2015年8月31日星期一

52. Infanterie-Division



The 52. Infanterie-Division was formed in August 1939 as part of the 3. Welle (wave). It manned defensive positions in the Saarpfalz in 1939 and later participated in the invasion of France. It took part in the invasion of the Soviet Union and, after two years of combat under Heeresgruppe Mitte, the division was disbanded November 1943 after suffering heavy losses near Smolensk.
The division staff formed the staff of the 52. Feldausbildungs-Division and the remnants formed Divisions-Gruppe 52 which was assigned to the 197. Infanterie-Division.


Source:axishistory.com

Related: ww2 german uniforms

50. Infanterie-Division



The 50. Infanterie-Division was formed on 26 August 1939 from the Grenzkommandantur Küstrin. Although initially formed as part of the 2. Welle (wave), it was reorganized on 15 November 1939 as a division of the 1. Welle.
After seeing combat in the invasions of Poland, France and Greece, the division took part in the invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, fighting on the southern sector under the 11. Armee. Following the Crimean campaign, during which it helped capture Sevastopol in June 1942, the division fought in the Caucasus and the Kuban. After returning to the Crimea in late 1943, the division was destroyed in May 1944 at Sevastopol.

Reformed from the remnants that had been evacuated from the Crimea, the division fought in East Prussia where it was largely destroyed in the Heiligenbeil pocket. The remnants went into Russian captivity at Pillau.

Major Dr. Fromm, commander of Panzerjägerabteilung 150, was highly critical of Nazism and was reported for this by a member of his staff together with allegations of minor currency offence. In the fall of 1941 the divisional commander was ordered to open a trail against Dr. Fromm who then chose to take his own life.

Source:Feldgrau.com
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49. Infanterie-Division



The 49. Infanterie-Division was formed in France in February 1944 from the 191. Reserve-Division and it was destroyed at Aachen in October 1944. Surviving elements were used to rebuild 246. Volksgrenadier-Division.


Area of operations

France (Feb 1944 - Aug 1944)
Belgium & Western Germany (Aug 1944 - Oct 1944)


Source:axishistory.com

2015年8月30日星期日

48. Infanterie-Division



The 48. Infanterie-Division was formed in February 1944 near Ostende in Belgium from the 171. Reserve-Division. It was destroyed in France in November 1944.

It was reformed January 1945, originally ordered to reform as a Volksgrenadier-Division the order was cancelled, but only existed as a kampfgruppe that saw action near Vienna.


Area of operations

Belgium (Jan 1944 - Aug 1944)
France (Aug 1944 - Sep 1944)
Luxembourg (Sep 1944 - Nov 1944)
[Reformed]
Austria (Jan 1945 - May 1945)

Source:axishistory.com

47. Infanterie-Division



The 47. Infanterie-Division was formed near Calais in France on 1 February 1944 by the restructuring of the 156. Reserve-Division. It was destroyed in September 1944 in the Mons Pocket.


Area of operations

France (Feb 1944 - Sep 1944)
Belgium (Sep 1944)



Source:axishistory.com

46.Infanterie-Division



The 46.Infanterie-Division was formed in late 1938 from Sudetenland recruits. This 1st Wave division saw action in the region of Southern Poland under Generalmajor Paul von Hase, moving through and fighting in the areas of Tschenstochau, Radom, Weichsel, Grabow, Kozienice, and Warka, finally seeing action in the tough fighting outside the approaches to the Polish Capital of Warsaw.

The 46.Infanterie-Division was initially held in OKH reserve at Beverungen on the western frontier for the beginning of the 1940 invasion of France on May 10, 1940. Released on May 13, 1940 for combat operations, the division was a part of XXXVIII.Armeekorps/4.Armee/Armeegroup B where it saw action from the Somme all the way to the Loire covering 400 miles in 13 days before the end of the fighting in France.

Employed as part of 11.Armee, the division would be on the extreme right wing of Heeresgruppe Süd for operations through the Ukraine in the Summer of 1941 as part of General Hansen's LIV.Armeekorps. Skirting south of the great Kiev encirclement battles of the summer of 1941 the 46.Infanterie-Division was among the units of the LIV.AK (along with 73.Infanterie-Division) driving on the Crimea to force the great Tartar Ditch at the approaches to the Perekop peninsula.

After 3 days heavy fighting, the 46.Infanterie.Division and 73.Infanterie.Divison overcame the 4 mile wide obstacle capturing the heavily fortified town of Armyansk and thereby allowing the second phase of 11.Armee Oberbefehlshaber Manstein's offensive. The second phase of operations was the infiltration of the Crimean peninsula by elements of General Kubler's XLIX.Gebirgskorps which included the well equipped SS-LAH motorised division. These units were to march south and quickly invest the remaining precincts up to and around the major Soviet Black Sea naval base of Sevastopol upon whose heavily defended ramparts they would then lay a long and protracted siege (although at the time it was intended to quicky take the Soviet naval fortress). The 46.Infanterie, as part of XLII Armeekorps continued south and then east along the Kerch peninsula toward Feodosiya. As Paul Carell describes "Generalleutnant Count von Sponeck, commanding XLII.Armeekorps, had dispatched his 73rd and 170.Infanterie-divisions to Sevastopol and was now left in the [Kerch] peninsula with the 46.Infanterie-Division. But its three regiments had succeeded, by an immediate counter-attack in a temperature of 30 degrees below zero Centigrade, in sealing off the Soviet bridgeheads and, by drawing on their last reserves, in actually mopping some of them up. Manstein had heaved a sigh of relief and had allowed the offensive operations at Sevastopol to continue. But now, on 29th December, the Russians had been inside Feodosiya since 0230 hours."

The 46.Infanterie-Division found itself defending a precarious 185 mile long position as the only full divisonal entity on the Kerch peninsula, (between the Sea of Azov & Black Sea). The Division suffered casualties from numerous Soviet probing counter-attacks on either side of their solitary positions and faced a serious attempt at being cut-off completely from the rest of the Crimean investment. On December 30th Armeekorps Commander General Hans von Sponeck* (who had earlier distinguished himself as CO of the 22.Luftlande-Division during the May 1940 storming of Holland), requested a tactical withdrawl of his forces from the Kerch area to more favorable defensive positions west of Ak Monai and Theodosia (Feyodosia). Manstein refused, urging him to hold a while longer,while he sent the 170.Infanterie.Division, but Sponeck had the 46.Infanterie withdraw anyway to save them from encirclement.

