Saturday, April 18, 2026

Bio of Generalmajor d.R. Maximilian Wengler (1890-1945)


Full name: Paul Moritz Maximilian Wengler
Nickname: No information

Date of Birth: 14 January 1890 - Roßwein, Saxony (German Empire)
Date of Death: 25 April 1945 - near Pillau-Neutief, East Prussia (German Reich)

Battles and Operations: Poland campaign, Western campaign, Eastern Front (Leningrad blockade, Battle of Lake Ladoga, defensive battles at Narva, fighting around Liepna in Latvia, defensive actions in Kurland, battles around Gotenhafen, Oxhöfter Kämpe and Pillau-Neutief)

NSDAP-Number: No information
Religion: No information
Parents: No information
Siblings: No information
Spouse: No information
Children: No information

Promotions:
28 November 1909 Fähnrich
15 August 1910 Leutnant
unknown Oberleutnant
1919 Charakterisierter Hauptmann a.D.
1939 Hauptmann der Reserve
1940 Major der Reserve
1942 Oberstleutnant der Reserve
1 December 1942 Oberst der Reserve
27 March 1945 Generalmajor der Reserve (RDA 1 October 1944)

Career:
28 November 1909 joined the 9th (Royal Saxon) Infantry Regiment No. 133 in Zwickau as Fähnrich
1914-1919 served with the regiment in the 40th Infantry Division No. 4 on the Western Front (including Marne battles, wounded at Somme-Py and Vitry-le-François)
1919 discharged from active service
1919-1939 branch director of Allianz insurance in Essen
1 September 1939 reactivated as Hauptmann der Reserve, company commander in Infantry Regiment 40 (27th Infantry Division)
1939-1940 Poland and Western campaigns as company commander
1940 battalion commander in Infantry Regiment 40 (occupation duties in France)
1941 transferred to Infantry Regiment 366 of the 227th Infantry Division (initially coastal defense in Normandy)
1941-1942 advance with the division to Army Group North up to Leningrad
5 July 1942 commander of Infantry Regiment 366
1942 defense of the Wengler position north of Gaitolowo during the First Battle of Lake Ladoga (encirclement and successful breakout)
15 October 1942 regiment renamed Grenadier Regiment 366
1943-1944 defensive battles before Leningrad and withdrawal
22 February 1944 Oak Leaves awarded for defense at Narva (including destruction of 73 Soviet tanks and repelling a naval landing)
11 May 1944 commander of the 227th Infantry Division
1944-1945 defensive battles in the Pskov area, Livonia and Kurland (Army Group North, later Army Group Vistula)
27 March 1945 commander of the 83rd Infantry Division (succeeding Generalleutnant Wilhelm Heun)
March-April 1945 battles around Gotenhafen, Oxhöfter Kämpe and Pillau-Neutief (killed by aerial bomb)

Awards and Decorations:
Ritterkreuz des Militär-St.-Heinrichs-Ordens (15 October 1914)
Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse (1914)
Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse (1914)
Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 2. Klasse (20 May 1940)
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 1. Klasse (29 December 1940)
Infanterie-Sturmabzeichen in Silber
Nahkampfspange in Bronze
Medaille Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/42
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes #1222 (6 October 1942) as Oberstleutnant der Reserve and Kommandeur Infanterie-Regiment 366 / 227.Infanterie-Division. In the sweltering late summer of 1942, during the grinding battles to maintain the narrow German corridor along the southern shore of Lake Ladoga that kept the siege of Leningrad alive, Wengler’s regiment found itself locked in one of the most desperate defensive stands of the entire Eastern Front. From the end of August the unit had been holding a key forested ridge known as the Kugelwäldchen (literally the “little ball wood”), a dominating height north of Gaitolowo that overlooked the vital supply routes and gave the Germans fire control over the surrounding swampy lowlands. When Soviet forces smashed through the neighboring sector and sliced the regiment off from the rest of the 227. Infanterie-Division, Wengler’s men were suddenly isolated in a pocket that the enemy immediately tried to crush. For eight full days the grenadiers fought off wave after wave of Soviet infantry and armor in savage close-quarters combat. Ammunition and food ran so low that small shock troops had to fight their way through enemy lines just to reopen the supply route for a few precious hours, while on other occasions the only resupply came from Luftwaffe aircraft dropping canisters directly onto the ridge under heavy anti-aircraft fire. The ridge became a moonscape of shell craters, burned-out vehicles, and fallen trees, yet Wengler’s leadership kept the position intact until a German relief column finally punched through and re-established contact. The tenacious eight-day stand at the Kugelwäldchen (later sometimes called the Wengler-Nase in regimental lore) prevented a collapse of the entire Ladoga corridor and earned him the Ritterkreuz.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #404 (22 February 1944) as Oberst der Reserve and Kommandeur Grenadier-Regiment 366 / 227.Infanterie-Division. By early 1944 the division was fighting for its life on the Narva River line in Estonia as part of the desperate effort to keep Army Group North from being cut off. On two consecutive days in the sector around the village of Omuti, Wengler’s grenadiers faced a massive Soviet armored assault across the frozen river and marshy ground. More than one hundred enemy tanks rolled forward in successive waves, supported by heavy artillery and masses of infantry. Under Wengler’s calm and inspiring command, the regiment’s anti-tank guns, Panzerfaust teams, and dug-in machine-gun nests turned the Narva shoreline into a blazing killing ground. When the smoke finally cleared, 73 of the 105 attacking Soviet tanks lay destroyed or abandoned in front of the German positions, their burning hulks lighting the winter sky. The regiment held the river line without yielding a single meter of ground. Shortly afterward Wengler’s men also played a decisive role in smashing a Soviet naval landing attempt west of Narva, where Red Army troops tried to come ashore from the Baltic in an effort to outflank the entire German bridgehead; the grenadiers rushed to the coast, met the invaders in brutal hand-to-hand fighting along the beaches and dunes, and drove them back into the sea with heavy losses. These twin feats at Omuti and the coastal landing secured the Narva front long enough for the Germans to stabilize their positions and earned Wengler the Eichenlaub.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #123 (21 January 1945 as Generalmajor der Reserve and Kommandeur 227.Infanterie-Division. By the summer of 1944 the German front in the Baltic states was crumbling under the weight of the Soviet Baltic Offensive. Divisionskommandeur Wengler conducted a masterful series of delaying actions and counterattacks in the fighting around the town of Liepna in Latvia. Vastly outnumbered, the division repeatedly dug in along rivers, ridges, and village strongpoints, launching sharp local counter-strokes that bloodied the advancing Soviet columns and bought critical time for neighboring units to withdraw in good order or reinforce the Tannenberg Line farther north. Wengler’s troops fought through burning forests and muddy roads, using every available anti-tank weapon and artillery piece to exact a heavy toll on the Red Army’s armored spearheads while the infantry held off relentless human-wave assaults. Their stubborn defense around Liepna and the subsequent reinforcement of the Estonian defensive positions contributed directly to the temporary stabilization of the front and prevented an immediate breakthrough into the heart of the Baltic states. For this sustained display of leadership and the division’s outstanding performance against overwhelming odds in the summer battles of 1944, Wengler received the Schwerter while the unit was still engaged in the grueling withdrawal toward Courland.
Nennung im Wehrmachtbericht (23 August 1944)

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Paul Moritz Maximilian Wengler was a German reserve officer who served with distinction in both world wars and rose to the rank of Generalmajor der Reserve in the final months of World War II. Born on 14 January 1890 in Roßwein, Saxony, within the German Empire, he became one of the few non-regular army officers to command a full infantry division on the Eastern Front and to receive the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords. Wengler earned these high decorations through repeated acts of leadership in desperate defensive battles, particularly during the grueling campaigns to hold the Leningrad corridor, the Narva River line, and the Baltic states against overwhelming Soviet forces. His career spanned from the trenches of the Western Front in 1914 to the collapsing defenses of East Prussia in 1945, where he was killed in action at the age of 55 near Pillau-Neutief. Despite spending most of the interwar years as a civilian insurance executive, he demonstrated exceptional combat effectiveness as a reserve commander, turning isolated pockets and crumbling lines into temporary strongpoints that delayed the Red Army's advance.

