Friday, March 6, 2026

Bio of Oberstleutnant Egon Mayer (1917-1944)


Full name: Egon Mayer
Nickname: Connie

Date of Birth: 19.08.1917 - Konstanz, Grand Duchy of Baden (German Empire)
Date of Death: 02.03.1944 - near Montmédy, Lorraine (France)

Battles and Operations: Battle of France, Battle of Britain, Operation Jubilee (Dieppe Raid), Channel Front defensive operations, Reichsverteidigung against USAAF daylight bomber raids

Religion: No information
Parents: Unknown farmer and unknown mother (grew up on the parents' farm named Hauserhof near Konstanz)
Siblings: No information
Spouse: No information
Children: No information

Promotions:
01.11.1937 entered Luftwaffe as Fahnenjunker
01.08.1939 Leutnant
00.00.1941 Oberleutnant
00.11.1942 Hauptmann
01.06.1943 Major
00.00.1944 Oberstleutnant

Career:
00.00.1917-1937 grew up on family farm Hauserhof near Konstanz, attended Langemarck-Realgymnasium in Singen
01.11.1937 volunteered for Luftwaffe service
1938-1939 flight training at Luftkriegsschule 2 Gatow and Jagdfliegerschule Schleißheim
01.08.1939 Leutnant
06.12.1939 posted to Jagdgeschwader 2 "Richthofen"
13.06.1940 first aerial victory during Battle of France (Morane-Saulnier M.S.406)
1940 Battle of Britain, often as wingman to Helmut Wick, multiple forced landings including swim in English Channel
00.00.1940-1941 short instructor tour at Jagdfliegerschule Werneuchen
10.06.1941 Staffelkapitän 7. Staffel JG 2 "Richthofen"
01.08.1941 Knight's Cross after 21 victories
16.07.1942 German Cross in Gold
November 1942 Gruppenkommandeur III./JG 2 "Richthofen"
23.11.1942 first victories over USAAF four-engine bombers (two B-17, one B-24)
developed head-on attack tactic against bomber boxes with Georg-Peter Eder
16.04.1943 Oak Leaves after 63 victories
01.07.1943 Geschwaderkommodore JG 2 "Richthofen"
05.02.1944 first Channel Front pilot to reach 100 victories
02.03.1944 killed in action leading attack on USAAF bomber formation, shot down by P-47 Thunderbolt escorts

Awards and Decorations:
Verwundetenabzeichen in Silber
Flugzeugführer- und Beobachterabzeichen
Eisernes Kreuz II.Klasse (25.10.1939)
Eisernes Kreuz I.Klasse Class (May 1940)
Frontflugspange für Jäger in Gold mit Anhänger "300"
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (01.08.1941, 265th award) as Leutnant and Staffelkapitän of the 7. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 2 "Richthofen". The award was granted immediately after he achieved his 21st confirmed aerial victory. By this point Mayer had been commanding his Staffel since 10 June 1941 and had already proven himself during the Battle of France and the Battle of Britain, where he flew frequently as wingman to Helmut Wick and survived multiple emergency landings, including one in the English Channel. The 21st victory came during ongoing defensive operations on the Channel Front against the RAF. The award ceremony took place together with two other JG 2 pilots, Erich Leie and Rudolf Pflanz, and was even filmed for the Deutsche Wochenschau newsreel. At the end of 1941 his score had already climbed further to 28 victories, underlining the rapid pace of his success in the West.
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold (16.07.1942) as Oberleutnant, 7./JG 2
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #232 (16.04.1943) as Hauptmann and Gruppenkommandeur of III./JG 2 "Richthofen", after reaching his 63rd victory. A decisive contribution to this milestone occurred on 14 February 1943 in a single mission when he shot down three Hawker Typhoons in quick succession (his 60th at 11:36 about 30 km northwest of Calais, 61st at 11:40 roughly 20 km east of Dover, and 62nd at 12:12 about 15 km northwest of Calais). The 63rd victory was scored in the weeks that followed during continued interception missions against RAF fighter-bombers and fighter sweeps over northern France and the Channel. The Oak Leaves recognised both his personal scoring rate and his growing leadership role. On 11 May 1943 Mayer personally received the decoration from Adolf Hitler at the Reich Chancellery in Berlin, after which he was promoted to Major on 1 June 1943.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #51 (02.03.1944, posthumous) as Oberstleutnant and Geschwaderkommodore JG 2 "Richthofen", after reached his 102nd and final victory. The Schwerter were announced on the very day of his death. On 2 March 1944 Mayer personally led his Geschwader in a large-scale interception of a USAAF bomber stream near Montmédy in Lorraine, France. During this engagement he pressed home attacks on the heavily defended bomber boxes, claiming the victories that brought his total to 102 (all scored exclusively in the West, including 26 four-engine bombers, 51 Spitfires and 12 P-47 Thunderbolts). While continuing the assault he was hit by escorting Republic P-47 Thunderbolts and crashed, dying of his wounds at age 26. The award citation highlighted his outstanding leadership in the Reichsverteidigung, his development (together with Georg-Peter Eder) of the effective head-on attack tactic against American bomber formations (first successfully used on 23 November 1942 over St. Nazaire), and the fact that he had become the first pilot on the Channel Front to reach 100 victories only a few weeks earlier on 5 February 1944. The posthumous Schwerter therefore recognised both the cumulative combat success and the final action in which he fell while leading his unit from the front.