The Division withdrew from Kerch and deployed, in a forced march of 75 miles, to the western outskirts of Feodisiya, intent on stemming the Russian infiltration further west which would have jeapordized all of 11.Armee in the Crimea. When the commander of Heeresgruppe Süd, Feldmarschall von Reichenau, found out about the unauthorized withdrawal at Kerch he had the Divisional commander, Generalleutnant Himer, immediately dismissed and the all of the various regimental traditions and battle honors of the 46th Infantry Division stripped in disgrace. This was the only time such an ignominious fate befell a wartime Heer division during the Second World War. In a matter of only weeks Feldmarschall Reichenau would be felled by a fatal heart-attack and Feldmarschall Fedor von Bock would take over his command. One of his first acts would be to restore honors and traditions to the 46.Infanterie-Division and place them under command of Generalleutnant Haccius for the siege of Sevastopol. Whatever the responisbility of the Corps or Divisional commanders were, von Bock reasoned, the soldiers of the 46th would not suffer the indignity of official disgrace for merely following orders.

During the 1942 campaign the division went south into the Caucasus. The 46.Infanterie.Division would support the XXXIX.Gebirgskorps well into the Maikiop region. It retreated later in the fall of 1942 to the Donets basin and fought at Belgorod in summer 1943. Later it took part in the retreat battles at Dnepropetrovsk in which the Division suffered major casualties and was denuded of much of it's offensive strength. Falling back with HG Sud into Romania and fighting at barely regimental strength on the Slovak-Hungarian border the remnants of the 46.Infanterie-DIvision surrendered to the Soviets in Czechoslovakia in May 1945.

Source:feldgrau.com

2015年8月26日星期三

45. Infanterie-Division



The 45. Infanterie-Division was formed in Linz on 1 April 1938 from the 4. Division of the Austrian Bundesheer. It was mobilized in August 1939 as part of the 1. Welle (wave). The division was destroyed at Bobruysk in June 1944 during the Soviet summer offensive.

Source:axishistory.com

44. Infanterie-Division



The 44. Infanterie-Division was formed on 1 April 1938 in Wien, Austria following the Anschluss from the 2. Division and 3. Division of the Austrian Army, the Österreichischen Bundesheer. It was mobilized in August 1939 as part of the 1. Welle (wave). The division took part in the campaign in Poland, advancing into the area allocated to the USSR. It later fought in the west suffering heavy losses against stiff French resistance. After the French surrender the division spent ten months on occupation duty and in March 1941 it was transferred to Poland for training.
It took part in the invasion of the Soviet Union on the southern sector of the front fighting at the Pripet Marshes and at Kiev. It took part in the fighting in the Caucasus area before advancing to Stalingrad where it was destroyed in January 1943.
The division was reformed on 17 February 1943 and on 1 June 1943 redesignated (44.) Reichs-Grenadier-Division Hoch und Deutschmeister.

Source:axishistory.com

41. Infanterie-Division



The 41. Infanterie-Division was formed in January 1945 in Slavonski Brod, Croatia from the 41. Festungs-Division. During the formation three penal battalions were absorbed by the division, II. Festungs-Infanterie-Bataillon 999 became II./Grenadier-Regiment 1232, III. Festungs-Infanterie-Bataillon 999 became II./Grenadier-Regiment 1231 and IV. Festungs-Infanterie-Bataillon 999  was absorbed into Grenadier-Regiment 1232. (1)
The division surrendered to the Yugoslav Army at Zabok, Croatia in May 1945.

This unit took part in anti-partisan operations in Croatia.

Source:axishistory.com

2015年8月25日星期二

39. Infanterie-Division



The 39. Infanterie-Division was formed in July 1942 as a “Walküre-II”-Division  under the 20. Welle (wave). It was disbanded in October 1943 after suffering heavy losses on the Eastern Front. The division staff formed the staff of the 41. Festungs-Division and the remnants formed Divisions-Gruppe 39 which was assigned to the 106. Infanterie-Division.

Source:axishistory.com

38. Infanterie-Division



The 38. Infanterie-Division was formed in July 1942 in Munsterlager as a “Walküre-II”-Division  under the 20. Welle (wave). It was disbanded in October 1943 after suffering heavy losses on the Eastern Front. The divisional staff, signals and supply units were used to form the 276. Infanterie-Division. The remnants formed Divisions-Gruppe 38 which was initially assigned to the 62. Infanterie-Division before being transferred to Korps-Abteilung F in March 1944.

Source:axishistory.com

36. Infanterie-Division



The 36. Infanterie-Division was formed in Kaiserslautern on 1 October 1936. It was mobilized in August 1939 as part of the 1. Welle (wave). It was reorganized and redesignated 36. Infanterie-Division (mot) on 1 November 1940.

It was de-motorized, reorganized and redesignated 36. Infanterie-Division on 1 May 1943. It was strengthened by the addition of Divisions-Gruppe 268, made up of the remnants of the 268. Infanterie-Division, in November 1943. The division was destroyed at Bobruysk in June 1944 during the Soviet summer offensive. It was reformed on 3 August 1944 as the 36. Grenadier-Division.

Source:axishistory.com

2015年8月24日星期一

35. Infanterie-Division



The 35. Infanterie-Division was formed in Karlsruhe on 1 October 1936. It was mobilized in August 1939 as part of the 1. Welle (wave).

Source:axishistory.com


34. Infanterie-Division



The 34. Infanterie-Division was formed in April 1936 in Koblenz and mobilized in August 1939 as part of the 1. Welle (wave). It manned defensive positions in the Saarpfalz in 1939 and later participated in the invasion of France. It took part in the invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941 and saw continuous combat there for almost three years. After suffering heavy losses in the relief of the Cherkassy pocket and in the fighting at Uman, it was refitted in May 1944 as part of the 26. Welle from Schatten-Division Neuhammer. Transferred to Italy in July 1944, the division surrendered there in April 1945.

Source:axishistory.com

33. Infanterie-Division



The 33. Infanterie-Division was formed on 1 April 1936 in Darmstadt (Wehrkreis XII) as part of the 1. Welle and was restructured into 15. Panzer-Division on 11 November 1940.

