History Daily - The End of the Warsaw Uprising
Episode Date: October 2, 2025October 2, 1944. After two months of fighting, the Warsaw Uprising ends when the surviving Polish rebels surrender to German forces. This episode originally aired in 2023. Support the show! Join Int...o History for ad-free listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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Oh, how much is it?
I'm pretty bad.
What?
What you laid out to say to leaven up.
I laid this one elamics, and then
a pair of lachycourtia.
Maista.
Vaasan Club.
Osta Vaasan tuotteita,
and runnasta palkintoia.
It's September 1st, 1944,
and Nazi occupied Warsaw,
five years into World War II.
Teresa Vilska, a young female liaison officer
with the Polish Home Army,
leads a group of 50 men through the
labyrinthine sewage system
running beneath the city.
Teresa is in charge of taking them across town to a rendezvous point where the Polish army needs
backup.
It's also her job to keep them orderly and silent, which is no easy feat.
Many of the men in the tunnels are not trained soldiers.
The majority are simply civilians who see now as the moment to rise up against their German
occupiers.
They struggle to keep their cool in the underground.
Frightened by the eerie silence of their strange new surroundings, some begin to
to raise their voices.
One switches on a flashlight.
Teresa flinches.
She knows the smallest of sounds, the briefest of lights,
will alert the German soldiers above,
and if found, they'll pay with their lives.
Teresa silences the soldiers around her,
but some brush off her warnings
and continue their nervous conversation.
Teresa grabs one man by the collar
and tells him she'll shoot him dead
if he makes another sound.
The threat is a bluff.
She isn't even armed,
but the soldiers don't know that.
The men finally fall silent and just in time.
Above them is an open manhole guarded by two German soldiers.
Teresa holds her breath as she silently shuffles through the tunnel
and the others follow suit.
Finally, they've made it past the soldiers,
but the journey is not even half over.
The walls around them shake as bombs drop from German planes overhead.
Just one could bring the entire tunnel system crashing down,
but Teresa can't think.
like that. She has a job to do. So they trudge on until Teresa spots another open manhole.
This time she breathes aside relief, realizing they've reached their destination.
She motioned for the men to start climbing the ladder leading up to the opening,
and one by one they're pulled up from the sewers by fellow Polish soldiers.
Teresa is the last to climb up. Her mission is a success, but the battle is far from over.
For 31 days, the citizens of Warsaw have been.
been fighting to retake their city. Over the next month, Polish fighters and others from the surrounding
area will lay down their lives in the pursuit of freedom in an effort that will come to be known
as the Warsaw uprising. But political games played out far from Poland will frustrate those
fighting for their lives and eventually force the rebels of Warsaw to accept defeat on October 2,
1944. A quick word before we get to the rest of the show. I know many of you listen to History Daily
while in the car, which is great. I like keeping you comfortable.
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Well, how many paver?
What did you? What you laidoed there? I laid down. I laid down one, one of one
Elamukson and then
a pair
Lachiacortia.
Maista.
Vaasan Club.
Osta Vaasan
Tuotteita,
Kereap,
and lunasta
Palkintoe.
From Noiser
in Airship,
I'm Lindsay Graham.
And this is
History Daily.
History is made
every day.
On this
podcast, every
day, we tell the
true stories of the
people and events
that shaped our world.
Today is
October 2,
1944,
the end of the
Warsaw Uprising.
It's August 1st,
in Warsaw, Poland, just before five in the afternoon.
General Taduz Borkomorodzky, the leader of the Polish Home Guard, walks through the streets of Warsaw,
heading to the tobacco factory that houses his impromptu headquarters.
As the general traverses through the city, he passes faces he recognizes as men from his underground
resistance movement, milling about incognito.
At exactly 5 p.m., these men will be full soldiers, members of the Polish Home Army,
ready to follow his orders, rise up, and finally attack the occupying Nazis.
In 1939, Poland was invaded by Germans on the West and Soviets on the East.
The two superpowers had made a deal to divide and conquer Eastern Europe,
and Poland became their first target.
Stuck between the might of both Hitler and Stalin, Poland had little hope of survival.
But over the past five years, a lot has changed.
Now the Soviets are sworn enemies of the Nazis.
And after having dealt Germany several defeats, the Soviets have taken to the airwaves,
asking the Polish army to rise up against their occupiers.
But the Polish people face a dilemma.
If they fight and beat the Germans, the Soviets are likely to come and claim Warsaw for their own.
And the last thing many Polish people want is to trade one occupier for another.
