Pursuit Brigade

The Pursuit Brigade (Polish: Brygada Pościgowa) was a Polish World War II unit of the Polish Air Force. It took part in the Polish Defensive War of 1939 as the main aerial reserve of the commander in chief and was used for air cover of the Polish capital of Warsaw. It was similar in shape to the Bomber Brigade. It was composed of two squadrons, each in turn composed of a number of escadrilles.

  • Polish III/1 Fighter Squadron (III/1. Dywizjon Myśliwski)
    • Polish 111th Fighter Escadrille (111 Eskadra Myśliwska)
    • Polish 112th Fighter Escadrille (112 Eskadra Myśliwska)
  • Polish IV/1 Fighter Squadron (IV/1 Dywizjon Myśliwski)
    • Polish 113th Fighter Escadrille (113 Eskadra Myśliwska)
    • Polish 114th Fighter Escadrille (114 Eskadra Myśliwska)
    • Polish 123rd Fighter Escadrille (123 Eskadra Myśliwska)

By 1st September Pursuit Brigade had 43 PZL P.11 and 10 PZL P.7 fighters (Zaloga, p.34).

It was the most successful element of the Polish Air Force during the Defensive War. On September 1st defending Warsaw it shot down 16 German planes, for a loss of 10 of its own fighters. It is credited with shooting down 42 German airplanes in the first 6 days of the war. By that time, it has however lost 38 of its 54 fighters. On 6 September, it was transferred from Warsaw theatre to Lublin (Zaloga, p.51-52).

Famous quotes containing the words pursuit and/or brigade:

    There is certainly no absolute standard of beauty. That precisely is what makes its pursuit so interesting.
    John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)

    [John] Brough’s majority is “glorious to behold.” It is worth a big victory in the field. It is decisive as to the disposition of the people to prosecute the war to the end. My regiment and brigade were both unanimous for Brough [the Union party candidate for governor of Ohio].
    Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1822–1893)