Commanders

Generalmajor Eugen Ritter von Schobert (6 Mar 1936 - 3 Feb 1938)
General der Artillerie Hermann Ritter von Speck (1 Mar 1938 - 29 Apr 1940)
Generalleutnant Rudolf Sintzenich (29 Apr 1940 - 5 Oct 1940)
General der Panzertruppen Friedrich Kühn (5 Oct 1940 - 1 Nov 1940)

Source:axishistory.com

SS Police Helmets

Certain SS police units(e.g.the 4.SS polizei panzer grenadier division and the Norwegian SS and police companies )wore the helmet insignia of the German Police on their field helmet.These consisted of a silver police eagle on a black shield(left side)and the red/white/black swastika shield (right side)

Source:Uniforms,Organizations and History of the Waffen-SS

SS Parachutist Helmets

The SS parachutist helmet was the standard Luftwaffe issue,with or without the Luftwaffe eagle transfer.It is though unlikely that the SS runes were ever worn on this helmet,as SS parachutist units were created after regulations were issued ordering the removal of these helmet transfers.A cloth helmet cover in SS camouflage pattern was issued for wear with this helmet.

Source:Uniforms,Organizations and History of the Waffen-SS


2015年8月23日星期日

32. Infanterie-Division



The 32. Infanterie-Division was formed in Köslin on 1 October 1936. It was mobilized in August 1939 as part of the 1. Welle (wave).

Source:axishistory.com

31.Infanterie-Division




The 31.Infanterie-Division was engaged in Poland in September, 1939 in the southern sector of the front where it aquitted itself well with minimal losses.

In May, 1940 during the campaign against France the 31.Infanterie-Division was part of Heeresgruppe B. 6.Armee, XI.Armeekorps, where it was engaged in heavy fighting in Belgium and France during the initial breakthrough period of the offensive, eventually making its way to the Loire demarcation line by the end of hostilities.

An extract of the divisional war diary commending the engineering unit of the division mentions "...six pionere-kompanien of Pionere-Abteilungen 31 u. 45, plus a kompanie from Pionere-Abteilung 2, bridged the Loire near Ancenis on June 22-23. In 22 hours, using the equipment of 14 bridge columns, a 375-meter 16-ton bridge was erected..."

The 31.Infanterie-Division followed the 2.Panzergruppe as part of the XII.Armeekorps in the central sector of operations during the June, 1941 offensive against the Soviet Union. It endured prolonged bitter fighting in the attempt to encircle Tula southeast of Moscow in late 1941, suffering heavy casualties.

A report which indicates the bitter fighting in the sector of Suchinitzki from Kampfgruppe von Gilsa during the winter of 1941/42 relates "...at the beginning of January, 1942 the fighting in the Yuchnow area went on with the greatest bitterness and with no pardon. Panzerjager-abteilung 31, for example, defended the village of Kostino as rear-guard On January 21, 1942, at 2:55pm, the last radio report from it came in - right side of town lost - then nothing more was heard from the unit..."

The 31.Infanterie-Division remained in a mostly defensive posture in the central sector of Heeresgruppe Mitte for most of 1942. As part of 9.Armee, XLVI.Panzerkorps, the Division next found itself engaged in the critical battles at the Kursk salient taking part in bitter rear-guard skirmishes at the middle-Dneiper. Subsequent fighting retreats west, barely at Kampfgruppe strength, took place by October 1943.

The heavy losses to the 31.Infanterie-Division in the Fall of 1943 are indicated a memo from Grenadier-Regiment 17 which included accounts of 28 major battles. During this period 35 of the regiment's 70 officers fell and the total strength of the unit sank from 1400 to 70 men.

In June of 1944 this veteran unit was almost completely anihillated during the Soviet summer offensive as part of 4.Armee, XXXIX.Panzerkorps. The commanding officer, Generalleutnant Ochsner was taken prisoner along with the bulk of his remaining men.

A cadre of 31.Infanterie-Division veterans who had escaped destruction provided the basis for the formation of the 31.Grenadier-Division.

Source:feldgrau.com

2015年8月20日星期四

30. Infanterie-Division

Formed in 1935 around the old 6.Infanterie-Regiment of the Reichswehr, this unit, composed mainly of Schleswig-Holstein recruits from the northern region of Germany was earmarked in 1938 to be an advance unit in the proposed invasion of Czechoslovakia.

In Sept.1939 as a part of Heeresgruppe Sud, 8.Armee, X.Armeekorps (General Ulex), the 30th, led by Generalmajor von Briesen, saw very heavy action against the cut-off Polish Army in the final stages of the short campaign. After action reports state that with his division stretched to the limits against the counter-attacking Poles, Generalmajor von Briesen personally led his last reserve battalion into the desperate fighting, halting the Poles, but losing his left forearm in the process. Vistied in Hospital by Keitel and Hitler, von Briesen was awarded the Knights Cross for his gallantry, and for maintaing the integrity of Blaskowitz's 8.Armee's lines; the first Divisional commander of the war to be thusly awarded. Hereafter, the 30.Infanterie was commonly known as the Briesen Division. (Von Briesen himself was promoted, and later became Military Commandant of Paris, 1940-42.)

The division fought in Belgium in the May 1940 Western campaign, and was sent East by June of 1941 to be part of X.Armeekorps, Heeresgruppe Nord - the higher formation with which it would stay until the end of the war. It fought at the Dvinsk in 1941, and was later encircled, under command of Generalleutnant Emil von Wiekede, for more than a year with II.Armeekorps at Demyansk in January 1942. Upon being freed from the pocket in Feburary of 1943, the Briesen Division fought in the Leningrad Salient, again as part of X.Armeekorps, falling back with the rest of Heeresgruppe Nord through the Baltic states in 1944, finally becoming one of the encircled formations of the now re-named Heeresgruppe Kurland of March 1945, fighting in the Kurland Kessel in a defensive role until its eventual surrender after May 9, 1945.

Source:feldgrau.com

29. Infanterie-Division



The 29. Infanterie-Division in Erfurt in October 1936. It was reorganized as a motorized division in the fall of 1937 and redesignated 29. Infanterie-Division (mot). It was destroyed at Stalingrad in January 1943. The surviving elements were used to form 29. Panzergrenadier-Division.

