1st Polish Armoured Division
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Polish 1st Armoured Div Patch
| Table of contents |
|
2 Organization during 1944-45 3 See also: |
History
In the early stages the division was stationed in Scotland and guarded approximately 200 kilometres of British coast.
Normandy
By the end of July 1944 the division has been transferred to Normandy. Last elements arrived on August 1 and the unit was attached to 1st Canadian Army. It entered combat on August 8 during the Operation Totalize. The division twice suffered serious bombings by Allied aircraft yet it achieved a brilliant victory against the Wehrmacht in the battles for Mont Ormel, 262 Hill and the town of Chamboise. This series of offensive and defensive operations came to be known as the Battle of Falaise in which a large number of German Wehrmacht and SS divisions were trapped in a huge pocket and subsequently destroyed. Maczek's division had the crucial role of closing the pocket at the escape route of those German divisions. Hence the fighting was absolutely desperate and the 2nd Polish Armoured Regiment and 24th Polish Lancers Regiment took the brunt of German attacks trying to break free from the pocket. Surrounded and running out of ammo they withstood all the incessant attacks of multiple fleeing panzer divisions for 48 hours until they were relieved.
Belgium and Holland
After the Allied armies broke out from Normandy, Polish 1st Armoured Division pursued Germans along the coasts of the English Channel. It liberated, among others, the towns of Ypres, Ghent and Passchendale. A successful outflanking manouevre planned and performed by gen. Maczek allowed liberation of the city of Breda without any civilian casualties (October 29, 1944). It spent the winter of ’44-’45 on the south bank of the river Rhine, guarding a sector around Moerdijk in the Netherlands. In early 1945 it was transferred to the province of Overijssel and started to push along with the Allies along the Dutch-German border, liberating the eastern parts of the provinces of Drenthe and Groningen with towns such as Emmen, Coevorden and Stadskanaal.
Germany
In April 1945 1st Armoured entered the Reich in the area of Ems. On May 6 Division seized Kriegsmarine naval base in Wilhelmshaven, where gen. Maczek accepted the capitulaton of the fortress, naval base, Ostfriesland Fleet and more than 10 infantry divisions. There the Division ended the war and was joined by the Polish 1st Independent Parachute Brigade.
Organization during 1944-45
; 10th Polish Armoured Cavalry Brigade (10 Brygada Kawalerii Pancernej) - col. T. Majewski:
- 1st Polish Armoured Regiment (1 pułk pancerny) - lt.col. Antoni Stefanowicz
- 2nd Polish Armoured Regiment (2 pułk pancerny) - lt.col. S. Koszustki
- 24th Polish Lancers Regiment (Armoured; 24 pułk ułanow im. Hetmana Żołkiewskiego) - lt.col. J. Kański
- 10th Polish Dragoons Regiment (10 pułk dragonow zmotoryzowanych) - lt.col. Władysław Zgorzelski
- 1st Polish Highland Battalion (1 batalion Strzelcow Podhalańskich) - lt.col. K. Complak
- 8th Polish Rifle Battalion (8 batalion strzelcow) - lt.col. Aleksander Nowaczyński
- 9th Polish Rifle Battalion (9 batalion strzelcow flandryjskich) - lt.col. Zygmunt Szydłowski
- 1st Polish Independent HMG Squadron (samodzielna kompania ckm.) - mjr M. Kochanowski
- 1st Polish Motorized Artillery Regiment (1 pułk artylerii motorowej) - lt.col. J. Krautwald
- 2nd Polish Motorized Artillery Regiment (2 pułk artylerii motorowej) - lt.col. K. Meresch
- 1st Polish Anti-Tank Regiment (formed in 1945 from smaller units) (1 pułk artylerii przeciwpancernej) - mjr R. Dowbor
- 1st Polish Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment (1 pułk artylerii przeciwlotniczej) - lt.col. O. Eminowicz, later mjr W. Berendt
- 10th Polish Mounted Rifle Regiment (10 pułk strzelcow) (recce) - mjr J. Maciejowski
- HQ, Military Police,
- engineers (saperzy dywizyjni) - lt.col. J. Dorantt
- signals (1 batalon łączności) - lt.col. J. Grajkowski
- administration, military court, church, reserve squadrons, medical service
Numbers
- 885 - officers and NCO's
- 15,210 - soldiers
- 381 - tanks (mostly M4 Sherman)
- 473 - pieces of artillery (mostly motorized)
- 4050 - cars, lorries, utility vehicles, artillery carriers
See also: