Piotr Skuratowicz
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Piotr Skuratowicz | |
---|---|
1891 – March/April of 1940 | |
Place of death | Katyń massacre |
Allegiance | Poland |
Rank | Generał brygady |
Commands held | Dubno Operational Group |
Battles/wars | Great War, Polish-Bolshevik War, Invasion of Poland |
Awards |
Piotr Skuratowicz (1891-1940) was a Polish military commander and a General of the Polish Army. A renowned cavalryman, he was arrested by the NKVD and murdered in the Katyn massacre.[1]
Piotr Marian Skuratowicz was born 1891 in Congress Poland, Russian Empire. He joined the Imperial Russian Army, where he received officer's training. During World War I he was drafted to the army and served with distinction on the Eastern Front. In 1917 he joined the 1st Polish Corps being formed in Russia, he was sent to Murmansk and then to France, where he joined Gen. Józef Haller's Blue Army. In June of 1919 he returned with his unit to the re-established Poland.
During the Polish-Bolshevik War he distinguished himself as a skilled cavalry commander and in 1920 he was made the commanding officer of the 6th Mounted Rifle Regiment. After the war he remained in the army and, following 1932, became the commander of Ostrołęka-based XII Cavalry Brigade. In 1937 came the peak of his career, when he was appointed to the Polish Ministry of Military Affairs as the chief of Cavalry Department. Throughout the entire interbellum period (after 1922) he was also the commander of Grudziądz-based Centre for Cavalry Training. Promoted to the rank of General in the spring of 1939, he became the commanding officer of the Dubno Operational Group, formed of various march battalions of cavalry units. With that unit he was to reinforce the Polish troops fighting with the Germans after the outbreak of the Invasion of Poland. However, after the Soviet invasion of Poland of September 17, his post was taken by Stefan Hanka-Kulesza and the unit was destroyed by the Red Army soon afterwards.
Arrested by the NKVD, Skuratowicz was sent to the concentration camp of Starobielsk and was then murdered in the Katyń massacre of 1940, in the NKVD prison in Kharkov.
[edit] References
- ^ George Sanford (2005). Katyn and the Soviet Massacre of 1940: Truth, Justice and Memory. Routledge, 50. ISBN 0415338735.