- Source: 1939 in Poland
Political incumbents
On September 30, 1939, the last government of the Second Polish Republic which resided in Warsaw was dissolved. The government was originally designed on May 15, 1936, by president of Poland Ignacy Mościcki under prime minister Felicjan Sławoj Składkowski.
= Members of the government
=President of Poland – Ignacy Mościcki,
Prime Minister – Felicjan Sławoj Składkowski,
Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Treasury – Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski,
Minister of Foreign Affairs – Józef Beck,
Minister of Justice – Witold Grabowski,
Minister of Military Affairs – Tadeusz Kasprzycki,
Minister of Agriculture – Juliusz Poniatowski,
Minister of Communication – Juliusz Ulrych,
Minister of Post Office and Telegraphs – Emil Kaliński,
Minister of Religious Beliefs and Public Enlightenment – Wojciech Świętosławski,
Minister of Industry and Trade – Antoni Roman.
= Other personalities
=Primate of Poland – August Hlond
Eastern Orthodox Church Archbishop of Warsaw – Dionizy (Dionisij, real name Konstantyn Waledynski)
Chief Rabbi of Warsaw – vacant
Marshall of the Sejm – Wacław Makowski
Marshall of the Senat – Bogusław Miedziński
Ambassador to Germany – Józef Lipski
Events
= January
=January 1. Józef Beck welcomes the new year in Monte Carlo, while president Ignacy Mościcki stays in Jaworzyna near Zakopane
January 2. Flu epidemic in Zagłębie Dąbrowskie, where 25% of residents are sick
January 3. In Warsaw a funeral of Cardinal Aleksander Kakowski (who died on December 31, 1938), takes place. The service is led by primate August Hlond, and by bishop Antoni Szlagowski
January 4. Józef Beck arrives in Munich
January 5. Minister Józef Beck meets Adolf Hitler in Berchtesgaden. Apart from Hitler and Beck, the meeting is attended by Joachim von Ribbentrop, Hans von Moltke, Polish ambassador to Berlin Józef Lipski, and Józef Beck's chef de cabinet, Michal Lubienski. The meeting lasts three hours
January 6. In Munich, minister Beck meets Joachim von Ribbentrop
January 7. In Warsaw, a funeral of Roman Dmowski takes place. Jadwiga Wajs gets married in Łódź
January 8. President Mościcki returns to Warsaw, where he meets foreign diplomats and ambassadors to Poland. On the same day, Jurgis Šaulys, a Lithuanian envoy, begins his mission in Warsaw
January 25. Joachim von Ribbentrop comes by train to Warsaw, he arrives at Warsaw Główna rail station 4:50 p.m.
January 26. Joachim von Ribbentrop meets Ignacy Mościcki, Józef Beck and Edward Rydz-Śmigły
January 27. Joachim von Ribbentrop leaves Warsaw and returns to Berlin
= February
=February 18. Heinrich Himmler comes to Warsaw. After meeting Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski and Józef Beck, he leaves in the night for Białowieża
February 19. Flooding in Volhynia, along the Horyn and the Styr. Heinrich Himmler hunts in Białowieża, together with Marian Zyndram-Kościałkowski
February 20. Heinrich Himmler returns to Berlin
February 22. First flights of the PZL.50 Jastrząb. Polish Telegraphic Agency announces that Trans-Olza hence will be called Western Silesia
February 24. AntiPolish riots at the Königliche Technische Hochschule zu Danzig in Gdańsk. Polish students are beaten
February 25. Warsaw students demonstrate in front of the German embassy. Galeazzo Ciano, together with wife Edda Mussolini, comes by train to Warsaw
February 26. Galeazzo Ciano unveils the monument of Francesco Nullo in Warsaw
= March
=March 1. On the last day of his visit, Galeazzo Ciano visits Kraków
March 2. A hurricane in Wilno destroys several houses
March 4. Romanian minister of foreign affairs, Grigore Gafencu, comes to Warsaw by train, greeted by Józef Beck, Stefan Starzyński and Jan Szembek
March 6. Grigore Gafencu returns to Bucharest. A group of Polish writers, including Konstanty Ildefons Gałczyński, visits Trans-Olza
March 16. Units of Hungarian Army meet troops of the Polish Army, after Hungarian invasion of Carpatho-Ukraine
March 17. In Berlin, Józef Lipski meets Hermann Göring, discussing establishment of Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia
March 22. A meeting of key Polish figures takes place at the Warsaw Castle. Present are Ignacy Mościcki, Edward Rydz-Śmigły, Józef Beck and Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski. All agree that Poland will not accept German proposal of extraterritorial rail and road connection between East Prussia and the rest of Germany. On the same day, Stanisław Mackiewicz is imprisoned in the Bereza Kartuska detention camp
March 26. In Berlin, Polish ambassador Józef Lipski meets Joachim von Ribbentrop, who demands that Gdańsk becomes part of Germany. Lipski, following Beck's order, refuses
March 30. In Warsaw, British ambassador Howard Kennard asks Józef Beck if Poland will accept British guarantees. Beck answers in the affirmative. On the same day, Wincenty Witos returns to Poland and stays in Kraków
March 31. In London, prime minister Neville Chamberlain officially declares that Great Britain will help Poland in case of war