Wengler's early life unfolded in the Saxon town of Roßwein, where he was raised as one of four children by his parents Max Wengler and Bertha Emilie Kruspe. Little is documented about his siblings or any formal higher education before military service, but in November 1909 he entered the Royal Saxon Army as a Fähnrich with the 9th (Royal Saxon) Infantry Regiment No. 133 stationed in Zwickau. He was commissioned as a Leutnant in August 1910 and quickly adapted to the rigorous training of the prewar imperial forces. His early military experience emphasized discipline and marksmanship, skills that would later prove vital in both world wars. By the outbreak of World War I in 1914, Wengler was already an experienced junior officer ready for frontline deployment with his regiment in the 40th Infantry Division No. 4.

During World War I, Wengler saw extensive combat on the Western Front, participating in the Marne battles and suffering wounds at Somme-Py and Vitry-le-François while serving continuously with his Saxon regiment from August 1914 until February 1919. His bravery under fire earned him the Ritterkreuz of the Military Order of St. Henry on 15 October 1914, along with both classes of the Iron Cross. The harsh realities of trench warfare, including gas attacks and artillery barrages, shaped his understanding of defensive tenacity, a trait that defined his later commands. After the armistice he was discharged from active duty as a charakterisierter Hauptmann and returned to civilian life, taking up a position as branch director of the Allianz insurance company in Essen, where he remained until the outbreak of the next global conflict in 1939.

Reactivated at the start of World War II as a Hauptmann der Reserve, Wengler first served as a company commander in Infantry Regiment 40 of the 27th Infantry Division, participating in the Poland and Western campaigns of 1939 and 1940. He advanced rapidly to battalion commander during the occupation of France before transferring in 1941 to Infantry Regiment 366 of the 227th Infantry Division, initially assigned to coastal defense duties in Normandy. By mid-1941 the division moved east with Army Group North, advancing through the Baltic states toward Leningrad. On 5 July 1942 Wengler assumed command of the regiment, which was soon thrust into the brutal fighting along the southern shore of Lake Ladoga. His leadership during these operations transformed him from a reserve officer into a recognized combat commander.

The action that secured Wengler's Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 6 October 1942 occurred in the late summer fighting north of Gaitolowo during the First Battle of Lake Ladoga. His regiment became isolated on a forested ridge known as the Kugelwäldchen after Soviet forces sliced through neighboring sectors, trapping the unit in a pocket for eight days of relentless assaults. Waves of Soviet infantry and armor crashed against the position amid swamps and shell craters, with ammunition so scarce that shock troops had to fight through enemy lines for resupply or rely on Luftwaffe airdrops under heavy fire. Wengler maintained calm authority, directing close-quarters defenses and counterattacks that prevented the collapse of the entire Ladoga corridor. The ridge, later nicknamed the Wengler-Nase in regimental accounts, held firm until relief arrived, showcasing his ability to inspire exhausted troops in near-hopeless conditions. The regiment was subsequently redesignated Grenadier Regiment 366 in October 1942.

Further recognition came in early 1944 on the Narva River line in Estonia, where Wengler, now an Oberst der Reserve still commanding Grenadier Regiment 366, earned the Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross on 22 February 1944 as the 404th recipient. In the sector around the village of Omuti, his grenadiers faced a massive Soviet armored assault across frozen ground, with more than one hundred enemy tanks advancing in successive waves supported by artillery and infantry. Under Wengler's direction, anti-tank guns, Panzerfaust teams, and machine-gun nests turned the shoreline into a blazing killing ground, destroying 73 tanks while holding every meter of the river line. Shortly afterward the regiment repelled a Soviet naval landing west of Narva, rushing to the beaches to engage invaders in brutal hand-to-hand combat amid dunes and surf, driving them back into the sea with heavy losses. These feats stabilized the Narva front long enough for Army Group North to reorganize.

By May 1944 Wengler had been promoted to command the entire 227th Infantry Division. He led it through the summer Soviet Baltic Offensive, conducting masterful delaying actions and counterattacks around Liepna in Latvia against vastly superior forces. The division repeatedly dug in along rivers and ridges, launching sharp local counterstrokes that bloodied Soviet armored spearheads and bought time for neighboring units to withdraw or reinforce the Tannenberg Line. Fighting through burning forests and muddy roads, Wengler's troops used every anti-tank weapon and artillery piece to exact a heavy toll during relentless human-wave assaults. For this sustained leadership in the face of overwhelming odds he received the Swords to the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves on 21 January 1945 as the 123rd recipient, becoming one of the few reserve officers to achieve this distinction. In March 1945 he took command of the 83rd Infantry Division, leading it through the final evacuation battles around Gotenhafen, the Oxhöfter Kämpe, and Pillau-Neutief in East Prussia.

Wengler met his end on 25 April 1945 when he was killed by an aerial bomb during the desperate fighting near Pillau-Neutief as German forces attempted to evacuate the last pockets of East Prussia. His death came just weeks before the unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany. Throughout his career Wengler exemplified the reserve officer who rose through merit rather than regular army privilege, commanding with a blend of Saxon discipline and pragmatic adaptability. His awards also included the 1939 Spange to both classes of the Iron Cross, the Infantry Assault Badge in silver, the Close Combat Clasp in bronze, the Winter Battle in the East Medal, and mention in the Wehrmachtbericht. Though details of his personal life, including any spouse or children, remain largely undocumented, his military legacy endures as a symbol of determined defensive leadership in the most attritional battles of the Eastern Front.





Maximilian Wengler and Georg Einhoff.







