Friday, May 1, 2026

Bio of Major Werner Schröer (1918-1985)


Full name: Werner Schröer
Nickname: No information

Date of birth: 12 February 1918 - Mülheim an der ruhr, Rheinprovinz (German Empire)
Date of death: 10 February 1985 - Ottobrunn, Bavaria (West Germany)

Religion: Not specified in available biographical sources (protestant background typical for the region and era but unconfirmed)
Parents: Friedrich Johann Schröer and Maria Schröer, née Schmitz
Siblings: No detailed information on siblings is recorded in primary biographical sources
Spouse: No public records of marriage or spouse details are widely documented
Children: No public records of children are widely documented

Promotions:
00.00.1937 Flieger
01.10.1938 Gefreiter
01.04.1939 Unteroffizer
01.12.1939 Feldwebel
01.03.1941 Leutnant
01.11.1942 Oberleutnant
01.02.1943 Hauptmann
01.11.1943 Major

Career:
12 February 1918 Schröer was born in Mülheim an der Ruhr, at the time in the Rhine Province of the Kingdom of Prussia. He was the son of Friedrich Johann Schröer and his wife Maria (née Schmitz)
1924-1937 Schröer attended school and graduated with his Abitur (School Leaving Certificate).
3 April 1937 Schröer begins his compulsory service with Reichsarbeitsdienst (Reich Labour Service) serving with RAD Stamm 6/191/5/3.
3 November 1937 With the completion of his RAD service on 20 April 1937 Flieger Schröer's recruit training begins with the 4. Kompanie (4th company) of Fliegerersatzabteilung 24 (24th Flier Replacement Unit) in Quakenbrück.
1 April 1938 Flieger Schröer is transferred to the Flughafenbetriebskompanie (Airport Operation Company) of Jagdgeschwader 132 to Düsseldorf, serving with the ground personnel.
1 July 1938 Schröer was posted to the 7. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 234 where his flight training began.
13 August 1938 Schröer then served with the Fliegerhorstkompanie (Airfield Company) in Düsseldorf .
1 October  1938 Schröer is promoted to the rank of Gefreiter.
1 April 1939 Schröer is promoted to the rank of Unteroffizer'
1 July 1939 Unteroffizier Schröer is then transferred to II. Gruppe of Jagdgeschwader 26 "Schlageter" , named after the Nazi martyr Albert Leo Schlageter, where he was posted to the 6. Staffel where he made his first flight.
1 September 1939 Unterofffizier Schröer attends an air observer course at the Aufklärungsfliegerschule (Reconnaissance Flying School) at Hildesheim.
16 October 1939 Schröer continues his pilot training at the flight schools in Kamp and Schafstädt .
1 December 1939 Schröer is promoted to the rank of Feldwebel
On 16 May 1940, he completed his flight training with Flugkommando 23 (Flight Commando) in Braunschweig. During this training period, he was promoted to Feldwebel (sergeant) on 1 December 1939. Schröer then received fighter pilot training at the Jagdfliegerschule 1 (fighter pilot school) at Werneuchen. There he learned to fly the Arado Ar 68 and Ar 96, the Messerschmitt Bf 108 and Messerschmitt Bf 109, the Bücker Bü 131, the Focke-Wulf Fw 56, and the Heinkel He 45 and He 51.[4] From 22 July to 17 August 1940, Schröer completed his fighter pilot training with the 2. Staffel of Ergänzungsjagdgruppe Merseburg, a supplementary training unit based in Merseburg.
February-May 1942 In February, Rommel launched his counter-offensive retaking a lot of the same ground all over again. So by March 1942, when Werner became Adjutant in I./JG 27 learning command under the experienced Eduard Neumann, they were back at Martuba, east of Derna.
19 April 1941 1st victory
22 June 1941, the day after the fall of Tobruk, Schröer was promoted to Staffelkapitän of 8./JG 27, based further forward at Gazala. The next day, 23 June, with Marseille having just reached 101 victories, Werner scored his 12th and finally started scoring regularly. With the Battle of Gazala well underway, and Rommel charging 500 km onto El Alamein, the airwar finally heated up.
July-November 1942 Schröer scored 16 victories in July, then after a month away, a further 13 victories bringing his total to 44 (including six on 15 September).
9 September  1942 Schröer is awarded the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold (German Cross in Gold)  after his 32nd & 33rd victories the day before. However, German pilots in North Africa may have significantly over-reported kills. On 15 September 1942 for instance; DAF squadron records suggest that German units over-claimed by a margin exceeding 200% on some occasions.
He continued scoring regularly in October, downing a further 15 aircraft. 
21 October 1942 Leutnant Schröer is awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross (Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes) for 49 victories, just before Montgomery launched his victorious Battle of El Alamein. In the frantic air battles overhead, Schroer shot down 10 aircraft in a week. 
4 November 1942 The new Oberleutnant Schröer shoots down his first four-engined bomber - a Boeing B-24 Liberator - west of Sollum (60th victory). However, the end in Africa was nigh, and with the Afrika Korps in full retreat, III./JG 27 handed over its aircraft to Jagdgeschwader 77 replacing it on the continent, and evacuated to Crete and the Aegean islands.
16 November  1942 Fittingly, as the Gruppe's highest scorer, Werner scored one of its last African victories (61st victory) . Those 61 victories, all scored in Africa, made him the second-highest scoring ace of the Desert War, after Marseille (who had been killed in a flying accident on 30 September with 158 victories).
1943 Schröer was ordered to relocate his 8. Staffel to Rhodes Airfield. Here, the Staffel was tasked with protecting German and Italian shipping from attacks by RAF bombers and torpedo bombers in the Aegean
1 February 1943 Schröer is promoted to Hauptmann while on Rhodes.  
11 February 1943 On a shuttle flight from Rhodes to Crete, Schröer intercepted and claimed two light bombers which he identified as Bristol Beaufort bombers north-northeast Karpathos. RAF records show that two Martin B-26 Marauder bombers were lost on 15 February at the time of the claims filed by Schröer. Authors Prien, Rodeike and Stemmer argue that at the time the B-26 was a new and unknown aircraft type to Schröer while the date discrepancy cannot be explained. After that he had extended leave at home for his wedding.
24 April 1943 Schröer is appointed Gruppenkommandeur of II./JG 27, replacing Gustav Rödel, who himself had been promoted to Kommodore of JG 27. II/JG 27 was now operating with the new Bf 109G in the dangerous skies over Sicily, as the Allies prepared for invasion with heavy preparatory bombing raids. Based at Trapani, on the western corner of the island, they were up against complete Allied air superiority and had the hopeless task of trying to protect transport aircraft makign desperate evacuation flights of remaining wounded and specialists our of the beleaguered Afrika Korps, now bottled up in Tunis. Just before Schroer took over command, on the evening of 18 April, only 6 transports had made it to Sicily out of 65 leaving Tunis. Flying at sea-level, half had been shot down and the remainder turned back damaged.Powerless to help, II./JG 27 claimed only one enemy fighter in response. However, with renewed vigour Werner led from the front and over the next two months, claimed 22 Allied aircraft shot down, including 12 four-engined heavy bombers. The surrender in May, of the Afrika Korps was of a comparable scale to the surrender of VI Army at Stalingrad only a few months earlier.
July 1943 Operation Husky, the Allied invasion of Sicily, started on 10 July. Unable to influence the result to any great degree, II./JG 27 had already been ordered back to the Italian mainland. Soon after, on 28 July, the unit was ordered to hand its aircraft over to other units and the pilots and crews returned to Germany for much-needed rest and re-equipment.
2 August 1943 For his courageous efforts against the odds, Schröer was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves (Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub), for 84 victories in defense of the Reich. His tally at the time was 85 victories. The presentation was made by Adolf Hitler at the Wolf's Lair, Hitler's headquarters in Rastenburg, present-day Ketrzyn in Poland. Five other Luftwaffe officers were presented with awards that day by Hitler, Hauptmann Egmont Prinz zur Lippe-Weißenfeld, Hauptmann Manfred Meurer, Hauptmann Heinrich Ehrler, Oberleutnant Joachim Kirschner, Oberleutnant Theodor Weissenberger were also awarded the Oak Leaves, and Major Helmut Lent received the Swords to his Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves.
August-September 1943. In August, II./JG 27 was at Wiesbaden-Erbenheim in Germany, starting training for a completely different air-war: Reichsverteidigung (Defense of the Reich) duties, at high altitude against the big, heavily-armed massed-formations of four-engined bombers, or Viermots.
6 September 1943 The II. Gruppe flew its first operational combat mission when the USAAF VIII Bomber Command targeted Stuttgart. Four bombers were claimed shot down by II./JG 27, three of them by Schröer. At 10:45, the Gruppe intercepted a B-17 formation near Stuttgart. In this encounter, pilots of II. Gruppe claimed nine aerial victories, six were later confirmed including three by Schröer.From August to March, Schroer shot down 14 aircraft, 11 of them being Viermots - an indication of the type of air-combat in which he was now fighting. The unit's first operational sortie in the Reich, 6 September, was their most successful with nine bombers claimed, including three for Schröer (86th-88th victories).
12 September 1943 II. Gruppe was ordered to Saint-Dizier Airfield in France.
14 October 1943 During the second Schweinfurt raid at 13:28, II. Gruppe was scrambled at Saint-Dizier and intercepted approximately 150 bombers without escorting fighter protection shortly after 14:00 over the Palatinate. During this aerial battle, Luftwaffe pilots of II. Gruppe claimed nine bombers shot down, including a B-17 by Schroer near Alzey (89th victory).
1 November 1943 Hauptmann Schröer is promoted to Major. 
14 March 1944 Major Schröer (with 99 victories) was appointed Gruppenkommandeur, III./Jagdgeschwader 54 (JG 54—54th Fighter WIng), based in the north at Lüneberg. In April the unit retrained and transferred onto the Focke Wulf Fw 190. On 24 May, Schröer claimed a P-51 Mustang and two P-47 Thunderbolts to reach his century (100th –102nd victories). But the worsening situation and the intense pressure was taking its toll, and he was sent on a month's stress-leave in early June just as Allied attention turned to Normandy, possibly saving his life as the unit took very heavy losses in France.
4 August 1944 Major Schröer was leading 2 Staffeln of his Gruppe against a "US-Bomberpulk" of B-17s, when attacked by escorting Mustangs. During the ensuing battle, Schröer's FW190 was struck by defensive fire from one of the bombers which inflicted severe damage to his aircraft, shattering the cockpit canopy and severely wounding him in the process. Not wishing to risk bailing out, he elected to make an emergency landing, spending 3 months in hospital recuperating from his wounds.
16 April 45 While serving as Geschwaderkommodore of Jadgeschwader 3, Major Werner Schröer becomes only the 142nd recipient of the Ritterskreuz des Eisernes Kreuz Mit Eichenlaub Und Schwertern (Knights Cross of the Iron Cross with Oakleaves And Swords).
8 May 1945 The war in Europe comes to an end with the unconditional surrender of all German armed forces. Werner Schröer was the 144th recipient of the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords. He was credited with 114 victories, claimed in only 197 combat missions. His tally of 26 four-engined bombers ranked him the 5th most successful pilot against that formidable type. Likewise, his score of 102 victories against the Western Allies, including 61 claimed over North Africa, make him the 5th-equal ranked pilot, alongside Joachim Müncheberg and Egon Mayer.
1946 Schröer was kept a prisoner-of-war until release in February 1946, and did not return to the military. In his later years, he ran a campaign to get a memorial erected to his friend Hans-Joachim Marseille, but  passed away before he could see that mission completed.
1973 Werner Schröer is interviewed about his experiences with the Lutwaffe during the air phase known as the Defense of the Reich for the English television series "The World At War", a 26 episode series which aired in 1973.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tYgCDcyAogs&feature=PlayList&p=AA4E5FC983CD32F7&index=4
10 February 85 Werner Schröer dies in Ottobrun (Munich) at the age of 67.

