- Witold Urbanowicz
Witold Urbanowicz (
March 30 1908 -August 17 ,1996 ) was a Polishfighter ace of theWorld War II . According to the official record, Witold Urbanowicz was the second best Polish fighter ace, with 17 confirmed wartime kills and 1 probable, not counting his pre-war victory. He was awarded with several decorations, among others theVirtuti Militari and britishDistinguished Flying Cross (United Kingdom) . He also published several books ofmemoir s.Biography
Urbanowicz was born in Olszanka, a village near
Augustów . In 1930, he entered acadet flying school inDęblin , graduating in 1932. Later, he completed an advanced pilotage course to become a fighter pilot. In the 1930s, he flew in fighter squadrons No. 113, then No. 111.In August 1936, flying an
PZL P.11 a, he shot down a Sovietreconnaissance plane which had crossed into Polish airspace. He was officially reprimanded and unofficially congratulated by his superior officer and, as "punishment", was transferred to an air force training school in Deblin where he was nicknamed "Cobra ".World War II
During the Invasion of Poland in 1939, Urbanowicz was in an improvised Ulez Group, comprising of flying instructors. They were flying obsolete
PZL P.7 a fighters, coveringDęblin andUłęż airfields. Despite a few encounters with enemy airplanes, the Polish fighters (which could barely match the speed of German bombers) were not able to shoot down any enemy planes. On September 8, the school was evacuated from Ulez and Dęblin.He was next ordered to go with the cadets to
Romania , where they were told to wait for British and French aircraft, which were to be sent there, but it turned out to be just a rumour. Urbanowicz returned to Poland to continue to fight, but after the Soviet invasion on Poland, he was captured by a Sovietirregular unit. The same day, he managed to escape with two cadets, crossed the Romanian border yet again, and eventually found his way to France where, after the fall of Poland, a new Polish army was being formed.While in France, he and a group of other Polish pilots were invited to join the
Royal Air Force inGreat Britain . After re-training on British aircraft, he was assigned toNo. 145 Squadron RAF , and became operational onAugust 4 ,1940 . On August 8, he shot down his firstMesserschmitt Bf 109 fighter and onAugust 12 , aJunkers Ju 88 .On
August 21 , he was transferred to the soon-to-be-famous Polish No. 303 Squadron, flying aHawker Hurricane as a Flight "A" commander. OnSeptember 6 , he shot down another Bf 109. OnSeptember 7 , he became asquadron leader , afterZdzisław Krasnodębski was injured. OnSeptember 26 , he was officially credited with shooting down four aircraft: two Ju 88s, a Bf 109 and aMesserschmitt Bf 110 , and another four three days later: three Bf 109s and oneDornier Do 17 . Despite his success, Urbanowicz was never popular at Polish headquarters, and onOctober 21 , he was forced to hand over the squadron command toZdzisław Henneberg . During theBattle of Britain , he had 15 confirmed kills and 1 probable, which made him the top Polish ace and in the top ten of Allied aces of the battle.Between
April 15 1941 , andJune 1 1941 , he commanded the 1st Polish Fighter Wing. Then he was withdrawn to staff work. In June 1941, he was assigned the 2nd AirAttaché in the Polish embassy in theUnited States .In September 1943, Urbanowicz accepted an offer to join the USAAF units in
China . OnOctober 23 , he joined the75th Fighter Squadron (Flying Tigers ). Flying aP-40 Warhawk , he took part in several combat missions. OnDecember 11 , he fought against six JapaneseMitsubishi Zero s and shot down two of them. According to his reports, he also shot other airplanes over China, and destroyed some on the ground, but those victories were not officially confirmed.In December 1943, he returned to the
United Kingdom , and later became anAir Attaché in the USA again.After the war
After the war, in 1946, he returned to Poland, but was arrested by the communist
Służba Bezpieczeństwa secret police as a suspectedspy . After his release, he fled to the USA. He lived inNew York City , working for American Airlines, Eastern Airlines and Republic Aviation. He retired in 1973. He visited Poland only in 1991, after the fall of communism and again in 1995, when he was promoted to the rank ofGeneral . He died in New York City onAugust 17 ,1996 ).External links
* http://www.chapshq.com/html_pages/witold_urbanowicz.htm
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