Source:
Wolfgang Keilig: Die Generale des Heeres 1939-1945
Gerhard von Seemen: Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939-1945
John R. Angolia, Roger James Bender: On the field of honor, volume 2
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/
https://en.wikipedia.org/
https://www.tracesofwar.com/
https://grokipedia.com/
https://rk.balsi.de/index.php?action=list&cat=300
https://www.unithistories.com/units_index/index.php?file=/officers/personsx.html
https://web.archive.org/web/20091027052912fw_/http://geocities.com/orion47.geo/index2.html
https://forum.axishistory.com/
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/
https://www.geni.com/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximilian_Wengler
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/34583/Wengler-Maximilian-Generalmajor.htm

Bio of Generaloberst Dr.jur. Lothar Rendulic (1887-1971)


Full name: Lothar Franz Maria Rendulic (Croatian: Rendulić)  
Nickname: Hitler's Austrian Fireman  

Date of Birth: 23.10.1887 - Wiener Neustadt, Lower Austria (Austria-Hungary)
Date of Death: 17.01.1971 - Fraham near Eferding, Upper Austria (Austria)

Battles and Operations: World War I (Eastern Front, Italian Front, Galicia, Carpathians), Operation Barbarossa, Battle of Kursk, defensive battles at Orel salient, Operation Rösselsprung (Drvar Raid), Lapland War (Finland withdrawal), Courland Pocket, defense of East Prussia and Austria, Prague Offensive  

NSDAP-Number: unknown (joined Austrian NSDAP May 1932)  
SS-Number: none (Heer)  
Religion: No information  
Parents: Father Lukas Rendulic (Oberst in the k.u.k. Army), Mother no information  
Siblings: No information  
Spouse: Anna Nella Zöbl  
Children: Helmut Rendulic (born 1928)
Title: Doctorate in law

Promotions:
08.08.1910 k.u.k. Leutnant  
04.08.1914 k.u.k. Oberleutnant  
01.05.1917 k.u.k. Hauptmann  
00.00.1925 Major (österreichisches Bundesheer)  
00.00.1929 Oberstleutnant i.G. (österreichisches Bundesheer)  
00.00.1933 Oberst (österreichisches Bundesheer)  
01.04.1938 Oberst i.G. (Reichsheer)  
01.12.1939 Generalmajor  
01.12.1941 Generalleutnant  
01.12.1942 General der Infanterie  
01.04.1944 Generaloberst  

Career:
00.00.1910 - 00.00.1918 various positions in k.u.k. Army (99. Infanterie-Regiment, 31. Infanterie-Division, XXI. Korps)  
00.00.1920 - 00.00.1938 Austrian Bundesheer (staff and instructional roles, military attaché in Paris and London 1934-1936)  
01.04.1938 - 00.00.1940 transferred to Wehrmacht, staff officer  
23.06.1940 - 10.10.1940 Kommandeur 14. Infanterie-Division  
00.10.1940 - 00.00.1942 Kommandeur 52. Infanterie-Division  
00.00.1942 - 00.00.1943 Kommandierender General XXXV. Armeekorps  
00.00.1943 - 06.1944 Oberbefehlshaber 2. Panzerarmee (Yugoslavia)  
06.1944 - 01.1945 Oberbefehlshaber 20. Gebirgsarmee and Wehrmachtsbefehlshaber Norwegen  
01.1945 Oberbefehlshaber Heeresgruppe Kurland  
01.1945 - 03.1945 Oberbefehlshaber Heeresgruppe Nord  
03.1945 Oberbefehlshaber Heeresgruppe Kurland (second time)  
04.1945 - 05.1945 Oberbefehlshaber Heeresgruppe Ostmark (formerly Süd)  
05.1945 - 02.1948 prisoner of war, tried at Nuremberg Hostages Trial  
02.1948 - 01.02.1951 imprisoned Landsberg am Lech  
00.00.1951 - 17.01.1971 author and local politician in Austria  

Awards and Decorations:
Militärverdienstkreuz III. Klasse mit Schwertern
Orden der Eisernen Krone III. Klasse mit Schwertern (twice)
Militär-Verdienstmedaille in Bronze and Silver
Karl-Truppenkreuz
Verwundetenmedaille mit Streifen  
Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer  
Eisernes Kreuz 1939 2. Klasse 20.09.1939  
Eisernes Kreuz 1939 1. Klasse 10.10.1939    
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Schwarz
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold 26.12.1941 als Generalmajor und Kommandeur der 52. Infanterie-Division  
Medaille Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/42  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (06.03.1942) as Generalleutnant and Kommandeur 52. Infanterie-Division. In the bitter winter of 1941-1942 on the central sector of the Eastern Front, southwest of Juchnow in the Lidijagrund area, Rendulic led his 52nd Infantry Division in a daring counterattack against Soviet forces that had penetrated deep into the German rear. Amid freezing temperatures, deep snowdrifts, and relentless Soviet pressure, the division launched an assault on 9 February 1942 to seal off and destroy the enemy thrust threatening supply lines and rear areas.
Rendulic’s troops advanced through waist-deep snow under artillery barrages and machine-gun fire, engaging in close-quarters fighting with bayonets and grenades as Soviet infantry and tanks attempted to break through. The general personally directed the operation from forward positions, coordinating infantry assaults with limited artillery and anti-tank support. His men cleared fortified Soviet pockets house by house and bunker by bunker in the wooded and frozen terrain, ultimately eliminating the threat and restoring the integrity of the German lines. This successful local counterstroke, which prevented a larger enemy breakthrough near the critical Juchnow sector, highlighted Rendulic’s calm leadership and tactical skill in desperate defensive situations. The award recognized this outstanding command performance during the defensive battles of Army Group Center in the harsh winter fighting.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #271 (15.08.1943) as General der Infanterie and  Kommandierender General XXXV. Armeekorps. Following the failure of Operation Citadel (the Battle of Kursk) in July 1943, the Red Army unleashed a massive counteroffensive against the Orel salient. Rendulic’s XXXV Army Corps, positioned on the eastern edge of the salient, faced the full fury of Soviet tank armies and infantry waves in some of the most savage defensive fighting of the war.
From mid-July onward, Soviet forces hurled hundreds of T-34 tanks and waves of infantry supported by heavy artillery and air strikes against the German positions. Rendulic’s corps, lacking sufficient armor and facing overwhelming numerical superiority, conducted a masterful fighting withdrawal while inflicting heavy losses. In the rolling hills and river valleys east of Orel, his troops dug in behind hasty fortifications, using anti-tank guns, mines, and Panzerfausts in desperate close-range ambushes. Entire Soviet tank brigades were shattered in the blazing summer heat as German defenders held key strongpoints under relentless bombardment.
Rendulic coordinated multi-division counterattacks and timely retreats, preventing the collapse of the entire salient and buying critical time for the orderly evacuation of Orel itself. Despite being pushed back, the corps maintained cohesion and repeatedly blunted Soviet breakthroughs through skillful use of terrain and concentrated fire. The Oak Leaves were awarded for this outstanding leadership in the defensive battles on the eastern edge of the Orel salient immediately after Operation Citadel, where Rendulic’s corps played a pivotal role in stabilizing the front during one of the largest Soviet offensives of 1943.
Goldenes Ehrenzeichen der NSDAP 19.09.1944  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #122 (18.01.1945) as Generaloberst and Oberbefehlshaber 20. Gebirgsarmee. After assuming command of the 20th Mountain Army in northern Finland and Norway in June 1944 (following the death of Generaloberst Eduard Dietl), Rendulic faced the collapse of German-Finnish cooperation. When Finland signed an armistice with the Soviet Union in September 1944, the Germans were ordered to withdraw their forces rapidly to Norway under the threat of attack from former Finnish allies and advancing Soviet troops.
Rendulic orchestrated one of the most challenging large-scale fighting withdrawals of the war across hundreds of kilometers of Arctic terrain – dense forests, swamps, rivers, and frozen tundra – in the face of harsh autumn and winter conditions, limited roads, and constant harassment. His mountain troops, reinforced with various units, conducted a series of delaying actions and rearguard battles while destroying infrastructure to deny it to the enemy. Columns of soldiers, horses, and vehicles moved northward under snow, rain, and fog, often fighting off Finnish and Soviet probes.
Despite enormous logistical difficulties and the vast distances involved, Rendulic managed to evacuate the bulk of his army intact, preserving “Germany’s best army” in the far north. The operation involved tactical brilliance in timing demolitions, coordinating naval support along the coast, and maintaining discipline amid exhaustion and isolation. Hitler personally congratulated Rendulic in January 1945, stating that he had saved the army. The Schwerter recognized this outstanding command achievement in directing the successful withdrawal of the 20th Mountain Army from Finland during the Lapland War.
Ärmelband Kurland 1945  
Lapplandschild 1945
Wehrmachtbericht mentions 06.06.1944, 28.12.1944, 14.03.1945, 09.05.1945  