Awards and Decorations:
00.00.1937 Reichssportabzeichen in Bronze (Reich Sports Badge in Bronze)
00.00.1939 Flugzeugführerabzeichen (Pilots Badge)
09.10.1939 Medaille Zur Erinnerung An Den 1. Oktober 1938 (Commemerative Medal of 1.10.38)
19.04.1941 Eiserne Kreuz 2. Klasse (Iron Cross 2nd Class)
15.09.1941 Eiserne Kreuz 1. Klasse (Iron Cross 1st Class)
15.09.1941 Frontflug-Spange für Jäger in Silber (Operational flying clasp in Silver for fighters)
05.11.1941 Italienisch Kriegskreuz (Italian War Service Cross)
22.06.1942 Italienisch Flugzeugführerabzeichen (Italian Pilots Badge)
06.08.1942 Ehrenpokal fur besondere Leistung im Luftkreig (Honor Goblet)
09.09.1942 Deutsches Kreuz in Gold (German Cross in Gold)
15.09.1942 Frontflug-Spange für Jäger in Gold (Operational flying clasp in Gold for fighters)
20.10.1942 Ritterkreuz des Eisernes Kreuz #626 as Leutnant and Staffelkapitän 8.Staffel / III.Gruppe / Jagdgeschwader 27 (JG 27). Awarded after 49 aerial victories. Schröer’s path to the Ritterkreuz centered on his rapid scoring during the intense air battles supporting rommel’s afrika korps in 1942. After a relatively slow start in north africa (his first victory was a hawker hurricane on 19 april 1941 near tobruk), he truly emerged as a leading ace once appointed staffelkapitän of 8./jg 27 on 22 june 1942.
In july 1942, during the fighting around the gazala line and the advance toward el alamein, he claimed 16 victories, often engaging raf hurricanes, curtiss p-40 tomahawks/kittyhawks, and spitfires in swirling dogfights over the barren desert. His scoring accelerated further in september, when he downed 13 enemy aircraft, including a remarkable six raf fighters on 15 september 1942 alone during heavy air combat over el alamein. These included a mix of spitfires and other single-engine types, with the sixth—a spitfire—bringing his total near the 48th mark. The desert sky that day was filled with contrails and smoke trails as german bf 109s clashed with determined british and commonwealth squadrons attempting to contest axis air superiority.
In october 1942, just before montgomery’s offensive at el alamein, schröer added another 15 victories, pushing his confirmed tally to 49. His 49th victory on or around 20 october was a hurricane (sometimes noted as a curtiss p-40) southwest of deir el tarfa, claimed against no. 238 squadron raf. These actions occurred amid frantic escort and interception missions, where 8./jg 27 frequently operated at the limit of endurance, flying from forward desert airstrips under constant threat of ground attack and logistical strain. Schröer’s efficiency—achieving nearly 50 victories in a theater known for its harsh conditions and skilled opponents—highlighted his marksmanship, situational awareness, and ability to lead his staffel in coordinated attacks. The award recognized not only his personal score but his contribution to maintaining axis air cover during critical ground operations.
02.08.1943 Ritterkreuz des Eisernes Kreuz mit Eichenlaub #268 as Hauptmann and Gruppenkommandeur II.Gruppe / Jagdgeschwader 27 (JG 27). Awarded after 84 aerial victories. Following the Ritterkreuz, Schröer continued to lead with distinction. In late 1942 and early 1943, as the Axis position in North Africa deteriorated, he added further claims, including four-engined bombers such as a boeing b-24 liberator west of sollum on 4 november 1942. 
The period from April to July 1943 saw II./jg 27 heavily engaged over sicily and southern italy during the allied invasion of sicily (operation husky) and subsequent operations. Operating under increasing pressure from superior allied numbers, schröer claimed around 22 additional victories in this timeframe, including 12 four-engined heavy bombers. These missions involved intercepting large formations of american b-17 flying fortresses and b-24 liberators escorted by p-38 lightnings and other fighters. Dogfights often unfolded at high altitude over the mediterranean or near the italian coastline, with schröer leading his gruppe in head-on attacks or diving passes to break up bomber boxes while evading escorting fighters.
His leadership was particularly noted for maintaining unit cohesion and effectiveness “against the odds” as german forces faced overwhelming material superiority and relentless allied air operations. By late july 1943, after handing over aircraft and returning to germany for rest and re-equipment, his score stood at approximately 84–85 victories. The oak leaves were awarded on 2 august 1943 in recognition of his continued success and command performance in the mediterranean theater, where he had become the second-highest scoring german ace after hans-joachim marseille in north africa and italy.
02.08.1943 Medaille Für Italienisch-Deutschen Feldzug in Afrika (The Italo-German Campaign Medal in Africa) Awards and Decorations:
00.00.1943 Ärmelband Afrika (Africa campaign cuff-title)*
16.04.1945 Ritterkreuz des Eisernes Kreuz mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #144 as Major and Geschwaderkommodore Jagdgeschwader 3 "Udet". The Schwerter were awarded specifically after reaching his 110th confirmed victory, recognizing his leadership of jg 3 in the closing stages of the reich’s defense and his personal contribution to slowing the soviet advance through aggressive interception sorties. By war’s end schröer had accumulated 114 victories in just 197 combat missions, including 26 four-engined bombers, a testament to his efficiency and resilience across multiple fronts.
These decorations underscored schröer’s evolution from a skilled staffel leader in the north african desert—where swirling, low-altitude fights against raf desert air force squadrons defined his early success—to a steady gruppenkommandeur holding the line in the mediterranean, and finally a geschwaderkommodore in the apocalyptic final battles of 1945. His career reflected the broader challenges faced by luftwaffe fighter pilots: adapting to different theaters, opponents, and increasingly desperate strategic situations while maintaining a high personal victory rate.
No proof available in the Bundesarchief. Proof was given by the Gemeinschaft der Jagdflieger. The award number is therefore based on the date of the awarding.
According to research by Veit Scherzer the awarding data was APril 16th, 1945.