Source:axishistory.com

28. Infanterie-Division




The 28. Infanterie-Division was formed in Breslau on 1 October 1936. It was mobilized in August 1939 as part of the 1. Welle(wave). On 1 December 1941, it was reorganized and redesignated 28. Leichte Infanterie-Division.

Source:axishistory.com

27. Infanterie-Division



The 27. Infanterie-Division was formed in Augsburg on 1 October 1936. It was one of the units that marched into Austria during the annexation of Austria (Anschluss) on 12 March 1938.
It was mobilized in August 1939 as part of the 1. Welle (wave). On 1 November 1940, it was reorganized and redesignated 17. Panzer-Division.

Source:axishistory.com



26.Infanterie-Division




Formed in 1936, the 26.Infanterie-Division was comprised mainly of Westphalian Rheinlanders and a small portion of East Prussians. It was known as the "Dom-Division" after the stylized divisional emblem it adopted of the Great Cathedral at Cologne's twin spires. It was not involved in the Polish campaign of 1939, and during the 1940 French campaign was held in reserve of XVI.Armee, seeing only minor engagement before the French armistice.

The 26.Infanterie-Division began the June, 1941 Russian campaign subordinated to Heeresgruppe Mitte, 3.Panzergruppe, VI.Armeekorps where it distinguished itself well as a front-line formation, crossing the Volga between Leningrad and Moscow in the Kalinin sector by October. In the bitter winter fighting of December 1941 thru Feburary 1942 around the Rzhev salient, the combat hardened 39.Infanterie-Regiment under Oberst Wiese, now down to two battalions, held vital positions against determined repeat attacks by fresh Siberian ski battalions. Along with the Westphalian 6.Infanterie-Division (and other newly engaged IX.Armee formations beneath General der Panzertruppe Walter Model), the units of the 26.Inf.Div. (as part of VI.Armeekorps) were able to hold the line around Toropets-Olenino, helping to prevent any further significant Soviet gain in this sector for the remaining winter period.

The 26.Inf.Div. spent 1942 as part of VI.Armeekorps, IX.Armee, taking relatively modest losses in a mostly defensive posture on the northern wing of Heeresgruppe Mitte. By July 1943, it was moved south and next found itself heavily engaged in the aftermath of the Kursk debacle. Pushed relentlessly westward, the 26.Inf.Div. would next distinguish itself in the dogged defense of Kovel (Poland) in July 1944 during the Soviet summer offensive Bagration - being one of the few Heeresgruppe Mitte formations to avoid complete annihilation at the hands of the Soviet steamroller. By September 1944, the continuously engaged and much depleted Infanterie formation was withdrawn from combat at the East Prussian border and sent to the truppenubungsplatz - Warthelager in western Poland for rest and refit. (after this - the 26.Infanterie-Division was struck from the OKW Order of Battle.)

In the "Warthelager" training area, it was decided by OKH that the remaining cadre elements of 26.Inf.Div., along with culled remnants of the 582.Volksgrenadier-Division and surplus Kriegsmarine and Luftwaffe ground-crew, would form the new 26.Volksgrenadier-Division.

Committed to the XLVII.Panzerkorps during the intial siege of Bastonge, the 26.VG-D was subsequently seconded to the I.SS-Panzerkorps of the 6.Panzerarmee in the latter stages of the battle. Taking heavy losses, by the end of the Wacht-am-Rhein offensive, the 26.Volks-Grenadier-Division would find itself with an effective combat strength of only 1,782 men.

After fighting desperately around Preum in Feburary of 1945 - the remnants of the divison went into Allied captivity at the armistice of May 1945.

Source:feldgrau.com

Black Uniform for Armoured Vehicle Crews


This uniform is basically the same as that worn by the German Army with the exception of the SS insignia.It was originally intended for tank and armoured crews but was later extended to crews of "Elephants",tank destroyer and assault gun crews in Panzer and Panzer-Grenadier divisons.It consisted of the following:
Black beret
Black field cap
Soft peaked cap with field grey top
Tunic
Grey or black shirt
Black tie
Trousers
Black belt
Black boots

This uniform served as both Walking -out Dress and Service Uniform.Officers and NCOs often wore the peaked cap when the uniform was worn as Walking -out Dress.The distinctive wide collar on both the black and field grey tunics was not trimmed in NCO "tresse" with the exception of NCOs in the "LAH"

Source:uniforms,organizations and history of the waffen-ss


German Overcoats

Officers and men in the Waffen SS wore a long double breasted,six- button overcoat which was very similar to that of the German Army.It was narrow at the waist,flared at the bottom and had two side slash pockets.
The collars,which were usually of dark bluish-green imitation velvet,tended to be of field grey wool later in the war.Overcoats varied according to rank,not only in quality but also as follows:

NCOs and Men:Field grey with dark green collar and two rows of grey buttons down the front.Collar patches,shoulder straps,sleeve eagle,rank insignia and unit cuffbands were worn.

Officers:Finer quality material with dark green collar and grey buttons.Shoulder straps,collar patches and sleeve eagle were worn.

Generals:Fine quality material with dark green collar and light grey lapel facings.Shoulder straps,collar patches and sleeve eagle were worn.

Collar patches were authorized for wear on the overcoat by October 1940.This practice was discontinued,hower,by an order dated June 1942,which stated that collar patches were no longer to be worn on overcoats.Holders of the Knights cross of the iron cross and war service cross were allowed to leave the top two buttons open to display the award.




Source:uniforms,organizations and history of the waffen-ss


2015年8月19日星期三

M1943 Cap


In 1943 a visored cap in wool-rayon was introduced for all troops and know as the  Einheitsmütze.Its design was based on the mountain cap,whose style had been derived from the visored Austrian cap of World War I.The turn-up could be pulled down to protect the neck and ears with the flaps buttoning across the chin.As in the mountain and Army style caps,the turn-up was scalloped in front to permit vision when pulled down.The turn-up was fastened in front by either one large or two small buttons.

The cap was plain and unpiped for enlisted men and NCOs.It was piped around the crown for officers.

The M1943 insignia consisted of the SS eagle and Totenkoph in grey or white embroidery.The eagle could be worn over the Totenkoph on the front of the cap.The Totenkoph could also be worn on front while the eagle was on the left side of the turn-up.

