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Stanisław Maczek

Lieutenant General Stanisław Maczek ([staˈɲiswav ˈmat͡ʂɛk]; 31 March 1892 – 11 December 1994) was a Polish tank commander of World War II, whose division was instrumental in the Allied liberation of France, closing the Falaise pocket, resulting in the destruction of 14 German Wehrmacht and SS divisions. A veteran of World War I, the Polish–Ukrainian and Polish–Soviet Wars, Maczek was the commander of Poland's only major armoured formation during the September 1939 campaign, and later commanded a Polish armoured formation in France in 1940. He was the commander of the famous 1st Polish Armoured Division, and later of the I Polish Army Corps under Allied Command in 1942–45.[1]

Stanisław Władysław Maczek
After the war, still in the rank of Generał dywizji.
Nickname(s)Baca
Born(1892-03-31)31 March 1892
Szczerzec near Lwów, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, Austria-Hungary
(now Shchyrets, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine)
Died11 December 1994(1994-12-11) (aged 102)
Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom
AllegiancePoland
Years of service1914–1947
RankLieutenant General
Commands held1st Armoured Division
10th Armoured Cavalry Brigade
10th Motorized Cavalry Brigade
Battles/warsWorld War I

Polish–Ukrainian War
Polish–Soviet War

World War II

AwardsOrder of the White Eagle
Knight's Cross of the Order of Virtuti Militari
Grand Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta
Cross of Valour
Gold Cross of Merit with Swords
Full list
RelationsVladko Maček (cousin)

Family

Stanisław Władysław Maczek was born on 31 March 1892 in the Lwów suburb of Szczerzec (now Ukrainian: Shchyrets),[2] then in Austro-Hungarian Galicia. His father was a lawyer, who after retiring opened chambers in Drohobycz.[3] His family was of distant Croatian extraction;[4][contradictory] he was a cousin of the Croatian politician Vladko Maček.[citation needed]

Education

After graduating from the grammar school at Drohobycz in 1910, he attended the philosophy faculty of Lwów University where he studied Polish philology[3] (i.e. language and literature). Among his tutors were the renowned Polish philologists Wilhelm Bruchnalski [pl] and Józef Kallenbach,[3] He also attended lectures by Kazimierz Twardowski.[2] During his studies he served in the Strzelec paramilitary organization, in which he received basic military training. After the outbreak of World War I, Maczek interrupted his studies, hoping to join Józef Piłsudski's Polish Legions, but instead was drafted into the Austro-Hungarian Army.[citation needed]

World War I

After receiving a brief officer training, Maczek was sent to the Italian Front of World War I. Initially an NCO in the Tyrolean Regiment[2] of the Imperial and Royal Army, he was promoted to second lieutenant in 1916 and then in 1918 to lieutenant. As the only Polish battalion commander in Austria-Hungary's Alpine regiments, Maczek gained experience in mountain warfare, which proved valuable in his later career.[citation needed]

Poland's borders

On 11 November 1918, after receiving news of the Armistice, Maczek disbanded his battalion and returned to the newly reborn Poland. Three days later he arrived at Krosno, where he joined the Polish Army. Assigned the command of a Krosno battalion, Maczek began a limited offensive against the forces of the West Ukrainian People's Republic (ZUNR) with the aim of relieving his besieged hometown. However, due to insufficient support, after initial successes at Ustrzyki, Chyrów and Felsztyn, the Polish offensive got bogged down and the Polish–Ukrainian War turned into trench warfare for the rest of the winter.[citation needed]

In April 1919 Maczek was withdrawn from his unit and became the organizer and commander of the so-called 'flying' company (Polish: lotna kompania) as part of Gen. Aleksandrowicz's 4th Infantry Division. This unit, created on Maczek's initiative, was modelled after the German Sturmbataillone of World War I and was highly mobile, with horse-drawn vehicles (in the singular, taczanka, podwoda) from Austrian Army depots, and well-equipped with heavy machine guns. The unit was formed mostly from battle-hardened troops of the Krosno battalion, and its combat value was well above the average of the Polish Army of the time. Hence it served in a "firefighter" capacity, plugging holes that appeared in defensive lines, but also fighting with distinction in the Polish spring offensive. It took part in some of the heaviest fighting of the war, including the battles for Drohobycz, Stanisławów, Buczacz, and finally the ZUNR capital, Stryj.[citation needed]

After the end of the Polish–Ukrainian fighting, Maczek was confirmed in the rank of major with seniority from 1 June 1919. He was then attached to General Iwaszkiewicz [pl]'s Polish 2nd Army as a staff officer. Bored with staff duties, Maczek repeatedly asked his superiors to give him command over a front-line unit. His wish was fulfilled only after the start of the Polish–Bolshevik War, when the 2nd Army suffered a defeat in initial clashes with Semyon Budyonny's 1st Cavalry Army. In Jarosław, Maczek formed a new 'flying' rifle battalion, mostly composed of fresh recruits and horseless uhlans. Despite insufficient training, the unit was moved to the front and Maczek again acted as a "firefighter", moving his unit quickly to wherever it was needed. His unit covered the retreat of the Polish forces at Mosty Wielkie, after which it was attached to Gen. Juliusz Rómmel's 1st Cavalry Division. It took part in the Polish assault on Waręż near Zamość, a tactical counter-assault on the rear of Budyonny's advancing Cossacks directly preceding the victorious battle of Komarów. After the end of hostilities, Maczek's battalion was officially named after him, although it was disbanded shortly after the signing of the treaty of Riga.[citation needed]

Interwar years

Maczek decided not to resume his studies at Lwów University and remained in active service. Between 1921 and 1923 he commanded an infantry battalion within the Lwów-based 26th Infantry Regiment. On 1 August 1923 he was promoted to lieutenant colonel and sent to the Higher Military School in Warsaw. He graduated the following year and served until 1927 as head of Section II (intelligence) in Lwów. Later that year he moved to Grodno, where he became deputy commander of the 76th Infantry Regiment. In 1929, after finishing his training, he became commander of the Grodno-based 81st Infantry Regiment, holding that post until 1934. During that time, on 1 January 1931, he was promoted to colonel. In 1935 he was transferred to Częstochowa, where he became commander of infantry (practically, deputy commander of the whole division) in the 7th Infantry Division.