But there is a glimmer of hope that if the Polish Home Army retakes Warsaw quickly enough,
they'll have a slim chance of defending the city against their supposed ally,
to the east. So the Polish army has decided to go through with the battle. And the man to lead
this military campaign is General Bor Komorovsky. The general arrives at the factory and checks his
watch. In just 15 minutes' time, 40,000 members of the Home Army will take to the streets of Warsaw,
armed with whatever they can find and turn on the Nazis. But as a truck approaches the factory,
the general worries that their plans may still be derailed. The vehicle is filled with several
members of the German police. They're most likely just passing by, but if they recognize the
sentry stationed outside the factory's entrance as an armed Polish fighter, the rebel's element
of surprise could be lost. The general rises from his seat to intervene, but several other
soldiers beat him to the scene. They raise their guns and kill all the Germans inside the truck.
But their gunshots alert other Germans positioned in pillboxes around the street. They open fire
and bullets cascade in the direction of the general and his men in the factory above.
As the Polish unit inside the factory fights back, the 5 p.m. deadline comes to pass.
Church bells ring and sirens scream throughout the city,
immediately followed by gunfire,
as nearly 40,000 home army soldiers take to the streets
aiming their weapons at anything in a German uniform.
All over the city, tanks are lit ablaze by bottles filled with gasoline and corked with explosives.
With what seems like the entire populace of Warsaw working as one,
the Germans in the street have no idea where to return fire.
For three hours, the fighting continues.
Then, at 8 p.m., the general hears scream from all around him.
And for once, these are screams of joy.
The red and white colors of the Polish flag once again fly above the offices of Prudential House,
the tallest building in Poland.
One by one, more flags begin to fly.
on the post office, on the town hall building.
The general takes in the scene.
He looks to the west and sees a German fuel dump on fire.
He knows that all of this must be visible to the Soviet forces on the horizon to the east.
And that is a worrying thought.
Today may have felt triumphant, but their ammunition won't last much longer.
If their grand plan is to succeed, the general knows the fighting has to be over in only a matter of days,
or else the Poles have no hope of keeping their city.
And still, the fighting continues.
The Polish Home Army suffers heavy casualties.
In the first 24 hours alone, they lose 2,000 men and the Germans only 500.
And over the coming weeks, positions will be taken and surrendered.
There will be battles for the city's highways,
as the Polish try to eliminate the Germans' ability to escape or receive reinforcements.
But though they will fight with a fierce passion,
the Polish soldiers will soon realize that their uprising success will depend on something
they do not control the support of Poland's allies.
It's been a day.
It's a good.
What you laid up to say on the oven.
I laid up myelieu.
I laid up one elamuxen and then parli lachycardia.
Maista.
Vaasan Club.
Osta Vaasan tuotteita,
kerapist, and lunasta palkintoa.
It's September 18th, 1944,
on a United States air base in Suffolk, England,
49 days after the Warsaw uprising began.
At 3 a.m., a group of airmen are rapsed,
from bed. They eat breakfast and collect their equipment, gathering oxygen masks,
parachutes, and emergency landing kits before being hustled into a briefing room.
There they learn of today's mission. They're informed that they'll be part of an
assignment to bring much-needed aid to the Polish soldiers fighting in Warsaw. They're told
that for weeks the Polish people have been battling Nazi occupiers bravely and without question,
but their supplies are short. If they are to have any hope of reclaiming Warsaw, they'll need more
ammunition and medical supplies, which the Allies intend to provide.
Maps are handed out, indicating where the Polish Home Army has seized back control from the Nazis.
The airmen are divided into two separate groups, each with their own location to target within the city.
They won't be bombing, only parachuting in supplies.
Pilots nod in understanding.
The mission sounds simple enough, but before they can take off, their commanding officer explains there's one complication.
After dropping off supplies in Warsaw, the planes will need to land in nearby Soviet territory.
A murmur circles the room.
In recent months, tensions between the Soviet Union and its Western allies have ratcheted up.
Despite all being on the same side in their fight against the Axis powers,
divisions have become evident regarding post-war plans.
The Soviet Union wants to establish a sphere of influence in Eastern Europe
and set up a pro-Soviet government in Poland after the war.
United States and the United Kingdom, on the other hand,
want to prevent the spread of communism
and hope to see a free and democratic government established in Poland instead.
These competing interests have started to manifest themselves in the battle over Warsaw.
The UK's leader, Winston Churchill,
has already sent internal messages questioning Soviet commander Joseph Stalin's reluctance to help Warsaw.
Rumors abound that the Soviets want Hitler's men to take out as much of the anti-Soviet Polish army as possible
before they themselves can sweep in.
This atmosphere's suspicion and distrust
gives the airmen pause about landing in Soviet territory.
Their commanding officer understands and sheriffs their hesitation.
But this mission is too important.
They must see it through, though he advises his pilots to leave behind their sidearms.