= April
=April 2. In the afternoon, Józef Beck leaves Warsaw and goes by train to London. On his way, he stops at Berlin, to meet ambassador Józef Lipski
April 4. Józef Beck meets at breakfast with lord Halifax and Winston Churchill in London. On the same day in the afternoon, Beck talks with Neville Chamberlain
April 5. In London, Józef Beck meets king George VI at Windsor Castle. In Warsaw, a funeral of Walery Sławek takes place
April 8. Stanisław Mackiewicz is released from Bereza Kartuska. Józef Beck returns to Warsaw
April 11. Adolf Hitler signs Fall Weiss
April 14. In Warsaw, Józef Beck meets Hungarian attaché, Andreas Hory
April 17. General Johan Laidoner, Commander-in-chief of the Estonian Army, comes to Warsaw
April 18. A regular air connection Warsaw – Copenhagen – London is opened
April 19. ORP Sęp (1938), built in the Netherlands, comes to Gdynia
April 22. General Johan Laidoner visits Kraków. Anatole de Monzie, French Minister of Public Works, comes to Poland
April 23. A 49-kilometer railroad connection Częstochowa – Chorzew Siemkowice, part of the Polish Coal Trunk-Line is opened
April 24. Józef Beck meets British ambassador, Sir Howard Kennard. Wojciech Korfanty returns to Poland. He comes to Poznań and talks to Primate August Hlond
April 30. In Gross Strehlitz near Oppeln, personnel of the Polish Theatre from Katowice is beaten by a Nazi crowd. In Warsaw, a great air show takes place. Poznań International Fair opens in Poznań
= May
=May 2. Polish Council of Ministers approves a bill according to which the President can issue decrees. A local election in Volhynia takes place
May 3. A military parade, to commemorate the Constitution Day, takes place in Warsaw
May 4. Marshall Edward Rydz-Śmigły meets schoolchildren from Warsaw and Trans-Olza
May 5. Józef Beck delivers a famous speech in the Sejm, in which he rejects Hitler's demands towards Poland
May 7. Mass patriotic demonstrations of peasants and workers take place across Poland, with the biggest in Warsaw and Tarnów
May 9. General Stasys Raštikis, Defense Minister of Lithuania, comes to Warsaw
May 11. Polish ambassador in Moscow, Wacław Grzybowski, meets Vyacheslav Molotov
May 12. A mutual help agreement between France and Poland is signed in Paris by Polish ambassador Juliusz Łukasiewicz and French Minister of Foreign Affairs, Georges Bonnet
May 13. Galeazzo Ciano informs Józef Beck that in case of future Polish-German conflict, Italy will support Germany
May 15. General Tadeusz Kasprzycki begins in Paris negotiations about military help with General Maurice Gamelin
May 16. General Wacław Stachiewicz orders his subordinates to create a plan of fortifications along the Polish-German border
May 18. Floods in Poland, in the areas of Kielce and Lwów
May 19. Polish-French military negotiations end in Paris. Both sides pledge to help each other in case of war
May 23. Polish-British military negotiations begin in Warsaw. Józef Beck meets General Józef Haller
May 26. Nationwide local elections are finished, with Obóz Zjednoczenia Narodowego winning 48% of votes. A Polish Institute is opened in Budapest
May 30. The funeral of Aleksander Brückner takes place in Berlin
= June
=June 2. A new ambassador of the Soviet Union, Nikolai Sharonov, comes to Warsaw and begins his mission
June 6. A dangerous fire in the unfinished complex of the Warsaw Główna rail station
June 7. Seven people die, when an express train Katowice – Warszawa derails near Pruszków
June 11. President Ignacy Mościcki begins a tour of the Central Industrial Area
June 13. A delegation of the Polish government, under Adam Koc, comes to London, to negotiate a loan for Polish Army
June 15. Polish Airlines open new connections: Gdynia – Warsaw – Budapest – Venice – Rome, and Warsaw – Budapest – Belgrad
June 16. A heat wave in Poland, with temperatures ranging from 35 C in Zaleszczyki, to 21 in Poznań, Toruń and Gdynia. Representatives of Polonia from the United States collect $750 000 to the National Defence Fund
June 21. A Convention of 300 Polish rabbis begins in Wilno
June 23. In Polish schools, summer vacation begins
June 24. Annual Days of the Sea begin in Gdynia. General Louis Faury visits Polish garrisons
June 26. Florian Znaniecki leaves Poland for a series of lectures at American universities
June 29. Jan Kiepura, together with wife Marta Eggerth, sing to thousands of people on the Old Town Market Place, Warsaw. All profits were given to the National Defence Fund
= July
=July 5. Grand Rabbi Ben Zion Halberstam of Bobov visits Oświęcim, enthusiastically greeted by some 3000 followers
July 6. At Warsaw's Castle, a meeting of Ignacy Mościcki, Felicjan Sławoj Składkowski, Edward Rydz-Śmigły and Józef Beck takes place. The gathered discuss Polish policies concerning the Free City of Danzig
July 8. Due to unusually hot and sunny weather, harvest begins in Poland earlier than usually
July 7. King of Albania Zog, comes to Lwów and, after a short break, he goes to Warsaw together with family
July 10. Neville Chamberlain, speaking in the House of Commons, states that Britain is determined to help Poland in case of an attack
