prussian border during the “secret” mobilization phase late in August 1939. The unit had been considered an elite infantry fighting unit since its inception in 1794. The brigade fought fiercely during the first days of the war, not surrendering an inch of ground in the early fighting. Sosabowski had been an instructor at the war college in Warsaw. Under his command junior officers calmed and steadied their men in those critical early hours – their first taste of combat.
Army Group North gained precious little ground for the Germans during the first day of the fight. On the other major front, the brunt of Germany’s Army Group South was borne by the Polish Army Krakow and Army Lodz. The main defense line of Army Lodz was some 20 km inland from the border, but advance Polish units saw heavy firefights in the wooded frontier areas. The German 8th and 10th armies threw a series of infantry attacks through the forests over a wide front. Particularly heavy fighting took place near Morka, north of Czestochowa. The Wolynska Cavalry Brigade (Wołynska Brygada Kawalerii) dug in and repulsed repeated attacks by the German 4th Panzer Division (4.Panzer-Division). While the Poles suffered heavy losses, they destroyed some 50 German armored vehicles and held their positions.21 Across Poland’s western border, heavily outnumbered Polish units held their ground against waves of attacking infantry supported by armor and air attacks.
Nineteen-year-old Edward Bucko had been within two months of completing his service in the army and looked forward to starting a highly sought-after job with the post office. A communications specialist wireless radio operator in the 62nd Company, 7th Tank Battalion (62 Kompanii, 7 Batalion Paczerny) with Army Lodz, he was now sent directly to the front east of Lodz to support the infantry units desperately trying to hold on. “On September 1, my unit was on a train headed towards Lodz. Around noon we passed through Warsaw. That’s when we found out the Germans had started bombing the city about eight o’clock that morning.”22
Five German infantry divisions and two Panzer divisions bore down on the Poles and intense, bloody fighting took place near Lodz. The Polish armor was sent directly to the front line and withdrew after suffering heavy losses. “When we got to Lodz, we were sent straight to the front in the forest. The Germans were so strong there we didn’t get very far,” said Bucko. Following a day of fierce fighting, what remained of the Polish armor limped back. “Our tanks looked like porcupines… Those tanks we had were not really designed for combat.”23 The thin-skinned TKS tankettes were riddled with bullet holes and had steel splinters and shards from exit holes piercing outward in every direction. After withdrawing and regrouping, the battered armor was ordered back to the front. “Before we even made it back to Lodz, we were ordered back to the front,” Bucko recalled.
Further south, some inroads were made by the German 10th Army against Army Krakow. The German 1st Panzer Division (1.Panzer-Division) carved a path separating the Wolynska Cavalry Brigade and the Polish 7th Infantry Division (7 Dywizja Piechoty), each of which was engaged by two separate German infantry and armored divisions.24 On the southern flank of the Polish 7th Infantry Division, the German 2nd Light Division pounded the Polish Krakowska Cavalry Brigade (Krakowska Brygada Kawalerii) and was able to advance armor between the Polish cavalry and the 7th Infantry Division. By the end of that first day, the Polish 7th Infantry Division was almost surrounded by German armor.
Further engagements saw the reserve Polish 55th Infantry Division (55 Dywizja Piechoty) facing the German 28th Infantry and 2nd and 5th Panzer divisions (2./5.Panzer-Division). The Polish 1st KOP Regiment (Korpus Ochrony Pogranicza, or Border Guard Regiment) and the Zakopane National Guard Battalion (Zakopane Batalion Obrona Narodowa) were overrun by most of three German divisions, forcing the Poles to reinforce the area near Nowy Targ with armor from the 10th Motorized Cavalry Brigade and units from the 6th Infantry Division (6 Dywizja Piechoty).25 The Polish 10th Armored “Black Brigade,” under the command of Polish Colonel Stanislaw Maczek and with 39 Vickers tanks and two companies of TKS tankettes, was one of the more modernized and updated outfits in the Polish army. Originally held in reserve near Wawel Castle in Krakow, the 10th was sent to support the KOP troops. The Polish armor, 75mm field guns and 37mm antitank batteries managed to stop the massive German advance in its tracks.
In Upper Silesia, Army Krakow faced two enemies. While frontline forces tangled with the German offensive, rear units faced small guerrilla forces made up of pro-Nazi Germans living in the area. German fifth columnists had prepared for the invasion for many months and minor skirmishes wreaked havoc on rearward elements and supply lines for a short time. The Polish soldiers who were given the task of solving the problem would pay with their lives when the Germans finally overran the area.
After a daylong savage fight over a protracted front, Poland’s piecemeal, half-manned defense had held the German war machine at bay, at least for the present. The plans to defend Poland consisted primarily of conducting a fighting retreat lasting for several days. This was supposed to allow their French and British allies time to counter the German invasion with attacks on Germany’s western borders. This would in turn force the Germans to withdraw a large number of divisions from Poland to defend the German homeland. The Poles then expected to collect up most of their forces on the eastern bank of the Vistula River, where they could regroup and counterattack a significantly weakened enemy. Under those circumstances it was conceivable that the Polish Army could at the very least hold the Germans in check and possibly even defeat whatever German force remained. It seemed that all of Poland, from the top ranks of command to the last enlisted man, had counted on the Allied counterattack and believed it would come. So, wherever possible, the Polish troops held at all costs. The next few days saw the Germans exploit the weak defenses, and gain initiative and momentum. However, Polish defenders were sure a few more days of a tenacious defense would bring much-needed relief from France.26