Nickname: No information
Date of Birth: 13.05.1907 - Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg (German Empire)
Date of Death: 18.07.1967 - Braunschweig, Niedersachsen (West Germany)
Battles and Operations: Western Campaign 1940, Battle of Crete 1941, North African Campaign, Tunisian Campaign, Eastern Front defensive battles near Kirovograd 1944, Operation Bollwerk 1944, Defence of Fortress Brest 1944
Religion: No information
Parents: No information
Siblings: No information
Spouse: Dr. Annemarie Meyer (married date unknown)
Children: Ingeborg Kroh, Horst Kroh, Anemarie Kroh
Promotions:
01.04.1933 Polizei-Leutnant
01.08.1933 Polizei-Oberleutnant
01.10.1935 Oberleutnant
01.10.1937 Hauptmann
01.04.1941 Major
11.01.1943 Oberstleutnant
06.04.1944 Oberst
13.09.1944 Generalmajor (Wehrmacht, honorary)
01.06.1956 Oberst (Bundeswehr)
01.09.1957 Brigadegeneral (Bundeswehr)
01.07.1959 Generalmajor (Bundeswehr)
Career:
00.00.1907-1926 early life in Heidelberg
08.04.1926-24.02.1933 entered Police Service and Training at the Police-School Brandenburg-Havel
25.02.1933-31.05.1933 Platoon-Leader in Police-Battalion Wecke
01.06.1933-16.07.1933 Platoon-Leader in Police-Group Wecke
17.07.1933-11.01.1934 Platoon-Leader in State-Police-Group Wecke
12.01.1934-30.09.1935 Platoon-Leader in State-Police-Group "General Göring"
01.10.1935-31.08.1937 transferred into the Luftwaffe as Company-Chief in the I. (Jäger) Battalion of the Luftwaffe-Regiment "General Göring"
01.04.1936-31.08.1937 detached to Parachute-Training
01.09.1937-31.03.1938 Company-Chief in the IV. (Parachute-Infantry) Battalion of the Luftwaffe-Regiment "General Göring"
01.04.1938-31.12.1938 Company-Chief in the I. Battalion of the 1st Paratrooper-Regiment
01.01.1939-01.06.1940 transferred to the Staff of the 7th Flying-Division
01.06.1940-31.07.1940 Ia Op. 1 in the Staff of the 7th Flying-Division
01.08.1940-28.02.1943 Commander of the I. Battalion of the 2nd Paratrooper-Regiment
01.07.1942-30.11.1942 at the same time Leader of Battle-Group Kroh with Paratrooper-Brigade Ramcke
30.11.1942-18.02.1943 at the same time Temporary-Leader of the 1st Luftwaffe-Jäger-Brigade (Ramcke)
01.03.1943-11.08.1944 Commander of the 2nd Paratrooper-Regiment
20.11.1943-11.12.1943 at the same time Delegated with the Leadership of the 2nd Paratrooper-Division
17.03.1944-01.06.1944 at the same time Delegated with the Leadership of the 2nd Paratrooper-Division
11.08.1944-31.08.1944 Delegated with the Leadership of the 2nd Paratrooper-Division
01.09.1944-18.09.1944 Commander of the 2nd Paratrooper-Division (Defence of Fortress Brest)
18.09.1944-1948 in Captivity (taken prisoner by American forces in Brest)
1948 released
01.06.1956-01.09.1957 entered Bundeswehr Service and attended briefing and courses
02.09.1957-30.09.1962 Commander of the 1st Air-Landing-Division
30.09.1962 retired
Awards and Decorations:
Fallschirmschützen-Abzeichen der Luftwaffe
Erdkampfabzeichen der Luftwaffe
Wehrmacht-Dienstauszeichnung IV. Klasse
Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse (22.05.1940)
Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse (22.05.1940)
Ärmelband Kreta
Gemeinsames Flugzeugführer- und Beobachter-Abzeichen
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (21.08.1941) as Major and Kommandeur I.Bataillon / Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 2 / 7.Flieger-Division. Awarded for his leadership during the airborne assault on Crete. On the morning of 20 May 1941 his reinforced battalion parachuted directly onto the drop zones around Rethymnon airfield under murderous defensive fire from British Commonwealth and Greek troops. Despite suffering crippling casualties in the first hours the paratroopers fought their way forward through olive groves and vineyards seizing the commanding Weinberg hill and pushing into the centre of the airfield itself. When a powerful Allied counterattack struck the following day Kroh pulled his surviving men back into a tight all-round defensive perimeter at an olive-oil factory roughly 1 800 metres east of the airfield near the village of Stavromenos. There the Kampfgruppe Kroh held out for days in brutal close-quarters combat repelling repeated assaults while ammunition and water ran dangerously low. On 24 May the exhausted 