July 11. In Jazłowiec, the 14th Regiment of Jazłowiec Uhlans celebrates its day
July 13. Felicjan Sławoj Składkowski tours the Poznań Voivodeship
July 15. On the anniversary of the Battle of Grunwald, a mass demonstration takes place in Kraków. On the same day in Katowice, Jan Kiepura sings to 20 000 people, with profits going to the National Defence Fund
July 17. General Sir Edmund Ironside of the British Army comes to Warsaw, via Gdynia. Jan Kiepura sings to 10,000 people in Karwina, Trans-Olza
July 18. General Ironside visits the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Warsaw
July 20. General Ironside visits garrisons of the Polish Army in Rembertów and Modlin. Wojciech Korfanty leaves prison
July 27. MS Batory, a passenger ship, enters service in the port of Gdynia
= August
=August 1. Officers of Polish Police arrest in Lwów around 30 activists of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists
August 2. In London, governments of Poland and Great Britain sign an agreement according to which Poland gets a loan in the amount of 8 million British pounds (200 million Polish zlotys). Poland initially demanded four times as much. On the same day, Benedictine monks return to the abbey in Tyniec
August 4. Polish customs officers in the Free City of Danzig are informed that they no longer can make inspections in the port. On the next day, under Polish pressure, the Senate of Danzig voids the decision
August 6. In Kraków, the 25th anniversary of First Cadre Company's departure is celebrated with estimated 200 000 watching the parade
August 8. A Polish-Hungarian celebration takes place at the Cross of the Legions in eastern Carpathians
August 9. Polish chargé d'affaires in Berlin, Stefan Lubomirski, meets Ernst von Weizsäcker, who hands Lubomirski a note from von Ribbentrop about tense situation in the Free City of Danzig
August 10. In Warsaw, Tomasz Arciszewski meets German chargé d'affaires, Johan von Wuhlisch. On the same day, Gauleiter Albert Forster makes a speech in Danzig, telling the crowds that the city will soon return to Germany
August 11. A conference of Józef Beck, Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski, Ignacy Mościcki, Felicjan Sławoj Składkowski and Edward Rydz-Śmigły, takes place at the Warsaw Castle
August 12. In Moscow, talks between military delegations of France, Great Britain and Soviet Union begin
August 13. Partial mobilization of the Polish Army
August 15. Poland celebrates 19th anniversary of the Miracle at the Vistula (see: Battle of Warsaw (1920)), with the biggest demonstration taking place in Radzymin. On the same day in Moscow, Vyacheslav Molotov talks with German ambassador to the Soviet Union, Friedrich Schullenburg. Schullenburg informs Molotov about von Ribbentrop's willingness to come to Moscow
August 17. French government grants Polish government credit in the amount of 430 million French francs
August 19. In Warsaw, Józef Beck, talking to British ambassador Howard Kennard and French ambassador Léon Noël, says that Polish government will not give permission for the Red Army to enter Polish territory in case of war with Germany. On the same day, Northern Trade Fair opens in Wilno
August 20. In Katowice, funeral of Wojciech Korfanty takes place
August 22. Heat in Poland, with temperatures reaching up to 31 degrees Celsius in Pomerania. Edward Rydz-Śmigły orders alarm mobilization in military districts along western border of Poland. Joachim von Ribbentrop leaves Berlin for Moscow
August 23. In Moscow, Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact is signed
August 24. In the morning, secret mobilization takes place in Poland, which covers around 75% of the Polish Army manpower
August 25. Pact of mutual help between Poland and Great Britain is signed in London. In Moscow, Soviet–French–British negotiations end. German battleship Schleswig-Holstein anchoress in the channel near Westerplatte
August 26. Adolf Hitler changes his order and attack on Poland is postponed to September 1. Nevertheless, some Wehrmacht units attack, especially in the south. Józef Beck meets Soviet ambassador, Nikolai Sharonov
August 28. German chargé d'affaires, Ernst Krummer meets Jan Szembek. Krummer declares that the German–Polish Non-Aggression Pact is unilaterally abrogated by Adolf Hitler. On the same day, Hitler speaks at Reichstag, and the speech is broadcast by the radio (see: List of Adolf Hitler speeches). 20 people die in the Tarnów rail station bomb attack
August 30. The Polish destroyers ORP Burza, ORP Błyskawica and ORP Grom are ordered to execute the Peking Plan, and the warships head for Great Britain. A mobilisation of the Polish Army is ordered
August 31. Gleiwitz incident. Polish ambassador in Berlin, Józef Lipski, for the last time sees Joachim von Ribbentrop. At 12:40 pm, Adolf Hitler gives an order to attack Poland on September 1, at 4:45 am
= September
=September 1 – Poland is invaded by Nazi Germany, this precipitates the start of the Second World War.
