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Sandomierz was by no means the biggest city on the area of the Central Industrial Region.
Its most important element was creation of the Central Industrial Region, and for the period 1940-1955, three five-year old plans had been prepared.
The town grew, and creation of the Central Industrial Region had an enormous impact on Rzeszów.
Radomyśl did not take advantage of the Central Industrial Region (Poland) in the late 1930s.
In 1938 Kraśnik was selected as the location for an ammunition factory (see Central Industrial Region).
In mid-1930s, the Polish government decided to move some sectors of heavy industry to the nation's heartland, creating the Central Industrial Region.
It was a major part of a series of investments made by the Polish government in the years 1936-1939 to create the Central Industrial Region.
The factory was part of the Central Industrial Region, and was to supply radio equipment to the Polish Army.
Creation of the Central Industrial Region and plans for the new voivodeship were warmly welcomed in Sandomierz.
It was organized into at least 2 distinct zones, on the grounds of former Polish sugar refinery of the Central Industrial Region.
According to other sources, Kwiatkowski announced Sandomierz as capital of the Central Industrial Region as early as 1935.
Furthermore, when in 1936 Dębica became one of main centers of the Central Industrial Region, Pilzno's importance was further weakened, and it remained so until now.
Like Stalowa Wola, Nowa Dęba is a town which owes its existence to the Central Industrial Region.
Other project stipulated that the new Voivodeship would cover whole area of the Central Industrial Region, thus its size would be 59.951 square kilometers, with 46 counties.
Apart from already-existing industrial areas, in the mid-1930s, an ambitious, state-sponsored project of Central Industrial Region was started under Minister Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski.
In the late 1930s, the government of the Second Polish Republic created Central Industrial Region, which was almost exclusively located in Lesser Poland.
To boost the local economy, the government of the Second Polish Republic began in the mid-1930s a massive program of industrialization, known as the Central Industrial Region.
For most part of the interbellum period, unemployment and poverty were prevalent, and the situation began slowly to improve in the late 1930s, after creation of the Central Industrial Region.
The third was the creation of a central industrial district, named COP - Central Industrial Region (Centralny Okręg Przemysłowy).
The first buildings of Nowa Sarzyna were constructed in the late 1930s to house workers of a new chemical plant, built as part of Poland's Central Industrial Region.
The city was designed to be a settlement for workers of Huta Stalowa Wola (known in 1938-39 as Zakłady Poludniowe or Southern Works), a plant built as part of the Central Industrial Region.
Farmers rebelled against the government (see: 1937 peasant strike in Poland), and the situation began to change in the late 1930s, due to construction of several factories for the Central Industrial Region, which gave employment to thousands of countryside residents.
Central Industrial Region, however, did not affect western counties of Lesser Poland, which had already been urbanized and industrialized (Biala Krakowska, Zywiec, Krakow, Jaworzno, Zaglebie Dabrowskie, Zawiercie, and Czestochowa).
The rearrangement of the Moscow District of the VVS and PVO into the Special Purpose Command is apparently connected with plans in the long term for the military-space defense of the central industrial region.
This process began in the 1930s, when Poland launched a significant expansion of its armaments industry, focused on building factories in the newly created Central Industrial Region (Polish: Centralny Okręg Przemysłowy, abbreviated COP).
Industrialization came very slowly, and was promoted in the mid-1930s with the development of the Central Industrial District.
Here he completed two frescos: "Poles Fighting for American Independence" and "Central Industrial District and Gdynia."
FŁT-Kraśnik S.A. was founded in 1938 as Munition Factory number 2, as part of the Central Industrial District.
The third was the creation of a central industrial district, named COP - Central Industrial Region (Centralny Okręg Przemysłowy).
Later that morning, the Central Industrial District was flooded even while Mayor Roe Bartle of Kansas City, Missouri was on an aerial inspection of the flood scene.
As a result of the great process of industrialization of the country, and by the decision of the central authorities, the metal products factory at Kraśnik was reopened and formed part of the Central Industrial District.