104th Company of Syndicalists explained

Unit Name:104th Company of Syndicalists
Native Name:104 Kompania Syndykalistów
Start Date:1943
End Date:September 6, 1944
Branch: Home Army
Size:Company
Command Structure:Bończa Battalion
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Battles:World War II
Notable Commanders:Kazimierz Puczyński

104 Company of Syndicalists (Polish: 104 Kompania Syndykalistów) was a military unit created by the Union of Polish Syndicalists (Związek Syndykalistów Polskich), which participated in the Warsaw Uprising.

Formation and structure

The 104th company was formed within the Home Army in 1943, on the basis of the combat unit of the Polish Syndicalists Union. Initially, the unit functioned as the 1028th platoon of the 1st District, the center of the Home Army.[1] After being reformed into a company, it became part of the 1st Grouping of the 1st Region. Before the uprising, it was separated from the grouping and constituted the reserve of the commander of the 1st Region in the following composition:

It consisted of three assault platoons, a reserve platoon, and two labor platoons. The assault platoons were commanded by the following officers:

On July 30, the company received 12 Sidolówek grenades from the District command. The company headquarters was located in the Szlenkier curtain factory at ul. Świętojerska 10. On the first day of the Uprising, before 17.00 on August 1, sixty soldiers arrived - including fifteen women - arrived at the HQ. The armament was: 5 pistols, 200 rounds of ammunition, two revolvers and 12 grenades.[2]

Participation in the Warsaw Uprising

First days

At first, the Company had around 50 soldiers, but it quickly grew in size, with numerous volunteers joining. On the first day of the Uprising, it took part in two failed attacks on a school located at Barokowa street, in which a German hospital was located. Also, it attacked the Polish Securities Printing House building, capturing it on the night of August 1/2.[3]

On the third day of the Uprising, it had some 360 soldiers, who, however, lacked weapons. The situation improved when the Poles captured Krasiński Palace and seized German guns and grenades as well as 42 German POWs.

The Company was not only engaged in fighting.[4] It had its own field bakery, which made bread, distributed to civilian population, as well as a field hospital, led by doctor Adam Krakowski. Furthermore, it had its own press service, consisting of members of the Union of Polish Syndicalists. It published two magazines - Iskra and Syndykalista.

After heavy fights in the first weeks of August 1944, the Company became the best-equipped Polish unit in the area of the Old Town.[4] It participated in capture of the PASTA skyscraper and in skirmishes around Warsaw’s Royal Castle. Then, under pressure from the Germans, it organized defence of the Old Town, including St. John’s Cathedral.

In the second half of August, the Company created its headquarters in the so-called Professors’ House, at 12 Brzozowa Street, where it stayed until general retreat from the district. During several skirmishes back then, the Company used red-black flags of Anarcho-syndicalists, which was at odds with the Home Army’s Military police, which demanded replacement of the flag with the Polish one and change the name of the Company into 104 Company of the Home Army. It has been estimated that losses (KIA, MIA and WIA) of the unit reached more than 50% of its personnel.

Final days

In late August 1944 the company, numbering only around 100 soldiers, evacuated through the sewage canals to the Warszawa-Śródmieście (Warsaw city center). There, it became part of the Boncza Battalion, and took part in fighting in the district of Powiśle, during which the Company was further depleted. The Assault Platoon, with 26 men managed to get to Czerniaków, where it became engaged in heavy fighting. In early September, parts of the company carried out rearguard actions during the evacuation of Warsaw’s Old Town.[5]

On September 15, 1944, three soldiers of the company managed to get across to the eastern bank of the Vistula. Later on more men got across, where they were conscripted into the First Polish Army.

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Oddziały Powstania Warszawskiego . Instytut Wydawniczy Związków Zawodowych. . 1988 . 95 . pl.
  2. Book: Rozwadowski, Piotr. Wielka Ilustrowana Encyklopedia Powstania Warszawskiego. I . . 2005 . 578 . pl.
  3. Attack on the Polish Securities Printing House . https://web.archive.org/web/20120221233550/http://www.warsawvoice.pl/WVpage/pages/article.php/11893/article . 21 February 2012 . 20 July 2006. . Polish Interpress Agency . . 17 May 2012. 0860-7591. 22723790.
  4. Web site: Syndykaliści w Powstaniu Warszawskim | Centrum Informacji Anarchistycznej . Cia.bzzz.net . 2006-07-31 . 2012-05-17 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090908021427/http://cia.bzzz.net/syndykalisci_w_powstaniu_warszawskim . 2009-09-08 . dead .
  5. Web site: Warszawa - oficjalny portal stolicy Polski - wersja BETA . Um.warszawa.pl . 2012-05-17 . 2012-04-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120419060854/http://www.um.warszawa.pl/news/powstanie/english/33.htm . dead .