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Egon Mayer was born on 19 August 1917 in Konstanz, Grand Duchy of Baden, German Empire, as the son of a farmer whose name has not been recorded in any available historical documentation. He grew up on the family farm known as Hauserhof near Konstanz and attended the Langemarck-Realgymnasium in nearby Singen. His religion is not documented. No information exists about any siblings, and he never married or had children, dying at the age of only twenty-six. Among his comrades he was affectionately known by the nickname Connie.

Mayer volunteered for the Luftwaffe on 1 November 1937 as a Fahnenjunker. He completed his basic military and flight training at Luftkriegsschule 2 in Gatow and at the Jagdfliegerschule in Schleißheim. On 1 August 1939 he was commissioned Leutnant. In 1941 he advanced to Oberleutnant, in November 1942 he became Hauptmann, on 1 June 1943 he was promoted Major, and early in 1944 he reached the rank of Oberstleutnant.

On 6 December 1939 Mayer was posted to Jagdgeschwader 2 Richthofen, the famous unit that would remain his home for the rest of his career. He claimed his very first aerial victory on 13 June 1940 during the Battle of France when he shot down a Morane-Saulnier M.S.406 fighter. Throughout the subsequent Battle of Britain he frequently flew as wingman to the legendary Helmut Wick and survived several emergency landings, one of which forced him to ditch in the English Channel and swim to safety. After a short period as an instructor at Jagdfliegerschule Werneuchen he returned to the front and on 10 June 1941 was appointed Staffelkapitän of the 7. Staffel of JG 2. By 1 August 1941 he had achieved twenty-one confirmed victories, all against Royal Air Force aircraft on the Channel Front, and for this performance he received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross as the 265th recipient of the award. The decoration was presented together with two other JG 2 pilots, Erich Leie and Rudolf Pflanz, and the ceremony was even filmed for the weekly newsreel Deutsche Wochenschau. At the close of 1941 his personal score stood at twenty-eight victories.

On 16 July 1942 Mayer was awarded the German Cross in Gold while still serving as Staffelkapitän. In November 1942 he was appointed Gruppenkommandeur of III. Gruppe of JG 2. Only days later, on 23 November 1942, he scored his first victories against United States Army Air Forces four-engined bombers, claiming two Boeing B-17 Flying Fortresses and one Consolidated B-24 Liberator over St. Nazaire. Together with his friend and fellow pilot Georg-Peter Eder he developed and perfected the head-on attack tactic against the massive American bomber boxes; this revolutionary method involved closing at high speed directly toward the nose of the bomber formation, firing a concentrated burst, then breaking away beneath the enemy to avoid the massed defensive fire. The tactic proved so successful that it was soon adopted throughout the Jagdwaffe on the Western Front.

Mayer continued to score rapidly against both RAF fighter-bombers and the growing daylight raids of the USAAF. A particularly outstanding day came on 14 February 1943 when, in a single mission, he shot down three Hawker Typhoons in quick succession: his sixtieth victory northwest of Calais at 11:36, the sixty-first east of Dover at 11:40, and the sixty-second again northwest of Calais at 12:12. These three kills in less than forty minutes brought him to the threshold of the Oak Leaves. Within the following weeks he reached his sixty-third victory and on 16 April 1943, as the 232nd recipient overall, he was awarded the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves while serving as Gruppenkommandeur. On 11 May 1943 Adolf Hitler personally presented the decoration to him at the Reich Chancellery in Berlin. Shortly afterwards, on 1 June 1943, Mayer was promoted to Major, and on 1 July 1943 he was given command of the entire Jagdgeschwader 2 Richthofen as Geschwaderkommodore.