September 17 – Poland is invaded by USSR
September 22. Joint Nazi-Soviet military parade in Brzesc nad Bugiem
= October
=October 1. In Paris, a Government in Exile, under General Władysław Sikorski, is sworn
October 2. Polish Army garrison in Hel capitulate. Governments of the United States and France officially recognize the government of General Sikorski. battle of Kock begins
October 4. In Wilno, the NKVD incarcerates Colonel Zygmunt Berling
October 5. Adolf Hitler greets German troops during the parade of victory in Warsaw. Battle of Kock ends
October 7. Adolf Hitler orders Heinrich Himmler to organize mass expulsions of Poles from western part of the occupied country. In Eastern Poland, electoral campaign begins
October 8. Upon decree of Hitler, Western provinces of Poland, with the population of 10 million and the area of 91 000 km2., together with the cities of Poznań, Gdynia, Toruń, Bydgoszcz, Łódź and Katowice are incorporated into the Third Reich
October 10. In Kiev, Soviet authorities arrest consul of Poland, Janusz Matuszynski, who vanishes without a trace
October 11. General Kazimierz Sosnkowski reaches Paris
October 12. General Government, with capital in Kraków, is created
October 16. Polish consul in Kaunas, Franciszek Charwat, leaves Lithuania, after both countries broke diplomatic relations when Lithuania incorporated the area of Wilno
October 19. The Germans transport to Berlin archives of the Polish Foreign Ministry
October 22. "Elections" in the Soviet-occupied areas of eastern Poland, marked by terror of the NKVD troops
October 23. Last Polish Army unit in Eastern Poland is dissolved near Orany. It was commanded by Colonel Władysław Wysocki
October 24. Nikita Khrushchev, talking to General Władysław Langner assures him that officers of the Polish Army, kept by the Soviets, will be released (see: Katyn massacre)
October 25. Since September 1, the Germans, in 700 mass executions, murdered around 16 000 Polish civilians
October 26. Hans Frank is appointed Governor-General of the Germany-occupied territories. In Lwów, first meeting of the People's Assembly of Western Ukraine takes place
October 27. Stefan Starzyński is arrested in Warsaw. In Lwów, the NKVD arrests General Marian Zegota-Januszajtis
October 28. Lithuanian Army units enter Wilno. According to German data, there are 360 000 Jews in Warsaw. In Białystok, first meeting of the People's Assembly of Western Belarus takes place
= November
=November 1. Upon decree of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union, southeastern part of Poland (see: Territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union) is incorporated into Soviet Ukraine as Western Ukraine, with the size of 88,000 km2 and population of 8,000,000. On the same day, at Rossa Cemetery in Wilno, a mass, patriotic demonstration takes place, with 20,000 people present
November 2. The Germans officially change name of the Wawel Castle into Krakauer-Burg. First Poles, displaced from German-occupied western part of country, come to Warsaw
November 3. German occupational authorities confiscate all radios. Hence, those Poles who keep their radios, are punished with death
November 5. Mass expulsions of Poles from Poznań begin. They are replaced with Germans from the Baltic states
November 6. Sonderaktion Krakau – arrest of 183 professors from Kraków
November 7. In Reichsgau Wartheland, a ban on Polish-German marriages is announced
November 8. Aleksandra Piłsudska, together with daughters Wanda Piłsudska and Jadwiga Piłsudska arrive in London,
November 9. Mass arrests of Polish teachers in Łódź county. The city of Łódź, together with surrounding areas, is incorporated into Wartheland
November 12. General Mieczysław Boruta-Spiechowicz leaves Lwów and tries to get to Hungary. Caught by the NKVD, he is arrested. On the same day, German authorities begin printing of German-language newspapers, Krakauer Zeitung (in Kraków) and Warschauer Zeitung (in Warsaw)
November 14. Upon decree of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union, northeastern part of Poland (see: Territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union) is incorporated into Soviet Belarus, as Western Belarus, with the size of 108,000 km2 and population of 4,800,000
November 19. In Lwów, a group of Polish writers (Władysław Broniewski, Tadeusz Boy-Żeleński, Stanisław Jerzy Lec, Aleksander Wat and Adam Ważyk), together sign an article published in Czerwony Sztandar, in which they praise incorporation of southeastern Poland into the Soviet Union
November 20. General Władysław Langner crosses former Polish–Romanian border
November 21. Colonel Stanisław Sosabowski leaves Warsaw and heads for Budapest. On the same day, German authorities officially transfer Spisz and Orawa to Slovakia