3. Kompanie still managed to storm the village of Kimari in a lightning bayonet attack that bought the defenders precious time. Resupply drops from Ju-52s arrived on 25 May bringing food ammunition and new orders to break out toward Heraklion. Under cover of darkness the Kampfgruppe slipped silently past Allied lines and reached its new blocking positions where it captured Hills 156 and 217 together with the village of Prinos. On 28 May Kroh launched a final coordinated assault back toward the oil factory that linked up with the advancing Kradschützen-Bataillon 55 and Gebirgsjäger units. For ten days of almost continuous fighting under constant pressure his battalion had pinned down and worn out far larger Allied forces preventing them from reinforcing other sectors and allowing the eventual German victory on the island. The official citation praised his calm and decisive leadership through the most difficult circumstances.
Medaglia d'Argento al Valor Militare (09.02.1942)
Medaille “Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/1942” (Ostmedaille)
Ärmelband Afrika
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold (24.12.1942)
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #443 (06.04.1944) as Oberstleutnant and Kommandeur Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 2 / 2.Fallschirmjäger-Division. The decoration recognised his regiment’s outstanding defensive stand during the Soviet winter offensive toward Kirovograd in early January 1944. On 5 January 1944 and in the bitter days that followed two full Soviet corps launched repeated massed attacks supported by heavy artillery and tanks directly against the key village of Nowo Andrejewka. Kroh’s paratroopers dug in among frozen fields ruined farmhouses and shallow trenches holding their positions with machine-gun fire hand grenades and close-combat counterthrusts. Wave after wave of Soviet infantry was cut down in the open snow-covered killing zones while Kroh personally directed the shifting of his few remaining reserves to the most threatened sectors. The regiment’s stubborn resistance prevented the enemy from achieving the planned breakthrough that would have unhinged the entire German front around Kirovograd and opened the road to the vital rail and road hub beyond. Despite being outnumbered and short of heavy weapons the paratroopers inflicted disproportionate losses and bought critical time for higher commands to stabilise the line. The citation highlighted the decisive role his leadership played in stopping two Soviet corps from advancing further.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #96 (12.09.1944) as Oberst and Führer 2.Fallschirmjäger-Division. The award recognised two separate achievements: First in Operation Bollwerk conducted by LII. Armeekorps in May 1944 Kroh led his Kampfgruppe in a lightning assault against a strong Soviet bridgehead across the Dniester River near Butor. On 10 May 1944 his paratroopers stormed forward under intense defensive fire breaking through three successive heavily fortified enemy lines in the sector of Balabauesti. With flamethrowers grenades and rapid infiltration tactics they rolled up the Soviet positions from the flanks and completely eliminated the bridgehead as ordered restoring the integrity of the German front. Second during the defence of Fortress Brest in western France in late summer 1944 Kroh assumed full command of the division and directed the tenacious holding action on the western front of the St. Pierre district north of the massive U-boat bunkers. Against overwhelming American armoured and infantry assaults supported by naval gunfire and air strikes his Fallschirmjäger fought house-to-house and bunker-to-bunker in the ruins of the port city. Kroh’s personal presence in the forward lines and his skilful use of the limited remaining artillery and anti-tank weapons prolonged the defence far beyond expectations tying down substantial Allied forces and delaying their advance into Brittany. He was captured in the St. Pierre sector on 18 September 1944 after the final collapse of organised resistance. The citation emphasised both the brilliant breakthrough in the east and the exemplary steadfastness shown during the desperate defence of the Atlantic fortress.