In October 1938 Maczek's experience as a commander of "flying" troops received recognition from his superiors, and he was given command of the Polish 10th Motorized Cavalry Brigade, the first fully motorized formation in the Polish Army.

September 1939

On the outbreak of war in September 1939, the 10th Motorized Cavalry Brigade was attached to the Kraków Army[5] defending Lesser Poland and Silesia. Equipped with only light tanks and tankettes and with only one artillery battery of just eight heavy cannons, the brigade went into battle on the first day of war. After the Battle of Jordanów, Maczek's unit faced the entire German XVIII Corps of Gen. Eugen Beyer and successfully shielded the southern flank of the Polish forces, along the Beskids. Supported by only a few battalions of Border Guards and National Defence troops, Maczek's motorized brigade faced two Panzer divisions[5] (4th Light Division under von Hubicki and 2nd Panzer Division under Veiel), as well as the 3rd Mountain Division under Eduard Dietl.

For five days Maczek's brigade fought bravely and efficiently, slowing the pace of the German Blitzkrieg to a bloody crawl: despite numerical and technical superiority, the Germans were unable to make more than 10 kilometres headway per day. Maczek's men took maximum advantage of the mountainous terrain, halting many German attacks and occasionally counter-attacking. However, after the front of the Kraków Army was broken to the north of the brigade's position, Maczek's formation was pulled out of the front line.

The brigade then fought as a screening unit, defending the bridges and fords in Lesser Poland, until it arrived at Lwów and joined the city's defences. It formed a mobile reserve during the battle for Lwów, allowing other Polish units to withdraw towards the Romanian Bridgehead. However, the plan was made obsolete by the invasion of Poland by the Soviet Union on 17 September. After two days, Marshal of Poland Edward Rydz-Śmigły ordered the brigade to cross the Hungarian border. Maczek's brigade was interned in Hungary. Although the unit had lost about half of its men, it had not been defeated in open combat, and therefore gained respect even from the enemy. It is considered to be the only Polish unit not to have lost a single battle in 1939. Maczek was not only esteemed by his superiors but also loved by his soldiers, who referred to him as Baca [pl], a traditional Polish highlanders' name for a shepherd.

France, 1940

 
Stanisław Maczek, 1944

After the end of the September campaign Maczek made it to France, where he joined the re-created Polish Army and was promoted to the rank of brigadier-general. He was made the commanding officer of the Polish military camp in Coëtquidan. He then prepared a detailed report on the workings of German Blitzkrieg tactics, and possible precautions against it. This report was, however, completely disregarded by the French general staff (the Germans captured it – unopened).[citation needed] He also started gathering any 10th Brigade veterans who had reached France in two camps in Paimpont and Campeneac. His aim was to preserve the integrity of his former unit and prevent the conscription of some of the best-trained Polish soldiers into standard infantry formations, where their experience would probably have been wasted. However, the French command was initially not interested in the formation of a Polish armoured unit and the Polish 10th Armoured Cavalry Brigade received almost no equipment. It was not until March 1940 that Maczek received a dozen obsolete FT-17 tanks for training, plus a few dozen cars and motorcycles.

Everything changed when Germany invaded France in the spring of 1940, by simply bypassing the Maginot Line. General Maczek's unit suddenly received all the equipment it requested, under one condition: they had to go into action immediately. That proved impossible, because many of Polish soldiers had no experience with the new French equipment and there was no time for training exercises. General Maczek decided instead to lead a small force of his best-trained men, hoping that the rest of his unit would join them later. That small force was called the 10th Armoured Cavalry Brigade (Polish: 10 Brygada Kawalerii Pancernej) in honour of the "Black Brigade" from 1939. On 6 June, 10th Brigade had one tank battalion, two strong motorized cavalry squadrons, one anti-tank battery and one anti-aircraft battery. It was attached to the French 4th Army near Reims and ordered to cover its left flank.[6] However, Maczek's unit was much too weak to achieve success against German armoured divisions. Polish soldiers managed to cover only one retreating French infantry division by attacking German forces in Champaubert-Montgivroux. Later the brigade had to withdraw with the rest of the French troops and joined the French XXIII Corps. On 16 June the brigade attacked by night the town of Montbard over the Burgundy Canal. Maczek's soldiers achieved complete surprise and took many German prisoners.

However, by then the brigade was fighting alone, with the French units on both flanks either routed or in retreat. There were no French forces to take advantage of that victory and the decimated Polish unit found itself surrounded and without fuel. On 18 June, Maczek decided to destroy unusable equipment and withdraw on foot. Later that day he had to split the remnants of his brigade into small groups, so they could pass through the enemy lines. Many of Maczek's men, including the general himself, found their way through Vichy France, North Africa and Portugal to the United Kingdom, where a Polish armored unit was recreated, while others joined the Polish and French resistance organizations in France and Belgium. Maczek relocated to London.[citation needed]

Scotland

Initially, the British high command wanted to use the recreated Polish Army solely for defence of the Scottish coastline between Aberdeen and Edinburgh, and the veterans of the Polish tank formations who arrived to the UK were pressed into the Polish 2nd Rifle Brigade under General Rudolf Orlicz-Dreszer. However, immediately on Maczek's arrival the idea was abandoned and General Władysław Sikorski managed to persuade the British government to create instead a Polish armoured unit.[7] After two years of training at the Blairgowrie training ground, in February 1942 General Maczek formed the 1st Polish Armoured Division. Initially serving in defence of the Scottish coast between Montrose and the Firth of Forth, the division was equipped by the British authorities with Churchill and M4 Sherman tanks in preparation for the Normandy landings.

