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EN
The history of major Alexander Iwanski is associated with Tarnow and its neighbourhood for almost 150 years. First documented sign of his family, left in the birth certificate books, occurred in the Matrimony Register in 1805 and it was connected with Jan Kanty Iwanski and Franciszka Loszowska's wedding. The oldest son of this marriage Jan Kanty Junior and the grandson Franciszek Ksawery were on duty for many years as forest rangers. The first of them was a ranger in Jastrzabka Nowa near Zasow and the second one in Leki Gorne below Tarnow. Alexander Iwanski was born in 1892 in Dabie (near Mielec). His parents were Jan Tadeusz (the son of Franciszek Iwanski) a teacher in Tarnow and Rozalia from the Jaklinski family. After graduating from the Junior High School in Tarnow and beginning legal studies at Jagiellonian University in Cracow in 1914, Alexander Iwanski was conscripted to Austrian army. He served military service in the 56th Austrian infantry regiment fighting on a Russian, Romanian and Italian front. He also trained the soldiers in a reserve reeve in Kielce. Alexander Iwanski took part in gorlicka campaign in which the 56th Austrian infantry regiment fought for the Pustka Hill. At the end of May 1915, near Krakowiec, Alexander was seriously hurt in head and stayed in hospital in Vienna. For his military service and bravery he was honoured with Austrian distinctions: the Great Silver Bravery Order of the First Class and the Charles Military Cross. In 1918 he was on the Italian front as an officer and took part in the creation of the 12th Infantry Regiment of Wadowice. After returning with his army to Wadowice he was appointed to be the first aide-de-camp in the headquarters district Wadowice. After marrying Zofia Waligorska – the daughter of Franciszek Waligorski (retired post office cashier) his later duty was connected with the commissary. Zofia and Alexander Iwanscy had four children: Krystyna, Adam, Danuta and Andrzej. In the years 1919-1939 Alexander Iwanski took active part in the military service of the Officers Corps Commissary in Brzesc by the river Bug, in Grodno, Lodz, Warsaw, Bialystok, Katowice and Kielce. He had directional functions in all of the commissary divisions. After finishing the Commissary High School in 1925 in Warsaw, he had the military service in Lwow for six years. His brother Franciszek often visited him at that time. Franciszek was a pilot-observant and served in the 6th air regiment in Sknilowo near Lwow. For the last four years before the World War II Alexander Iwanski was the Director of the Receiving Group with the degree of the Major Commissary. His family spent a lot of months and sometimes even years with his grandparents Waligorscy in Wadowice. In 1937 the Iwanski family moved to Wadowice forever and their children Danuta and Adam continued learning in the local schools. After the broke out of the World War II and the evacuation to the West, major Alexander Iwanski served military service in France and in England (Scotland). In 1946 he returned home to his family. He died on 11th June 1965 in Krosno.
EN
The Organization for Preparing Women for the Defense of the Country / Female Military Training Organisation (Polish acronym: PWK) was established on March 20, 1928 in order to prepare women for auxiliary functions in the army in the event of the outbreak of war. Members of the Organisation were undergoing sanitary, communications, economic and office training. In March 1939, the Social Emergency Service was established to acquaint Polish women, who were not associated, with the principles of self-defense and self-help during the war. The Organization (PWK) also had a dynamically developing Local Circle in Wadowice, which cooperated with the local 12th Infantry Regiment. At the outbreak of the war, the initial mobilization plans failed, but the trained members of PWK joined the current defensive works throughout the country.
PL
Organizacja Przysposobienie Wojskowe Kobiet (PWK) została założona 20 marca 1928 r. Jej celem było przygotowanie kobiet do pełnienia funkcji pomocniczych w wojsku w przypadku wybuchu wojny. Członkinie Organizacji przechodziły szkolenia w zakresie pomocy medycznej i łączności a także księgowe i biurowe. W marcu 1939 r. Nadwyczajny Walny Zjazd PWK powołał pogotowie społeczne, które miało przygotować kobiety na wypadek wojny. Organizacja posiadała dynamicznie rozwijający się hufiec w Wadowicach, który współpracował z 12 pułkiem piechoty.
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