Teresa Remiszewska
Teresa Remiszewska (born 19 June 1928 in Międzychód, Poland – died 2 March 2002 in Sopot) was a Polish sailor, yacht captain, sailing instructor and pioneer of women's solo sailing in Poland. She was also a journalist and jailed in late 1982 for her political activism.
Teresa Remiszewska | |
---|---|
Born | 19 June 1928 Międzychód, Poland |
Died | 2 March 2002 Sopot, Poland |
Occupation(s) | Sailor, journalist, political activist |
Known for | Polish women's solo sailing pioneer |
Spouse | Jerzy Damsz (1911–1987) |
Children | Two |
Life and work
Teresa was the youngest of three daughters born to Jadwiga and Kazimierz Remiszewski. During the German occupation of Poland during World War II, she was educated in clandestine classes, and after the war ended, she studied at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków.[1]
She married the first time in 1948 and moved to Nowa Huta. From 1965 on, after her divorce, she lived in Gdynia, taking jobs at the yacht clubs Stal and Gryf, and then at the Paris Commune Shipyard as a yacht captain and sailing instructor.[1][2]
Voyages
In 1970, she was the first Polish woman to make a solo voyage around the Baltic Sea on the yacht Zenit, taking a 690-mile route. For this feat, she was nicknamed "First Lady of the Baltic Sea"[2] and received the 3rd "Cruise of the Year" award in 1970. The cruise and the award brought her popularity, which allowed her to participate in the Fourth OSTAR Transatlantic Regatta of Solitary Sailors two years later.[2][3]
Sailing single-handed aboard the yacht Komodor in 1972, Remiszewska became the fourth woman in sailing history to cross the Atlantic alone (in a time of 57 days, 3 hours and 18 minutes) and described her ocean voyage to the United States in her book Out of the Bitterness of Salt, My Joy, which was reissued in 2019 by the Bernardinum Publishing House.[1]
While in the United States, she met Jerzy Damsz (1911–1987), the last commander of the 307th Night Fighter Squadron in England, and they married. After the couple returned to Poland, Damsz's return after 35 years of emigration resulted in a secret service investigation by the Polish communist authorities for espionage. Although the charges were brought against her husband, they prevented Remiszewska from organizing the first solo female sailing voyage around the world.[1]
Journalist
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, she worked in the editorial department of the magazine Sails and Motor Yachting. She was also a political activist and worked in the environmental protection committee of the National Covenant Commission of the Solidarity Polish trade union. For her political activism during martial law, she was detained on 23 December 1982 after a co-worker's denunciation and then arrested, remaining incarcerated from 24 December 1982 to 21 March 1983.[2] The proceedings against her were dropped in 1983.[4]
Remiszewska translated (under the pseudonym Urszula Karpinska) Norman Davies' work White Eagle, Red Star, covering the Polish–Soviet War and printed by an underground publisher illegally.[2][5]
Honors and awards
For her sailing accomplishments, she was honored with, among other things: an entry in the Pantheon of Gdynia, a Star in the Avenue of Distinguished Sea People in Rewa and a plaque in the Avenue of Polish Sailing in the Mariusz Zaruski Basin in Gdynia.[3]
Personal life
She had a son and daughter: Andrzej, a shipbuilding engineer and Danuta who became the youngest person to obtain a yacht captain's license in Poland.[1]
Remiszewska is buried with Damsz in the municipal cemetery in Sopot, Poland (section N4-19-14).
References
- "Remiszewska, Teresa". 2004-03-01. Archived from the original on 2004-03-01. Retrieved 2023-10-03.
- "Remiszewska Teresa (1928 - 2002)". Oficjalny serwis internetowy miasta Gdynia (in Polish). Retrieved 2023-10-03.
- "Aleja Żeglarstwa Polskiego". Portal Informacyjny » Żeglarski.info (in Polish). 2017-05-24. Retrieved 2023-10-03.
- They continued their trade union activities..." Tried for political reasons in the Gdańsk Voivodeship (1981-1983) , ed. IPN, Gdańsk 2012, p. 136
- Słowa, Krzysztof Bronowski-Muzeum Wolnego (2016-10-09). "BIBUŁA - wydawnictwa niezależne 1976 - 1989 Polska". www.incipit.home.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2023-10-03.