To Germany

 
British Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery in conversation with Major General Stanisław Maczek during his visit to the 1st Polish Armoured Division Headquarters in Breda, 25 November 1944.

Towards the end of July 1944 the Polish 1st Armoured Division was transferred to Normandy, where it was to prove its worth during the 1944 invasion of Normandy. Attached to the First Canadian Army, Maczek's men entered combat on 8 August, seeing service during Operation Totalize. The division twice suffered attacks of friendly fire from U.S. Army Air Force aircraft, yet achieved a brilliant victory against the Wehrmacht in the battles for Mont Ormel, Hill 262 and the town of Chambois. In this series of offensive and defensive operations, which came to be known as the Battle of Falaise, 14 German Wehrmacht and SS divisions were trapped in the huge Chambois pocket and destroyed. Maczek's division had the crucial role of closing the pocket to block the escape route of the German divisions.[8]

 
Senior commanders of the First Canadian Army, May 1945. Seated from the left: Stanisław Maczek (Polish Army), Guy Simonds, Harry Crerar, Charles Foulkes, Bert Hoffmeister. Standing from the left: Ralph Keefler, Bruce Matthews, Harry Foster, Robert Moncel (standing in for Chris Vokes, Stuart Rawlins (British Army).

After this decisive battle, Maczek's Division continued to spearhead the Allied drive across the battlefields of northern France, Belgium, the Netherlands and finally Germany. During its progress it liberated Ypres, Oostnieuwkerke, Roeselare, Tielt, Ruislede and Ghent in Belgium. (Coincidentally, the Polish word maczek means "poppy" in English, the symbol of remembrance associated with the area around Ypres in the First World War.) Thanks to an outflanking manoeuvre, it proved possible to free Breda in the Netherlands after a hard fight but without incurring losses in the town's population. A petition on behalf of 40,000 inhabitants of Breda resulted in Maczek being made an honorary Dutch citizen after the war. The Division's finest hour came when its forces accepted the surrender of the German naval base of Wilhelmshaven, taking captive the entire garrison, together with some 200 vessels of Hitler's Kriegsmarine.

Maczek commanded the 1st Armoured Division until the end of European hostilities and was promoted to major-general. After the capitulation of Germany he went on to command the Polish I Corps and became commanding officer of all Polish forces in the United Kingdom until their demobilization in 1947.

Exile

 
Maczek's grave, Polish cemetery, Breda, Netherlands

After the war, Maczek was stripped of Polish citizenship by the Communist government of the Polish People's Republic, and thus had to remain in Britain. He left the army on 9 September 1948[9] but was for some reason denied a general's pension by the British government.[9] As a result, Maczek worked as a bartender at an Edinburgh hotel until the 1960s.[10]

 
General Stanislaw Maczek, Bench outside Edinburgh Council Chambers.

Although living in the United Kingdom, General Stanisław Maczek had a strong connection to the Netherlands. Besides being a regional hero to the areas he liberated in World War II, he was awarded honorary citizenship of the city of Breda. Recently acquired archive documents show that the Polish general secretly received a yearly allowance from the Dutch government, for the rest of his life. He got his allowance, because Mayor Claudius Prinsen of Breda was worried in 1950,[11] after receiving information that Maczek was in a 'difficult financial situation'. The Polish general was doing unskilled labor to make ends meet. He also had to take care of a chronically ill daughter who needed costly treatment.[12]

The mayor of Breda informed the Dutch national government that a war hero was in financial need. He made an appeal to the government to help the man that liberated the Netherlands.[13] The government decided quickly and awarded Maczek an indexed general's pension, which was paid for by the Ministry of Foreign affairs from a secret budget. The Dutch government did not want this to be made public, due to its sensitive nature.[14] In the Cold War period, announcing that the Dutch were paying a non-communist Polish ex-general, would certainly strain diplomatic relations with the communist Polish government and the Soviet Union. Not to mention, it would confront the British government with a not so proud moment in their history. Uninformed about his improved financial situation, the Dutch public responded at once in 1965 when news came that his chronically ill daughter needed costly medical treatment in Spain. The Dutch population raised a substantial amount of money following a national radio broadcast for the Maczek family, helping out the general that liberated them.[12]

In 1972 an appeal was made by the Poolse Katholieke Vereniging in Nederland to the Dutch Parliament. This organization became the voice for the remaining Polish veterans in the Netherlands and asked for compensation of pension lost due to the aftermath of the war.[15] The Dutch Ministry of Defence did not meet this request, based upon the Algemene Militaire Pensioenwet (1966), which stipulates that non-Dutch persons needed to have been associated with the Dutch Armed Forces during the war period, in order to be entitled to a wartime pension.[12][16]

In 1989, the last Polish Communist Government of Prime Minister Mieczysław Rakowski issued a public apology to the General, and in 1994 he was presented with Poland's highest state decoration, the Order of the White Eagle.[17]

Lieutenant General Stanisław Maczek died on 11 December 1994, at the age of 102.[18] According to his last wish, he was laid to rest among his soldiers at the Polish military cemetery in Breda, the Netherlands.[18] Each year during Liberation Day festivities, Breda is visited by a large Polish contingent and the city devotes part of the festivities to the fallen Polish soldiers.