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Werner schröer was a german military aviator and fighter ace in the luftwaffe during the second world war. He was credited with one hundred fourteen aerial victories achieved in only one hundred ninety seven combat missions. The majority of his claims were scored against western allied aircraft including sixty one in north africa and twenty two over italy with an additional twelve victories claimed on the eastern front. Among his successes were twenty six four engined heavy bombers. He rose to the rank of major and ended the war as geschwaderkommodore of jagdgeschwader three udet. Schröer received the knight's cross of the iron cross with oak leaves and swords for his leadership and combat performance across multiple theaters.

Born on twelve february nineteen eighteen in mülheim an der ruhr in the rhine province schröer was the son of friedrich johann schröer and his wife maria née schmitz. He attended school from nineteen twenty four until nineteen thirty seven graduating with his abitur. After completing compulsory reichsarbeitsdienst service he joined the luftwaffe in nineteen thirty seven initially serving as ground personnel. His recruit training began on three november nineteen thirty seven with the fourth company of flieger ersatz abteilung twenty four in quakenbrück. He progressed through various ground and training units before beginning flight training and later fighter pilot instruction. Schröer was promoted to gefreiter in nineteen thirty eight and to unteroffizier in nineteen thirty nine eventually reaching feldwebel by december of that year.

Schröer joined jagdgeschwader twenty seven in nineteen forty and flew his first combat missions during the battle of britain though without confirmed victories at that stage. In march nineteen forty one his unit transferred to north africa to support the afrika korps under erwin rommel. On nineteen april nineteen forty one he claimed his first victory a hawker hurricane near tobruk but was himself shot down and forced to make an emergency landing with his messerschmitt bf one zero nine riddled by bullets. Early scoring proved slow as he adapted to the vast desert skies and skilled royal air force opponents. His progress accelerated dramatically after he was appointed staffelkapitän of the eighth staffel of the third group of jagdgeschwader twenty seven in june nineteen forty two. In july he recorded sixteen victories often in fierce dogfights over the gazala line and during the advance toward el alamein where swirling combats involved hurricanes curtiss p forty tomahawks and kittyhawks.

His most remarkable day came on fifteen september nineteen forty two during heavy air battles over el alamein when schröer claimed six royal air force fighters in a single mission bringing his total close to fifty. These intense engagements unfolded amid contrails and smoke trails as german bf one zero nine fighters clashed repeatedly with determined british and commonwealth squadrons attempting to regain air superiority. By twenty october nineteen forty two after adding fifteen more victories including a hurricane or p forty southwest of deir el tarfa he reached forty nine confirmed claims. For these achievements as leutnant and staffelführer he was awarded the knight's cross of the iron cross. On four november he intercepted us army air forces b twenty four liberators raiding benghazi downing one for his sixtieth victory. His sixty first and final north african claim came on sixteen november a p forty south of tecis just before the axis retreat. With sixty one victories in africa he ranked as the second highest scoring german ace in the desert campaign after hans joachim marseille.

Following the evacuation from north africa schröer continued operations over sicily and southern italy during the allied invasion of sicily. Promoted to hauptmann he assumed command of the second group of jagdgeschwader twenty seven in april nineteen forty three. Between april and july nineteen forty three his pilots faced overwhelming allied air power including large formations of boeing b seventeen flying fortresses and b twenty four liberators escorted by lockheed p thirty eight lightnings and other fighters. Schröer personally claimed around twenty two additional victories in this period including twelve four engined bombers. These high altitude intercepts over the mediterranean and italian coastline demanded precise head on attacks or diving passes to disrupt bomber boxes while evading escorts. For his continued success and steady leadership against superior numbers he received the oak leaves to the knight's cross on two august nineteen forty three as the two hundred sixty eighth recipient after approximately eighty four or eighty five victories.

In the final phase of the war schröer commanded the third group of jagdgeschwader fifty four before being appointed geschwaderkommodore of jagdgeschwader three udet on fourteen february nineteen forty five. Operating in the desperate defense of eastern germany during the soviet oder offensive he claimed twelve soviet aircraft including il two sturmoviks and yak fighters in low level highly dangerous missions amid intense anti aircraft fire and numerical inferiority. These actions pushed his total past one hundred ten victories. On nineteen april nineteen forty five following his one hundred tenth confirmed claim he was awarded the swords to the knight's cross with oak leaves as the one hundred forty fourth recipient. Schröer survived the war and was held in british captivity until seven february nineteen forty six.

After his release schröer initially worked as a taxi driver in frankfurt while studying to earn a diplom kaufmann degree in business administration. He later lived and worked in rome italy for eleven years with his family. Upon returning to germany he joined the aviation industry and served as head of the central protocol department at messerschmitt bölkow blohm in ottobrunn until retirement. In nineteen sixty eight he adjusted the spelling of his surname to schröer with the umlaut. Werner schröer died on ten february nineteen eighty five in ottobrunn two days before his sixty seventh birthday and was buried with military honors at the parkfriedhof cemetery there. His career exemplified the skill adaptability and resilience required of luftwaffe fighter pilots who operated across vastly different theaters under increasingly difficult conditions.




















Source:
Obermaier, Ernst: Die ritterkreuzträger der luftwaffe 1939-1945, band i: jagdflieger  
Spick, Mike: Luftwaffe fighter aces  
Zabecki, David T. (editor): World war ii in europe, an encyclopedia  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/werner_schröer  
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/26616/schroer-werner.htm  
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/ (general luftwaffe officer references)  
https://rk.balsi.de/index.php?action=list&cat=300  
https://aircrewremembered.com/krackerdatabase/  
https://www.ww2.dk/lwoffz.html  
https://aufhimmelzuhause.com/id240.htm  
https://luftwaffeinprofile.se/  
https://ww2gravestone.com/people/schroer-werner/  
https://forum.axishistory.com/  
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/  
https://www.geni.com/ (family name basics)  
https://web.archive.org/web/20091027052912fw_/http://geocities.com/orion47.geo/index2.html

Bio of Generalmajor Hellmuth Mäder (1908-1984)


Full name: Hellmuth Oskar Walter Mäder
Nickname: None widely documented

Date of birth: 5 July 1908 - Rotterode, Thuringia (German Empire)
Date of death: 12 May 1984 (Koblenz, Rheinland-Pfalz (West Germany)

Religion: Not publicly specified in available sources.  
Family name: Limited public details are available. Parents, siblings, spouse, and children are not extensively documented in open military biographies or genealogical records. He was born into a family in rotterode, thuringia. No confirmed information on marital status or descendants appears consistently across primary military lexicons and award records.

