Following retirement he settled in his wife's manor in
Omięcin near
Szydłowiec. Although only a
Major, he was referred to as "The General" by the local population.[4]
He served with distinction until the final
Battle of Warsaw. Despite his tactical successes in the borough of
Wola, which pushed back the initial assault, Młokosiewicz's force was defeated the following day, and
Warsaw fell to the
Imperial Russian Army.[6]
Three years before his death, Młokosiewicz published his own account of the
Battle of Fuengirola and his part in the
Peninsular War. It was in large part a reaction to inconsistencies in Blayney's memoirs.[7]
^Tadeusz Nowak; Jan Wimmer; Eligiusz Kozłowski; Mieczysław Wrzosek (1973).
Dzieje oręża polskiego, 963-1945: Kozłowski, E., Wrzosek, M. 1794-1938. Wydawn. Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej, Uderzenie Franciszka Młokosiewicza odrzuciło Rosjan na pozycje wolskie. Przeciwnatarcie to zakończyło pierwszy dzień walk o Warszawę, w której Rosjanie odnieśli poważny sukces, natomiast Polacy (Bem i Młokosiewicz) zdołali odwlec upadek miasta o jeden dzień. Retrieved 13 June 2012.