A pattern of the M1943 was produced in camouflage cloth and worn with or without the eagle and Totenkoph insignia.

A white cloth cover was issued for winter use in snowbound areas.

Source:uniforms,organizations and history of the waffen-ss

25. Infanterie-Division



The 25. Infanterie-Division was formed in Ludwigsburg on 1 April 1936. It was reorganized and redesignated 25. Infanterie-Division (mot) on 15 November 1940.

Source:axishistory.com

24. Infanterie-Division



The 24. Infanterie-Division was formed in Chemnitz on 15 October 1935. It was mobilized in August 1939 as part of the 1. Welle (wave). The division surrendered in Courland in May 1945.

Source:axishistory.com



23. Infanterie-Division



The 23. Infanterie-Division was formed in Potsdam on 15 October 1935. It was mobilized in August 1939 as part of the 1. Welle (wave).
On 14 September 1942, the division was reorganized and redesignated 26. Panzer-Division.

The division was reformed on 23 October 1942 in Denmark from elements of the old 23. Infanterie-Division and replacements from the Ersatzheer.
The division suffered heavy losses while defending the Baltic islands of Dagö and Ösel from September to November 1944. Refitted in December 1944, the division fought in Prussia and surrendered along with the rest of Armee Ostpreußen May 1945.

Source:axishistory.com


22.Infanterie-Division



The 22.Infanterie-Division was formed in October 1935 in Bremen.

During the Polish Campaign the 22.Infanterie-Division took part in securing the Westwall along the French border in the region of Eifel and Saarpfalz. During the same time, Infanterie-Regiment 16 took part in the fighting in Poland along the Bzura. After the Polish Campaign in late October 1939, the 22.Infanterie-Division was transfered to troop training ground Sennelager where it was trained as an airlanding unit, the only one of its kind in the entire German miltiary. Its roll was to be air transported into battle well ahead of any advancing ground units. It was trained to be airlifted shortly after German paratroopers has secured an airfield or landing zone appropriate for transport aircraft to land in. With this training, the term Luftlande was added to the units name.

The 22.Infanterie-Division (Luftlande) took part in the Western Campaign in 1940 in its intended airlanding role when the division was flown into Holland in the early hours of May 10th in the van of the attack on the low countries following the airbone assault of the 7.Flieger-Division. Infanterie-Regiment 47 and Infanterie-Regiment 65 were flown in Ju52 transport aircraft to three landing zones north of Rotterdam in the Hague region, while Infanterie-Regiment 16 was flown south into the Rotterdam region. Attempts were made to land portions of Infanterie-Regiment 47 and Infanterie-Regiment 65 in or around Valkenburg, Ockenburg and Ypenburg with varying degrees of success. At each location a combination of factors led to very heavy losses, including terrible coordination, Dutch resistance and horrible landing zones. This in turn led to a failure to reach the objectives of the first day, the securing of the airfields around the Hague and the capture of the Dutch high command and Royal family who managed to escape to England.

To the south, Infanterie-Regiment 16 had a much better time of the landings managing to secure the airfield at Waalhaven rather soon after landing, although Dutch resistance made the landing zone dangerous for sometime. Once landed, the bulk of Infanterie-Regiment 16 was directed to march north and capture Rotterdam itself. To facilitate such a bold attack, an even bolder one was planned - the capture of the bridges over the Maas River in the very center of Rotterdam. Four bridges in the center of town connected the northern and southern portions of the city between the Maas and the island of Noordereiland. Their importance was that they were vital if Infanterie-Regiment 16 was to take Rotterdam at all. To capture them, 120 men of Pionier-Bataillon 22 and 11.Kompanie/Infanterie-Regiment 16 were formed into Kampfgruppe Schrader and flown to the base of the four bridges in He59 float planes. Their bold assault was a stunning success and they managed to seize the bridges without any losses. Their small numbers meant they would be under severe pressure from any Dutch counterattacks. Soon after the Kampfgruppe occupied the bridges they linked up with Fallschrimjäger that had dropped to assist. Dutch attacks began thereafter and constricted the German permitter to the base of the bridges, prohibiting them from expanding their hold farther to the north. The 120 men of the Kampfgruppe and the 50 Fallschirmjäger held out until those landed at Waalhaven could link up. In the meantime the Dutch responded by attacking the bridges from the air and water, including an attack by Dutch naval vessels at point blank range. Dutch gunboat Z-5 and torpedo boat TM-51 were sent in to rake the Germans with 75mm and 20mm fire. In the end, the landings in the north proved to be a failure and the scattered and uncoordinated troops were ordered to head south once it was clear the Hague would not be taken. In the south the Dutch withdrew on May 13th once it was clear that the Germans could not be defeated.

During the second phase of the Western Campaign in June of 1940, the 22.Infanterie-Division (Luftlande), now regrouped and refreshed, took part in the advance into France fighting in the region of Dinant and Recroi to Saint Quentin.

The 22.Infanterie-Division (Luftlande) next took part in the Invasion of the Soviet Union as a part of Armeegrupp Süd, fighting in southern Russia with the 11.Armee. Moving through Romania it crossed the Pruth River and fought to the Dnestr River and Stalin Line, which it fought through. Moving on to cross the Bug and Dneiper Rivers, the division eventually fought into the Crimea where it took part in fierce and bloody fighting for Sevastopol. The 22.Infanterie-Division led the assault against the heavily defended fortress city in its sector and stormed numerous Soviet positions, notably taking the Stalin Werke and Wolga Werke.

After fighting in the Crimea, the 22.Infanterie-Division (Luftlande) was transfered to Crete where it took part in security and occupation operations in the region of Rethymon and Iraklion until 1944. During its occuption of Crete, the 22.Infanterie-Division was also used as the main assault force in various amphibious assault operations in the Aegean Sea in 1943 and 1944, most notably against the Islands of Kos, Kalymnos, Leros and Samos. The unitis well known for its role in the occupation of Leros against fierce British and Italian resistance in November of 1944.

With German prospects in the Med fading, the 22.Infanterie-Division (Luftlande) was transfered from Crete and the Aegean in 1944 to Greece where it would take part in anti-partisan operations against Tito's forces before surrendering in May of 1945.

