Józef Maroszek was born on 13 June or 13 July 1904 in
Boglewice near
Grójec. Although Maroszek's design never entered mass production, it drew the attention of military authorities. Before completing his studies, on 9 August 1931, Maroszek married Helena née Piątkowska, a 30-year-old widow. On 18 April 1932, he earned the degree of mechanical engineer. After graduation, Maroszek was employed at the
Military Institute of Armament Technology in Warsaw. For several months, he refined his Karabinek KP-32 project, revisiting it again between 1935 and 1936. However, its flaws could not be fully resolved, and the
prototype was ultimately not selected for production. Between 1934 and 1935, Maroszek initiated work on a new
anti-tank rifle design, later adopted by the Polish Armed Forces as the
wz. 35 anti-tank rifle. By late 1935 and early 1936, a trial batch of prototypes was produced. The innovative design of this rifle, featuring a
muzzle brake, proved far more effective at piercing armor than traditional designs and was nearly half the weight. In 1937, the rifle entered secret
mass production, continuing until the outbreak of
World War II. In parallel, the
Military Institute of Armament Technology announced a competition in 1934 for Poland's first domestically designed
semi-automatic rifle. Maroszek's "Turniej" rifle, alongside two other designs, progressed to advanced testing, and in 1936, it was selected as the sole design for further development. By 1938, the refined
Kbsp wz. 38M entered production, but only 150 units of the trial series were manufactured before the war disrupted further production. One of Maroszek's lesser-known projects was a training variant of the
Browning wz. 28, adapted for the cheaper
.22 long rifle ammunition. While he created a prototype, it never advanced to mass production. and the other at the
Warsaw Rising Museum When war broke out, Maroszek and the Military Institute of Armament Technology staff were evacuated eastward. On 16 September 1939, their evacuation train was attacked by the
Luftwaffe near
Zdolbuniv in
Volhynia. According to Maroszek, he used his personal wz. 38M semi-automatic rifle to fire at attacking aircraft, reportedly forcing one to land with the pilot severely wounded and the gunner fatally shot. This remains the only known account of the wz. 38M being used during the
September Campaign. After Poland's occupation by Soviet and German forces, Maroszek returned to Warsaw. From December 1939, he worked as a foreman at H. Zieleziński's mechanical plant in
Praga, assisting in rebuilding Warsaw's power plant after war damage. During this time, Maroszek collaborated with the
resistance movement. He manufactured springs and spare parts for captured weapons in his apartment and helped transport these materials to storage locations. After its fall, he was transferred through transition camps in
Pruszków and
Skierniewice to relatives in
Sadurki. By March 1945, he returned to Warsaw to his surviving apartment in
Mokotów.
Academic career Shortly after the war, Józef Maroszek began collaborating with Władysław Kukier's company. However, Professor soon recruited him to help organize the newly established
Łódź University of Technology, and the two later returned to Warsaw. Between the 1960s and 1970s, he published three academic manuals:
engineering drawing (1969),
fasteners (1974), and mechanical transmissions (1971). On 25 November 1975, Maroszek retired but remained professionally active. He contributed to investigations, such as providing expertise on the tragic
1979 Warsaw gas explosion. For this work, he drew upon calculations he had performed decades earlier during his doctoral research on muzzle brakes, a feature he had implemented in his anti-tank rifle design. Józef Maroszek passed away on the 6th of January, 1985 in Warsaw at the age of 80 and was buried at Wawrzyszew Cemetery. == Awards, distinctions, and decorations ==