s in Pinsk. In the Polish operational plans, the Pinsk flotilla was to form a mobile strategic reserve of the
Polish Army in the area and was to constitute the core of the forces defending the area of the Pinsk Marshes. The Polish
commander-in-chief and
Marshal of Poland,
Edward Rydz-Śmigły, forecast that the area would be used for a last stand by the Polish Army, where it would await the relief on the western front from Poland's allies. However the
Invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939, made the plans obsolete. In September 1939, the Flotilla (without the Vistula River Detachment) consisted of 6 river monitors, 3 river gunboats, 4 armed ships, 17 armed cutters (including 3 service cutters and 1 artillery reconnaissance and communications cutter), 2 reporting cutters, 7 river minesweepers and a mine-gas ship, and 48-50 auxiliary units, including 32 scows, a hospital ship, 2 tugs, several motorboats and 6 speedboats. All units were sunk on the orders of General Franciszek Kleeberg in 1939. From 25 September to 12 November, the emergency and rescue service of the
Dnieper Flotilla and the
EPRON rescue and underwater works company recovered at least 54 of them, including 26 combat ships (5 monitors, 2 gunboats, 15 armed cutters, a mine-gas ship and 3 minesweepers), which were then incorporated into the WFD after repairs and rearmament. On 10–14 September 1939, on the basis of the reserve battalion (mobilised from 31 August) and the Landing Unit (established on 2 August), two naval battalions were formed, consisting of dismounted cadets from the Naval Cadet School in
Gdynia and reserve sailors. The battalion commanders were Commander Pawłowski and Capt. Mar. Marian Foltyn (initially Lt. Mar. Władysław Galiński). The sailors were changed into the field uniforms of the land forces, the officers and senior officer cadets kept their garrison sailor caps, the younger officer cadets and reservists mostly put the
Navy eagles on their field caps on their own initiative. On September 20, after sinking the floating units, the majority of the Flotilla's personnel marched on the orders of General Kleeberg towards
Lubieszów and
Włodawa, with the intention of breaking through towards
Romania. On September 22, General Kleeberg, deprived of contact with the command, decided to march to the aid of
Warsaw. On September 28, he changed the name of his troops to
SGO "Polesie". After the departure, in accordance with Kleeberg's order, of the few who doubted the purpose of further fighting and some sailors of
Ukrainian and
Belarusian nationality, the reorganization of the naval battalions took place, which on September 28, together with other sailors, joined the 182nd Infantry Regiment of the 60th Infantry Division as the 3rd "naval" battalion. The battalion commander was 2nd Lt. Commander Stefan Kamiński, the company commanders were Capt. Mar. Lucjan Rabenda, Artillery Captain Jerzy Wojciechowski and Infantry Captain Jan Lipecki. The quartermaster was 2nd Lt. Commander Alojzy Pawłowski. In addition, the 4th company of the independent battalion of the 179th Infantry Regiment of this division was created from the sailors (commander - 2nd Lt. Mar. Bohdan Korsak). Some of the flotilla sailors did not join SGO "Polesie", but joined the
KOP Group of Brig. Gen.
Wilhelm Orlik-Rückemann, forming a joint naval battalion under the command of: Lieutenant Commander Henryk Eibl, Captain Mar. Edmund Jodkowski and Captain Art. Bogusław Rutyński. Most of them were taken prisoner by the Soviets on the night of 25/26 September, with several dozen being murdered the next day in
Mokrany. During actions against the Soviets and the Germans, most of the ships were
scuttled by their crews to avoid capture. In 1939-40 most of them were
refloated,
repaired, rearmed and included in the Soviet Pinsk Naval Flotilla (1940). They took an active part in battles of
World War II but were mostly destroyed in 1941. ==See also==