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Lothar Rendulic was an Austrian-born officer who rose to the rank of Generaloberst in the German Wehrmacht during the Second World War and became known as Hitlers Austrian Fireman for his repeated success in stabilizing collapsing fronts across multiple theaters. Born on 23 October 1887 in Wiener Neustadt in Lower Austria within the Austro-Hungarian Empire he came from a military family with his father Lukas serving as an Oberst in the k.u.k. Army. After completing his law studies and earning a doctorate in jurisprudence Rendulic joined the Austro-Hungarian forces in 1910 as a Leutnant and saw extensive combat throughout the First World War on the Eastern Front and in the Carpathians and Galicia where he participated in fierce mountain battles and earned several imperial decorations including the Military Merit Cross and the Iron Crown Order. Following the collapse of the empire he transferred to the new Austrian Bundesheer in the 1920s advancing through staff and instructional posts while also serving as military attache in Paris and London during the mid-1930s. An early supporter of the Austrian Nazi movement he joined the party in May 1932 which briefly led to his forced retirement in 1936 before the Anschluss of 1938 reactivated him into the Wehrmacht at the rank of Oberst im Generalstab.

During the opening campaigns of the Second World War Rendulic served initially in staff roles before assuming command of the 14th Infantry Division in June 1940 and later the 52nd Infantry Division. It was in this latter position on the central sector of the Eastern Front during the brutal winter fighting of 1941-1942 that he earned his first major decoration. In February 1942 southwest of Juchnow in the Lidijagrund area his division faced a deep Soviet penetration that threatened German supply lines amid waist-deep snow freezing temperatures and relentless artillery barrages. Rendulic personally directed a counterattack from forward positions coordinating infantry assaults through snowdrifts with limited anti-tank support as his men engaged in savage close-quarters fighting with bayonets grenades and small-arms fire to clear fortified Soviet pockets house by house and bunker by bunker. The successful operation sealed off the enemy thrust restored the front and prevented a larger breakthrough earning him the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 6 March 1942 as Generalleutnant and divisional commander for his calm leadership and tactical skill under extreme pressure.

By the summer of 1943 Rendulic had advanced to command the XXXV Army Corps as General der Infanterie and found himself at the center of one of the most intense defensive struggles of the war following the failure of Operation Citadel at Kursk. When the Red Army launched its massive counteroffensive against the Orel salient in July his corps on the eastern edge absorbed the brunt of Soviet tank armies and infantry waves supported by heavy artillery and air strikes. In the rolling hills and river valleys east of Orel German troops under his direction dug into hasty fortifications using anti-tank guns mines and Panzerfausts in desperate ambushes that shattered entire Soviet tank brigades in the blazing summer heat. Rendulic orchestrated skillful multi-division counterattacks and timed withdrawals maintaining unit cohesion despite overwhelming numerical superiority and preventing the immediate collapse of the salient. His leadership during these savage battles which bought critical time for the orderly evacuation of Orel itself resulted in the award of the Oak Leaves to his Knights Cross on 15 August 1943 as the 271st recipient recognizing his outstanding performance in stabilizing the front after the failed German summer offensive.

In June 1944 following the death of Generaloberst Eduard Dietl Rendulic was promoted to Generaloberst and took command of the 20th Mountain Army in northern Finland and Norway just as German-Finnish cooperation collapsed. When Finland signed an armistice with the Soviet Union in September 1944 he faced the enormous task of executing a fighting withdrawal of his forces across hundreds of kilometers of Arctic terrain including dense forests swamps rivers and frozen tundra under constant harassment from former Finnish allies and advancing Soviet troops. His mountain divisions conducted a series of delaying actions and rearguard battles while destroying infrastructure to deny it to the enemy with long columns of soldiers horses and vehicles moving northward through snow rain and fog often fighting off probes in isolated engagements. Despite severe logistical challenges vast distances and exhaustion among the troops Rendulic maintained discipline coordinated coastal naval support and timed demolitions with tactical precision preserving the bulk of his army intact in what became known as the Lapland War. Hitler personally congratulated him in January 1945 for saving Germanys best army in the far north and this achievement earned Rendulic the Swords to his Knights Cross with Oak Leaves on 18 January 1945 as the 122nd recipient.

Following the successful evacuation from Finland Rendulic was transferred in rapid succession to command Army Group Kurland in January 1945 then Army Group North and again Kurland before taking over Army Group Ostmark the former Army Group South in April 1945 for the final defense of Austria and Bohemia. In these desperate late-war battles he oversaw rearguard actions in the Courland Pocket and the defense of East Prussia where his forces fought against overwhelming Soviet superiority in bitter winter conditions. His reputation as a crisis manager led to his repeated deployment to the most threatened sectors but the strategic situation had deteriorated beyond recovery. At the end of the war in May 1945 he was captured by American forces and held as a prisoner until his trial in the 1948 Nuremberg Hostages Trial where he was convicted of war crimes related to hostage executions in Yugoslavia although acquitted on charges stemming from scorched-earth policies in Lapland. He served ten years in Landsberg Prison before his release on 1 February 1951.

In the years after his release Rendulic settled in Upper Austria where he worked as an author publishing several books reflecting on his military experiences and strategic views of the war. He also engaged in local politics while maintaining a low public profile. Lothar Rendulic died on 17 January 1971 in Fraham near Eferding and was buried in the Pfarrfriedhof in Leonding. He was survived by his wife Anna Nella Zöbl and their son Helmut born in 1928. Throughout his career Rendulic had demonstrated a consistent talent for defensive operations under extreme adversity rising from a junior officer in the imperial army to one of only three Austrians to reach the highest general officer rank in the Wehrmacht.


























Source:  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lothar_Rendulic  
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/16522/Rendulic-Lothar.htm  
https://ww2gravestone.com/people/rendulic-lothar/  
https://www.geni.com/people/Lothar-Rendulic/6000000024316674172  
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/  
https://rk.balsi.de/index.php?action=list&cat=300  
https://forum.axishistory.com/  
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/  
https://web.archive.org/web/20091027052912fw_/http://geocities.com/orion47.geo/index2.html  
https://www.unithistories.com/units_index/index.php?file=/officers/personsx.html  
Scherzer, Veit: Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939–1945 (various editions referencing awards and dates)

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Bio of Oberst Wolfgang Kretzschmar (1907-1944)


Full name: Wolfgang Hans Kretzschmar  
Nickname: No information  

Date of Birth: 02.07.1907 - Allenstein, Ostpreußen (German Empire)  
Date of Death: 27.12.1944 - KIA Frauenburg bei Saldus (Latvia)
Buried on: German War Cemetery Frauenburg / Saldus, Plot: U1. Row: 16. Grave: 471.