Promotions:
1 April 1933 Polizei-Leutnant
1 April 1934 Polizei-Oberleutnant
1 October 1935 Oberleutnant
1 July 1941 Major
1 September 1942 Oberstleutnant
1 October 1943 Oberst
30 January 1945 Generalmajor
1946 Brigadegeneral (Bundeswehr)
Generalleutnant (Bundeswehr)

Career:
- April 1, 1928: Joined the German police as an officer candidate. Attended the Bonn State Police Academy, state police school for weapons and physical training in Spandau, eiche higher state police school, and school for technology and transport in berlin-tempelhof.
- April 1, 1933: Promoted to police lieutenant.
- April 1, 1934: Promoted to police oberleutnant.
- October 1, 1935: Transferred from the police to the wehrmacht as oberleutnant.
- September 1939: Served as a junior officer and staff officer with the 34th infantry division.
- January to April 1940: Completed a general staff course at the war academy in dresden.
- Spring 1940: As oberleutnant, commanded the 14th company of the 522nd infantry regiment in the 297th infantry division (the division was not deployed in the battle of france).
- Late 1940: Appointed commander of the III battalion of the 522nd infantry regiment.
- 1941: The 297th infantry division was assigned to army group south for operation barbarossa. It advanced toward kyiv and rostov and participated in subsequent defensive actions.
- June 27, 1941: Awarded the iron cross 2nd class as hauptmann and commander of III./infanterie-regiment 522.
- August 1, 1941: Awarded the iron cross 1st class.
- Winter 1941-1942: Led defensive actions with his battalion during the harsh winter fighting on the eastern front.
- April 3, 1942: Awarded the knight's cross of the iron cross as major and commander of iii./infanterie-regiment 522 for his leadership in a bold river crossing of the mosh river. This action enabled his division to bypass fortified positions and continue the pursuit across the udy and donez rivers.
- July 1942: Promoted to major and assumed command of the entire 522nd infantry regiment. The regiment fought at kharkiv, the izyum pocket, and voronezh during the advance toward the don river.
- September 1, 1942: Promoted to oberstleutnant.
- Late 1942 to early 1943: Led the regiment as part of the 6th army into the stalingrad area. Directed battle groups during intense defensive fighting in december 1942 and january 1943. Suffered a serious wound and was evacuated by air before the final collapse of the 6th army. Placed in the führerreserve during recovery.
- October 1, 1943: Promoted to oberst.
- Early 1944: Commanded the eingreifbrigade narwa on the northern sector of the eastern front. Successfully halted localized soviet attacks before being severely wounded again.
- After recovery: Appointed commander of the heeresgruppen waffenschule nord (army group weapons school north), a training establishment. Also led the infanterie-lehrbrigade nord.
- July 1944: During the soviet summer offensive, organized the defense of the vital railway junction at siauliai (schaulen) as kampfkommandant with scratch units including security companies and alarm units. Held the position under heavy attack, allowing retreating german forces to withdraw. Continued defensive actions with improvised units afterward.
- August 27, 1944: Awarded the oak leaves to the knight's cross (560th award) as oberst and leader of the lehr-brigade nord / heeresgruppen waffenschule nord, and simultaneously combat commander of siauliai.
- Autumn 1944: Briefly commanded the 7th panzer division on the northern russian front.
- End of 1944: Assigned command of the elite führer-begleit-brigade (part of panzerkorps großdeutschland). Led it during the ardennes offensive.
- December 24, 1944: Took command of the führer-begleit-brigade.
- January 30, 1945: Promoted to generalmajor. The brigade was expanded into the führer-grenadier-division, and he was appointed its commander.
- March 1945: The division fought near stettin and in the battle for lauban. On march 4, 1945, it linked up with the 8th panzer division, cut off soviet spearheads, inflicted heavy losses, and contributed to the recapture of lauban (one of the last notable german operational successes in the east).
- April 18, 1945: Awarded the swords to the knight's cross (143rd award) as generalmajor and commander of the führer-grenadier-division. The division continued fighting on the eastern front, retreating toward the outskirts of vienna in the final battles for austria.
- May 1945: Surrendered to american forces at the end of the war but was handed over to soviet custody.
- 1945-1955: Held in soviet captivity.
- 1956: Joined the newly formed bundeswehr of west germany with the rank of brigadegeneral. Commanded the infanterieschule hammelburg (infantry school at hammelburg).
- Later years in bundeswehr: Rose to the rank of generalleutnant before retirement.
- 1974: Arrested and convicted of embezzlement of funds and inconsistencies in expense reports related to his bundeswehr service. Sentenced to two years imprisonment. He denied the accusations until his death.
- May 12, 1984: Died in konstanz (some sources note koblenz in connection with records) at age 75.

Awards and Decorations:
Eisernes Kreuz II.Klasse (27 June 1941)
Eisernes Kreuz I.Klasse (1 August 1941)
Infanterie-Sturmabzeichen in Silber
Verwundetenabzeichen in Schwarz
Verwundetenabzeichen in Silber
Nahkampfspange in Bronze
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (3 April 1942) as Major and Kommandeur III.Bataillon / Infanterie-Regiment 522 / 297.Infanterie-Division, awarded for a bold and decisive river crossing operation during the spring advance on the Eastern Front under Heeresgruppe Süd. In early 1942, his battalion faced a strongly fortified soviet position blocking the main advance route. Instead of launching a costly frontal assault, Mäder led his men in a daring crossing of the Mosh river under difficult conditions. His troops established a bridgehead on the far bank through aggressive infiltration and rapid assault, overcoming resistance with close-quarters combat and determined leadership. This unexpected maneuver allowed the bulk of the 297th infantry division to cross the river on the same day without heavy losses. The bridgehead bypassed the main soviet defenses, enabling the division to maintain momentum and continue its pursuit across the udy and donez rivers near tschugujoff the following day. Mäder's action demonstrated exceptional initiative and tactical skill, turning a potential stalemate into a successful continuation of the offensive.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #560 (27 August 1944) as Oberst and Infanterie-Lehrbrigade der Heeresgruppen-Waffenschule Nord und Kampfkommandant von die Stadt Schaulen. During the Soviet Šiauliai offensive (part of the later phases of Operation Bagration), Soviet forces (mainly from the 1st Baltic Front) advanced toward the important rail junction at Schaulen in late July 1944.
On or around 26 July 1944, Soviet spearheads (including elements of the 3rd Guards Tank Corps) reached the city. Mäder had only weak forces available—various security companies, alarm units, and ad-hoc troops.
Mäder quickly formed a Kampfgruppe (battle group) from these scratch units, defended the city for about a day and night, and then broke out toward Libau (Liepāja) on the night of 27–28 July. This helped keep the route open for other retreating German units.
Fighting in the broader Schaulen area continued into August 1944. Mäder continued to lead scratch units in the defense against the ongoing Soviet offensive.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #143 (18 April 1945) as Generalmajor and Kommandeur Führer-Grenadier-Division, awarded for the division's role in the battle for Lauban in early march 1945 — one of the last notable German operational successes on the Eastern Front. After heavy fighting near Stettin, the division moved southwest and engaged Soviet forces threatening Lauban. Between March 1 and 5, 1945, the spearheads of the Führer-Grenadier-Division executed a skillful counterattack and linked up with the 8th Panzer Division on March 4. This coordinated thrust cut off advancing Soviet units in a classic pincer movement. In fierce engagements involving panzergrenadiers, tanks, and artillery, German forces encircled the enemy spearheads. Although most Soviet troops managed to break out on foot, they were forced to abandon the majority of their heavy weapons, tanks, and equipment in the process. Lauban itself was recaptured, delivering a sharp local defeat to the Red Army at a time when such victories were extremely rare. Mäder's energetic command of the elite division in fluid, high-intensity combat amid the collapsing front contributed directly to this tactical success and helped stabilize the immediate sector during the desperate final battles before the retreat toward Vienna and Austria.

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Hellmuth Mäder was a German army officer who rose through the ranks to become a general during the Second World War. Born on 5 July 1908 in Rotterode in Thuringia, he initially served in the police before transferring to the Wehrmacht in 1936. By the outbreak of war in September 1939 he was a staff officer with the 34th Infantry Division. His early wartime service included staff duties and then command of a company in the 297th Infantry Division during the preparations for the invasion of the Soviet Union. Mäder demonstrated leadership in infantry operations on the Eastern Front, where his unit participated in the advance under Army Group South toward the Don River and engagements around Kharkov and the Izyum sector.

In the spring of 1942, as a major commanding the third battalion of Infantry Regiment 522, Mäder led a bold assault crossing of the Mosh River that allowed the bulk of his division to advance successfully. For this action he received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 3 April 1942. He later took command of the full regiment and continued to serve with distinction in defensive and offensive operations. By 1944 his reputation for determined leadership under pressure earned him further recognition. In July 1944, while serving with an infantry training brigade attached to Army Group North and acting as battle commander of the city of Schaulen, Mäder organized scratch forces to delay a major Soviet armored thrust. His Kampfgruppe held the position for a full day and night before breaking out, contributing to the stabilization of the sector and earning him the Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross on 27 August 1944.

In the autumn of 1944 Mäder was briefly assigned command of the veteran 7th Panzer Division on the northern sector of the Eastern Front, succeeding officers such as Dr. Karl Mauss. His tenure with the division was short but occurred during intense defensive fighting. Toward the end of 1944 he received a more prestigious posting as commander of the Führer-Begleit-Brigade, an elite formation within Panzerkorps Großdeutschland under General Dietrich von Saucken. He led this mechanized brigade during the Ardennes Offensive in the West before it was rapidly expanded in early 1945 into the Führer-Grenadier-Division. Promoted to Generalmajor, Mäder assumed full command of the new division as it was redeployed to the Eastern Front.