Many artefacts and memorabilia belonging to Maczek and the 1st Polish Armoured Division are on display in the Polish Institute and Sikorski Museum in London.

In 2018 a bronze statue was unveiled in honour of General Maczek in the quadrangle of the Edinburgh City Chambers. A footpath crossing Bruntsfield Links which leads to the general's former home in Arden Street in Marchmont, has been named General Maczek Walk.[19][20]

Honours and awards

Gallery

In popular culture

Maczek, as the leader of the 10th Motorized Cavalry Brigade, is a historical figure in the novel A Witness to Gallantry: An American Spy in Poland 1939.

In The Death of the Fronsac by Neal Ascherson, a Polish officer, Maurycy Szczucki, serves with General Maczek in World War II. After the war, Szczucki returns to Edinburgh where he discovers the impoverished Maczek working as a barman in the Learmonth Hotel. The General is frequently visited by old comrades, who "salute him before they order a whisky."[21]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Astonishing story of unsung WWII hero premieres in captivating new documentary". Retrieved 4 April 2020.
  2. ^ a b c Mieczkowski, Zbigniew (2004). The Soldiers of General Maczek in World War II. p. 16. ISBN 83-914145-8-2.
  3. ^ a b c Editor Zbigniew Mieczkowski The Soldiers of General Maczek in World War II ISBN 83-914145-8-2 Page 16
  4. ^ Mieczkowski, Zbigniew (2004). The Soldiers of General Maczek in World War II. p. 17. ISBN 83-914145-8-2.
  5. ^ a b Krzysztof Barbarski Polish Armour 1939–1945 ISBN 0-85045-467-0 Page 8
  6. ^ Stanislaw Mikolajczyk The Pattern of Soviet Domination Sampson Low, Marston & Co 1948 Page 8
  7. ^ Garlinski, Jozef. Poland in the Second World War, p. 235; ISBN 0-333-39258-2
  8. ^ John Keegan Six Armies in Normandy; ISBN 0-14-005293-3, Chapter 7, "A Polish Battlefield"
  9. ^ a b The Poles in Britain 1940–2000 (ed. Peter Stachura), Chapter 6 (by Evan McGilvray), p. 64; ISBN 0-7146-8444-9
  10. ^ The Poles in Britain 1940–2000, ibid., p. 54.
  11. ^ National Archives (Netherlands) NL-HaNA, Buitenlandse Zaken / Code-Archief 65–74, 2.05.313, inv.nr. 25330,brief van Prinsen aan de Nederlandse ambassadeur in Groot-Brittannië, 6 maart 1950
  12. ^ a b c "The Polish veterans after World War II". 6 January 2016.
  13. ^ National Archives (Netherlands) NL-HaNA, Buitenlandse Zaken / Code-Archief 65–74, 2.05.313, inv.nr. 25330, Intern memorandum A.P. Hoevelaak t.b.v. dossier Maczek 726.2, onderwerp: ‘Radio-aktie ten behoeve van dochter Generaal Maczek’
  14. ^ National Archives (Netherlands) NL-HaNA, Buitenlandse Zaken / Code-Archief 65–74, 2.05.313, inv.nr. 25330, Verzoek van ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken (Mr. Simons) aan Binnenlandse Zaken omtrent de goedkeuring en geheimhouding van het verlenen van jaargeld aan generaal Maczek, 21 November 1951
  15. ^ National Archives (Netherlands) NL-HaNA, Defensie / Militair Personeel, 2.13.5372, inv.nr. 165. Verzoekschrift van de Poolse Katholieke Vereniging in Nederland aan de voorzitter van de Tweede Kamer der Staten Generaal, 23 juni 1972
  16. ^ National Archives (Netherlands) NL-HaNA, Defensie / Militair Personeel, 2.13.5372, inv.nr. 165. Antwoord van het Ministerie van Defensie op het verzoekschrift van de Poolse Katholieke Vereniging in Nederland, 15 September 197
  17. ^ Binder, David (14 December 1994). "Stanislaw Maczek, 102, General Who Led Poles in World War II". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 May 2010.
  18. ^ a b The Poles in Britain 1940–2000, ibid., p. 67.
  19. ^ "Statue plan for Polish WW2 general who worked in Capital". Edinburgh Evening news. 12 March 2017.
  20. ^ Brown, Graham. "VIDEO: Statue of war hero General Maczek installed thanks to late Angus peer's memorial campaign". The Courier. Retrieved 18 July 2019.
  21. ^ Ascherson, Neal (2017). The Death of the Fronsac. Head of Zeus. ISBN 9781786694393.