Battles and Operations: Polenfeldzug, Westfeldzug, Ostfront (Kämpfe südlich des Ladoga-Sees, Abwehrschlachten am Wirtz-See, 3. Kurlandschlacht)  

Religion: No information  
Parents: No information  
Siblings: No information  
Spouse: Ursula Gertrud Annemarie Elisabeth Görg  
Children: two children (names unknown)  

Promotions:  
00.00.1926: Einjährig-Freiwilliger
00.00.1923: Fahnenjunker
00.00.1931: Leutnant
00.00.1935: Oberleutnant
00.00.1939: Hauptmann
00.01.1942: Major
01.02.1944: Oberstleutnant
01.08.1944: Oberst

Career:  
1926 Joined as one-year volunteer in Infantry Regiment 3;
?: Stab, Infanterie-Regiment 45;
1936: Ausbildungsoffizier, Infanterieschule Döberitz;
? - 1938: Stabsoffiziersausbildung, Kriegsakademie;
?: Stab, X. Armeekorps;
February 18th, 1940: Bataillonskommandeur, Infanterie-Regiment 506;
January 1941: Lehrgangsleiter/Taktikausblider, Infanterieschule;
June 16th, 1942 - August 1942: Kommandant, Infanterie-Bataillon z.b.V. 540;
winter 1942 - July 21st, 1943: Kommandant, Grenadier-Bataillon z.b.V. 540;
December 1943: Kommandeur, Jäger-Regiment 24(L);
November 1944 - 27 december 1944: stellvertretender Führer, 12. Luftwaffen-Feld-Division; 

Awards and Decorations:  
02.10.1936 Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 4. Klasse (4 Jahre)  
02.10.1936 Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 3. Klasse (12 Jahre)  
02.10.1936 Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 2. Klasse (18 Jahre)  
12.10.1939 Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse  
00.06.1940 Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Schwarz (WIA 11.06.1940)
23.06.1940 Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse  
00.00.194_ Infanterie-Sturmabzeichen in Silber  
17.03.1943 Anerkennungsurkunde des Oberbefehlshabers des Heeres  
15.05.1943 Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes #1799 as Major and Kommandeur Grenadier-Bataillon 540 z.b.V. In late January and early February 1943, Kretzschmar’s unit was ordered to hold a strategically vital hill that anchored the entire German defensive sector. Under freezing conditions and relentless Soviet pressure, massed enemy infantry and artillery hammered the position day after day. When the Soviets finally punched through at the boundary with the neighboring unit, threatening to roll up the whole line, Kretzschmar personally assembled a scratch force from troops on his right flank. Leading this handful of men himself through blinding snow and enemy fire, he launched a furious counterattack that smashed the penetration, restored the front, and saved the sector.
00.07.1943 Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Silber (WIA 11.06.1940 00.08.1942 + 21.07.1943)
Nahkampfspange in Bronze  
Nahkampfspange in Silber  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #600 as Oberstleutnant and Kommandeur Jäger-Regiment 24 (L) / 12.Luftwaffen-Feld-Division. Kretzschmar again proved his mettle during the defensive battles at Wirtz Lake in September 1944. The Soviet 1st Shock Army hurled repeated tank-supported assaults against his regiment’s positions. For days his men fought with grim determination, beating back twelve separate armored attacks in close-quarters combat. Only on 15 September 1944, during the thirteenth enemy onslaught at Ergli, did the front finally crack under the overwhelming weight of steel and numbers.
12.01.1945 Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #121 (posthumous) as Oberst and Kommandeur Jäger-Regiment 24 (L) / 12.Luftwaffen-Feld-Division. In the final weeks of his life, during the 3rd Battle of Courland in December 1944, Kretzschmar’s regiment held a sector near Dzukste. The fighting was apocalyptic: wave after wave of Soviet attacks crashed against German lines in blinding snowstorms and sub-zero temperatures. Kretzschmar’s men stood “like a rock in the surf,” absorbing blow after blow while he led from the front, moving between foxholes, directing fire, and inspiring his troops by personal example. On 27 December 1944, still fighting with weapon in hand, Oberst Kretzschmar was killed in action. For his utter devotion to duty and ultimate sacrifice his regiment’s stand was recognized with the Schwerter to the Ritterkreuz mit Eichenlaub, awarded posthumously.
Ärmelband Kurland

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Wolfgang Hans Kretzschmar was a German Army officer during World War II who rose to the rank of Oberst and became one of the most highly decorated soldiers of the conflict. Born on 2 July 1907 in Allenstein, East Prussia, in the German Empire, he was killed in action on 27 December 1944 near Frauenburg in Latvia while serving on the Eastern Front. Kretzschmar commanded various infantry and grenadier units in some of the war's fiercest defensive battles and was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords, one of Nazi Germany's highest military honors. His career spanned from the interwar period through the invasions of Poland and the West to prolonged and brutal engagements against Soviet forces, where his personal leadership under extreme conditions earned him repeated recognition for bravery and tactical skill.

Kretzschmar entered the Reichswehr in 1926 as a one-year volunteer with Infantry Regiment 3. He advanced steadily through the ranks, receiving his commission as Leutnant in 1931 and promotion to Oberleutnant in 1935. Before the outbreak of war he held instructional and staff positions, serving as a training officer at the Infantry School in Döberitz in 1936 and completing general staff training at the War Academy until 1938. He later joined the staff of the X Army Corps. These early roles prepared him for the demands of modern warfare, emphasizing tactics and leadership that he would later apply with notable success on the battlefield.

With the start of World War II, Kretzschmar took part in the Polish Campaign in 1939 and the Western Campaign in 1940. He was appointed battalion commander in Infantry Regiment 506 on 18 February 1940 and by January 1941 had become a course leader and tactics instructor at the Infantry School. In June 1942 he assumed command of Infantry Battalion z.b.V. 540, a special-purpose probation unit formed in Fulda in December 1941 and composed largely of soldiers seeking redemption through frontline service after disciplinary issues. Redesignated Grenadier Battalion z.b.V. 540 in October 1942, the formation operated as an independent army troop often attached to divisions in high-risk sectors. Under Kretzschmar the battalion earned a reputation for resilience in the harsh terrain of the Eastern Front.

The unit saw its most intense action south of Lake Ladoga in late 1942 and early 1943 as part of the defensive lines near Leningrad. The landscape of frozen swamps, dense forests, and icy trenches turned every Soviet assault into a nightmare of artillery barrages and close-quarters fighting amid snowstorms and sub-zero temperatures. In late January and early February 1943, Kretzschmar's battalion was ordered to hold a strategically vital hill that anchored the entire German sector. When massed Soviet infantry and artillery punched through at the boundary with a neighboring unit, threatening to collapse the line, Kretzschmar personally assembled a scratch force from his right flank. Leading the men himself through blinding snow and enemy fire, he launched a furious counterattack that smashed the penetration, restored the front, and saved the position. For this leadership and bravery he received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 15 May 1943. He was severely wounded during operations in August 1942 and again in July 1943 while still commanding the battalion.