Under his leadership JG 2 became one of the most effective units in the Reichsverteidigung, the defence of Germany against American daylight bombing. On 5 February 1944 Mayer became the first pilot operating exclusively on the Channel Front to reach one hundred aerial victories. His total at that point included twenty-six four-engined bombers, fifty-one Supermarine Spitfires and twelve Republic P-47 Thunderbolts, every one of them scored against Western Allied aircraft. Only weeks later, on 2 March 1944, he personally led his Geschwader in a major interception of a large USAAF bomber stream near Montmédy in Lorraine. In the course of the fierce fighting he pressed home repeated attacks on the heavily defended bomber boxes and claimed the victories that raised his score to 102. While continuing the assault he was attacked by escorting P-47 Thunderbolts, received fatal wounds, and crashed. He died the same day at the age of twenty-six. On that very day the Swords to the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves were awarded to him posthumously as the fifty-first recipient. The citation emphasised not only his personal score but also his outstanding leadership and the tactical innovations he had introduced against the American heavy-bomber offensive.

In more than 353 combat missions Egon Mayer achieved 102 confirmed aerial victories, all of them on the Western Front and without a single kill scored against the Soviet Union. He was one of the very few Luftwaffe fighter leaders who rose from the ranks of the enlisted men and young officers to command an entire Geschwader while still in his mid-twenties. His development of the head-on attack against bomber formations, his coolness under fire during the Battle of Britain, and his willingness to lead from the front until the last moment made him a role model for the young pilots who followed him. Although the war continued for another fourteen months after his death, the loss of Egon Mayer was felt deeply within JG 2 and the wider Jagdwaffe. He is remembered today as one of the most successful and respected fighter pilots of the Channel Front, a farmer's son from Konstanz who became a legend in the skies over France and the Reich.


Source:
Obermaier, E., Die Ritterkreuzträger der Luftwaffe, Hoffmann, 1989
Fellgiebel, W.-P., Elite of the Third Reich - The Recipients of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross 1939-45, Helion & Company Limited, 2003
Kwasny A. und G., Die Eichenlaubträger 1940-1945, Deutsches Wehrkundearchiv, 2001
Patzwall K., Scherzer V., Das Deutsche Kreuz 1941-1945, Geschichte und Inhaber Band II, Verlag Klaus D. Patzwall, 2001
Scherzer, V., Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939-1945, Scherzers Militaer-Verlag, 2007
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/
https://en.wikipedia.org/
https://www.tracesofwar.com/
https://ww2gravestone.com/
https://www.findagrave.com/
https://aircrewremembered.com/KrackerDatabase/
https://www.ww2.dk/lwoffz.html
https://forum.axishistory.com/
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/
https://www.bundesarchiv.de/en/
https://www.geni.com/
https://books.google.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

Bio of Generalmajor Dr. med. dent. Franz Bäke (1898-1978)


Full name: Franz Fritz August Bäke
Nickname: No information 

Date of Birth: 28.02.1898 - Schwarzenfels, Kreis Schlüchtern, Hesse-Nassau (German Empire)  
Date of Death: 12.12.1978 - Hagen / Westfalen (West Germany)

Battles and operations: Polish Campaign, French Campaign, Eastern Front, Battle of Kursk, Cherkassy Pocket, Defense of Hungary

NSDAP-Number: No information  
SS-Number: No information  
Religion: No information  
Parents: No information  
Siblings: No information  
Spouse: No information  
Children: No information
Academic degree: Dr. med. dent. (dentistry, graduated in 1922)

Promotions:  
00.00.1915 Kriegsfreiwilliger  
pre-1916 Gefreiter  
00.00.1918 Unteroffizier  
00.00.1918 Vizefeldwebel O.A.  
01.12.1937 Leutnant der Reserve
01.01.1940 Oberleutnant der Reserve
01.05.1941 Hauptmann der Reserve
01.08.1942 Major der Reserve
01.11.1943 Oberstleutnant der Reserve
01.05.1944 Oberst der Reserve
28.02.1945 Oberst
20.04.1945 Generalmajor  