External links

  • OpusMedia.fr, Captain Kazimierz Duda – 1st Polish Armoured Division – C.K.M.
  • Montormel.evl.pl, History of 1st Polish Armoured Division
  • Montormel.evl.pl, 1st Polish Armoured Division in the battle of Falaise
  • New research on Maczeks post-war situation

stanisław, maczek, lieutenant, general, staˈɲiswav, ˈmat, ʂɛk, march, 1892, december, 1994, polish, tank, commander, world, whose, division, instrumental, allied, liberation, france, closing, falaise, pocket, resulting, destruction, german, wehrmacht, division. Lieutenant General Stanislaw Maczek staˈɲiswav ˈmat ʂɛk 31 March 1892 11 December 1994 was a Polish tank commander of World War II whose division was instrumental in the Allied liberation of France closing the Falaise pocket resulting in the destruction of 14 German Wehrmacht and SS divisions A veteran of World War I the Polish Ukrainian and Polish Soviet Wars Maczek was the commander of Poland s only major armoured formation during the September 1939 campaign and later commanded a Polish armoured formation in France in 1940 He was the commander of the famous 1st Polish Armoured Division and later of the I Polish Army Corps under Allied Command in 1942 45 1 Stanislaw Wladyslaw MaczekAfter the war still in the rank of General dywizji Nickname s BacaBorn 1892 03 31 31 March 1892Szczerzec near Lwow Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria Austria Hungary now Shchyrets Lviv Oblast Ukraine Died11 December 1994 1994 12 11 aged 102 Edinburgh Scotland United KingdomAllegiancePolandYears of service1914 1947RankLieutenant GeneralCommands held1st Armoured Division10th Armoured Cavalry Brigade10th Motorized Cavalry BrigadeBattles warsWorld War I Italian FrontPolish Ukrainian WarPolish Soviet War Battle of KomarowWorld War II Invasion of Poland Battle of Jordanow Battle of Jaroslaw Battle of Lwow Battle of France Invasion of Normandy Falaise pocket Operation Tractable Battle of Hill 262 Battle of Chambois Clearing the Channel CoastAwardsOrder of the White EagleKnight s Cross of the Order of Virtuti MilitariGrand Cross of the Order of Polonia RestitutaCross of ValourGold Cross of Merit with SwordsFull listRelationsVladko Macek cousin Contents 1 Family 2 Education 3 World War I 4 Poland s borders 5 Interwar years 6 September 1939 7 France 1940 8 Scotland 9 To Germany 10 Exile 11 Honours and awards 12 Gallery 13 In popular culture 14 See also 15 References 16 External linksFamily EditStanislaw Wladyslaw Maczek was born on 31 March 1892 in the Lwow suburb of Szczerzec now Ukrainian Shchyrets 2 then in Austro Hungarian Galicia His father was a lawyer who after retiring opened chambers in Drohobycz 3 His family was of distant Croatian extraction 4 contradictory he was a cousin of the Croatian politician Vladko Macek citation needed Education EditAfter graduating from the grammar school at Drohobycz in 1910 he attended the philosophy faculty of Lwow University where he studied Polish philology 3 i e language and literature Among his tutors were the renowned Polish philologists Wilhelm Bruchnalski pl and Jozef Kallenbach 3 He also attended lectures by Kazimierz Twardowski 2 During his studies he served in the Strzelec paramilitary organization in which he received basic military training After the outbreak of World War I Maczek interrupted his studies hoping to join Jozef Pilsudski s Polish Legions but instead was drafted into the Austro Hungarian Army citation needed World War I EditAfter receiving a brief officer training Maczek was sent to the Italian Front of World War I Initially an NCO in the Tyrolean Regiment 2 of the Imperial and Royal Army he was promoted to second lieutenant in 1916 and then in 1918 to lieutenant As the only Polish battalion commander in Austria Hungary s Alpine regiments Maczek gained experience in mountain warfare which proved valuable in his later career citation needed Poland s borders EditOn 11 November 1918 after receiving news of the Armistice Maczek disbanded his battalion and returned to the newly reborn Poland Three days later he arrived at Krosno where he joined the Polish Army Assigned the command of a Krosno battalion Maczek began a limited offensive against the forces of the West Ukrainian People s Republic ZUNR with the aim of relieving his besieged hometown However due to insufficient support after initial successes at Ustrzyki Chyrow and Felsztyn the Polish offensive got bogged down and the Polish Ukrainian War turned into trench warfare for the rest of the winter citation needed In April 1919 Maczek was withdrawn from his unit and became the organizer and commander of the so called flying company Polish lotna kompania as part of Gen Aleksandrowicz s 4th Infantry Division This unit created on Maczek s initiative was modelled after the German Sturmbataillone of World War I and was highly mobile with horse drawn vehicles in the singular taczanka podwoda from Austrian Army depots and well equipped with heavy machine guns The unit was formed mostly from battle hardened troops of the Krosno battalion and its combat value was well above the average of the Polish Army of the time Hence it served in a firefighter capacity plugging holes that appeared in defensive lines but also fighting with distinction in the Polish spring offensive It took part in some of the heaviest fighting of the war including the battles for Drohobycz Stanislawow Buczacz and finally the ZUNR capital Stryj citation needed After the end of the Polish Ukrainian fighting Maczek was confirmed in the rank of major with seniority from 1 June 1919 He was then attached to General Iwaszkiewicz pl s Polish 2nd Army as a staff officer Bored with staff duties Maczek repeatedly asked his superiors to give him command over a front line unit His wish was fulfilled only after the start of the Polish Bolshevik War when the 2nd Army suffered a defeat in initial clashes with Semyon Budyonny s 1st Cavalry Army In Jaroslaw Maczek formed a new flying rifle battalion mostly composed of fresh recruits and horseless uhlans Despite insufficient training the unit was moved to the front and Maczek again acted as a firefighter moving his unit quickly to wherever it was needed His unit covered the retreat of the Polish forces at Mosty Wielkie after which it was attached to Gen Juliusz Rommel s 1st Cavalry Division It took part in the Polish assault on Warez near Zamosc a tactical counter assault on the rear of Budyonny s advancing Cossacks directly