Mieczysław Boruta-Spiechowicz

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Mieczysław Boruta-Spiechowicz
Kopa, Morawski
Rank Generał brygady Generał brygady
Born February 20, 1894
Rzeszów, Austria-Hungary
Died October 13, 1985
Zakopane, Poland
Career
Profession: professional officer,
In service since: 1914
Notable assignments: CO of Boruta Operational Group
CO of the 1st Armoured Corps
Major wars and battles: Great War, Polish-Ukrainian War, Polish-Bolshevik War, Polish Defensive War, World War II
Later work: farmer, social worker
Medals
Order Virtuti Militari (V klasy) Krzyż Oficerski Orderu Odrodzenia Polski Krzyż Niepodległości z Mieczami Krzyż Walecznych Krzyż Walecznych Krzyż Walecznych Krzyż Walecznych Krzyż Walecznych Krzyż Walecznych Krzyż Walecznych Złoty Krzyż Zasługi

Mieczysław Boruta-Spiechowicz (1894 - 1985) was a Polish military officer, a general of the Polish Army and a notable member of the post-war anti-communist opposition in Poland.

He joined the army in 1914 and served at various posts within the Polish Legions. After Poland regained her independence in 1918 he remained in active service and took part in both the Polish-Ukrainian War and the Battle of Lwów, in which he commanded a separate defence line, and later a Lwów Infantry Regiment formed out of local volunteers. Dispatched to France, he became the commander of two regiments of the Blue Army, with which he returned to Poland in 1919. During the Polish-Bolshevik War he distinguished himself as a skilled commander of the Polish mountain infantry units, of which he formed a regiment and commanded it on various fronts of the conflict.

After the war he was sent to the Higher War School in Warsaw and received professional military training. He served at various commanding posts in a number of Polish infantry units, both standard and mountain. He was also a notable military theorist and writer of several books on the history and practice of warfare. During the Polish Defensive War he served as the commanding officer of the Boruta Operational Group, a part of the Kraków Army. Taken prisoner of war by the USSR, he was held in various Gulags and NKVD prisons until set free by the Sikorski-Mayski Agreement of 1941. He then joined the Anders' Polish Army in the East and became the commanding officer of the newly-formed Polish 5th Infantry Division. He spent the rest of the World War II as the commander of the Polish 1st Armoured Corps, combining the Polish 1st Armoured Division and the Polish Independent Parachute Brigade.

As one of the very few Polish pre-war generals to return to Communist-held Poland in 1945, he was initially accepted into the Polish Army. However, following a conflict with Karol Świerczewski he was demobilized and retired. He settled in Zakopane, where he became a farmer. He also remained an active member of the anti-communist opposition in Poland and in 1977 became one of the founding members of the ROPCiO movement.

This article is part
of the series:
Polish Podhale Rifles
pre-war collar badge of the Podhale Rifles
History of Poland
2nd Mountain Bde
21st Mountain Div
22nd Mountain Div
Carpathian Bde
3rd Carpathian Div
21st Podhale Brigade
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