Career:  
00.05.1915-1919 5. Westfälisches Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 53 then 2. Schlesisches Grenadier-Regiment Nr. 11 and 1. Schlesisches Grenadier-Regiment Nr. 10 then Westfälisches Fußartillerie-Regiment Nr. 7
1919-1921 Freikorps Epp
1921-1923 studies medicine and dentistry attaining Dr. med. dent. degree
1923-1937 own dental practice in Hagen
01.03.1933 joined SA final rank SA-Standartenführer
00.00.1937 voluntary exercise with Aufklärungs-Abteilung 6 Münster
01.12.1937 Leutnant der Reserve
01.01.1938 Mob.-Offizier Panzer-Abteilung 65
1938 Sudetenland occupation as Zugführer and deputy company commander 3. Kompanie Panzer-Abteilung 65
1939 Polish Campaign as leader of light column then platoon leader 2. Kompanie Panzer-Abteilung 65
01.11.1939 company commander 1. Kompanie Panzer-Abteilung 65
1940 French Campaign wounded three times
01.02.1941 Ordonnanz-Offizier staff Panzer-Regiment 11
01.05.1941 Hauptmann Panzer-Regiment 11
1941-1942 Eastern Campaign
01.04.1942 commander II. Abteilung Panzer-Regiment 11
01.08.1942 Major
mid-07.1943 commander Panzer-Regiment 11
01.11.1943 Oberstleutnant and confirmed commander Panzer-Regiment 11
01-02.1944 commander schweres Panzer-Regiment Bäke for operations at Tscherkassy
07.1944 commander Panzer-Brigade 106 Feldherrnhalle
09.03.1945 commander Panzer-Division Feldherrnhalle 2
20.04.1945 Generalmajor
1945-1947 prisoner of war
post-war re-established dental practice in Hagen  

Awards and Decorations:  
Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse 1914 (15.07.1916)  
Verwundetenabzeichen 1914 in Gold  
Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer  
Clasp to the Iron Cross 2nd Class (26.09.1939)  
Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse (01.06.1940)  
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Gold  
Panzerkampfabzeichen in Silber (multiple grades up to Stufe 100 on 26.04.1944)  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (11.01.1943) as Major der Reserve and commander II./Panzer-Regiment 11 / 6. Panzer-Division. On 1 January 1943 Bäke and his men conducted a round of bitter urban combat in Nowo Marjewka against two Soviet battalions and about 30 tanks. Twenty-seven of these were destroyed in the resultant fighting and after this Bäke launched a counterattack on his own initiative. The result of this latter move was the destruction of a Soviet armoured wedge that had advanced between Nowo Marjewka and the II. Panzergrenadier-Regiment 114 at Werchne Obliwiski. Another 32 tanks including 20 T-34s were destroyed and with this the latest attempt by the Soviet 25th Tank Corps to break through to the railway line west of Morosowskaja was prevented.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #262 (01.08.1943) as Major der Reserve and commander II./Panzer-Regiment 11. On 11 July 1943 the reinforced Panzer-Regiment 11 reached the village of Kasatschja which was located northeast of Belgorod at a point 12 km beyond the Donez river. Bäke persuaded his regimental commander to go against the divisional order by capturing the village of Rschawez by night and creating a bridgehead over the Sswernyi Donez. During the following night Bäke’s Vorausabteilung consisting of II. Abteilung Panzer-Regiment 11 and the II. Schützenpanzerwagen Bataillon Panzergrenadier-Regiment 114 thrust past enemy anti-tank gun positions before finding itself side by side with a column of 20 T-34s. Then six T-34s began to surround Bäke’s command Panzer which was only armed with a wooden gun as camouflage. Bäke and his Ordonnanzoffizier Leutnant Zobel left the command Panzer and eliminated four T-34s with magnetic anti-tank grenades. The charges placed by the Major on the fifth and sixth tanks did not explode. Bäke clambered onto an approaching Panzer sent to support them and directed it to destroy both of these enemy tanks. The partially destroyed bridge near Rschawez was taken.  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #49 (21.02.1944) as Oberstleutnant der Reserve and commander Panzer-Regiment 11. Awarded for the special operation that his specially prepared schwere Panzer-Regiment Bäke consisting of the Stab Panzer-Regiment 11 34 Tigers of the schwere Panzer-Abteilung 503 and 47 Panthers of the II. Abteilung Panzer-Regiment 23 conducted in the time period 23 January to 1 February 1944. During this armoured raid Bäke launched a thrust via Shaskow in order to reduce pressure on the III. Panzer-Korps. In the process 268 Soviet tanks and assault guns as well as 156 guns were destroyed. During the same fighting in the Balabonovka pocket Bäke personally destroyed three Soviet tanks at close range with infantry weapons earning three additional Tank Destruction Badges in Silver.
Panzervernichtungsabzeichen in Silber (three times)  
Medaille zur Erinnerung an den 1. Oktober 1938  
Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/42 Medal  
DRL Sportabzeichen in Gold  
Mentioned in Wehrmachtbericht (31.01.1944 and 06.12.1944)  
Nominated for Brillanten but rejected