November 22. French government declares the town of Angers seat of Polish government-in-exile
November 23. Upon decree of Hans Frank, all Jews over the age of 12 must wear armbands with the Star of David
November 29. Upon decree of the Supreme Soviet, all inhabitants of the Soviet-occupied areas of Poland are granted Soviet citizenship
= December
=December 3. President in Exile, Władysław Raczkiewicz, moves from Paris to Angers
December 4. General Kazimierz Sosnkowski signs a Decree number 1 for Citizen Rakon (Rakon was nom de guerre of Stefan Rowecki), which contains text of oath of members of the Union of Armed Struggle
December 5. A Theological college in Lwów is dissolved by Soviet authorities
December 7. In Zakopane, NKVD and Gestapo officers discuss mutual cooperation and methods of fighting Polish resistance (see: Gestapo–NKVD Conferences). In Palmiry, the Germans execute 80 persons
December 10. In Lwów, NKVD agents arrest around 800 officers of the Polish Army, including General Mariusz Zaruski. In Volhynia, resettlement of ethnic German population begins. The Germans move to Wartheland
December 13. In Warsaw, Bolesław Piasecki is arrested
December 15. Lithuanian government liquidates Polish-language University of Stefan Batory in Wilno, creating a Lithuanian-language Vilnius University
December 23. In Lublin, the Germans execute 10 leaders of local Polish community
December 24. In Eastern Poland, occupied by the Soviets, exchange of currency takes place. Polish złotys are replaced with the much less valued Rubles
December 27. In Wawer, the Germans execute 106 Polish civilians
Arts and literature
= Awards
=January 17. Jerzy Andrzejewski is awarded the youth prize of the Polish Academy of Literature
January 28. Leopold Staff receives an Honorary degree at the Warsaw University
= New books
=Possessed by Witold Gombrowicz
Nuta człowiecza, a poetry bundle by Józef Czechowicz
= Film
=Sportowiec mimo woli, with Adolf Dymsza, directed by Mieczysław Krawicz, music by Henryk Wars, premiered on May 31 1940.
Trzy serca, with Elżbieta Barszczewska and Aleksander Żabczyński, based on a book by Tadeusz Dołęga-Mostowicz, directed by Michał Waszyński, music by Zygmunt Wiehler, premiere March 17, 1939,
Doktór Murek, with Nora Ney based on a book by Tadeusz Dołęga-Mostowicz, directed by Juliusz Gardan, music by Władysław Szpilman,
Włóczęgi, a comedy directed by Michał Waszyński, music by Henryk Wars,
U kresu drogi with Mieczysława Ćwiklińska and Kazimierz Junosza-Stępowski, screenplay by Anatol Stern, directed by Michał Waszyński.
Sports
= January
=January 8. A 20-year-old Polish glider Tadeusz Góra is awarded the Lilienthal Medal for his 577.8-kilometer glider flight from Bezmiechowa near Lesko to Soleczniki near Wilno
January 10. In the Upper Silesian city of Beuthen, football team of Polish Upper Silesia loses 3–5 to the team of German Upper Silesia, with Leonard Piątek scoring two goals and Jerzy Wostal one
January 11. Jadwiga Wajs, discus throw Olympic silver and bronze medalist gets married in Łódź
January 15. In Warsaw, in an international boxing match, Poland beats the Netherlands 16-0
January 16. In Stockholm, in an international boxing match, Poland beats Sweden 12-4
January 22. In a football friendly in Paris, France beats Poland 4-0
January 25. The national ice hockey team for the 1939 World Ice Hockey Championships in Switzerland has been announced. It consists of 15 players – 5 from Cracovia, 4 from Dąb Katowice, 4 from Warszawianka Warszawa, 1 from AZS Poznań and 1 from Czarni Lwów
January 27. Men's volleyball championships of Poland begin in Lwów
January 29. In Lwów, Sokol Drugi Lwów becomes men's volleyball champion of Poland. Second is Cresovia Grodno, third – CWS Warszawa
= February
=February 4. In the 1939 World Ice Hockey Championships, Poland in Group C (Basel) beats the Netherlands 9-0
February 5. In the 1939 World Ice Hockey Championships, Poland in Basel loses 0–4 to Canada
February 7. In the second round of the 1939 World Ice Hockey Championships, Poland in Basel loses to Switzerland 0-4
February 8. In the second round of the 1939 World Ice Hockey Championships, Poland in Basel beats Hungary 5-3
February 9. In the second round of the 1939 World Ice Hockey Championships, Poland in Basel loses to the United States 0-4
February 10. In the consolidation round of the 1939 World Ice Hockey Championships, Poland in Zürich beats Hungary 3-0
February 11. Skiing championships of the world (FIS), begin in Zakopane
February 12. In the consolidation round of the 1939 World Ice Hockey Championships, Poland in Zürich loses to Germany 0–4, finishing sixth overall
February 12. In Poznań, in an international boxing match, Poland beats Hungary 14-2
= March