After recovering from his wounds, Kretzschmar returned to frontline duty and by December 1943 had taken command of Jäger Regiment 24 of the 12th Luftwaffe Field Division. In September 1944, during the defensive battles at Wirtz Lake, his regiment faced repeated tank-supported assaults from the Soviet 1st Shock Army. For days the men fought in grim close-quarters combat, repelling twelve separate armored attacks before the line finally buckled on 15 September at Ergli under overwhelming numbers and firepower. The regiment's outstanding performance in holding the sector against such pressure earned Kretzschmar the Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross on 30 September 1944. He was promoted to Oberstleutnant in February 1944 and to Oberst in August 1944.

In November 1944 Kretzschmar became deputy commander of the 12th Luftwaffe Field Division. During the apocalyptic fighting of the Third Battle of Courland in December 1944, his forces held a sector near Dzukste against wave after wave of Soviet attacks in blinding snowstorms and freezing conditions. Kretzschmar led from the front, moving between foxholes to direct fire and inspire his troops by personal example as they stood firm like a rock against the onslaught. On 27 December 1944 he was killed in action near Frauenburg while still fighting with weapon in hand. For his regiment's stand and his ultimate sacrifice he was awarded the Swords to the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves posthumously on 12 January 1945. Kretzschmar was married to Ursula Gertrud Annemarie Elisabeth Görg and left behind two children whose names remain unknown. His service exemplified the combination of professional skill and personal courage demanded by the Eastern Front's relentless campaigns.




Source:  
Berger, Florian: Mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern. Die höchstdekorierten Soldaten des Zweiten Weltkrieges.  
Fellgiebel, Walther-Peer: Die Träger des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939-1945.  
Scherzer, Veit: Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939-1945.  
Thomas, Franz: Die Eichenlaubträger 1940-1945.  
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/  
https://en.wikipedia.org/  
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/34582/Kretzschmar-Wolfgang-Hans-J%C3%A4ger-Regiment-24.htm
https://grokipedia.com/  
https://rk.balsi.de/index.php?action=list&cat=300  
https://www.unithistories.com/units_index/index.php?file=/officers/personsx.html  
https://web.archive.org/web/20091027052912fw_/http://geocities.com/orion47.geo/index2.html  
https://forum.axishistory.com/  
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/  
https://www.geni.com/  
https://military-history.fandom.com/wiki/Wolfgang_Kretzschmar

Bio of SS-Obergruppenführer Walter Krüger (1890-1945)


Full name: Walter Krüger
Nickname: No information

Date of Birth: 27.02.1890 - Straßburg, Elsaß (German Empire)
Date of Death: 22.05.1945 - Sulęcin near Liepāja, Kurland, Latvia (suicide to avoid capture by Soviet troops in the Courland Pocket)

Battles and Operations: World War I (Western Front and infantry actions), Freikorps operations in the Baltic region (1919), Western Campaign (1940 as staff officer), Operation Barbarossa, Leningrad front (capture of Luga and Krasnogvardeisk), Battle of Kursk (Operation Citadel), defensive battles on the Eastern Front, Courland Pocket

NSDAP-Number: 3.995.130 (01.05.1937)
SS-Number: 266.184 (30.04.1935)
Religion: No information
Parents: Alfred Krüger (army colonel in the Kingdom of Prussia), mother unknown
Siblings: Friedrich-Wilhelm Krüger (younger brother, SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Waffen-SS, Ritterkreuzträger)
Spouse: No information
Children: No information

Promotions:
01.04.1900 Kadett
00.00.1907 Fähnrich
18.03.1908 Leutnant
25.02.1915 Oberleutnant
18.08.1917 Hauptmann
00.12.1933 SA-Standartenführer
30.04.1935 SS-Obersturmbannführer
30.01.1939 SS-Standartenführer
01.01.1940 SS-Oberführer
20.04.1941 SS-Brigadeführer und Generalmajor der Waffen-SS
30.01.1942 SS-Gruppenführer und Generalleutnant der Waffen-SS
21.06.1944 SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Waffen-SS

Career:
00.00.1900: Kadettenanstalten Karlsruhe und Berlin-Lichterfelde
00.00.1908: Leutnant, 2. badischen Grenadier-Regiment 110
00.08.1914: Bataillon Adjutant
Füsilier-Regiment «Prinz Charles Anton von Hohenzollern» Nr 40
Preussische Jäger-Regiment 2
00.00.1918: Hauptmann und Bataillonskommandeur
00.01.1919: Freikorps, Baltikum, Abt Pfeffer, Westfälische Freikorps, Kurland
00.00.1920-.00.12.1920: MG Kompanie, Schützen-Regiment Nr. 13
00.00.1921: joined the Stahlhelm
00.12.1933: joined the SA
00.00.1935: entered the SS-Verfügungstruppe as SS-Obersturmbannführer, Führer, II. Bataillon, SS-Standarte "Germania"
01.05.1937: entered the NSDAP
00.05.1937: Kdr, II./ SS Standarte 2
00.05.1937-00.10.1937: Lehrer, SS-Junkerschule Bad Tölz
00.10.1937: Offizier, Stab, SS-Standarte 'Deutschland'
00.11.1937: Kdr, IV./ SS-Standarte 'Deutschland'
00.11.1938: Kdr, SS Standarte z.b.V., Ellwangen
00.08.1939: SS-Standartenführer, Ia, SS-Polizei-Division, Western campaign
00.08.1940-00.09.1940: Lehrer, SS-Junkerschule Bad Tölz
00.10.1940: SS-Führungshauptamt in Berlin
25.05.1941-25.06.1941: SS-Brigadeführer, Führer, 1. SS-Brigade (mot)
10.08.1941-15.12.1941: SS-Brigadeführer, Kommandeur, SS-Polizei-Division, Leningrad
16.12.1941: Inspekteur der Infanterie, SS-Führungshauptamt
00.02.1942: Kdr, Amtsgruppe C, SS-FHA
03.04.1943: SS-Gruppenführer, Kommandeur, SS-Panzergrenadier-Division "Das Reich", Bjelgorod
00.12.1943: SS-Gruppenführer, Kommandierender General, IV. SS-Panzerkorps
15.03.1944-24.07.1944: SS-Gruppenführer, Befehlshaber der Waffen-SS, Kommissariat "Ostland"
25.07.1944: SS-Obergruppenführer, Kommandierender General, VI. Waffen-Armeekorps der SS, Nordabschnitt
22.05.1945: suprised by soviet troops in a forest, committed suicide

