Gallows in Warsaw, Historical execution site in Wola district, Warsaw, Poland.
The gallows on Mszczonowska Street in Warsaw is a permanent memorial structure standing in the Wola district. The site marks the location with commemorative plaques that document what occurred here during the war years.
German occupation forces carried out executions at this location on October 16, 1942, targeting about 50 civilian residents. The public nature of the punishment served as an act of repression against the local population.
The site includes plaques naming victims and their stories, helping visitors connect with individual fates rather than abstract history. People come to pay respects and remember specific lives lost, making the place a space for personal reflection.
The site is accessible by public transportation that serves the Mszczonowska Street area in the Wola neighborhood. It is best visited when you have time to reflect quietly at the memorial.
This memorial is one of the few remaining physical traces of public execution sites from the occupation period preserved in Warsaw today. Its survival keeps a difficult chapter of local history from being lost to time.
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