preceding the victorious battle of Komarow After the end of hostilities Maczek s battalion was officially named after him although it was disbanded shortly after the signing of the treaty of Riga citation needed Interwar years EditMaczek decided not to resume his studies at Lwow University and remained in active service Between 1921 and 1923 he commanded an infantry battalion within the Lwow based 26th Infantry Regiment On 1 August 1923 he was promoted to lieutenant colonel and sent to the Higher Military School in Warsaw He graduated the following year and served until 1927 as head of Section II intelligence in Lwow Later that year he moved to Grodno where he became deputy commander of the 76th Infantry Regiment In 1929 after finishing his training he became commander of the Grodno based 81st Infantry Regiment holding that post until 1934 During that time on 1 January 1931 he was promoted to colonel In 1935 he was transferred to Czestochowa where he became commander of infantry practically deputy commander of the whole division in the 7th Infantry Division In October 1938 Maczek s experience as a commander of flying troops received recognition from his superiors and he was given command of the Polish 10th Motorized Cavalry Brigade the first fully motorized formation in the Polish Army September 1939 EditOn the outbreak of war in September 1939 the 10th Motorized Cavalry Brigade was attached to the Krakow Army 5 defending Lesser Poland and Silesia Equipped with only light tanks and tankettes and with only one artillery battery of just eight heavy cannons the brigade went into battle on the first day of war After the Battle of Jordanow Maczek s unit faced the entire German XVIII Corps of Gen Eugen Beyer and successfully shielded the southern flank of the Polish forces along the Beskids Supported by only a few battalions of Border Guards and National Defence troops Maczek s motorized brigade faced two Panzer divisions 5 4th Light Division under von Hubicki and 2nd Panzer Division under Veiel as well as the 3rd Mountain Division under Eduard Dietl For five days Maczek s brigade fought bravely and efficiently slowing the pace of the German Blitzkrieg to a bloody crawl despite numerical and technical superiority the Germans were unable to make more than 10 kilometres headway per day Maczek s men took maximum advantage of the mountainous terrain halting many German attacks and occasionally counter attacking However after the front of the Krakow Army was broken to the north of the brigade s position Maczek s formation was pulled out of the front line The brigade then fought as a screening unit defending the bridges and fords in Lesser Poland until it arrived at Lwow and joined the city s defences It formed a mobile reserve during the battle for Lwow allowing other Polish units to withdraw towards the Romanian Bridgehead However the plan was made obsolete by the invasion of Poland by the Soviet Union on 17 September After two days Marshal of Poland Edward Rydz Smigly ordered the brigade to cross the Hungarian border Maczek s brigade was interned in Hungary Although the unit had lost about half of its men it had not been defeated in open combat and therefore gained respect even from the enemy It is considered to be the only Polish unit not to have lost a single battle in 1939 Maczek was not only esteemed by his superiors but also loved by his soldiers who referred to him as Baca pl a traditional Polish highlanders name for a shepherd France 1940 Edit Stanislaw Maczek 1944 After the end of the September campaign Maczek made it to France where he joined the re created Polish Army and was promoted to the rank of brigadier general He was made the commanding officer of the Polish military camp in Coetquidan He then prepared a detailed report on the workings of German Blitzkrieg tactics and possible precautions against it This report was however completely disregarded by the French general staff the Germans captured it unopened citation needed He also started gathering any 10th Brigade veterans who had reached France in two camps in Paimpont and Campeneac His aim was to preserve the integrity of his former unit and prevent the conscription of some of the best trained Polish soldiers into standard infantry formations where their experience would probably have been wasted However the French command was initially not interested in the formation of a Polish armoured unit and the Polish 10th Armoured Cavalry Brigade received almost no equipment It was not until March 1940 that Maczek received a dozen obsolete FT 17 tanks for training plus a few dozen cars and motorcycles Everything changed when Germany invaded France in the spring of 1940 by simply bypassing the Maginot Line General Maczek s unit suddenly received all the equipment it requested under one condition they had to go into action immediately That proved impossible because many of Polish soldiers had no experience with the new French equipment and there was no time for training exercises General Maczek decided instead to lead a small force of his best trained men hoping that the rest of his unit would join them later That small force was called the 10th Armoured Cavalry Brigade Polish 10 Brygada Kawalerii Pancernej in honour of the Black Brigade from 1939 On 6 June 10th Brigade had one tank battalion two strong motorized cavalry squadrons one anti tank battery and one anti aircraft battery It was attached to the French 4th Army near Reims and ordered to cover its left flank 6 However Maczek s unit was much too weak to achieve success against German armoured divisions Polish soldiers managed to cover only one retreating French infantry division by attacking German forces in Champaubert Montgivroux Later the brigade had to withdraw with the rest of the French troops and joined the French XXIII Corps On 16 June the brigade attacked by night the town of Montbard over the Burgundy Canal Maczek s soldiers achieved complete surprise and took many German prisoners However by then the brigade was fighting alone with the French units on both flanks either routed or in retreat There were no French forces to take advantage of that victory and the decimated Polish unit found itself surrounded and without fuel On 18 June Maczek decided to destroy unusable equipment and withdraw on foot Later that day he had to split the remnants of his brigade into small groups so they could pass through the enemy lines Many of Maczek s men