Awards and Decoartions:
Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse (1914) - 28.09.1914
Ritter II. Klasse des Ordens vom Zähringer Löwen - 12.03.1915
Militärverdienstkreuz 2. Klasse
Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse (1914) - 23.12.1916
Kreuz für Verdienste im Kriege
Ritter des Königlich Preußischen Hausordens von Hohenzollern mit Schwertern - 24.06.1918
Militärverdienstorden III. Klasse mit Schwertern
Verwundetenabzeichen in Schwarz (1918)
Verwundetenabzeichen in Gold (1918)
Baltenkreuz 2. Klasse
Baltenkreuz 1. Klasse
Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer - 1934
Deutsches Reiterabzeichen in Silber
Ehrendegen des Reichsführers-SS
SS-Ehrenring
SS-Dienstauszeichnung 4. Stufe (4 Jahre) - 30.04.1939
Medaille zur Erinnerung an den 13. März 1938 - 1939
Medaille zur Erinnerung an den 1. Oktober 1938 - 1939
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 2. Klasse (1914) - 13.06.1940
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 1. Klasse (1914) - 22.06.1940
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes #734 (13.12.1941) as SS-Brigadeführer und Generalmajor der Waffen-SS and Kommandeur SS-Polizei-Division. Krüger received the award for his division's outstanding performance during the opening phases of Operation Barbarossa on the Leningrad front. He assumed formal command on 10 August 1941, but the citation highlighted the unit's decisive breakthroughs and captures achieved under his energetic leadership in the preceding weeks of intense summer fighting.
In the dense forests and marshy terrain south of Leningrad, the SS-Polizei-Division advanced against stubborn Soviet defenses along the Luga River line. Soviet forces had fortified the area with extensive fieldworks, artillery positions, and repeated counterattacks by infantry and armored elements. Under Krüger's direction the division fought through these obstacles in brutal close-quarters combat, securing the key town of Luga by late July and pressing onward despite heavy casualties from sniper fire, minefields, and determined Red Army resistance. By late August the division reached and captured Krasnogvardeisk (modern Gatchina), a critical road and rail hub that opened the path for the German encirclement efforts around Leningrad. Krüger's calm coordination of infantry assaults, artillery support, and rapid exploitation of breakthroughs turned potential stalemates into advances, tying down large Soviet formations and contributing directly to the isolation of Leningrad. The division's success in these actions, achieved despite logistical strains and fierce opposition, formed the core justification for the award.
Medaille Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/42 (Ostmedaille) - 1942
SS-Dienstauszeichnung 3. Stufe (8 Jahre) - 30.04.1943
Goldenes Ehrenzeichen der NSDAP
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #286 (31.08.1943) as SS-Gruppenführer und Generalleutnant der Waffen-SS and Kommandeur SS-Panzergrenadier-Division "Das Reich". Krüger’s Eichenlaub recommendation reads as follows: “SS-Gruppenführer Krüger has led the SS-Pz.Gren.Div. ‘Das Reich’ since the 12.04.1943. In December 1941 he was awarded the Knight’s Cross before Leningrad as the commander of the SS-Pol.Div. During the German offensive operation ‘Citadel’, which took place near Belgorod in the time period 05.-16.07.1943, the SS-Pz.Gren.Div. ‘Das Reich’ had the mission of breaking through the heavily fortified 1st and 2nd Soviet defensive lines between Belgorod and Tomarowka while advancing on the right wing of the SS-Pz.Gren.Div. ‘LSSAH’. It would then press on to Prokhorovka.
Particularly bad weather conditions in the days before the assault muddied up the advance routes, and strong Russian forest defenses hindered the carrying out of the mission. However through the scrupulously conducted preparations (in the form of planning exercises) by Gruppenführer Krüger, as well as his energetic leadership after the start of the assault, it was possible to break through the first line on the first day of the attack. The second Soviet line fell on the following day, an event which enabled the Division to launch a swift thrust to the north.
After the Division had already pressed on further to the north and captured the villages of Lutschki and Kalinin, a crisis suddenly emerged in the deep, open right flank of the Division. This was overcome with swift retaliatory action, thanks to the pronounced calm and determination of the divisional commander. The incessant waves of attacking Soviet tank masses were smashed, and following the employment of the last reserves a viable defense was built up. The destruction of 212 tanks was the success of the day. By rerouting the Panzer-Regiment in these critical hours the Division succeeded in thrusting into the flank and rear of the enemy, and through this Gruppenführer Krüger was able to turn a crisis into a total victory. This was recognized with a special order of the day by the supreme commander of the 4. Panzerarmee.
In the continued fighting on the 14.-15.07.1943, following additional defensive successes to the north, the Division succeeded in launching a surprise attack towards the east against Praworot. Despite difficult road conditions it was able to establish contact with the 7. Panzer-Division, which was coming up from the south further to the east. With this the encirclement of enemy forces in the right flank of the Korps was pulled off. SS-Gruppenführer Krüger had a major share in the success of this attack through his personal influence on the conduct of combat.
After the Division had been pulled out and sent to the Mius front, Gruppenführer Krüger received a new mission. With his Division on the right wing of the Korps, he was to clean up the enemy penetration position along the Mius and reach the river itself. Despite bad weather and road conditions, strong enemy hilltop positions and a fierce defense, Gruppenführer Krüger again succeeded in breaking through the strong enemy field positions with his Division.
Through the capture of the grimly defended strongpoint of Stepanowka, and the pursuit after the fleeing enemy by the SS-Pz.Gren.Div. ‘Das Reich’ (both on the 02.08.1943), the Korps was able to push the Soviets back across the Mius and retake the old German defensive line. SS-Gruppenführer Krüger once more had a decisive share in these successes (which led to the destruction of 26 tanks and the capture of 1400 prisoners) by his personal actions and their influence on the fighting.”
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #120 (11.01.1945) as SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Waffen-SS and Kommandierender General VI.SS-Freiwilligen-Armeekorps. The following telex transcript, written by General der Infanterie Carl Hilpert (commander of the 16. Armee), describes the actions by Walter Krüger that led to him receiving the Schwerter:
“Subject: Additional leadership deeds of Eichenlaub holder SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Waffen-SS Krüger, commanding general of the VI. SS-Korps.
On the 3rd day of the Third Battle of Courland, following an overwhelming artillery barrage, the Russians launched a surprise attack against the front of Gruppe Henze, which was defended by security units and Latvian troops. Already by the midday hours the Russian 19th Tank Corps had succeeded in breaking through the main line and penetrating as far as the artillery positions. SS-Obergruppenführer Krüger dispatched the handful of available Korps reserves to help the Batterien, which were engaged in close combat.
Even so, by the evening of the 23.12.1944 the Russians had succeeded in tearing open a hole at the boundary between Gruppe Henze and the 19th Latvian SS-Division. Their aim was to expand their breakthrough in a northwesterly direction and thereby collapse the northern wing of the 16. Armee. In this dark hour General Krüger ruthlessly weakened his own right wing and threw the units of the 93. Infanterie-Division freed up by this action (namely Grenadier-Regiment 174) against the enemy. However this did not succeed in closing the frontline gap. Thus, despite the impending danger to the left wing of his Korps, General Krüger decided to take the Armee level reserves previously employed in the area of the 19. Latvian SS-Division and use them for a counterattack into the deep right flank of the Russian assault wedge.
Success: The friendly elements that were encircled in Trenci were relieved, and the enemy called off further advances against our left wing during the night. Thus in the following days they commenced a major attack against the entire centre of the Korps’ frontage with strong tank forces (including elements of an additional Tank Corps), and in doing so they broke through the left wing of the 19. Latvian Division and carried on their advance towards Lestene through forest and swamp. Only minor elements of the 227. Division held their ground in the break-in area as an island of resistance. The danger of an operational breakthrough was still present, as our troops had become exhausted following days of fighting and were visibly decreasing in their defensive capabilities. In this situation the leadership would have to show iron resolve.
General Krüger steadfastly stood by his decision to use his last available reserve, a Kampfgruppe of the 4. Pz.Div., to attack in this great defensive battle despite all the other crises that were going on. This decision, maintained only with great difficulty, turned the tide of the battle. The enemy was hit hard in his area of main effort and pushed back. Through the infliction of high losses in the process (including well over 100 tanks) they were forced to suspend their attack.
On the night of the 27./28.12.1944, a firmly constructed defensive line was finally established, and it defied the last attacks of the 11 day Third Battle of Courland. After multiple major crises, a great defensive success was ultimately achieved. General der Waffen-SS Krüger showed outstanding merit in this battle through his firm leadership and unwavering toughness.
I ask that this outstanding performance as a leader be recognized accordingly.”
Ärmelband Kurland - 1945