=March 3. In Katowice, the team of Dąb Katowice becomes ice-hockey champion of Poland. Second is Warszawianka Warszawa, third Ognisko Wilno
March 5. In Łódź, in an international table tennis game, Poland beats Latvia 5-4
March 12. In Lwów, in an international boxing match, Poland beats Finland 14-2
March 12. In Riga, in an international boxing match, Poland B beats Latvia 10-6
March 19. In Poznań, in an international boxing match, Poland beats Italy 10-6
March 26. In the first game of the 1939 season of the Polish football league, Garbarnia Kraków beats at home Ruch Chorzów 2-1 (att. 4000)
= April
=April 2. Games of the 1939 season of the Polish football league begin. In the first round, Warszawianka Warszawa loses at home to Ruch Chorzów 0-5 (att. 3000), AKS Chorzów loses in Chorzów 1–2 to Cracovia (att. 6000), Pogoń Lwów beats at home Garbarnia Kraków 5-1 (att. 4000), Wisła Kraków beats at home Polonia Warszawa 2-1 (att. 3500) and Warta Poznań beats at home Union Touring Łódź 7-0 (att. 2000)
April 10. During the Easter holidays, several foreign football teams came to Poland. Gedania Gdańsk, a Polish minority side from the Free City of Danzig, beat 3-1 Warszawianka Warszawa in Warsaw, Elektromos Budapest lost 1–2 to Wisła Kraków and beat 1-0 Cracovia Kraków, Kispest FC beat 2-1 AKS Chorzów and lost 1–2 to Ruch Chorzów, and SK Bratislava beat 2–1 in Lwów the reserve team of Pogoń Lwów
April 13. Polish team leaves Poznań and goes by train to Dublin, to participate in the 1939 European Amateur Boxing Championships
April 16. In the games of the Polish football league, Polonia Warszawa beats at home Warta Poznań 3-1 (att. 4000), Cracovia beats at home Warszawianka Warszawa 2-1 (att. 7000), Garbarnia Kraków loses at home 2–3 to AKS Chorzów (att. 7000), Ruch Chorzów beats at home Pogoń Lwów 4-1 (att. 4000) and Wisła Kraków beats in Łódź Union-Touring 3-1 (att. 3000). In Warsaw, in a table tennis international game, Kaunas beats Warsaw 7-2
April 22. Polish boxing team, with one gold (Antoni Kolczyński), three silver medals (Antoni Czortek, Józef Pisarski, Franciszek Szymura) and a bronze by Zbigniew Kowalski, leaves Dublin, after the 1939 European Amateur Boxing Championships. Poland overall is the winner of team competition. In Riga, in a basketball international friendly, Poland loses to Latvia 18:42
April 23. In the games of the Polish football league, Cracovia Kraków beats at home Union-Touring lodz 1-0 (att. 3000), Garbarnia Kraków beats away Warszawianka Warszawa 2-0 (att. 3000), Pogoń Lwów beats at home Polonia Warszawa 3-2 (att. 3000), Warta Poznań beats at home Wisła Kraków 4-1 and in the Upper Silesian classic, Ruch Chorzów beats on home turf AKS Chorzów 3–2, with attendance of 10,000. In Riga, in a basketball international friendly, Poland beats Latvia 31-29
= May
=May 3. In Kraków, in the Polish Football League game, Wisła Kraków beats Pogoń Lwów 2-1 (att. 4000). In international tennis game, Poland beats Romania 3–1. In Warsaw and major Polish cities (Kraków, Lwów, Wilno, Poznań, Toruń, Gdynia, Białystok, Zakopane, Lublin, Brzesc, Grudziądz, Slonim), National Running Day competitions take place, with numerous athletes participating
May 7. In games of the Polish Football League, Warszawianka Warszawa beats Polonia Warszawa 5-1 (att. 8000), Ruch Chorzów beats Garbarnia Kraków 5-0 (att. 5000), Wisła Kraków beats Cracovia Kraków 5-1 (att. 8000), Pogoń Lwów ties at home with Union-Touring Łódź 2-2 (att. 2000) and Warta Poznań beats at home AKS Chorzów 2-1 (att. 5000). In Warsaw, in the Davis Cup match, Poland beats the Netherlands 4-1
May 14. In Warsaw, in an international football friendly, the team of the city of Warsaw beats the team of the city of Kaunas 5-2
May 19. A Davis Cup game Poland-Germany begins
May 21. In games of the Polish Football League, Warszawianka Warszawa loses at home 0–4 to AKS Chorzów (att. 3000), Ruch Chorzów routs at home Union-Touring Łódź 12-1 (with 10 goals by Ernest Wilimowski, att. 2000), Pogoń Lwów beats away Warta Poznań 1–0, and Wisła Kraków ties 1–1 with Garbarnia Kraków (att. 6000)
May 22. In Kaunas, during the Basketball Championships of Europe, basketball team of Poland beats Estonia 40-36
May 23. In Kaunas, basketball team of Poland beats France 38-36
May 24. In Kaunas, basketball team of Poland loses to Lithuania 18-46
May 25. In Kaunas, basketball team of Poland beats Hungary 42-20
May 27. In Łódź, in a football friendly, Poland ties 3–3 with Belgium, with two goals by Ernst Wilimowski and one by Jerzy Wostal. On the same day in Lwów, events marking 35th anniversary of Pogoń Lwów take place
May 28. Polish national basketball team finishes the EuroBasket 1939 on the third spot, behind Lithuania and Latvia
= June
=June 4. In Warsaw, in a football friendly, Poland ties 1–1 with Switzerland, with a goal by Leonard Piątek