including the general himself found their way through Vichy France North Africa and Portugal to the United Kingdom where a Polish armored unit was recreated while others joined the Polish and French resistance organizations in France and Belgium Maczek relocated to London citation needed Scotland EditInitially the British high command wanted to use the recreated Polish Army solely for defence of the Scottish coastline between Aberdeen and Edinburgh and the veterans of the Polish tank formations who arrived to the UK were pressed into the Polish 2nd Rifle Brigade under General Rudolf Orlicz Dreszer However immediately on Maczek s arrival the idea was abandoned and General Wladyslaw Sikorski managed to persuade the British government to create instead a Polish armoured unit 7 After two years of training at the Blairgowrie training ground in February 1942 General Maczek formed the 1st Polish Armoured Division Initially serving in defence of the Scottish coast between Montrose and the Firth of Forth the division was equipped by the British authorities with Churchill and M4 Sherman tanks in preparation for the Normandy landings To Germany Edit British Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery in conversation with Major General Stanislaw Maczek during his visit to the 1st Polish Armoured Division Headquarters in Breda 25 November 1944 Towards the end of July 1944 the Polish 1st Armoured Division was transferred to Normandy where it was to prove its worth during the 1944 invasion of Normandy Attached to the First Canadian Army Maczek s men entered combat on 8 August seeing service during Operation Totalize The division twice suffered attacks of friendly fire from U S Army Air Force aircraft yet achieved a brilliant victory against the Wehrmacht in the battles for Mont Ormel Hill 262 and the town of Chambois In this series of offensive and defensive operations which came to be known as the Battle of Falaise 14 German Wehrmacht and SS divisions were trapped in the huge Chambois pocket and destroyed Maczek s division had the crucial role of closing the pocket to block the escape route of the German divisions 8 Senior commanders of the First Canadian Army May 1945 Seated from the left Stanislaw Maczek Polish Army Guy Simonds Harry Crerar Charles Foulkes Bert Hoffmeister Standing from the left Ralph Keefler Bruce Matthews Harry Foster Robert Moncel standing in for Chris Vokes Stuart Rawlins British Army After this decisive battle Maczek s Division continued to spearhead the Allied drive across the battlefields of northern France Belgium the Netherlands and finally Germany During its progress it liberated Ypres Oostnieuwkerke Roeselare Tielt Ruislede and Ghent in Belgium Coincidentally the Polish word maczek means poppy in English the symbol of remembrance associated with the area around Ypres in the First World War Thanks to an outflanking manoeuvre it proved possible to free Breda in the Netherlands after a hard fight but without incurring losses in the town s population A petition on behalf of 40 000 inhabitants of Breda resulted in Maczek being made an honorary Dutch citizen after the war The Division s finest hour came when its forces accepted the surrender of the German naval base of Wilhelmshaven taking captive the entire garrison together with some 200 vessels of Hitler s Kriegsmarine Maczek commanded the 1st Armoured Division until the end of European hostilities and was promoted to major general After the capitulation of Germany he went on to command the Polish I Corps and became commanding officer of all Polish forces in the United Kingdom until their demobilization in 1947 Exile Edit Maczek s grave Polish cemetery Breda Netherlands After the war Maczek was stripped of Polish citizenship by the Communist government of the Polish People s Republic and thus had to remain in Britain He left the army on 9 September 1948 9 but was for some reason denied a general s pension by the British government 9 As a result Maczek worked as a bartender at an Edinburgh hotel until the 1960s 10 General Stanislaw Maczek Bench outside Edinburgh Council Chambers Although living in the United Kingdom General Stanislaw Maczek had a strong connection to the Netherlands Besides being a regional hero to the areas he liberated in World War II he was awarded honorary citizenship of the city of Breda Recently acquired archive documents show that the Polish general secretly received a yearly allowance from the Dutch government for the rest of his life He got his allowance because Mayor Claudius Prinsen of Breda was worried in 1950 11 after receiving information that Maczek was in a difficult financial situation The Polish general was doing unskilled labor to make ends meet He also had to take care of a chronically ill daughter who needed costly treatment 12 The mayor of Breda informed the Dutch national government that a war hero was in financial need He made an appeal to the government to help the man that liberated the Netherlands 13 The government decided quickly and awarded Maczek an indexed general s pension which was paid for by the Ministry of Foreign affairs from a secret budget The Dutch government did not want this to be made public due to its sensitive nature 14 In the Cold War period announcing that the Dutch were paying a non communist Polish ex general would certainly strain diplomatic relations with the communist Polish government and the Soviet Union Not to mention it would confront the British government with a not so proud moment in their history Uninformed about his improved financial situation the Dutch public responded at once in 1965 when news came that his chronically ill daughter needed costly medical treatment in Spain The Dutch population raised a substantial amount of money following a national radio broadcast for the Maczek family helping out the general that liberated them 12 In 1972 an appeal was made by the Poolse Katholieke Vereniging in Nederland to the Dutch Parliament This organization became the voice for the remaining Polish veterans in the Netherlands and asked for compensation of pension lost due to the aftermath of the war 15 The Dutch Ministry of Defence did not meet this request based upon the Algemene Militaire Pensioenwet 1966 which stipulates that non Dutch persons needed to have been associated with the Dutch Armed Forces during the war period in order to be entitled to a wartime pension 12 16 In 1989 the last Polish Communist