Dęblin, Poland
Polish Air Force University
Lotnicza Akademia Wojskowa
University type: military
Status: public
Contact:
ul. Dywizjonu 303 nr 35
08-521 Dęblin
tel. +48 261 517 100
Polish Air Force Academy, known all over the
world as the Dęblin „School of the Eaglets” , continues the traditions
of the Air Force Officer Schools operating from 1918. Air Force
Officer School was established in the town of Grudziądz in November
1925. The "School of the Eaglets" was transferred to the Dęblin area,
where the military had been granted the land, on 14 April 1927. From
1928, under the name Air Force Officer Cadet School, the School
commenced the education and training of pilots and observers who were
to become Polish Air Force officers. During the Second World War, after
the 1939 Defensive War in Poland, Polish Air Force personnel fought in
Western Europe, under the banner of Polish Air Force. The actual
banner, which is a relic kept in the Academy's Hall of Tradition, is a
sign of glory of Polish wings and of the unity of Polish Air Force
personnel fighting in the West and in the East. In the course of the
war, the pilots and instructors from Dęblin continued to train the air
force personnel in Polish Flight Training Schools, among others in
Hucknall and Newton. In Poland, which was partially liberated from
German occupation, air training was resumed by the Air Force School of
Polish Armed Forces in Zamość on 31 October 1944. That school was
transferred to Dęblin airfields on 23 March 1945. In 1968, Air Force
Officer School was re-organized and given the status of a
university-level school under the name of Air Force Officer Training
College. By the Act issued of the Polish Prime Minister on 7th June,
1994, concerning transforming officer training colleges into higher
education institutions of the university level, the School was
re-organized and given its current name of the Polish Air Force
Academy.
Committed to preserving the eternal memory of
many generations of Polish Air Force Personnel, Polish Air force
Academy strives for the development of the Polish Air Force by training
and educating new generations of aviators and expanding the scientific
and technological heritage.