June 8. In a game of the Polish Football League, Wisła Kraków loses at home 0–1 to Ruch Chorzów (att. 7000)
June 11. In games of the Polish Football League, Warta Poznań beats at home Warszawianka Warszawa 4-2 (att. 3500), Garbarnia Kraków loses at home to Cracovia 1-2 (att. 4000), Polonia Warszawa routs at home Union-Touring Łódź 6-1 (att. 4000) and AKS Chorzów beats at home Pogoń Lwów 2-0 (att. 5000)
June 18. In games of the Polish Football League, Pogoń Lwów beats at home Cracovia Kraków 3–0, Warta Poznań ties away with Ruch Chorzów 1-1 (att. 6000), Wisła Kraków beats in Warsaw Warszawianka Warszawa 1-0 (att. 2500), Garbarnia Kraków ties at home 2–2 with Polonia Warszawa (att. 2000) and AKS Chorzów beats in Łódź Union Touring 7-1 (att. 3000). On the same day, handball team of Poland beats Sweden in Katowice 8-6
June 25. In an international women's track and field match in Bergamo, Poland loses to Italy 33–51. In games of the Polish Football League, Polonia Warszawa beats at home Wisła Kraków 5-4 (att. 6000), AKS Chorzów ties at home 0–0 with Warszawianka Warszawa (att. 2000), Cracovia Kraków loses at home 2–5 to Ruch Chorzów (att. 6000), Pogoń Lwów beats in Łódź Union-Touring 2-1 (att. 1500) and Warta Poznań beats at home Garbarnia Kraków 5-0 (att. 4000). In Łódź, ŁKS Łódź becomes man's handball champion of Poland. Second is Pogon Katowice, third AZS Warszawa, and fourth, AZS Lwów
= July
=July 2. In the games of the Polish Football League, Ruch Chorzów loses at home 2–3 to Polonia Warszawa (att. 4000), Cracovia beats Warszawianka Warszawa in Warsaw 3-1 (att. 1500), Wisła Kraków routs at home Warta Poznań 5-0 (att. 3000), and Pogoń Lwów, in its last ever official home game, ties 1–1 with AKS Chorzów (att. 5000)
July 8. Men's track and field championships of Poland begin in Poznań
July 9. In Kraków, in the Polish Football League game, Garbarnia Kraków beats Union Touring Łódź 2-1 (att. 1000)
July 15. Women's track and field championships of Poland begin in Katowice
July 16. In the Polish Football League game, Polonia Warszawa ties 2–2 at home with Ruch Chorzów (att. 4000), on the same day women's swimming championships of Poland end in Bielsko-Biała
July 22. Tour de Pologne begins with the first stage, from Warsaw to Lublin
July 23. Second stage of Tour de Pologne, from Lublin, via Zamość and Rawa Ruska, to Lwów
July 24. Third stage of Tour de Pologne, from Lwów, via Przeworsk to Rzeszów,
July 25. Fourth stage of Tour de Pologne, from Rzeszów, via Tarnów to Kraków
July 26. Fifth stage of Tour de Pologne, from Kraków, via Bielsko-Biała, to Cieszyn
July 28. Sixth stage of Tour de Pologne, from Cieszyn, via Trzyniec, to Katowice
July 29. Seventh stage of Tour de Pologne, from Katowice, via Częstochowa, to Piotrków Trybunalski
July 30. Last, eighth, stage of Tour de Pologne, from Piotrków Trybunalski to Warsaw. Bolesław Napierała wins the tournament
= August
=August 2. In Gdynia, Józef Hebda becomes tennis champion of Poland
August 10. International tennis game Poland – China starts in Warsaw
August 12. Rowing championships of Poland begin in Poznań
August 13. In the Polish Football League qualifiers, Legia Poznań ties at home 1–1 with Junak Drohobycz and Śląsk Świętochłowice beats at home Śmigły Wilno 2-1
August 15. In the Polish Football League game, Cracovia loses at home 3–4 to Pogoń Lwów (att. 4000)
August 20. In the last prewar round of the Polish Football League, Polonia Warszawa beats at home Pogoń Lwów 2-1 (this is the last ever game in the history of the Lwów side, att. 5000), Cracovia beats 3–2 in Łódź the team of Union Touring Łódź (att. 3000), Warta Poznań beats at home Ruch Chorzów 5-2 (att. 8000), AKS Chorzów beats at home Garbarnia Kraków 3-0 (att. 3000) and Wisła Kraków beats at home Warszawianka Warszawa 4-2 (att. 3000). On the same day, in the qualifiers to the League, Śmigły Wilno beats at home Legia Poznań 5-1 (att. 3000), and Junak Drohobycz ties at home 0–0 with Śląsk Świętochłowice (att. 4000),
August 25. For the first time in the interbellum period, a Polish football team, Śmigły Wilno, goes to Lithuania to play friendlies there,
August 27. In Warsaw, Polish football team beats Hungary 4–2, with three goals scored by Ernest Willimowski and one by Leonard Piątek (see: 1939 Poland vs Hungary football match)
= September
=September 3 – A planned international football friendly between Poland and Bulgaria in Warsaw was cancelled due to the invasion of Poland. On the same day, the Gordon Bennett cup in ballooning, planned in Lwów, was cancelled. Three other international matches were cancelled in September, between Poland and Yugoslavia in Belgrade on 6 September, and two matches on the 24 September between Poland B Team and Finland in Helsinki, and Poland A Team and Romania in Bucharest.
