Independent Operational Group Polesie

Independent Operational Group Polesie

Independent Operational Group Polesie ("Samodzielna Grupa Operacyjna Polesie", SGO Polesie) was one of the Polish Army Corps (Operational Groups) that defended Poland during the Invasion of Poland in 1939. It was created on September 11 1939 and was commanded by general Franciszek Kleeberg. The SGO is most notable fighting in the battle of Kock, the last battle of the Invasion of Poland.WIEM Encyklopedia]

Tasks

Created by the orders of Polish Commander in Chief on 9th and 11th September due to German breakthroughs, the SGO was tasked with defending the region of Polesie (see also Polesie Voivodeship), defined by the lines of Muchawiec and Prypeć rivers, with the towns of Brześć (Brest) and Pińsk (where the SGO HQ was located). The SGO was to prevent Polish forces in the central Poland from being encircled from the east.

Operational history

From 14 September the units of the SGO faced the German XIX Panzer Corps under Heinz Guderian. Forces under general Konstanty Plisowski defended the town of Brześć (Brest) from 16 to 19 September and forces under colonel Adam Epler defend Kobryń from 16 to 18 September.

After the Soviet invasion of Poland on September 17, Kleeberg at first followed orders from Polish High Command and retreated towards Romanian border (see Romanian Bridgehead). On 22 September, cut off from his superiors, he decided to aid besieged Warsaw. As they were running low on supplies, Kleeberg decided to recapture the town of Dęblin, where Polish Army had large stores of supplies. On 28 September Warsaw capitulated; Kleeberg - at that time having crossed Bug river near Włodawa - decided that they units will advance west and organize large scale partisan warfare from local forest complexes near Świętokrzyskie Mountains. In the days of 29-30 September the units were engaged by the Soviet Red Army but were able to defeat them. From 2 October the SGO, at that point the last organized regular unit of the Polish Army, fought against the German forces of XIV Mechanized Corps in the battle of Kock. Despite immense German numerical superiority Polish forces were able to score several tactical victories; however they were increasingly running low on supplies (including ammunition). Hence on 5 October Kleeberg decided to capitulate; the fighting ended on the early hours of October 6. He was the last Polish general to capitulate in the Polish Defensive War; he is also considered one of the few Polish generals of the September 1939 campaign to have not been defeated in battle (along with Gen. Maczek).Ref_label|a|a|none

Not all of Polesie Group soldiers capitulated; many dispersed and continued guerilla warfare, most notably Henryk Dobrzański.

Organization

The SGO was commanded by general Franciszek Kleeberg, his chief of staff was colonel M. Łapicki. Kleeberg was taksed with organizing his group from various small units in Polesie region; most of them were either reserve and mobilizing or second line such as the National Defense units; the notable exception were the elite Border Protection Corps (KOP) units and the Riverine Flotilla of the Polish Navy.

On 14th September, when the group was engaged by German forces, it was composed of:
* "Kobryń Group" (seven infantry battalions) - under col. Adam Epler
* "Brześć Group" (five infantry battalions, two light tank companies, two armored trains under gen. Konstanty Plisowski
* "Drohiczyn Poleski Group" (three infantry battalions) - under col. Kazimierz Gorzkowski
* "Jasiołda Group" (one infantry battalion) - under mjr Ludwik Rau
*Riverine Flotilla of the Polish Navy

Over the next two weeks the group sustained casualties but also was reinforced by various units from the disintegrating Polish army, including defenders of the Sarny Fortified Area. The total strength of the SGO was 18,000 soldiers.

On 29th September, after reorganization, the group was composed of:
*Polish 50th Infantry Division (reserve, later nicknamed "Brzoza" after its commander) under col. Ottokar Brzoza-Brzezina
*Polish 60th Infantry Division (reserve, later nicknamed "Kobryń") under col. Adam Epler
*Improvised Cavalry Division "Zaza" (improvised, nicknamed "Zaza") under gen. Zygmunt Podhorski (mostly based on Podlaska Cavalry Brigade and Suwalska Cavalry Brigade from Independent Operational Group Narew)

Notes

a Note_label|a|a|none Another Polish commander with the reputation of undefeated, Stanisław Maczek, was promoted to from colonel to general only in November 1939.

External links

*pl icon [http://pl.wikisource.org/wiki/Ostatni_rozkaz_gen._Kleeberga_do_%C5%BCo%C5%82nierzy_SGO_%22Polesie%22 Final Order of General Keeberg to his soldiers]

References

:Inline: :General:
*Polish|Samodzielna Grupa Operacyjna Polesie|8 February 1939
*pl icon [http://portalwiedzy.onet.pl/53777,,,,armie_i_samodzielne_grupy_operacyjne_wojska_polskiego_1939,haslo.html Armie i samodzielne grupy operacyjne Wojska Polskiego 1939] WIEM Encyklopedia
*pl icon [http://www.1939.pl/organizacja/polska/inne_zwiazki.htm Inne związki operacyjne Wojska Polskiego powstałe po 1 września 1939]

Further reading

*Jan Wróblewski, "Samodzielna Grupa Operacyjna Polesie 1939", M.O.N., 1989, ISBN 8311076996

ee also


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Independent Operational Group Narew — Forces as of 31 August and German plan of attack. Forces as of 14 September with …   Wikipedia

  • Operational Group — For Serbian police Operational Group see Operational Group (Serbia). Operational Group (Polish: Grupa Operacyjna, abbreviated GO) was the highest level of tactical division of the Polish Army before and during World War II and the Invasion of… …   Wikipedia

  • Battle of Kock (1939) — Infobox Military Conflict conflict=Battle of Kock caption= partof=Invasion of Poland date=October 2 – October 6, 1939 place=Near Kock, Poland result=Polish tactical victory German strategic victory combatant1= combatant2= commander1=Franciszek… …   Wikipedia

  • Soviet invasion of Poland — This article is about the invasion in 1939. For the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1920, see Polish Soviet War. Soviet invasion of Poland Part of the invasion of Poland in World War II …   Wikipedia

  • Soviet invasion of Poland (1939) — Infobox Military Conflict conflict=Soviet invasion of Poland partof=the invasion of Poland in World War II place=Poland result=Soviet victory combatant1= combatant2= commander1= commander2=) strength1=Over 20,000Ref label|a|a|none 20… …   Wikipedia

  • Wilhelm Orlik-Rueckemann — (sometimes referred to as Wilhelm Rückemann ; 1894 1986) was a Polish general, military commander and one of the pioneers of armoured warfare in Poland. Biography Wilhelm Orlik Rueckemann was born August 1, 1894 in Lwów. In 1912 he started… …   Wikipedia

  • Franciszek Kleeberg — (February 1, 1888 in Tarnopol April 5, 1941 near Dresden) was a Polish general. He served in the Austro Hungarian Army before joining the Polish Legions in World War I and later the Polish Army. During the Germans Invasion of Poland he commanded… …   Wikipedia

  • Wilhelm Orlik-Rückemann — Born 1 August 1894 Lwów Died …   Wikipedia

  • List of World War II topics (I) — # I ll Remember April (film) # I Airborne Corps (United Kingdom) # I Armored Corps (United States) # I Canadian Corps # I Corps (Australia) # I Corps (France) # I Corps (Germany) # I Corps (United Kingdom) # I Corps (United States) # I Hua Huang… …   Wikipedia

  • Battle of Szack — Infobox Military Conflict conflict=Battle of Szack caption= partof=Invasion of Poland date=September 28, 1939 place=Szack, Poland (now Ukraine) result=Polish victory combatant1= combatant2= commander1=Unknown commander2= strength1=52nd Rifle… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”