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Walter Krüger was a German Waffen-SS general during the Nazi era who rose to the rank of SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Waffen-SS. Born on 27 February 1890 in Straßburg in Alsace-Lorraine within the German Empire, he was the son of a Prussian army colonel and the elder brother of Friedrich-Wilhelm Krüger, who later became another prominent SS general and Ritterkreuzträger. Krüger served with distinction in both world wars, commanding large formations on the Eastern Front in the second conflict and earning the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords for his leadership in critical defensive and offensive operations. He committed suicide on 22 May 1945 in a forest near Sulęcin close to Liepāja in the Courland Pocket, choosing death over capture by advancing Soviet forces just days after the German surrender in Europe.

Krüger entered the Prussian cadet corps in 1900 and attended institutions in Karlsruhe and Berlin-Lichterfelde before being commissioned as a Leutnant in 1908 with the 2nd Badisches Grenadier-Regiment Nr. 110. During World War I he served initially as a battalion adjutant and later as a company and battalion commander on the Western Front, where he was wounded twice and accumulated a series of Imperial German decorations including both classes of the Iron Cross, the Knight's Cross of the Order of the Zähringer Lion, and the Prussian House Order of Hohenzollern with Swords. After the armistice he joined Freikorps units in the Baltic region in 1919, fighting Bolshevik forces in Kurland with formations such as Abteilung Pfeffer and the Westfälisches Freikorps. He briefly returned to the Reichswehr as a machine-gun company commander before leaving active service in 1920 to join the Stahlhelm veterans' organization, where he remained active until the early 1930s.

In December 1933 Krüger entered the Sturmabteilung as a Standartenführer and transferred to the SS-Verfügungstruppe in April 1935 with the rank of SS-Obersturmbannführer, taking command of the second battalion of SS-Standarte Germania. He served as an instructor at the SS-Junkerschule Bad Tölz and held various regimental commands before becoming operations officer of the SS-Polizei-Division in 1939, a role in which he helped prepare the unit for the Western Campaign. His steady rise through the SS ranks reflected both his Imperial Army experience and his early commitment to the National Socialist movement, including joining the NSDAP in 1937. By January 1940 he had reached SS-Oberführer and was positioned for higher field commands as the war expanded eastward.

Krüger assumed command of the SS-Polizei-Division on 10 August 1941 while it was engaged with L. Armeekorps of the 18. Armee on the Leningrad front during Operation Barbarossa. In the dense forests and marshy terrain south of the city, Soviet forces had constructed formidable defensive lines along the Luga River supported by artillery, minefields, and repeated armored counterattacks. Under his direction the division fought through these positions in grueling close-quarters combat, securing the key town of Luga by late July despite heavy losses from sniper fire and determined Red Army resistance. By late August the unit captured Krasnogvardeisk, a vital road and rail junction that facilitated the German encirclement efforts around Leningrad. Krüger's calm coordination of infantry assaults, artillery barrages, and rapid exploitation of breakthroughs turned repeated stalemates into measurable advances, tying down large Soviet formations and contributing directly to the isolation of the city; for this leadership he received the Knight's Cross on 13 December 1941 as the 734th recipient.

In March 1943 Krüger took command of the SS-Panzergrenadier-Division Das Reich within II. SS-Panzerkorps and led it through the opening phases of Operation Citadel, the German offensive at Kursk. Amid torrential rains that transformed roads into quagmires and thick belts of forest bristling with anti-tank guns and bunkers, his grenadiers and panzers smashed through the first Soviet defensive line on 5 July in fierce hand-to-hand fighting under constant artillery and air attack. The second line fell the following day, enabling thrusts that seized villages such as Lutschki and Kalinin after bitter street battles. When strong Soviet tank waves threatened the open right flank, Krüger directed reserves from forward positions, wheeling his panzer regiment to strike the enemy armor in the flank and rear while defensive strongpoints absorbed the main assault; the division destroyed 212 Soviet tanks in the resulting melee and turned a potential rout into a local victory. Later actions on the Mius front saw his forces break through hilltop positions on 2 August, capture Stepanowka, pursue the retreating enemy across the river, destroy 26 tanks, and take 1,400 prisoners while restoring the German line. These achievements earned him the Oak Leaves on 31 August 1943 as the 286th recipient.

Krüger subsequently commanded IV. SS-Panzerkorps before serving as inspector general of Waffen-SS infantry troops and then taking charge of VI. SS-Freiwilligen-Armeekorps, composed largely of Latvian and Estonian volunteers, in the Courland Pocket. During the Third Battle of Courland in late December 1944 his sector faced a devastating Soviet artillery barrage followed by a breakthrough by the 19th Tank Corps that reached German artillery positions. Krüger committed his scant reserves into savage close-quarters fighting, thinned his own lines to free forces, and launched a counterattack with army-level reserves into the deep right flank of the penetration, relieving encircled troops in Trenci and sealing the gap overnight amid freezing snow. When another Soviet tank corps advanced through forest and swamp toward Lestene, he threw his final reserve—a Kampfgruppe from the 4. Panzer-Division—directly against the enemy main effort. Coordinated counterattacks across snow-covered terrain destroyed more than 100 Soviet tanks in running battles and re-established a continuous defensive line, blunting eleven days of assaults and preventing the collapse of the northern wing of 16. Armee. A telex from the army commander explicitly credited Krüger's unyielding personal leadership for the corps' success against vastly superior forces; for this he was awarded the Swords on 11 January 1945 as the 120th recipient. Surprised by Soviet troops while attempting to evade capture in a forest near Sulęcin on 22 May 1945, he ended his life rather than face imprisonment.



































Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Krüger_(SS_general)
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/34579/Krüger-Walter-Waffen-SS.htm
https://grokipedia.com/page/Walter_Krüger_(SS_general)
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/
https://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?t=22259
https://en.namu.wiki/w/발터_크뤼거
https://www.geni.com/
https://rk.balsi.de/index.php?action=list&cat=300
https://www.unithistories.com/units_index/index.php?file=/officers/personsx.html
https://web.archive.org/web/20091027052912fw_/http://geocities.com/orion47.geo/index2.html
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/