Jan Włodarkiewicz | |
---|---|
Born |
Warsaw, Russian Empire |
May 28, 1900
Died | March 19, 1942 Lwów, Poland |
(aged 41)
Allegiance | Poland |
Years of service | 1915–1942 |
Rank | lieutenant colonel |
Commands held | Wachlarz |
Battles/wars | World War I, Polish-Bolshevik War, World War II |
Lieutenant Colonel Jan Włodarkiewicz (Polish: [ˈjan vwɔdarˈkʲɛvit͡ʂ]; 1900–1942; noms de guerre Damian, Darwicz and Odważny) was a Polish soldier, an officer of the Polish Army and a freedom fighter during World War II. He is notable as the first commander of the Wachlarz, the first secret service formed by an underground resistance organization in occupied Europe.
Jan Włodarkiewicz was born May 28, 1900 in Warsaw. A graduate of the prestigious Stanisław Staszic gymnasium in Warsaw, in his youth Włodarkiewicz took part in several anti-tsarist youth organizations. After the outbreak of World War I he joined the clandestine Polish Military Organization, where he received basic military training.
After the war he remained in the Polish Army and since 1918 served in all conflicts Poland fought in. Initially in the Nieśwież-based Polish 27th Uhlan Regiment, in 1929 he was assigned to the staff of the 9th Independent Cavalry brigade in Baranowicze. After his successful service there, in 1930 he was assigned to the Centre for Cavalry Training in Grudziądz. In 1935 he was promoted to rotmistrz (captain of cavalry). Since then until the outbreak of World War II he served in the Polish General Staff as an officer officially responsible for the training of reserve Polish cavalry units. In reality, he served in the Special Command entitled with organization of partisan warfare, diversion and railroad sabotage of the 2nd Department of the Polish General Staff.