Source:feldgrau.com


21. Infanterie-Division



The 21. Infanterie-Division was formed in Elbing on 15 October 1935 from the cover name Kommandant von Elbing. The infantry regiments were formed from 3. (Preußisches) Infanterie-Regiment of 1. Division of the Reichwehr. It was mobilized in August 1939 as part of the 1. Welle (wave).


Source:axishistory.com


2015年8月18日星期二

Service Caps

The service or uniform cap was a peaked cap with field grey cover,black cap band and black leather visor.The cap band for officers was a black velvet and a black wool for enlisted men.Officers and Standartenoberjunker wore a double silver cap cord fastened with matt silver buttons.NCOS wore a black lether strap fastened by two black buttons.Waffenfarbe appeared above and below the cap band and around the crown of the cap for officers and enlisted men.Waffen SS generals wore caps with silver piping.

The Waffen SS eagle in matt silver metal was worn on the upper front portion of the cap and a matt silver SS Totenkopf was worn in the front centre of the cap band.Non-SS eagles were sometimes worn,such as cloth or metal Army eagles,NSDAP eagles,etc.,probably through lack of supplies.

Although against regulations,many Waffen SS personnel of all ranks removed the rigid cap spring in order to give their peaked cap a jauntier shape.



Source:Uniforms,organizations and history of the waffen-ss

Steel Helmets

The Waffen-SS utilized the M1935 steel helmet,which was adopted by the Wehrmacht.The M1935 was supplied in five basic sizes and weighed from 1.8 to 2.7lbs.Its suspension consisted of an adjustable leather-padded,spring-aluminum band which was secured at the sides and rear by three cotter keys.The M1943 was also adopted and worn by the Waffen-SS personnel.It was similar in appearance to the M1935 except it dispensed with the inward crimp around the rim thus easing and cheapening manufacture.Waffen-SS helmets were finished in matt field-grey and fitted with a black leather chin-strap.

The waffen-ss continued to use the two decal shields which the SS-VT had utilized pre-war.These shields were centred immediately below the ventilation holes on either side of the helmet.The left shield was red with a white circle containing a black swasitka.The right shield was silver bearing the double runes of the SS.In early 1941,combat troops were restricted in the wearing of the red/white/black swastika shield for the sake of camouflage and concealment.
Although the SS runes were worn alone for some time,these were also discontinued after November 1943.

Cloth camouflage helmet covers were widely used by the Waffen-SS and can be distinguished from those of the Army and Luftwaffe by the distinctive
SS camouflage pattern.These covers were reversible,having either two styles of camouflage pattern (spring and autumn)or a mottled pattern on one
side and white on the other.They were fitted to the helmet by a fold in front and small metal hooks at the back and either side.It is probable that a
special SS helmet cover was issued and worn by members of the SS-Fallschirmjager-Bataillon.

The basic matt field grey helmet was offen re-painted to fit the terrain when helmet covers were not available.Camouflage netting was also worn on Waffen-SS helmets and decorated with leaves,branches,etc.


Source:Uniforms,organizations and history of the Waffen-SS


20. Infanterie-Division






The 20. Infanterie-Division was formed on 15 October 1935 from the cover name Reichswehrdienststelle Hamburg. The infantry regiments were formed from 6. Infanterie-Regiment of 2. Division of the Reichwehr. It was motorized in the fall of 1937 and redesignated 20. Infanterie-Division (mot).
It took part in the occupation of the Sudetenland area of Czechoslovakia in October 1938 under the command of XVI Armeekorps.
It was redesignated 20. Panzergrenadier-Division in July 1943.


Source:axishistory.com




19. Infanterie-Division

The 19. Infanterie-Division was formed in Hannover on 15 October 1935 from the cover name Artillerieführer VI. The infantry regiments were formed from 17. Infanterie-Regiment of 6. Division of the Reichwehr.

On 1 November 1940, it was reorganized and redesignated 19. Panzer-Division.


Source:axishistory.com


18. Infanterie-Division





The 18. Infanterie-Division was formed in Liegnitz on 15 October 1935 from the cover name Infanterieführer III. The infantry regiments were formed from 8. (Preußisches) Infanterie-Regiment of 3. Division and 12. Infanterie-Regiment of 4. Division of the Reichwehr.

After taking part in the Western Campaign in 1940, on November 1st, 1940, the Division was reformed as the 18.Infanterie-Division (mot).



Source:Feldgrau.com


17. Infanterie-Division



The 17. Infanterie-Division was formed in Nürnberg on 15 October 1935 from the cover name Artillerieführer VII. The infantry regiments were formed from 21. (Bayerisches) Infanterie-Regiment of 7. Division of the Reichwehr.

The 17.Infanterie-Division took part in the occupation of Austria on March 12, 1938.

In January of 1945, the Division was nearly totally destroyed in the Weichsel bend, while remnants survived in the Neumarkt-Breslau pocket. It was reformed in March 1945 in Schlesien (Hirschberg - Bad Warmbrunn area) from the remnants of the old division and various ad-hoc units, fighting on briefly until the end in May of 1945 when it put down its arms in the region of the Riesen Mountains.


Source:Feldgrau.com


16.Infanterie-Division



The 16.Infanterie-Division was formed on 15 October 1935 from the cover name Kommandant von Münster. The infantry regiments were formed from 18. Infanterie-Regiment of 6. Division of the Reichwehr.

It was split into 16. Infanterie-Division (mot) and 16. Panzer-Division on 1 November 1940.

It was ordered to reform in August 1944 from 158. Reserve-Division and the surviving elements of 16. Luftwaffe-Feld-Division but that was not completed and it was instead reformed as 16. Volksgrenadier-Division.

Source:axishistory.com



15.Infanterie-Division

The 15. Infanterie-Division was formed in Würzburg on 15 October 1935 from the cover name Artillerieführer V. The infantry regiments were formed from 13. (Württemburgisches) Infanterie-Regiment of 5. Division of the Reichwehr.