Births
February 2, Marcin Libicki, conservative politician is born in Poznań,
February 6 Czesław Niemen, a singer and composer, is born in Stare Wasiliszki
April 20, Anna Radziwiłł, historian, educator, and politician,
April 27. Stanisław Dziwisz, a Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church, is born in Raba Wyżna
May 2. Stanisław Ciosek, a prominent member of the Polish United Workers' Party, is born in the village of Pawłowice near Radom
May 28, Wojciech Karolak, jazz musician, born in Warsaw
June 17. Krzysztof Zanussi, producer and film director is born in Warsaw
July 2. Film actress Iga Cembrzyńska is born in Radom
July 19. Bohdan Cywiński, a writer and member of anticommunist movements, is born in Milanówek
July 29. Witold Baran, a middle-distance runner, is born in Chmielów near Kielce
August 9. Maria Czubaszek, a poet and songwriter, is born in Warsaw
August 23. Edward Linde-Lubaszenko, actor, born in Białystok
September 19. Jerzy Bartmiński, linguist and ethnologist, is born in Przemyśl
September 23. Janusz Gajos, an actor, is born in Dąbrowa Górnicza
November 5. Jan Nowicki, actor, born in Kowal
December 29. Konrad Fiałkowski, scientist, born in Lublin
Deaths
January 2. In the village of Drozdowo near Łomża, at 1:05 a.m., dies Roman Dmowski
February 24. In Warsaw dies Tadeusz Puszczyński, commandant of the Wawelberg Group and the Sarny Fortified Area
March 8. In Warsaw dies professor Władysław Marian Zawadzki, former Minister of Treasury
April 2. Walery Sławek commits suicide
May 24. Professor Aleksander Brückner dies in Berlin
July 3. Football player Hubert Gad drowns in a pond in Świętochłowice
August 17. Wojciech Korfanty dies in Warsaw
September 9. Józef Czechowicz, avant garde poet, dies in Lublin
September 10:
Władysław Raginis commits suicide at Wizna
Wilhelm Fritz von Roettig, German Waffen SS general becomes the first general killed in action during World War II
September 18. Following Soviet invasion on Poland, Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz commits suicide in the Polesie Voivodeship
September 20. Tadeusz Dołęga-Mostowicz dies in a skirmish with Soviet forces in Kuty
September 22. General Józef Olszyna-Wilczyński is murdered by the Red Army soldiers
September 24. Samuel Dickstein, mathematician (b. 1851)
October 30. In Konstantynów dies Wacław Gąsiorowski, writer of popular historic novels
December 14. Wacław Niemojowski, a monarchist politician, dies in Kalisz
December 24. Professor Antoni Meyer dies in Sachsenhausen concentration camp
December 28. Stanisław Estreicher dies in Sachsenhausen concentration camp
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Penyerbuan Polandia
- The Mass Extermination of Jews in German Occupied Poland
- Polandia
- Invasi Polandia oleh Slowakia
- Perang Dunia II
- Orde Baru (Nazisme)
- Penyebab Perang Dunia II
- Aliansi militer Anglo-Polandia
- Pengeboman Frampol
- Kejahatan Nazi terhadap bangsa Polandia
- Invasion of Poland
- 1939 in Poland
- Soviet invasion of Poland
- History of Poland (1939–1945)
- Second Polish Republic
- History of Poland (1918–1939)
- Occupation of Poland (1939–1945)
- Timeline of the 1939 invasion of Poland
- 1939 German ultimatum to Poland
- Warsaw