- Jan Jagmin-Sadowski
Jan Jagmin-Sadowski (born April 24, 1895 in
Grojec , died October 5, 1977 inWarsaw ), was a general of thePolish Army in the interbellum period, also member ofJózef Piłsudski 's legions.In the early XX century, Sadowski studied mechanics at the
Lviv Polytechnic , and there he got in touch with Polish independence movement. He became a member of thePolish Socialist Party - Revolutionary Fraction, as well as Polish Rifles and theSokol movement. After outbreak of World War I, he volunteered to the 1st Legionnaire Rifles Regiment. In 1914 he distinguished himself in battles of Anielin and Łaski, next year he fought at Łowiczowek, Konary and Jozefowek. In 1916, as soldier of theI Brigade of the Polish Legions , he fought in the bloody battle ofKostiuchnówka . After theOath crisis , Sadowski, together with other officers, was interned in a prisoner of war camp inBeniaminów .In the
Second Polish Republic , Sadowski, then a colonel, was an instructor at the School of Infantry Officers in Warsaw. In 1919 he entered the Polish Army Headquarters' School in Warsaw, then was sent on a two-year course toEcole Superieure de Guerre in Paris. After graduation, Sadowski was promoted to major and became commandant of the elite 15. "Wolves" Infantry Regiment inDęblin . Later on, in 1931, he was named commandant of thePolish 23rd Infantry Division , stationed inKatowice .On March 19, 1939, Sadowski was promoted to general, and took command of the freshly created
Upper Silesian Fortified Area . During thePolish September Campaign , he was commandant of the Âlàsk Operational Group, which was part of theKraków Army . His units were engaged in heavy fights with advancingWehrmacht , especially in the area ofMikołów andWyry . However, the Germans managed to break through Polish defence and Sadowski ordered his men to retreat behind thePrzemsza . In mid-September 1939Edward Rydz-Śmigły renamed his Group into Operational Group "Jagmin". His troops participated in the defence ofKraków , then fought in the area ofKielce and finally, in theBattle of Tomaszów Lubelski , where they were defeated.After the campaign, Sadowski was kept in a POW camp in
Wollenberg , where he spent the war. In 1946 he returned to Poland, where he was forced to move to reserve. In 1976 his name once again became famous, when Sadowski, protesting against conferringVirtuti Militari toLeonid Brezhnev , together with other war weterans, left his own Virtuti Militari at theJasna Góra Monastery . He authored several books, including "Dzialania Grupy Operacyjnej "Slask" 1-3 wrzesnia 1939 r." ("Activities of the Slask Operational Group, September 1-3, 1939").
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