The 15.Infanterie-Division did not take part in the Polish Campaign, during the operations it was situated along the Western Front in the Saar Region between Saarlautern and Saarbrucken. Although the Western Front was for the most part quiet while the bulk of the Wehrmacht took part in operations in Poland, the French did in fact launch a limited and initially somewhat successful offensive against the German frontier which managed to occupy about 200km of German soil and 50 German villages. This was the French Saar Offensive and it was launched on September 7th, 1939. The French attacked the lines of the German 1.Armee in an arc to the south of Saarbrucken, noteably occupying the Warndt Salient, among other areas. When the French launched their attack Germans units pulled back to the Siegfried Line in the North along the Saar River and the French quickly took the ground they gave up. But soon after the offensive was launched the French began to realize the futility of holding German territory in the region unless additional operations were launched. Poor French planning and a lack of French offensive spirit precluded a wider offensive so in less than a few weeks German units retook much of the ground they had lost initially. French operational losses were light, about 28 KIA. During these operations the 15.Infanterie-Division was involved directly, initially pulling back to the Saar River against the French advance and soon after moving forward again to reoccupy their lost ground.

When the Germans attacked France on May 10th, 1940, the 15.Infanterie-Division had moved from the 1.Armee sector to the 16.Armee sector, and was at the time in Armee reserve. As soon as the 16.Armee pushed into Luxemburg, the 15.Infanterie-Division began to move forward, and by the evening of the 11th had itself crossed completely through Luxemburg. On the 12th, the 15.Infanterie was at the front line at in the region of Virton in Belgium, and stayed in this region under the XIII.Armee-Korps until the 25th when it was pulled from the line and transfered to the 2.Armee sector, arriving in position along the Aisne River on or about June 1st. On June 9th, it attacked across the Aisne directly against the 45th French Infantry Division, where it was held until the French were gradually and then completely pushed back. It then moved over the Vesle River, the Marne River, and finally the Aube River in region of Vinets. On June 18th it arrived along the Loire River, once again opposite the now crushed remains of the French defenders. The 15.Infanterie-Division ended the Campaign against France stationed in and around Nevers along the Loire River in central France.

Between July 1940 and July 1941, the 15.Infanterie-Division was located in the region of Dijon in France under the 12.Armee. In July of 1941 it was transfered to the Eastern Front where the bulk of the Wehrmacht had already launched across the Soviet border and punched its way inland. The 15.Infanterie arrived at the front and came under the control of Heeresgruppe Mitte. There it advanced north of Minsk to the region of Mogilew where it entered combat against the Soviets. It then took part in attack and defensive combat in the Jelna Bend at Tokarewo and between Ustrom and the Dnieper River. Shortly there-after, it fought near Wjasma, and then advanced to Nara and took part in defensive fighting near Tarutino and Iklinskoje and fighting on the Schanja where it later fought defensive combat in the region Wjasma between the start of 1942 and April of that year, when it was transfered back to France for rest and refitting.

The division remained in France throughout the rest of 1942 in the region of Bordeaux on coastal defense operations between Loire and Girondemundung.

The 15.Infanterie-Division was once again transferred to the East on Feburary 9, 1943. By Feburary 18, the division was once again heavily committed fighting west of the Donets as a component of the 4.Panzerarmee. It suffered heavy losses duiring the Battle of Dnepropetrovsk in the summer of 1943, and later participated in the grueling defensive battles of the southern Ukraine. In August 1944, the division was encircled west of the lower Dnestr, managing to break out, but only after suffering serious losses to it's establishment. After a small time in reserve it returned to the front at kampfgruppe strength to help oppose the Soviet breakthrough into Hungary in October, 1944. Battered, and only a burnt-out shell of it's former strength, the division was surrounded in the large pocket east of Prague in May of 1945 where it surrendered to the Soviet Army.

Source:Feldgrau.com



2015年8月17日星期一

14.Infanterie-Division




The 14. Infanterie-Division was formed in Leipzig on 15 October 1935 from the cover name Kommandant von Leipzig. The infantry regiments were formed from 11. (Sächsisches) Infanterie-Regiment of 4. Division of the Reichwehr.

On October 15th, 1940, the 14.Infanterie-Division was reformed as the 14.Infanterie-Division (mot.). The conversion was completed by March 3rd, 1941.

In 1943 the 14.Infanterie-Division (mot.) was de-motorised after an attempt to reform it into the 14.Panzergrenadier-Divison failed. This process began on May 1st, 1943 and the division was then redesignated the 14.Infanterie-Division on June 30th, 1943

Source:Feldgrau.com



13.Infanterie-Division




The 13. Infanterie-Division was formed in Magdeburg on 15 October 1935 from the cover name Infanterieführer IV. The infantry regiments were formed from 9. (Preußisches) Infanterie-Regiment of 3. Division and 12. Infanterie-Regiment of 4. Division of the Reichwehr.

On October 12, 1937, the 13.Infanterie-Division was redesignated as the 13.Infanterie-Division (mot.).



Source:Feldgrau.com




12.Infanterie-Division



The 12. Infanterie-Division was formed in Schwerin on 15 October 1935 from the cover name Infanterieführer II. 

The infantry regiments were formed from the 5.(Preußisches) Infanterie-Regiment and 6.Infanterie-Regiment of the 2.Division of the Reichswehr.


For the Campaign in Poland, the 12.Infanterie-Division was part of Armeekorps Wodrig of Generalleutnant von Kuchler's 3.Armee, Heeresgruppe Nord during the initial thrust out of Prussia towards Warsaw. Interestingly, the division's integral Artillerie-Regiment had an honorary commander, the former pre-war Commander in Chief of the German Army, Generaloberst Werner von Fritsch. He died of wounds recieved at during this fighting.*

After a distinguished acquittal of it's objectives in Poland, the division participated in the 1940 French campaign as part of II.Armee-korps, IV.Armee, where it notably helped stop a desperate French Army attempt to cut the main "sikelschnitt-panzer corridor" of German troops heading speedily for the Channel coast, hoping to relieve the trapped British and French forces in Belgium. 

Still part of II.Armeekorps, the division fought with XVI.Armee, Heeresgruppe Nord, in the initial invasion of Russia in June 1941, and was instrumental in the capture of Dvinsk. Still in the North in 1942, the division was the main relieving force of the trapped II.Armeekorps troops in the Demjansk Pocket. The overwhelming 1944 Soviet summer Offensive "Bagration", found the unfortunate 12.Infanterie-Division entrapped in the great Minsk-Vitebsk encirclements by the Red Army of the collapsed Heeresgruppe Mitte. The Divison's CO, Generalleutnant Rudolf Bambler surrendered his division to the Soviets in July 1944. None of the main combat elements of the division escaped capture. The Division was then reformed in August as the 12.Grenadier-Division


Source:Feldgrau.com



11.Infanterie-Division





The 11. Infanterie-Division was formed in Allenstein on 15 October 1935 from the cover name Infanterieführer I

The infantry regiments were formed from the 2.(Preußisches) Infanterie-Regiment of the 1.Division of the Reichswehr.