Grosses Verdienstkreuz des Verdienstordens der Bundesrepublik Deutschland (12.09.1962)
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Hans Kroh was a German paratroop general who served in the Wehrmacht during the Second World War and later in the Bundeswehr of the Federal Republic of Germany. Born on 13 May 1907 in Heidelberg in the German Empire he rose from police service in the 1920s to become one of the most decorated Fallschirmjäger commanders of the conflict earning the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords for his leadership in airborne assaults Crete defensive actions on the Eastern Front and the desperate defense of the Atlantic fortress of Brest. After the war he spent several years in captivity before resuming a military career in the new West German armed forces where he commanded a division until his retirement in 1962 as Generalmajor. He died on 18 July 1967 in Braunschweig at the age of sixty. Throughout his service Kroh was noted for his calm decisive command under extreme pressure often turning outnumbered defensive stands into costly delays for superior enemy forces and leading bold counterattacks that restored critical sectors of the front.
Kroh spent his early years in Heidelberg before entering police service on 8 April 1926 when he began training at the Police School in Brandenburg-Havel. He progressed through various police units including stints as a platoon leader in Police Battalion Wecke and the State Police Group General Göring. On 1 October 1935 he transferred with other police personnel into the newly expanding Luftwaffe taking up company command roles in the Luftwaffe Regiment General Göring. After completing parachute training he served as company chief in the regiment's parachute infantry battalion and later in the 1st Paratrooper Regiment. By the outbreak of war in 1939 he had been assigned to the staff of the 7th Flying Division where he gained experience in operational planning. During the Western Campaign of 1940 he earned both the Iron Cross Second Class and First Class on 22 May for his contributions in the rapid advances through the Low Countries and France demonstrating the initiative and tactical skill that would mark his later airborne operations.
In the spring of 1941 Kroh as Major and commander of the I Battalion of Fallschirmjäger Regiment 2 in the 7th Flieger Division led his reinforced unit in the airborne assault on Crete during Operation Merkur. On the morning of 20 May his paratroopers jumped directly into the drop zones around Rethymnon airfield under intense defensive fire from British Commonwealth and Greek troops suffering heavy casualties in the first hours yet fighting through olive groves and vineyards to seize the commanding Weinberg hill and push into the center of the airfield. When a powerful Allied counterattack struck the next day Kroh withdrew his surviving men into a tight all-round defensive perimeter at an olive-oil factory roughly eighteen hundred meters east of the airfield near Stavromenos. There the Kampfgruppe Kroh endured days of brutal close-quarters combat repelling repeated assaults while ammunition water and supplies dwindled dangerously low. On 24 May the exhausted third company still stormed the village of Kimari in a lightning bayonet attack that bought precious time. Resupply drops arrived on 25 May and under cover of darkness the group slipped past Allied lines to occupy new blocking positions capturing Hills 156 and 217 along with the village of Prinos. On 28 May Kroh launched a final coordinated assault that linked up with advancing German mountain troops and motorised units. For ten days of almost continuous fighting his battalion pinned down and wore out far larger Allied forces preventing reinforcements to other sectors and contributing decisively to the eventual German victory on the island. For this action he received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 21 August 1941 praised in the citation for his calm and decisive leadership in the most difficult circumstances.
