Sunny view, to the museum's Observation Tower, tram at the Warsaw Uprising Museum Light Rail Station, Towarowa Street, Warsaw


The Warsaw Uprising Museum, housed in a former trams power station, opened 31 July 2004, the 60th Anniversary of the Uprising. Outside, the museum building, stands a Memorial Wall with the names of thousands of insurgents who died in the Uprising, from 1 August to 2 October 1944. On the museum's observation tower we see the Kotwica ('anchor'), a symbol of the Polish Underground and Home Army during World War 2. The emblem was originally created by the Home Army Wawer Sabotage Unit as an emblem for the Polish struggle for independence. With the meaning 'pomscimy Wawer' ('We shall avenge Wawer'), the initials, 'PW', were a reference to the reprisal massacre of 107 civilians, 26-27 December, 1939, by the German occupiers at Wawer, near Warsaw. 'PW' is also an abbreviation for 'Wojsko Polskie' ('Polish Army') and Powstanie Warszawskie ('Warsaw Uprising'). The symbol, because of its association with Polish independence, was banned after World War 2 by the Communist authorities. In the background of the shot rises the Crown Square Office Building, the name, 'Oracle', on the roof referring to one of the main tenants. View across Towarowa Street at Grzybowska Street towards the Museum's Observation Tower and tram at the Warsaw Uprising Museum Light Rail Station.


Size: 4299px × 2866px
Location: Towarowa at Grzybowska Street, to Observation Tower Warsaw Uprising Museum, Wola, Warsaw
Photo credit: © robert harrison / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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