The Führer-Grenadier-Division under Mäder first saw heavy combat near Stettin before being shifted southward to help defend the approaches to Vienna in the final weeks of the war. In March 1945 the division participated in the successful counterattack at Lauban, where its spearheads linked with the 8th Panzer Division, cutting off Soviet forces, inflicting heavy equipment losses on the enemy, and temporarily liberating the town in what proved to be one of the last notable German operational victories on the Eastern Front. During the desperate fighting on the outskirts of the Austrian capital in April 1945, Mäder continued to direct his division amid collapsing German lines. On 18 April 1945 he was awarded the Swords to his Knight's Cross, becoming the 143rd recipient of this high decoration as Generalmajor and divisional commander.

With the collapse of German resistance in May 1945, Mäder surrendered to American forces but was subsequently handed over to the Soviets. He endured ten years of captivity in the Soviet Union before his release in 1955. Upon returning to West Germany he joined the newly formed Bundeswehr in 1956 with the rank of Brigadegeneral. He served as commander of the Infantry School at Hammelburg and rose to the rank of Generalleutnant before retiring. His postwar career ended controversially when, in 1974, he was convicted of embezzlement and irregularities in expense reporting related to his Bundeswehr service and sentenced to two years in prison, a charge he maintained his innocence of until the end of his life.

Hellmuth Mäder died on 12 May 1984 at the age of 75 in Konstanz on Lake Constance, though some records note Koblenz as the place of death. He was buried in the Hauptfriedhof in Koblenz. Throughout his military career he was recognized for personal courage and tactical skill in both offensive and defensive roles across multiple fronts, culminating in the highest grades of the Knight's Cross. His service spanned the Wehrmacht in the Second World War and the Bundeswehr in the Cold War era, reflecting the complex transition many former German officers made in the postwar period.










Source:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/hellmuth_m%C3%A4der
- https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/34592/m%C3%A4der-hellmuth.htm
- https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/personenregister/m/maederh.htm
- https://ww2gravestone.com/people/mader-hellmuth/
- https://www.feldgrau.com/ww2-german-officer-hellmuth-mader
- https://rk.balsi.de/ (lists of ritterkreuzträger)

Bio of Generalmajor Hermann von Oppeln-Bronikowski (1899-1966)


Full name: Hermann Leopold August von Oppeln-Bronikowski
Nickname: No information

Date of birth: 2 January 1899 - Berlin (German Empire)
Date of death: 19 September 1966 - Gaißach, Bavaria (West Germany)

Religion: The broader Oppeln‑Bronikowski family is historically associated with the Calvinist (reformed) confession in several branches, but there is no explicit public record stating Hermann’s personal confession; sources therefore usually list his religion as “unknown” or do not specify it further.
Parents: Hermann von Oppeln‑Bronikowski (later General der Infanterie in the Kaiserliche Armee) and Marie von Oppeln‑Bronikowski (maiden name not clearly established in open online sources).
Siblings: Public biographical records do not list specific names or numbers of siblings for Hermann Leopold August; detailed family archives focus instead on earlier generations of the Oppeln‑Bronikowski house.
Spouse: Edelgard von Kleist (married mid‑June 1931 in Züllichau, daughter of generalleutnant Adolf von Kleist).
Children: Published sources do not give clear, consistently cited names or numbers of children; some genealogical notes mention “children” in plural but without specific details usable in an authoritative bio.

Promotions:
23 March 1917: Fähnrich
19 December 1917: Leutnant
1 October 1919: Leutnant (with patent from 1 April 1918)
1 April 1925: Oberleutnant
1 June 1933: Rittmeister
1 March 1937: Major
1 August 1940: Oberstleutnant (ranked as of december 1941, with renewed seniority from june 1939 in some records)
1 February 1942: Oberst
30 January 1945 (effective from 1 January 1945): Generalmajor

Career:
1912 Entered the Bensberg Cadet School near Cologne, later transferred to the cadet institute at Groß-Lichterfelde near Berlin.
23 March 1917 Promoted to Fähnrich.  
19 December 1917 Promoted to Leutnant. Voluntarily reported to the front and joined Infantry Regiment “Prince Carl” Nr. 118 on the Western Front. Served as platoon and troop leader in Champagne and the Argonne.  
28 May 1918 Awarded the Iron Cross 2nd Class.  
14 October 1918 Awarded the Iron Cross 1st Class (one of the youngest lieutenants to receive it), personally presented by Lieutenant-General Paul von Kleist.
1 October 1919 Reappointed as Leutnant with patent from 1 April 1918. Continued service in the reduced Reichswehr, initially in cavalry and infantry roles.  
1 April 1925 Promoted to Oberleutnant.  
1 June 1933 Promoted to Rittmeister (cavalry captain).  
1 March 1937 Promoted to Major.
1936 Competed as an equestrian in the Berlin Summer Olympics. Won the gold medal in team dressage riding the East Prussian gelding “Gimpel”.
1939 Served as commander of the reconnaissance battalion (Aufklärungs-Abteilung 24) of the 24th Infantry Division during the invasion of Poland.  
25 September 1939 Awarded the 1939 Clasp to the Iron Cross 2nd Class.  
10 November 1939 Awarded the 1939 Clasp to the Iron Cross 1st Class.
1 August 1940 Promoted to Oberstleutnant (with RDA seniority dated 17 December 1941, later renewed to 1 June 1939 in some records).  
Voluntarily transferred to the Panzertruppe on 1 October 1941 and assigned to the 5th Panzer Brigade in the 4th Panzer Division. Took command of elements of Panzer-Regiment 35.
Fought in the advance toward Moscow (Orel-Tula sector) and subsequent defensive battles.  
 Mid-January 1942 Took command of Panzer-Regiment 35.  
1 February 1942 Promoted to Oberst.  
October 1942 Assumed command of Panzer-Regiment 204 of the 22nd Panzer Division.  
Led desperate counterattacks and defensive actions with the 22nd Panzer Division in the winter of 1942-43 near Army Group Don to prevent encirclements related to the Stalingrad battle. His Kampfgruppe achieved notable successes, destroying large numbers of Soviet tanks, guns, and heavy weapons despite heavy losses.  
1 January 1943 Awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross as Oberst and commander of Panzer-Regiment 204.  
7 August 1943 Awarded the German Cross in Gold as Oberst in Panzer-Regiment 11 (after earlier command transitions).  
Suffered a war injury in 1943.
Recovered and appointed commander of Panzer-Regiment 22 of the 21st Panzer Division.  
Led immediate armored counterattacks against Allied forces after the D-Day landings on 6 June 1944. Some of his tanks reached toward the coast but were forced to withdraw under pressure. His regiment held positions around Caen for approximately 32 days against superior Allied forces, maintaining defensive lines despite heavy fighting and fuel/ammunition shortages.  
28 July 1944 Awarded the Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross (536th recipient) as Oberst and commander of Panzer-Regiment 22.
26 September 1944 Participated in a division commanders’ course.  
7 November 1944 Took temporary or preparatory leadership role toward commanding the 20th Panzer Division, succeeding General der Panzertruppe Mortimer von Kessel.
30 January 1945 (effective from 1 January 1945): Promoted to Generalmajor.  
Assumed full command of the 20th Panzer Division in Silesia. Led defensive operations and counterattacks against Soviet advances, including actions near the Neisse River, defense of Neisse, a corridor to Breslau over the Zobten mountain, relief of encircled troops at the fortress of Bautzen (freeing about 1,200 soldiers), and holding actions toward Spremberg.  
17 April 1945 Awarded the Swords to the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves (142nd recipient) as Generalmajor and commander of the 20th Panzer Division for these actions.
On 8 May 1945, upon learning of the unconditional surrender at the command post of Fallschirm-Panzerkorps “Hermann Göring”, he dissolved his division in an orderly manner, allowing small groups to break out toward American lines.  
Taken prisoner by American forces on 18 May 1945. Held in various camps (including Staudemühle near Paderborn and British camps in Belgium). Interrogated and initially classified as a potential war criminal due to his role in the defense of Caen but later released in 1947 as “completely innocent"
Post-war life: Worked as a civil engineering consultant and contributed to the reconstruction of the new German Bundeswehr. Served as a riding instructor, including preparing the Canadian Olympic dressage team for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics.  
Interviewed by author Cornelius Ryan for the book *The Longest Day*.
19 September 1966   Died of a heart attack in Gaißach, Bavaria, West Germany, at the age of 67.

