Albatros on show at new Polish Army Museum

Reproduction D.III in Polish unit markings a prime exhibit in Warsaw-based collection

On 14 August, the new Polish Army Museum opened its doors at the Warsaw Citadel, in the north of Poland’s capital city. One of the star exhibits is a reproduction Albatros D.III fighter, which wears the markings of the 7. Eskadra Lotnicza, better-known as the ‘Kościuszko Squadron’. Formed in late 1919 by Merian C. Cooper, who had served as a DH-4 bomber pilot with the US Army Air Service during World War One and went on to co-direct and produce the 1933 film King Kong, the unit was made up from a group of more than a dozen American volunteers who stayed in Europe after the 1914-18 conflict to fight for the Second Polish Republic against the Soviet Union during the Polish-Bolshevik war of February 1919-March 1921.

Still on display outside the old Army Museum in central Warsaw are a large number of former Polish Air Force aircraft, including a Petlyakov Pe-2, Tupolev Tu-2, Ilyushin Il-2 and Il-10, and a Yak-9. These constitute the largest assembly of Second World War-era aeroplanes still displayed outdoors in Europe. Thankfully, the move of this priceless group of exhibits to the new museum for restoration will begin during the course of 2024.

The Albatros D.III, wearing the markings of the ‘Kościuszko Squadron’, is one of the highlights of the newly opened Polish Army Museum.
The Albatros D.III, wearing the markings of the ‘Kościuszko Squadron’, is one of the highlights of the newly opened Polish Army Museum.