The 11.Infanterie-Division took part in the Polish campaign in 1939 as part of 3.Armee, Heeresgruppe Nord.

It played a minor role in the French campaign of 1940, and was also part of the initial invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941 under 1.Armeekorps, XVIII.Armee, Heeresgruppe Nord. Notably, the division took part in the rapid sweep of the Baltic states, and later in the harsh battles around Zoltsy. A staple unit of the siege elements around Leningrad for the next year, the division was instrumental in holding the Soviet offensive of 1943 south of Lake Ladoga, in which it took heavy casualties. 

Pulled from the line for rest and refitting in Greece in late 1943, the fresh 11.Infanterie-Division was posted once again to the Leningrad sector where it fought in the Battle of Narva, and was subseqently involved in the general withdrawl from this salient to western Latvia. It became one of the encircled units of Heeresgruppe Nord in the Kurland Pocket when the Soviets penetrated to the Baltic sea in late autumn of 1944, cutting them off. It remained a staple "fire-brigade" of the Kurland front until April 30, 1945 when it was evacuated from the Kurland pocket to what was left of the Reich, along with the 14.Panzer Division.


Source:Feldgrau.com



10.Infanterie-Division

The 10. Infanterie-Division was formed on 15 October 1935 from the cover name Kommandant von Regensburg. 
The infantry reigments were formed from 20.(Bayerisches) Infanterie-Regiment of the 7.Division of the Reichswehr.


The 10.Infanterie-Division took part in the occupation of Austria on March 12, 1938.

The 10.Infanterie-Division took part in the Polish and French Campaigns.

On November 15th, 1940, the 10.Infanterie-Division began conversion to the 10.Infanterie-Division (mot.). Conversion was complete by May 1st, 1941.




Source:Feldgrau.com

Related german militaria

9.Infanterie-Division




The 9. Infanterie-Division was formed in Gießen on October 15,1935 from the cover name Infanterieführer V.
The infantry regiments were formed from  15.Infanterie-Regiment of the 5.Division of the Reichswehr.


Mobilized for the Polish campaign, the 9.Infanterie-Division was sent to the Saar to bolster the western flank of Germany's borders while the Wehrmacht overran Poland.

The 9.Infanterie-Division fought in the battle for France in 1940 as a component of 12.Armee, Armeegruppe A in its advance through Luxumburg and Belgium. It fought at Amiens and on the Somme River, later crossing the Oise and Ourcq Rivers before advancing on Paris. Early in the morning of June 14th, 1940, the 9.Infanterie-Division was the first German unit to enter Paris after its fall. 

After the occupation of Paris the 9.Infanterie-Division went into reserve and remained in northern France on occupation duty until April of 1941 when it was posted to Poland and the Easten Front to prepare for the Invasion of the Soviet Union.

There, beneath the aegis of XXXXIV.Armee-korps, 6.Armee, it took part in crossing of the frontiner, the battles through the Stalin Line and the drive on and capture of Kiev by Heeresgruppe Sud. Shifted further to the south, the 9.Infanterie-Division notably took part in the advance into the Caucasus, the Kuban, and in the lower Dneiper campaigns during the 1942-43 period. The division suffered heavy losses in the Summer of 1944, in the general retreat of Axis forces across the Romanian border.

Encircled and nearly anihillated in Romania, what was left of the division was pulled from the line and sent to the Ossboel-Esbjerg area of Denmark to be rebuilt. During re-fitting it absorbed the partially formed 584.Volksgrenadier-Div., and was reformed as the 9.Volksgrenadier-Division.

Source:Feldgrau.com


German Cross

German Cross was instituted by Adolf Hitler on September 28,1941 to bridge the gap between the Iron Cross 1st Class and the Knight's Cross.It was awarded in two divisions:gold for repeated acts of bravery or achievement in combat and silver for distinguished non-combat war service.




2015年8月16日星期日

Iron Cross

Iron cross is the best known of all German medals,it was first introduced on March 10, 1813 by King Friedrich-Wilhelm III of Prussia.By the end of World War II,there were eight classes of the Iron Cross.The classes were:2nd Class,1st Class,Knight's Cross,Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves,Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords,Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves,Swords and Diamonds,Knight's Cross with Golden Oak Leaves,Swords and Diamonds and Grand Cross of the Iron cross.The Iron Cross in its various classes was awarded to all ranks of the Wehrmacht,Luftwaffe and Kriegsmarine to recognize officers and men for acts of bravery,heroism and leadership.

Iron Cross 1st Class and 2nd Class  looked very similar and were worn on the same position on the lower left side of the uniform. When the Iron Cross First Class was awarded, the Iron Cross Second Class was signified with a small ribbon attached to a button.

Knight's Cross was worn on the neck with a striped black, white and red ribbon attached.

Knight's Cross

Iron Cross 1st Classs






2015年8月13日星期四

Korvettenkapitan Heinrich Bleichrodt's Uniform

Heinrich Bleichrodt (21 October 1909 – 9 January 1977) was one of the most successful German U-boat commander of the Second World War. He began his U-boat career in October 1939,from October 1939 until retiring from front line service in December 1943, he sank 25 ships for a total of 152,320 gross register tons (GRT). For this he received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves, among other commendations.He earned the nickname "Ajax" during his time with the U-boats.




2015年8月11日星期二

Admiral Karl-Jesko von Puttkamer's Uniforms


Karl-Jesko Otto Robert von Puttkamer (24 March 1900 – 4 March 1981), served as naval adjutant to the General Staff until June 1935,he was promoted to rear admiral in September 1943.





Source:Uniforms Of The Third Reich-A Study In Photographs


General der Flieger Stefan Fröhlicher's uniform

Stefan Fröhlich (7 October 1889  – 2 October 1978) was a highly decorated General der Flieger in the Luftwaffe during World War II. He was also a recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross.

This uniform was manufactured in March 1938 when Fröhlich was an Oberst.It was later upgraded as he was promoted.