World War I

Casualties of War from the Tonawandas
Clarence Greeny Geiss
Haller's Army

 









Haller's Army

Introduction

The following material was put on this site to alert the citizens of North Tonawanda that some of their fathers and grandfathers were members of a group of W.W.I Veterans called Haller's Army or the Polish Blue Army .

The North Tonawanda History Museum is in the process of designing exhibits and would like to include this locally forgotten group of veterans.  A list of known individuals who volunteered from North Tonawanda has been included; if you know of individuals who are not on the list, please contact the Museum at the number below or e-mail us at nthistorymuseum@aol.com.

If you have uniforms, pictures, medals, flags or any artifacts of the Polish Blue Army and would like to donate the materials for exhibit in the museum, contact Donna at above.

Your assistance to remember this unique group of veterans is greatly appreciated.

Haller's Army— A Brief Overview
by Robert Tarwacki a Professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY

Prior to the First World War, Poland had ceased to exist as a nation. Poland was “partitioned” into sections under the influence of her neighbors, Prussia, Austria and Russia. However, the people struggled to maintain a sense of national identity in their hearts and minds. Contemporary personalities, such as Jan Ignacy Paderewski and emerging leaders like Jozef Pilsudski, knew that a sense of national identity would have to be maintained if Poland was to re-emerge as a nation someday. It was during this period of time that Paderewski is said to have popularized the saying, “Jeszcze Polska nie zginela poki my zyjemy” This is loosely translated as, “There is still a Poland, as long as we live.”

Although both Paderewski and Pilsudski dreamed of a Poland reborn and both knew that the active presence of a Polish Army in the World War would be a crucial factor in achieving this goal, the two men had very different plans for the implementation of their dream. Eventually, a number of different “Polish” armies would be engaged in battle on both the side of the Entente and the Central powers. Russia would field an army known as the Lancers. Austria would provide the training ground for Pilsudski's creation, the Legions. France, however, would provide the support for the creation of a well trained, well equipped, modern army, the equal of any army afield in those days. It would come to be known as the Polish Army in France. This was the fruits of Paderewski's labors.

Although France was the nation that provided the first opportunities for this Polish Army, both Canada and the United States were invaluable in its creation. The Polish government-in-exile was domiciled in France. Negotiations between the two governments resulted in France's political and financial support for 2 divisions of a Polish Army to be mustered. A third division was eventually approved and financed. A certain number of émigrés were also available for enlistment there, but not nearly enough to fill the needed ranks.

Paderewski, touring in the United States, had developed the idea of recruiting Polish American volunteers to help fill the ranks of the Polish Army in France. He believed that 50,000 men could be enlisted for the cause. He was eventually introduced to Colonel House, who influenced President Woodrow Wilson to approve the executive orders necessary to allow the active recruitment of persons on American soil for duty in a foreign army. Although President Wilson would not allow a foreign army to stand on or be trained on American soil, he did allow for an officers' training camp to be formed. The Canadians agreed to provide the training camp for the main body of the army in a town called Niagara on the Lake, close to where the officers would train. This camp became known as Camp Kosciusko. President Wilson eventually came out strongly in support of Poland, and called for the creation of a free Polish state as one of his famous “Fourteen Points.”

Meanwhile, in France, the search for a suitable Polish commander of this new Army was under way. Pilsudski's Polish Legions were busily fighting as allies of the Axis forces when a major falling out occurred. Three Legions had been formed and were actively taking part in battle. When Germany demanded that they sign an oath of loyalty, they refused. Two of the Legions (I & III Legion) remained behind, Pilsudski among them, and were interred for the duration of the war. The third legion, (II Legion,) under the command of General Jozef HaIler, abandoned the Central powers and went over to the Russian side. However, before General HaIler could successfully extract his Legion from the battlefield, a German attack took a heavy toll on his forces. HaIler and the remnants of his group made their way to eastern Russia and eventually to France. It was then, that he was asked to take command of the fledgling Polish Army in France. Among the French advisors assigned to train the Polish forces was a young Captain named Charles DeGaulle.

It is estimated that the United States eventually provided almost 100,000 Polish American volunteers to this army. The first campaign fought by Haller's Army was at Champagne in France in 1918. By the war's end in November of 1918, Paderewski had realized his dream of establishing a Polish Army and thus had helped to guarantee the rebirth and just as importantly, the long term survival, of a new Polish Republic.

The story of the Polish Army in France does not end here. Haller's Army went on to play a critical role in the shoring up of the new Polish Republic in the turbulent years following the War. Haller's Army fought throughout the Polish-Soviet War of 1919-1920 and provided valuable support on the northern front during the battle known as “Miracle on the Vistula,” when the Red Army's advance was halted at the gates of Warsaw. Though many of the American volunteers who had formed the army and fought in France were sent home by this time, new volunteers from Poland were recruited and trained to fill their ranks. Thus, the army became known as “the Volunteer Army,” which General Haller continued to command.

Paderewski thought that it was a fitting tribute to Americans, that they volunteered to fight for Polish independence in much the same way as Kasimir Pulaski and Tadeusz Kosciusko had volunteered in the American fight for independence so many years earlier.

