成人快手

Explore the 成人快手
This page has been archived and is no longer updated. Find out more about page archiving.

18 June 2014
Accessibility help
Text only
Legacies - North East Wales

成人快手 成人快手page
 Legacies
 UK Index
 North East Wales
 Article
Gallery
Video
Listings
Your stories
 Archive
 Site Info
 成人快手 History
 Where I Live

Contact Us

Like this page?
Send it to a friend!

 
Immigration and Emigration
The staff barracks at Penley.
The staff barracks at Penley.

© A Bereza / W Wernick
Penley Poles

The beginnings of the Polish hospital

In 1941, Germany attacked the Soviet Union, which led to the signing of the Polish-Soviet Agreement. Churchill brokered a deal between General Sikorski, the Polish leader, and Stalin, which allowed for the creation of a Polish army in the Soviet Union. The army was made up of the Poles who had been held captive in the Soviet Union. Polish men and women who were freed by the Agreement, travelled from all over the Soviet Union to Buzuluk, south-east of Moscow, to join the ranks.

One of the wards at Penley

The Polish Medical Core, or hospital was formed as part of the Army, and left the Soviet Union with the soldiers and their dependants for the Middle East in August 1942. The army trained in Persia, and then moved on to Iraq, where the hospital came under the command of the British. It then travelled, to Palestine, Africa and Italy, where the Polish Army and hospital spent three years fighting in support of the allies, and treating their wounded.

After the war

The staff barracks at Penley.
The staff barracks at Penley.
© A Bereza / W Wernick
When the war ended, some of the Polish who had come from eastern Poland were ambivalent about returning home. Poland was divided into two halves, and their homeland was under Soviet, and therefore, communist, control.

In 1946, the Polish Army and hospital sailed from Naples to Liverpool, and many of the Poles chose to settle in the area. A home for the hospital was found at Penley, 50 miles to the south west, to continue the treatment of war veterans and their families. The camp, which was by then near derelict, had been occupied by the No. 129th US Army General Hospital but they had abandoned it three years previously when they left for D Day.

On arrival, the conditions that the Poles encountered were in sharp contrast to those of Italy. The climate was dramatically colder, food was rationed, and the Poles met with a cool reception from the British, who were themselves struggling to make ends meet. Despite this, No.3 Polish Hospital set up camp and began to make a home from what little that was available.


Pages: [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ] Next


Your comments




Print this page
Cymraeg
Archive
Look back into the past using the Legacies' archives. Find nearly 200 tales from around the country in our collection.

Read more >
Internet Links
The 成人快手 is not responsible for the content of external Web sites.
Norfolk
Norwich textiles
Related Stories
Mass emigration to Poland and the Baltic by the Scots
The Ugandan Asians, and life in Suffolk
The Lithuanian community in Lanarkshire, how it sprung up and the fears for its future.




About the 成人快手 | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy