NEWS
from THE POLISH AMERICAN CONGRESS
DOWNSTATE NEW YORK DIVISION
177 Kent St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11222 - (718) 349-9689
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MAY 4, 2007
A TRIBUTE TO THE MEMORY OF U.S. AIR ACE FRANCIS S.
GABRESKI
New York's Long Island community will commemorate the fifth anniversary of
the death of Col. Francis S. "Gabby" Gabreski, America's top air ace in Europe
in World War II, according to the Downstate New York Division of the Polish
American Congress.
As the umbrella organization of America's Polish ethnics, the Congress
announced a wreath-laying ceremony will be conducted at Col. Gabreski's
gravesite on Saturday, May 19th, Armed Forces Day, at 11:30 a.m. Joining the
Congress in the observance will be the American Polish Council of Long Island.
His remarkable record of shooting down 28 German aircraft and destroying
another three on the ground was achieved within a period of less than eleven
months. After going into private industry when WW II ended, Gabreski rejoined
the military a few years later when the Korean War broke out. There he shot down
six Soviet-built MIG-15 fighters and shared credit for the downing of another.
Gabreski took great pride in his Polish heritage. Because he spoke Polish and
felt strongly "about what the Nazis had done to Poland" after they invaded and
started WW II in 1939, he requested assignment to a Polish fighter unit attached
to the Royal Air Force.
He then flew some two dozen missions over Europe alongside the Polish pilots
prior to joining the United States 56th Fighter Group in Britain with which he
amassed his amazing feats in air combat.
After he retired from the Air Force in 1967, Gabreski held an executive
position with Grumman Aerospace and then was named president of the Long Island
Rail Road. In tribute to him, the Suffolk County Air Force Base in Westhampton
Beach was renamed the Francis S. Gabreski Airport, now a general-aviation
airport.
The Polish American Congress honored "Gabby" at a special banquet in
Brooklyn, N.Y. in 1998. A year later, the Congress celebrated his 80th birthday
at its annual Christmas party, the traditional Polish "Oplatek."
He was brought close to tears when the gathered children of the Maria
Konopnicka Supplementary School sang their "Happy Birthday" and the traditional
Polish "Sto Lat" to him. Gabreski kept in close contact with the Polish American
Congress until his death in 2002.
"He was a great American and a proud American but an American who never
forgot his Polish roots and always remembered his Catholic origin," said Richard
Brzozowski, secretary of the Congress and chairman of the Col. Francis S.
Gabreski Memorial Committee.
The public is invited to participate in the commemorative observance at
Calverton National Cemetery, 210 Princeton Blvd., Route 25, Calverton, N.Y.,
exit 68N on the L.I. Expressway.