When they do land on Soviet soil, it's best that they are unarmed,
less tensions between their countries escalate further.
His men oblige and finish their preparations.
Then, at 7.30 a.m., under cover of fog, three bomber groups and three fighter groups
take off for what will be an eight-and-a-half-hour journey.
For the first few hours, the aircraft fly uneventfully.
Then, just after 11 a.m., a lone German fighter is spotted, but swiftly dispatched.
As the Allied planes continue above northern Germany, more German aircraft take to the skies.
And the first casualty on the Allied side is lost in a dogfight.
But the majority of the planes make it to the sky.
skies above Warsaw and drop the much-needed supplies below. On the ground, the Polish Home Army
rejoices, cheering and shouting praise to the Americans for coming to their aid. And as the crates
parachute down to their targets, delighted soldiers rip open the boxes to reveal everything
from guns and ammunition to anti-tank weapons and food. One crate even holds blood for transfusions
donated from a Scottish hospital. But many of the drops don't go to plan. Even when the packages land
in the correct location, they immediately provoked a direct response from Germans on the ground.
Many attempts to claim the boxes are stopped by concentrated German fire.
Some of the larger crates drop from the sky fall into no-man's land,
inspiring tense standoffs between Polish soldiers on one side,
desperate to get the crates and their contents,
and German soldiers on the other, doing anything they can to prevent their enemy from re-arming.
And the Polish rebels put up a spirited fight, but it's of little use.
The Allies support has come too late to tip the tide in favor of the Polish,
and with many of the Home Army already without ammunition,
the majority of the thousand or so supply containers are claimed by the Nazis.
All told, nearly 80% of the parcels intended for the Polish will fall into enemy hands,
and as well-intentioned as the mission was, it will not be the miracle the people of Warsaw needed.
As a result, after two months of fighting and countless lives lost,
the Warsaw Uprising will come to a tragic end.
It's been a day.
It's a good.
What's your life on?
I laid out of the leifference and then parli lachycourtier.
Maista.
Vaasan Club.
Osta Vaasan tuotteita,
kerapist, and lunasta palkintoa.
It's October 2nd, 1944,
63 days after the start of the Warsaw uprising.
General Taduz-Borkovsky sits across from a German commander
with a pen in his hand.
He stares his counterpart in the eyes, wondering if he can trust the man in front of him.
He thinks about how two weeks earlier the German forces had been good to their word
and let over 20,000 civilians lead the city to look for safety.
He weighs that, with the horrors he knows the Nazis have committed over five years of occupation.
But after 63 days of fighting, the Polish rebels are out of arms, supplies, food, and water,
giving the general little choice but to negotiate an end to their uprising.
One of the terms of his agreement with the Germans is that all those who fought will be given
combatant rights and face no reprisal from German forces.
The general is skeptical of whether he can trust the Nazis to follow through with this.
But with no further support coming from the Allies,
the general sees no option but to sign the paper in front of him,
agreeing to the immediate capitulation of the Polish Home Army.
The next day, Polish soldiers will hand over their weapons
and make their way to Germany's prisoner of war camps.
A further half a million Polish civilians will be forced once again to surrender to Nazi occupation.
During the uprising and its aftermath, over 10,000 Polish soldiers and an estimated 200,000 civilians will be killed.
And once the Polish army is gone, German forces will lay waste to Warsaw.
Nazis will take flamethrowers to buildings, focusing in particular on those with historic significance.
And over the course of three months, they will level the city to the ground.
Despite the capitulation agreement,
around 100,000 Polish civilians will be sent to Germany as slave laborers.
Several thousand more will find themselves in concentration camps.
And by the time the Soviet Union finally captures Warsaw on January 17, 1945,
there will be little left of the once Grand City.
With so many of the anti-Soviet forces killed in the uprising,
it will be simple for Stalin to assert control of the region.
For years after World War II,
Poland will be ruled by a puppet communist government.
But in 1989, the country will reestablish itself as a democratic state
over four decades after the country's hope of self-determination was crushed
by the unfortunate end of the Warsaw uprising on October 2, 1944.
Next, on History Daily, the last native Prince of Wales is executed
after being found guilty for high treason against the King of England.
From Noisor and airship, this is History Daily,
hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham.
Audio editing by Mohamed Shazi, sound designed by Mali Bach, music by Lindsay Graham.
This episode is written and researched by Owen Paul Nichols.
Executive producers are Alexandra Curry Buckner for airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
I'm pretty good.
What you laid out there?
What you laidoed on the oven.
I laidoen one elamics and then pari lachiacortia.
Maista.
Vaasan Club.
Osta Vaassan tootte,
getpistees and lunasta
palkintoa.
