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At that time it consisted of two infantry brigades (13th and 14th), and four infantry regiments (25th, 26th, 11th and 27th), as well as two artillery brigades (7th Light Artillery, 7th Heavy Artillery). The division took part in shielding of the Polish borders during the Polish–Ukrainian War of 1919.
2nd Pomerania Artillery Brigade, in Choszczno (Tactical Ballistic Missiles) 5th Mazurska Engineer Brigade, in Szczecin; 6th Warsaw Cannon Artillery Brigade, in Toruń; 7th Howitzer Artillery Brigade, in Toruń; 2nd Pomerania Chemical Defence Regiment, in Grudziądz; 4th Łużycki Signal Regiment, in Bydgoszcz; 14th Sudecki Anti-tank Artillery ...
39th Inf.Div., Motorised Bde, Sandomierz Group, Komorowski's Cavalry Group Małopolska Army (Armia Małopolska) Kazimierz Fabrycy See:Karpaty Army above Warszawa Army (Armia Warszawa) Juliusz Rómmel, Walerian Czuma, Wiktor Thommée Polish Army in France (Wojsko Polskie we Francji) Władysław Sikorski 1st Grenadier, 2nd Rifle, 10th Armoured ...
1st Motorized Infantry Brigade (Polish)(East) 2nd Armoured Brigade (2. Brygada Pancerna) - (65 x T-34/85) 3rd Armoured Brigade; 4th Armoured Brigade; 24th SP-artillery regiment (21 x SU-85) 25th SP-artillery regiment (21 x ISU-122) 27th SP-artillery regiment (21 x SU-76M) 2nd mortar regiment; 26th AA-artillery regiment; Rocket artillery battalion
The Inspector Land Forces, a two-star, major-general equivalent, reports to Commander, Armed Forces General Command, a three-star, general broni. Separately and without seemingly any responsibility to the Inspector Land Forces, the divisions of the Polish Land Forces also report, separately, to the Commander, Armed Forces General Command.
7th Company: Księcia Janusza Street; 8th Company: Gizów – Redutowa streets; 9th Company (reserve): western side of the Cross-City Line; Artillery: 3rd Battery, 41st Field Artillery Regiment (2 guns, 75 mm): on both sides of Wolska Street, behind the positions of the 8th Company, near a barricade across the street at Gizów Street.
The Army was created on March 23, 1939, to defend Toruń and Bydgoszcz and to carry out delaying actions in the so-called "Polish Corridor". It was led by Lt.-Gen. Władysław Bortnowski and consisted of five infantry divisions, two National Defence brigades and one cavalry brigade.
The Centre was to retrain officers and train tank drivers, armoured car drivers, gunners, self-propelled and tractor artillery drivers, and radio operators. The trained personnel was to be sent to the 7th Armoured Regiment for further specialist training according to the training programmes prepared by Lt. Col Szostak.