Haller's Army Index Search Results

North Tonawanda, New York

Haller's Army Index Search Results

North Tonawanda, New York

LAST NAME FIRST NAME PAGE VOLUME FORM TYPE
Bienko Michal 85 22 C
Bienko Michal ABC   L
Bienko Michal 7 363 A
Boczkowski Roch 1 363 A
Boczkowski Roch 76 22 C
Boczkowski Roch ABC   L
Brzezinski Antoni ABC   L
Brzezinski Antoni 62 12 A
Brzezinski Antoni 73 19 C
Chmielowski Kazimierz 4 11 A
Chmielowski Kazimierz 61 17 C
Cholewa Thomasz 3 363 A
Cholewa Thomasz 87 22 C
Cholewa Thomasz ABC   L
Chrzaszcz Pawel ABC   L
Chrzaszcz Pawel 5 11 A
Chrzaszcz Pawel 60 17 C
Duplicki Pawel ABC   L
Duplicki Pawel 2 363 A
Duplicki Pawel 77 22 C
Golinski Antoni ABC   L
Grzesik Mateusz 68 203 A
Grzesik Mateusz 13 363 A
Grzesik Mateusz 21 17 C
Grzesik Mateusz ABC   L
Gwuzdz Jan 14 363 A
Kielbasa Jozef ABC   L
Kielbasa Jozef 12 363 A
Kielbasa Jozef 11 17 C
Kleniek Aleksander 58 399 C
Kleniek Aleksander ABC   L
Kociolowicz Jan ABC   L
Kociolowicz Jan 8 363 A
Kociolowicz Jan 92 22 C
Kociolowicz Jan 8 363 A
Kuczynski Alfons 47 19 C
Kuczynski Alfons ABC   L
Kuczynski Alfons 15 363 A
Kulawiec Jozef 83 363 A
Obremski Antoni 58 363 A
Ostrowski Michal ABC   L
Ostrowski Michal 24 34 A
Ostrowski Michal 33 5 C
Siedlecki Waclaw 16 22 C
Siedlecki Waclaw ABC   L
Sikora Szczepan 11 363 A
Sikora Szczepan 5 17 C
Sikora Szczepan ABC   L
Stebli Mikolaj  ABC   L
Stebli Mikolaj  9 363 A
Stebli Mikolaj  91 22 C
Wilczek Stanislaw ABC   
Wilczek  Stanislaw  29  203 
Wilczek  Stanislaw  49  22 
Woliszewski Czeslaw  48  19 
Zakoscieiny Wladyslaw ABC   
Zakoscieiny Wladyslaw  4 363 
Zakoscieiny Wladyslaw   6 363 
Zakoscieiny Wladyslaw  84 22 
Zakoscieiny  Wladyslaw  83 22 
Zielinski Walenty  ABC   
Zielinski  Walenty   5 363 
Zielinski  Walenty   86 22 
Ziembinski Wladyslaw  5 203 A
Ziembinski Wladyslaw 9 22 C
Ziembinski Wladyslaw ABC   L
Ziobrowski Franciszek ABC   L
Ziobrowski Franciszek 10 363 A
Ziobrowski Franciszek 101 22 C

Youngstown, New York

Youngstown, New York
LAST NAME FIRST NAME PAGE VOLUME FORM TYPE
Stylski Michal 10 58 A


GENERAL JOZEF HALLER AND THE BLUE ARMY

The story of General Jozef Haller and the Polish Army in France has long gone untold. The Army, also known as Haller's Army and the Blue Army, fought under French Command in World War I, as well as in the Polish-Soviet War of 1918 -1921. Many of the members of Haller's Army were Polish Americans who answered the call of prestigious recruiters, such as Igancy Paderewski, Polish Statesman and renowned musician.

The heroic exploits of General Haller and his army were repressed by the Soviets and much of the written history of the Blue Army is all but gone. These pages are an attempt to memorialize the deeds of these patriots and provide a source of reference for those who wish to know more about their Polish roots, or are students of military history.



IGNACY JAN PADEREWSKI

Paderewski was instrumental in getting President Woodrow Wilson's approval to recruit a Polish Army on American soil. Wilson, however, would not allow such an army to be formed or trained within the US, so recruits mustered in Canada. Paderewski also successfully lobbied Wilson to secure his support for a free and independent, post-war Poland, eventually one of Wilson's “Fourteen Points.”















GENERAL CHARLES DeGAULLE
Military Advisor to Haller's Army
From 1920-1921
Period picture shows his WWI rank of Captain

“The post-World War French Army had plenty of officers to spare, and France sent an enormous number of officer-instructors to Poland.  One of the French officers was a Captain named Charles de Gaulle, who had come to Poland with Haller's Army.  He had served in East Galicia and had then become an instructor at the Polish training camp at Rembertow, about six miles from Warsaw.  In the summer of 1920 he went into the field with a Polish division.  In 1921 he was offered, but declined, a commission as a major in the Polish Army.” (Excerpted from "Bitter Glory" by Richard M. Watt)

 


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314 Oliver Street
North Tonawanda, NY 14120
(716) 213-0554