Awards and Decorations:
Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse 1914 (28 May1918)
Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse 1914 (14 October 1918)
Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 2. Klasse 1939 (25 September 1939)
Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 1. Klasse 1939 (10 November 1939)
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Schwarz
Panzerkampfabzeichen in Silber (Stufe II oder ohne Zahl)
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (1 January 1943) as Oberst and Kommandeur Panzer-Regiment 204 / 22.Panzer-Division. The actions that earned him the award took place during the desperate winter battles of Heeresgruppe Don in late 1942 and early 1943. As commander of a panzer-regiment, von Oppeln-Bronikowski led aggressive armored counterattacks in the vast snow-covered plains of the Don-Donets region and the great Don bend. Amid collapsing german lines and the looming disaster at Stalingrad his Kampfgruppe repeatedly clashed with far superior soviet forces in freezing conditions where temperatures plunged below minus thirty degrees and supply lines were almost nonexistent. Between early December 1942 and early January 1943 his panzers destroyed or captured 451 enemy tanks, 209 guns, and 752 heavy infantry weapons. In one notable engagement his tanks executed rapid flanking maneuvers through deep snow to surprise and annihilate a soviet battlegroup in close-range duels. Despite severe equipment shortages including tanks immobilized when field mice chewed through electrical wiring his unit held critical sectors and delayed massive soviet advances buying vital time for other german formations.
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold (7 August 1943 as Oberst in Panzer-Regiment 11)
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #536 (28 July 1944) as Oberst and Kommandeur Panzer-Regiment 22 / 21.Panzer-Division. On 6 June 1944 immediately after the Allied D-Day landings he launched bold counterattacks pushing his panzer IV tanks northward toward the coast in an attempt to split the British and Canadian beachheads. Some of his armored vehicles advanced so far that crews could see the english channel before being forced back by devastating naval gunfire, fighter-bomber attacks and determined infantry resistance. For the next thirty-two days his regiment fought a grueling defensive battle around the city of Caen. In the dense bocage countryside with its thick hedgerows that restricted movement and visibility his panzers absorbed relentless bombardments from allied warships and aircraft while launching sharp local counterthrusts to plug gaps in the line. Day and night the unit held its positions through skillful use of covered firing points and rapid repositioning despite mounting losses in tanks fuel and men. His energetic and personal leadership helped maintain fighting spirit in the face of overwhelming allied material superiority.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #142 (17 April 1945) as Generalmajor and Kommandeur 20. Panzer-Division. Oppeln-Bronikowski’s award recommendation reads as follows:
“In the time period 15.-17.03.1945 the enemy deployed overwhelming infantry and tank forces in a southerly direction from Grottkau in the direction of Neisse, and they achieved a deep penetration into friendly lines. In response the 20. Pz.Div. (attached to VIII. Korps at the time) was dispatched against this threat, with its foremost elements located north of Neisse being the first to engage the enemy. Although this maneuver managed to contain the hostile thrust following bitter combat, on the 18.03.1945 the enemy thrust forwards along the axis Stephansdorf—Gross-Giessmannsdorf—Hochdorf with their 6th Guards Mechanized Corps and the 282nd Rifle Division. Their goal was to envelop Neisse from the west.
Following this dangerous turn-of-events Generalmajor von Oppeln (commander of the 20. Pz.Div.) and his staff were pulled out of the area north of Neisse. He received the mission to use the newly arrived elements of his Division to engage the advancing enemy and close the gap between Neisse and Nowag.
Undeterred by the unclear situation, Generalmajor von Oppeln immediately conducted a personal reconnaissance of the terrain that had been occupied by the foe. He found and reorganized those defending forces that were still fighting, and eliminated the opposing armoured spearheads in Hochdorf in a lightning-swift display of action. After this he personally led a counterattack against the enemy troops that had penetrated into the forest north of Gross-Giessmannsdorf. This series of actions that Generalmajor von Oppeln directed from the foremost line proved sufficient to prevent a hostile breakthrough towards the Neisse—Ottmachau road.
The bold, flexible leadership and inspiring personal bravery of Generalmajor von Oppeln have enabled him to repeatedly halt and smash strong enemy tank and infantry formations time and again. The 20. Pz.Div. was attached to VIII. Korps for the second time in 4 weeks, and it has once again proven itself to be an elite division. The Division has shown itself to possess both energy and endurance (especially in night attacks). For his part Generalmajor von Oppeln has particularly distinguished himself through both his demonstrated personal bravery as well as the swiftness with which he executes his plans.
Generalmajor von Oppeln has already previously distinguished himself during the fighting on the 07.02.1945, during the first 4-day attachment of his Division to the Korps. On this day he was present at the spearhead of the armoured group during its attack, and he provided the tempo for the successful night attack that was launched against the bitterly defending foe near Grottkau. He delivered similarly impressive results on the 27.01.1945, during the offensive combat in the Upper Silesian industrial area. Although his armoured vehicle was knocked out twice on this day he continued to lead the spearhead group towards the south and into the enemy’s midst. This opened up a path for the bulk of the encircled friendly Divisionen to occupy new positions.
This commander is possessed of particularly flexible leadership, uncompromising boldness and outstanding skill, and these virtues are reflected in the ranks of his Panzer-Division. He and his men never fail to deliver crushing blows upon the foe wherever they are deployed.”

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Hermann leopold august von oppeln-bronikowski was a german army officer and olympic equestrian champion who rose to the rank of generalmajor during the second world war. Born on 2 january 1899 in berlin into a prussian noble family with deep military roots his father was a general of the infantry. He entered cadet school in 1912 first at bensberg and later at gross-lichterfelde. During the first world war he volunteered for frontline service and was commissioned as a leutnant in late 1917. He fought on the western front with infantry regiment prince carl no. 118 earning both classes of the iron cross 1914 by october 1918 at a young age. After the war he continued his career in the reichswehr transitioning through various cavalry and infantry postings while steadily advancing in rank.

In parallel with his military duties von oppeln-bronikowski excelled in competitive dressage. He represented germany at the 1936 summer olympics in berlin where he contributed to the team gold medal riding the east prussian gelding gimpel. The horse had previously helped secure gold in 1928. Individually he placed tenth. His horsemanship and cavalry background later informed his reputation as a bold and energetic commander once the wehrmacht began emphasizing armored warfare. By 1939 he had reached the rank of major and commanded the reconnaissance battalion of the 24th infantry division during the invasion of poland. For his performance he received the 1939 clasps to both classes of the iron cross.

With the expansion of the panzer forces von oppeln-bronikowski transferred to armored units in 1941. He commanded panzer-regiment 35 then panzer-regiment 204 of the 22nd panzer division on the eastern front. In the desperate winter fighting of 1942-43 near army group don his kampfgruppe conducted aggressive counterattacks that helped delay soviet encirclement efforts connected to stalingrad destroying hundreds of enemy tanks and guns despite heavy losses. On 1 january 1943 he was awarded the knight's cross of the iron cross as an oberst. He later commanded panzer-regiment 11 with the 6th panzer division and earned the german cross in gold in august 1943 before being wounded.

In 1944 von oppeln-bronikowski took command of panzer-regiment 22 within the 21st panzer division stationed in normandy. On 6 june he led immediate counterattacks against the allied landings pushing some elements toward the coast although superior numbers and air power forced withdrawals. His regiment held defensive lines around caen for roughly a month under intense pressure. For these actions he received the oak leaves to the knight's cross on 28 july 1944 as the 536th recipient. Described by contemporaries as exuberant and dashing he was known for his frontline leadership style though occasional tensions with superiors arose linked to his personal habits including drinking.

By late 1944 he prepared to assume command of the 20th panzer division on the eastern front. Promoted to generalmajor with effect from 1 january 1945 he led the division during the final defensive battles in silesia. His forces conducted counterattacks near the oder river defended neisse opened a temporary corridor toward breslau and relieved encircled troops at bautzen freeing around 1 200 soldiers. For his leadership in these actions he was awarded the swords to the knight's cross with oak leaves on 17 april 1945 as the 142nd recipient. On 8 may 1945 upon hearing of the unconditional surrender he dissolved the division in orderly fashion allowing small groups to attempt breakout toward american lines. He was taken prisoner shortly afterward and after interrogation and a period of internment was released in 1947 classified as innocent.

