Stanisław Krysicki
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Stanisław Krysicki | |
---|---|
1910 – 2006 | |
Place of death | Warsaw, Poland |
Allegiance | Allies of World War II |
Rank | Captain |
Other work | Lawyer |
Captain Stanisław Krysicki (1910-2006) was a Polish lawyer, who served as a military judge in Scotland during World War II[1]. Krysicki's father Alexander was a businessman, who built Jagiellonki School. In this school, Stanislav Krysicki took part in Scouting and organized summer camps. He was a leader of the Scouting Association of the Republic (Poland),[2][dubious ] and organized many divisions.
Krysicki completed his legal studies at Warsaw University, and went on to become a judge at the District Court in Płock. He sent several German Nazi spies to prison. When the Second World War started, the Germans wanted to find him for imprisoning their agents. He fled to Romania, and then to France and Scotland.
Krysicki undertook further legal studies in Dundee. He become a Second Lieutenant in the corps of Judicial Corps judicial officers, later advancing to the rank of Captain. He completed studies of administrative law in 1945 at the University of Edinburgh. After the war he worked for the Midland Bank in London[3]. Three years later he returned to Poland, becoming an expert on structural law, and a legal adviser in Warsaw. He practiced law in his home country for another 22 years.
Stanislav Krysicki wrote in his autobiography:
"...from autumn of 1926 I became qualified on position team (...) by ambition my (...) was organization for our bodyguard of camp summer (...). I tried therefore conquests in various ways money, abym could organize such camp. We rented from the gardener with street. Missionary the pond, which in each nearly year froze. During of winter months, nearly from the half of December to first days of March, ice was suitable to the driving on the skates. Athletics this were at the same time very popular and nearly all school youth it tilled. We engaged the man, who prepared ice field to the drive, tidying snow and glazing by water, in order to on the surface was smooth ice. We installed also loudspeaker, but from of gramophone plates flowed music appropriate to the drive. Tickets sold in turn separate harcerze. Income from the skating rink was enough significant. We earned also on the sale of paste to the shoes, which at that time easily was not to receive. My uncle had the factory of such paste. From it I found out, in what sort manner is produced it and personally I even accompanied at to it with it wyrobie. Boys gathered empty pudełka, we filled it produced through us by paste, but has pudełkach naklejaliśmy of card advertising paste. Additionally in the shop school locating itself in the wardrobe on the first piętrze of corridor we sold literate materials and the cake, which we acquired on the wholesale price from the confectioner, gentleman of bell having factory near by of school building….[4]
[edit] References
- ^ Stanisław Krysicki, Gazeta.pl, 2006-10-11,
- ^ Krysicki, S. Od Procuratora do Sapera I do Auditora
- ^ Kuffel, R. Jagiellończyków biografie niepospolite. ISBN 9788391582770[page # needed]
- ^ Krysicki, S. Od Procuratora do Sapera I do Auditora
[edit] Further reading
- Romany Kuffel, Jagiellończyków biografie niepospolite