Helt riktigt på alla punkter! En flygare värd att påminnas om.varjag skrev:Jan Nagórski
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jan_Nag%C3%B3rski
Den opp-och-nedvända flygbåten var en -
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grigorovich_M-9
Varjag
*Polen blev ju självständigt efter VK1.Amund skrev:Dog tydligen 1917 enligt ett land, men visade sig på 50-talet trots allt leva i sitt hemland
I länken om honom:
Varjag till väders!Nagórski survived World War II and continued his career as a civil worker in Gdańsk and then as an engineer in Warsaw. In 1955, during one of his lectures, Czesław Centkiewicz, a renowned Polish polar explorer and author, presented the audience with a short biographical note of a "long-forgotten pioneer of aviation, pilot Jan Nagórski who died in 1917". Nagórski, who remained interested in exploration of the polar areas and was present at the lecture stood up and announced that he was not Russian and definitely not dead. This revelation became widely publicised by the Polish media and Nagórski's achievements were rediscovered. On Centkiewicz's suggestion, Nagórski described his Arctic flights in a book entitled The First Above Arctic[3] (1958). In 1960 he published Over the Burning Baltic, the memoirs of his World War I service.[4] As a late recognition of his deeds, Nagórski was awarded the Officer's Cross of the Polonia Restituta by Polish President.