After the war von oppeln-bronikowski worked as a civil engineering consultant and participated in early planning for the reconstruction of the west german bundeswehr. He remained active in equestrian circles serving as a riding instructor and helping prepare the canadian dressage team for the 1964 tokyo olympics. He was also interviewed by author cornelius ryan during research for the book the longest day. Hermann von oppeln-bronikowski died of a heart attack on 19 september 1966 in gaissach bavaria at the age of 67. He was survived by his wife edelgard von kleist whom he had married in 1931 and their three children. His career bridged the old prussian cavalry tradition olympic achievement and the mechanized battles of the second world war marking him as one of the more colorful and capable panzer leaders of his generation.























Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermann_von_Oppeln-Bronikowski
https://gmic.co.uk/topic/85662-oppeln-bronikowski-hermann-von/
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/12987/Oppeln-Bronikowski-von-Hermann-Leopold-August.htm
https://ww2colorfarbe.blogspot.com/2015/10/generalmajor-hermann-von-oppeln.html
https://www.walter-frentz-collection.de/fotoarchiv/personenarchiv-a-z/personen-n-r/

Thursday, April 30, 2026

Bio of Oberst Arthur Jüttner (1908-2003)


Full Name: Arthur Jüttner  
Nickname: In military and veteran circles he is often referred to as “der letzte Kommandeur der 62. Volksgrenadier‑Division” (the last commander of the 62nd Volksgrenadier Division)

Date of birth: 18 August 1908 - Kattowitz, Upper Silesia (German Empire)
Date of death: 1 December 2003 - Bramstedt, Lower Saxony (Germany)

Religion: Protestant (evangelisch)   
Parents: The son of a customs official (Zollbeamter). Details about his mother and any siblings remain sparsely documented in public sources.
Spouse: He married, but his wife died in Upper Silesia in early 1945 during the chaotic final months of the war. He received special leave in February 1945 to attend her funeral.
Children: Information regarding his children is limited and not extensively recorded in available biographical materials. After the war he resided in West Germany and became actively involved in veterans traditions associations focused on Silesian military heritage.

Promotions:
1926 Enters military service as a Freiwilliger in the Reichswehr
1930 Unteroffizier
1935 Feldwebel
1937 Hauptfeldwebel
1 April 1938 Oberleutnant
1 February 1939 Hauptmann 
1 January 1942 Major
1 September 1943 Oberstleutnant
18 October 1944 Oberst
1955 Oberst der Reserve (Bundeswehr)

Career:
13 April 1926: Enlisted as a volunteer in the 3. Kompanie, 7. (Preussisches) Infanterie-Regiment in Neisse.  
1930: Passed the non-commissioned officer examination.  
1935: Promoted to Feldwebel in the regimental staff of Infanterie-Regiment 7; trained Fahnenjunker (officer candidates) of the 8. Division.  
1937: Promoted to Hauptfeldwebel in the staff company, I. Bataillon, Infanterie-Regiment 7, Neisse.  
1 April 1938: Promoted to Oberleutnant; appointed Chef, 3. Kompanie, I. Bataillon, Infanterie-Regiment 7.  
1 February 1939 (some sources cite 1 October 1938): Promoted to Hauptmann; appointed Chef, 1. Kompanie, Infanterie-Regiment 7 (later associated with Infanterie-Regiment 38 of the 8. Infanterie-Division).  
1938-1939: Participated in the occupation of the Sudetenland and the remainder of Czechoslovakia.  
1939: Participated in operations in Silesia near Hindenburg and the polish campaign near Nikolai, earning both classes of the iron cross.  
October 1939: Führer, I. Bataillon, Infanterie-Regiment 7.  
10 May 1940: Fought in the western campaign in France as Führer, I. Bataillon, Infanterie-Regiment 38, 8. Infanterie-Division.  
Summer 1941: Eastern front with 8. Infanterie-Division; operations around Grodno, Rudno, Witebsk, Smolensk.  
Circa July 1941: Appointed Kommandeur, III. Bataillon, Infanterie-Regiment 38.  
1 January 1942: Promoted to Major; continued as Kommandeur, III. Bataillon, Infanterie-Regiment 38 (later Jäger-Regiment 38 after the division became the 8. Jäger-Division).  
February-March 1942 onward: Fought in the Demjansk pocket area and along the Lowat river.  
April-June 1943: Attended Regimentsführerlehrgang in Döberitz.  
July 1943: Kommandeur, Grenadier-Regiment 532, 383. Infanterie-Division (initially Heeresgruppe B, later in the Pripyat area south of Bobruisk).  
1 September 1943: Promoted to Oberstleutnant.  
1 March 1944: Promoted to Oberst.  
June-August 1944: Defended positions during the soviet summer offensive; held a railway bridge over the Beresina near Bobruisk for several days to allow corps elements to withdraw, served as rearguard holding the northern edge of Bobruisk, and led a fighting breakout of approximately 700 km over 44 days through encirclement via Minsk and Baranowitschi, finally breaking through soviet lines near Augustowo on 18 August 1944 with a small group of survivors.  
September 1944: Führer, Grenadier-Regiment 164, 62. Volksgrenadier-Division (formed in Neuhammer, Silesia).  
December 1944-January 1945: Participated in the Ardennes offensive (Battle of the Bulge); his regiment advanced toward the Salm river and Trois Ponts area near Malmedy, contributing significantly to the deepest penetrations by infantry units.  
February 1945: Defensive fighting at the Westwall near Gmünd; received special leave for his wife's funeral in Upper Silesia.  
March 1945: Führer, 62. Volksgrenadier-Division; fighting in the Siebengebirge area; conducted negotiations with american forces to protect field hospitals.  
April 1945: Continued defensive actions in the Ruhr pocket area near Wuppertal; taken prisoner by US forces on 17 April 1945.  
Post-1945: Released from captivity; worked in rubble clearance, agriculture, and later as an independent merchant.  
Circa 1955: Joined the Bundeswehr as Oberst der Reserve; served as deputy brigade commander, Panzergrenadierbrigade 32.  
1960 onward: Appointed Ehrenoberst (honorary colonel). From 1982 he led the Arbeitsgemeinschaft Traditionsverbände Schlesischer Truppen and co-authored material on Silesian military traditions.