Government of Prime Minister Mieczyslaw Rakowski issued a public apology to the General and in 1994 he was presented with Poland s highest state decoration the Order of the White Eagle 17 Lieutenant General Stanislaw Maczek died on 11 December 1994 at the age of 102 18 According to his last wish he was laid to rest among his soldiers at the Polish military cemetery in Breda the Netherlands 18 Each year during Liberation Day festivities Breda is visited by a large Polish contingent and the city devotes part of the festivities to the fallen Polish soldiers Many artefacts and memorabilia belonging to Maczek and the 1st Polish Armoured Division are on display in the Polish Institute and Sikorski Museum in London In 2018 a bronze statue was unveiled in honour of General Maczek in the quadrangle of the Edinburgh City Chambers A footpath crossing Bruntsfield Links which leads to the general s former home in Arden Street in Marchmont has been named General Maczek Walk 19 20 Honours and awards Edit Order of the White Eagle 1994 Knight s Cross of the Order of Virtuti Militari Gold Cross of the Order of Virtuti Militari Silver Cross of the Order of Virtuti Militari Grand Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta Commander s Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta Cross of Valour Gold Cross of Merit with Swords Grand Officer of the Order of the Crown with Palms Belgium Croix de Guerre with Palms Belgium Commandeur of the Legion of Honour France Croix de Guerre with Palms France Medaille commemorative de la guerre 1939 1945 France Commander of the Order of Orange Nassau Netherlands Order of the Star of Romania IV Class Romania Companion of the Order of the Bath United Kingdom Distinguished Service Order United Kingdom Gallery Edit General Maczek s home 1948 94 Marchmont district of Edinburgh Scotland General Maczek Walk Bruntsfield Links Edinburgh Scotland Emblem of Polish 1st Armoured Division Polish Institute and Sikorski Museum London Polish 1st Armoured Division Memorial Normandy France Polish 1st Armoured Division Memorial Tielt Belgium Street named after General Maczek Aalter Brug Belgium General Maczek Museum Breda Netherlands General Maczek Memorial by Karin Hardonk General Maczek Square Stadskanaal Netherlands Bust of General Maczek Krakow Poland General Maczek Memorial Gdansk Poland General Maczek Memorial Warsaw Poland General Maczek memorial plaque Warsaw Poland Polish 1st Armoured Division Memorial Warsaw Poland Maczek quotation on reverse of Memorial The Polish soldier fights for the freedom of all nations but dies only for Poland In popular culture EditMaczek as the leader of the 10th Motorized Cavalry Brigade is a historical figure in the novel A Witness to Gallantry An American Spy in Poland 1939 In The Death of the Fronsac by Neal Ascherson a Polish officer Maurycy Szczucki serves with General Maczek in World War II After the war Szczucki returns to Edinburgh where he discovers the impoverished Maczek working as a barman in the Learmonth Hotel The General is frequently visited by old comrades who salute him before they order a whisky 21 See also EditList of Poles Polish contribution to World War II Polish Armed Forces in the West Western betrayal World War II Behind Closed Doors Stalin the Nazis and the West Poles in the United Kingdom Great Polish Map of Scotland Stanislaw SosabowskiReferences Edit Astonishing story of unsung WWII hero premieres in captivating new documentary Retrieved 4 April 2020 a b c Mieczkowski Zbigniew 2004 The Soldiers of General Maczek in World War II p 16 ISBN 83 914145 8 2 a b c Editor Zbigniew Mieczkowski The Soldiers of General Maczek in World War II ISBN 83 914145 8 2 Page 16 Mieczkowski Zbigniew 2004 The Soldiers of General Maczek in World War II p 17 ISBN 83 914145 8 2 a b Krzysztof Barbarski Polish Armour 1939 1945 ISBN 0 85045 467 0 Page 8 Stanislaw Mikolajczyk The Pattern of Soviet Domination Sampson Low Marston amp Co 1948 Page 8 Garlinski Jozef Poland in the Second World War p 235 ISBN 0 333 39258 2 John Keegan Six Armies in Normandy ISBN 0 14 005293 3 Chapter 7 A Polish Battlefield a b The Poles in Britain 1940 2000 ed Peter Stachura Chapter 6 by Evan McGilvray p 64 ISBN 0 7146 8444 9 The Poles in Britain 1940 2000 ibid p 54 National Archives Netherlands NL HaNA Buitenlandse Zaken Code Archief 65 74 2 05 313 inv nr 25330 brief van Prinsen aan de Nederlandse ambassadeur in Groot Brittannie 6 maart 1950 a b c The Polish veterans after World War II 6 January 2016 National Archives Netherlands NL HaNA Buitenlandse Zaken Code Archief 65 74 2 05 313 inv nr 25330 Intern memorandum A P Hoevelaak t b v dossier Maczek 726 2 onderwerp Radio aktie ten behoeve van dochter Generaal Maczek National Archives Netherlands NL HaNA Buitenlandse Zaken Code Archief 65 74 2 05 313 inv nr 25330 Verzoek van ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken Mr Simons aan Binnenlandse Zaken omtrent de goedkeuring en geheimhouding van het verlenen van jaargeld aan generaal Maczek 21 November 1951 National Archives Netherlands NL HaNA Defensie Militair Personeel 2 13 5372 inv nr 165 Verzoekschrift van de Poolse Katholieke Vereniging in Nederland aan de voorzitter van de Tweede Kamer der Staten Generaal 23 juni 1972 National Archives Netherlands NL HaNA Defensie Militair Personeel 2 13 5372 inv nr 165 Antwoord van het Ministerie van Defensie op het verzoekschrift van de Poolse Katholieke Vereniging in Nederland 15 September 197 Binder David 14 December 1994 Stanislaw Maczek 102 General Who Led Poles in World War II The New York Times Retrieved 24 May 2010 a b The Poles in Britain 1940 2000 ibid p 67 Statue plan for Polish WW2 general who worked in Capital Edinburgh Evening news 12 March 2017 Brown Graham VIDEO Statue of war hero General Maczek installed thanks to late Angus peer s memorial campaign The Courier Retrieved 18 July 2019 Ascherson Neal 2017 The Death of the Fronsac Head of Zeus ISBN 9781786694393 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stanislaw Maczek OpusMedia fr Captain Kazimierz Duda 1st Polish Armoured Division C K M Montormel evl pl History of 1st Polish Armoured Division Montormel evl pl 1st Polish Armoured Division in the battle of Falaise New research on Maczeks post war situation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stanislaw Maczek amp oldid 1131834990, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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