Following Crete Kroh served in North Africa with the Ramcke Parachute Brigade commanding battle groups and temporarily leading the 1st Luftwaffe Jäger Brigade during the Tunisian Campaign. He earned the German Cross in Gold on 24 December 1942 and the Italian Silver Medal for Military Valor on 9 February 1942 for his performance in the harsh desert fighting. In March 1943 he assumed command of Fallschirmjäger Regiment 2 within the newly formed 2nd Parachute Division. Transferred to the Eastern Front in late 1943 the regiment under his leadership played a key role in defensive operations around the vital rail and road hub of Kirovograd. On 5 January 1944 and in the bitter days that followed two full Soviet corps launched repeated massed attacks supported by heavy artillery and tanks against the key village of Nowo Andrejewka. Kroh's paratroopers dug in among frozen fields ruined farmhouses and shallow trenches holding their positions with machine-gun fire hand grenades and close-combat counterthrusts. Wave after wave of Soviet infantry was cut down in the open snow-covered killing zones while Kroh personally directed the shifting of his few remaining reserves to the most threatened sectors. The regiment's stubborn resistance prevented the enemy from achieving the planned breakthrough that would have unhinged the entire German front around Kirovograd and opened the road to the vital communications beyond. Despite being outnumbered and short of heavy weapons the paratroopers inflicted disproportionate losses and bought critical time for higher commands to stabilise the line. For these actions he was awarded the Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross on 6 April 1944.
In the summer of 1944 Kroh was delegated leadership of the 2nd Parachute Division and promoted to Oberst. During the Soviet offensive in Bessarabia he led Kampfgruppe Kroh in Operation Bollwerk breaking through multiple enemy lines. On 10 May his paratroopers stormed forward under intense defensive fire near Balabauesti eliminating a strong Soviet bridgehead across the Dniester River by breaking through three successive heavily fortified lines with flamethrowers grenades and rapid infiltration tactics restoring the integrity of the German front. He then assumed full command of the division and directed its defence of the fortress of Brest in western France. Against overwhelming American armoured and infantry assaults supported by naval gunfire and air strikes his Fallschirmjäger fought house-to-house and bunker-to-bunker in the ruins of the port city particularly on the western front of the St. Pierre district north of the massive U-boat bunkers. Kroh's personal presence in the forward lines and his skilful use of the limited remaining artillery and anti-tank weapons prolonged the defence far beyond expectations tying down substantial Allied forces and delaying their advance into Brittany. He was captured by American forces on 18 September 1944 in the St. Pierre sector and remained in captivity until his release in 1948. For these combined achievements in the east and west he received the Swords to the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves on 12 September 1944.
After returning to civilian life in Germany Kroh worked in various capacities until 1956 when he joined the newly formed Bundeswehr re-entering service as Oberst and attending staff courses. Promoted to Brigadegeneral on 1 September 1957 he was appointed commander of the 1st Air Landing Division a role he held with distinction until his retirement on 30 September 1962 as Generalmajor. On 12 September 1962 he was awarded the Great Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in recognition of his post-war contributions to the democratic armed forces. Little is recorded of his personal life beyond his marriage to Dr. Annemarie Meyer and their three children Ingeborg Horst and Anemarie. No nickname is documented in historical sources and details of his religion or extended family such as parents and siblings remain unrecorded in available military biographies. Kroh's career exemplified the transition from the elite airborne forces of the Wehrmacht to the professional Bundeswehr reflecting both the intense combat experiences of the Second World War and the rebuilding of Germany's military under new democratic principles.

Major Hans Kroh.

Major Hans Kroh.
Oberstleutnant Hans Kroh.

Oberst Hans Kroh.

French General Jacques Massu, military governor of Metz and commander of the 6th military region, surrounded by German Generalmajor Hans Kroh (right) and French General Jean-Paul Marzloff (L), salutes the troops during the Colibri exercise, the first joint airborne maneuvers of French and German paratroopers, near the Oberhoffen camp near Haguenau, in Alsace on May 12, 1962, under the direction of General Marzloff, commander of the XIth light intervention division of Nancy. Since 1962, the 11th Parachute Brigade (11th BP) and the 1st Luftlande Brigade participate in this bilateral training to share specific skills in the field of airborne troops (TAP).
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