Awards and Decorations:
Dienstauszeichnung Der Wehrmacht 4. Klasse (4 Jahre) (2 October 1936)
Dienstauszeichnung Der Wehrmacht 3. Klasse (12 Jahre) (2 October 1936)
Dienstauszeichnung Der Wehrmacht 2. Klasse (18 Jahre) (1938) 
Medaille Zur Erinnerung An Den 1. Oktober 1938 Mit Spange "Prager Burg" (1939)
Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse (2 October 1939)  
Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse (27 October 1939)  
Infanterie-Sturmabzeichen (13 August 1941)
Nahkampfspange In Bronze (1 October 1941)
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 In Schwarz (2 November 1941)
Ritterkreuz Des Eisernen Kreuzes #717 (14 December 1941) as Hauptmann and Kommandeur III.Bataillon / Infanterie-Regiment 38 / 8.Infanterie-Division. In the first weeks of September 1941, during the Battle of Smolensk and the follow-on operations toward the Dnieper River, Jüttner’s battalion played a critical role in sealing off escaping Soviet forces. The Germans aimed to prevent a major Soviet evacuation from the Smolensk pocket and trap large enemy formations east of the Dnieper.
Near Pnewo (close to the Dnieper River), Jüttner’s battalion held a key sector of the German frontline under intense pressure. Soviet forces from at least three divisions attempted to break out. Jüttner’s men repelled repeated assaults, taking hundreds of prisoners while maintaining their positions despite heavy artillery and infantry attacks.
When a Soviet cavalry regiment exploited a gap in the line and threatened to rupture the German cordon, Jüttner personally led a flanking counterattack. His troops moved swiftly through difficult terrain to strike the cavalry from the side. In close-quarters fighting—marked by savage hand-to-hand combat, sabers clashing with bayonets, and machine-gun fire mowing down charging horsemen—the German infantry crushed the regiment. This action helped close the pocket tighter and contributed to the capture of significant numbers of Soviet troops and equipment.
Jüttner’s leadership, personal bravery under fire, and tactical initiative in both defensive stands and aggressive counterattacks were cited as decisive.
Medaille "Winterschlacht Im Osten 1941/42" (Ostmedaille) (1942)
Demjanskschild (1943)
Deutsches Kreuz In Gold #320/1 (27 February 1943)
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 In Silber (18 August 1944)
Nahkampfspange In Silber (18 October 1944)
Ritterkreuz Des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #622 (18 October 1944) as Oberst and Kommandeur Grenadier-Regiment 532 / 383.Infanterie-Division (later associated with remnants in the Bobruisk area), during the Soviet summer offensive (Operation Bagration) in Belarus.
In June 1944, as the Red Army launched its massive offensive that destroyed much of Army Group Center, Jüttner’s regiment was positioned near Bobruisk along the Beresina River (Berezina).
Defense of the Railroad Bridge: Jüttner’s men held the vital railroad bridge over the Beresina long enough for elements of three German corps to withdraw across it under heavy Soviet pressure. This rearguard action prevented an immediate collapse and allowed thousands of German troops and vehicles to escape encirclement amid constant artillery barrages and probing attacks by Soviet infantry and tanks.
Rearguard at Bobruisk (30 June 1944): As the pocket closed, remnants of five German divisions formed Gruppe Hoffmeister for a desperate breakout. Jüttner’s regiment again formed the rearguard, holding the northern edge of Bobruisk for an entire day against overwhelming Soviet forces. The fighting was chaotic and brutal: house-to-house combat in the burning ruins of the city, with German grenadiers using panzerfausts, machine guns, and grenades to repel repeated Soviet assaults supported by tanks and artillery.
When the position became untenable, Jüttner ordered his forces to split into multiple small Kampfgruppen (battle groups) to increase survival chances during the breakout. He personally led one small group in an epic 700 km march through enemy-held territory via Minsk and Baranowitschi (Baranovichi). Over 44 days, they fought almost daily small-scale battles—ambushes in forests, skirmishes in villages, night marches to avoid detection, and desperate fights for food and ammunition. The group endured exhaustion, Soviet patrols, partisans, and harsh summer conditions.
On 18 August 1944, near Augustowo (Augustów), Jüttner’s group (now reduced to just 3 officers and 8 men) reached the Soviet frontline. That night, they launched a daring final breakout, infiltrating and fighting through Soviet lines to reach German positions.
These actions—skilled delaying tactics, selfless rearguard leadership, and extraordinary endurance during the long fighting withdrawal—earned Jüttner the Eichenlaub. The award recognized not a single engagement but a sustained series of brave and selflessly conducted actions amid the near-collapse of the front.
Ritterkreuz Des Eisernen Kreuzes Mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #141 (5 April 1945) as Oberst and Kommandeur Grenadier-Regiment 164 / 62.Volksgrenadier-Division, on the Western Front during the Ardennes Offensive (Battle of the Bulge) and its aftermath.
During the German winter offensive in the Ardennes (December 1944–January 1945), Jüttner’s regiment played a key role in the push toward the Salm River (near Vielsalm, Belgium). His leadership helped German forces reach the river in good time despite fierce American resistance, difficult terrain, freezing weather, and fuel shortages.
Later, as the offensive stalled and Allied counterattacks intensified, Jüttner ordered his regiment to hold positions west of Vielsalm against overwhelming enemy superiority (American infantry, tanks, and artillery). The regiment fought a bitter defensive battle for a full day. By afternoon they were surrounded, with Americans attacking from the front and rear. Under Jüttner’s personal command, the grenadiers held their ground into the night—repelling assaults in snow-covered forests and villages amid bitter cold, with close-range fighting, artillery duels, and desperate counterattacks to keep supply lines or escape routes open as long as possible.
This stand contributed significantly to the overall German effort in that sector by delaying Allied advances and buying time for other units. The Swords citation highlighted Jüttner’s major share in the offensive’s partial successes and his regiment’s tenacious defense under dire conditions.

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Arthur Jüttner was a German army officer who served in the Wehrmacht during the Second World War and rose to the rank of Oberst. Born on 18 August 1908 in Kattowitz in Upper Silesia as the son of a customs official, he attended middle school in Kattowitz and Beuthen before completing a commercial apprenticeship in Oppeln. He joined the Reichswehr in 1926 and continued his military career after the transition to the Wehrmacht. Jüttner progressed steadily through the ranks, gaining early command experience as a company leader and later as a battalion and regimental commander. His service spanned several major campaigns from the invasion of Poland through the campaigns in the West and the prolonged operations on the Eastern Front.

Jüttner began the war as a company commander in Infanterie-Regiment 38. He led his unit during the annexation of the Sudetenland, the occupation of Czechoslovakia, and the Polish campaign in 1939, where he earned both classes of the Iron Cross. He subsequently participated in the campaign in the West in 1940 as deputy battalion commander. In the summer of 1941, with the launch of Operation Barbarossa, he assumed command of the III. Bataillon of Infanterie-Regiment 38 within the 8. Infanterie-Division. His battalion saw heavy fighting near the Dnieper River. In early September 1941, near Pnewo, Jüttner and his men defended a critical sector of the front to block Soviet attempts to retake Smolensk. They captured prisoners from three Soviet divisions and, through a personal flanking attack, destroyed a Soviet cavalry regiment that had broken through the lines. For these actions he received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 14 December 1941 while still a Hauptmann. He was promoted to Major on 1 January 1942.

Throughout 1942 and 1943 Jüttner continued to serve on the Eastern Front with various infantry and Jäger formations, including periods with the 8. Jäger-Division. He earned the German Cross in Gold on 27 February 1943 and was promoted to Oberstleutnant in September 1943. At that time he took command of Grenadier-Regiment 532 of the 383. Infanterie-Division in the area south of Orel. His regiment later operated in the Pripyat marshes region between the Dnieper and Berezina rivers south of Bobruisk. Jüttner was promoted to Oberst on 1 March 1944. His leadership during defensive operations earned him recognition for maintaining discipline and effectiveness under difficult conditions against numerically superior Soviet forces.

During the Soviet summer offensive of 1944, Operation Bagration, the 383. Infanterie-Division was shattered near Bobruisk. Jüttner's regiment played a key role in holding a southern railway bridge over the Berezina for three days, allowing elements of three German corps to withdraw. His unit then formed the rearguard, defending the northern edge of Bobruisk for a full day before being overrun. Cut off from the main German lines, Jüttner led remnants of his forces in a fighting withdrawal. Over 44 days they covered approximately 700 kilometers through enemy territory via Minsk and Baranowitschi. On 18 August 1944 near Augustowo, Jüttner and a small group of eleven men broke through Soviet lines at night to reach German positions. For his leadership and bravery during these engagements he was awarded the 622nd Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross on 18 October 1944.

In late 1944 Jüttner assumed command of Grenadier-Regiment 164 within the newly formed 62. Volksgrenadier-Division. The division participated in the Ardennes Offensive, known as the Battle of the Bulge. Jüttner's regiment contributed significantly to the advance toward the Salm River. He ordered his men to hold positions west of Vielsalm against overwhelming enemy forces for an entire day, helping to secure the German timetable in that sector. In early 1945 the division shifted to defensive duties along the Westwall near Gmünd. On 11 March 1945 Jüttner took temporary command of the entire 62. Volksgrenadier-Division. For his continued performance, particularly in the Ardennes, he received the 141st Swords to the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves on 5 April 1945, presented by Generaloberst Josef Harpe. The division ultimately fought in the Ruhr Pocket until the end of the war in Europe.

After the war Jüttner was released from captivity and later lived in West Germany. He served for a time as an Oberst der Reserve and deputy commander of Panzergrenadierbrigade 32 in the Bundeswehr reserve structure. He remained active in veteran circles and in  the postwar years compiled his memoirs with assistance from former comrades, offering a detailed account of frontline service from company level to divisional command. Arthur Jüttner died on 1 December 2003 in Bramstedt, Lower Saxony, at the age of 95. He was remembered by contemporaries and later historians as a capable infantry leader who rose from modest beginnings through demonstrated bravery and tactical skill in some of the most intense battles of the Eastern Front and the final Western campaigns.











Source:
Soldatische Tradition in Schlesien 1241-1945 by Arthur Jüttner and Eckehart G. Münnich (Arbeitsgemeinschaft Traditionsverbände Schlesischer Truppen, 1997)
https://www.das-kriegsende.de/oberst-juettner/
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/7534/Juettner-Arthur-Grenadier-Regiment-164.htm  
https://www.das-kriegsende.de/oberst-juettner/  
https://military-history.fandom.com/wiki/Arthur_J%C3%BCttner  
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Personenregister/J/JuettnerA.htm  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Knight%27s_Cross_of_the_Iron_Cross_recipients_(J) (and related pages)  
https://rk.balsi.de/  
https://forum.axishistory.com/ (threads on knight's cross holders and unit histories)  
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/  
https://www.unithistories.com/ and archived resources via web.archive.org.