Bolesław Talago
He was the son of Józef and Teofila Kulikowska. From February 1925, he published an illustrated radio bi-weekly magazine devoted to radio engineering[1]. It was one of the first Polish magazines devoted exclusively to radio and radio technology[2]. In February 1923, he was running a surveying company in Toruń[3]. As a surveyor he lived and worked with his family in many cities of Pomerania and eastern Poland: Kamieniec Podolski, Toruń, Grudziądz, Grodno, Bielsk Podlaski, Vilnius. He had two wives. With Katarzyna Talago (Sołonienko) he had four children - Boleslaw Talago (1919–1976), Bronisław (1925–1998), Halina (1927–2013)[4] and Danuta (1934–1978). During the Second World War, between 1942 and 1944 he worked in the Vilnius police station. In 1943, he was arrested and imprisoned in a forced labor camp in Prawieniszki[5], Lithuania, in connection with the execution, by the Home Army, of the Lithuanian police inspector Marian Podobasie [7]. Among the detainees were representatives of Polish intelligentsia, including scientists, teachers, lawyers, doctors, and engineers. After the war he farmed in Łódź[6] and from 1953 in Niechorze. He is buried in Warsaw at the Powązki Cemetery. References
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