7th Infantry Division (Poland)
The 7th Infantry Division was the name of several units of the Polish Army.
Second Polish Republic
The original division was formed on 14 May 1919 near Częstochowa. At that time it consisted of two infantry brigades, and four infantry regiments, as well as two artillery brigades. The division took part in shielding of the Polish borders during the Polish–Ukrainian War of 1919. During the Polish–Soviet War it was commanded by Col. Szubert and reinforced to three brigades. It took part in the Battle of the Niemen as part of the Polish 3rd Army. After the war the division was dispersed in several barracks in western Poland, among them in Częstochowa, Piotrków Trybunalski, Lubliniec and Łódź. In 1921, the structure of the division was changed: both infantry brigades were dissolved, and the 11th Infantry Regiment was transferred to the 23rd Infantry Division. In the Second Polish Republic, the division was commanded by the Fourth Military District from Łódź. The headquarters of the division were stationed in Częstochowa, and it consisted of the following units:- 25th Infantry Regiment,
- 27th Infantry Regiment,
- 74th Upper Silesian Infantry Regiment,
- 7th Light Artillery Regiment.
In the afternoon of 3 September, the division tried to break out of the encirclement. The advance, supported by divisional artillery, was at first successful, but after some time, German machine gun fire together with tanks halted the Poles. In the evening decimated units of the 7th Division tried once again to break out. Elements of the 74th Regiment, together with cavalry and sappers, managed to reach Kielce on 5 September. Most of the division, however, suffered such heavy losses that it was unable to fight any longer. In the early afternoon of 4 September, the division surrendered to the Germans.
World War II and after 1945
After the Sikorski–Mayski agreement of 1941, in February of the following year the 7th Division was recreated in the Soviet Union as part of the Anders Army/Polish Armed Forces in the East. Withdrawn to Persia, it was disbanded and its units were attached to the 6th Division.During the Operation Tempest, the division was recreated by the Radom–Kielce inspectorate of Armia Krajowa. Composed of two regiments, it took part in heavy fights against the Germans. After central Poland had been taken over by the Soviet Army, the majority of its soldiers returned to the underground, risking arrest by the omnipotent NKVD.
At the same time one of the units of the Polish People's Army formed under guidance of the Soviet Union received the same number. Formed north of Lublin, it was formed of three infantry regiments and one artillery regiment. Insufficiently equipped and trained, the unit was attached to the Second Army and dispatched to the front near Rothernburg, where it stormed the Lusatian Neisse river with heavy casualties. After several days of heavy fighting on a bridgehead to the west of the river, the division was levied and withdrawn to the rear.
After the war ended, the PPA 7th Infantry Division, under the control of the Second Army, was assigned to protect the Mużakowa – Kopaczów section of the western border. The divisional headquarters was stationed at Lubań, with regimental staff at Mirsk, Zgorzelec,
Bogatynia, and Jędrzychowice. Since 1947, the sub-units became a part of Operational Group Wisła.
Before being transferred from OW IV to OW V, in 1949 the division was stationed as follows:
- Divisional headquarters – Bytom
- 33rd Nysa Infantry Regiment – Nysa
- 35 Infantry Regiment – Tarnowskie Góry
- 37 Infantry Regiment – Chorzów
- 38 Light Artillery Regiment – Kędzierzyn-Koźle
- 10 Anti-tank artillery squadron – Tarnowskie Góry
- 18 Sapper Battalion – Bytom
- Communications Company 27 – Bytom
Commandants of the Division 1919–1939
- General Adam Mokrzecki,
- General Leonard Skierski,
- General Bronislaw Babianski,
- General Franciszek Latinik,
- General Karol Schubert,
- General Eugeniusz Pogorzelski,
- General Emil Prochaska,
- General Stanislaw Wroblewski,
- General Mieczyslaw Dabkowski,
- General Wacław Stachiewicz,
- General Janusz Gąsiorowski.