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Dr. med. dent. Franz Bäke was born on 28 February 1898 in the small village of Schwarzenfels near Schlüchtern in the Province of Hesse-Nassau within the German Empire. He volunteered for military service in May 1915 at the age of seventeen and was assigned first to the 5th Westphalian Infantry Regiment Number 53 in Cologne before transferring to the 2nd Silesian Grenadier Regiment King Frederick III Number 11 and later the 1st Silesian Grenadier Regiment King Frederick William II Number 10 on the Western Front. As an officer candidate he earned the Iron Cross Second Class on 15 July 1916 for bravery in action and was promoted to Gefreiter before being severely wounded in November 1916 and reassigned to the Westphalian Foot Artillery Regiment Number 7. He rose to Unteroffizier and then Vizefeldwebel in 1918 while being wounded twice more and returned to the front in September of that year. Discharged from the regular army in January 1919 he immediately joined the right-wing paramilitary Freikorps Epp where he served until 1921 while simultaneously beginning studies in medicine and dentistry. He passed his state examination in 1922 and received his doctorate in dental medicine in 1923 earning the professional title Dr. med. dent. That same year he opened his own successful dental practice in Hagen in Westphalia where he would spend most of his civilian life.

No reliable historical records provide information on his parents siblings spouse children or religious affiliation and he is not known to have used any nickname. In March 1933 he joined the Sturmabteilung rising eventually to the rank of SA-Standartenführer by 1944 though this affiliation remained secondary to his reserve military duties. In 1937 he performed voluntary training with the reconnaissance detachment of the 6th Panzer Division in Münster and on 1 December of that year he was commissioned as a Leutnant der Reserve. Mobilized in 1938 he participated in the occupation of the Sudetenland as platoon leader and deputy company commander in the 3rd Company of Panzer-Abteilung 65. During the Polish Campaign of 1939 he first led the light supply column of the battalion then served as a platoon leader in the 2nd Company before being promoted to Oberleutnant on 1 November 1939 and taking command of the 1st Company. In the Battle of France in 1940 his unit fought as part of the 1st Light Division which was redesignated the 6th Panzer Division in October 1939 and he was wounded three times earning the Iron Cross First Class on 1 June 1940 along with the 1939 Wound Badge in Gold.

Transferred to the Eastern Front in 1941 Bäke served initially as ordnance officer on the staff of Panzer-Regiment 11 and was promoted to Hauptmann on 1 May 1941. He took part in Operation Barbarossa and the subsequent battles including the failed relief attempt for the encircled Sixth Army at Stalingrad during Operation Winter Storm in December 1942. On 1 April 1942 he assumed command of the second battalion of Panzer-Regiment 11 and was promoted to Major on 1 August 1942. His most celebrated actions began in the winter of 1942-1943 west of the Don River. On New Years Day 1943 Bäke led his battalion in intense urban fighting inside the village of Nowo Marjewka against two Soviet battalions supported by approximately thirty tanks. Twenty-seven enemy tanks were destroyed in the close-quarters combat and Bäke then launched an immediate counterattack on his own initiative smashing a Soviet armored wedge that had driven between his position and elements of the 114th Panzergrenadier Regiment at Verkhne Obliwiski. Another thirty-two tanks including twenty T-34s were knocked out in this engagement effectively halting the Soviet 25th Tank Corps attempt to reach the vital railway line west of Morozovskaya. For these actions he received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 11 January 1943 as Major der Reserve and commander of II. Abteilung Panzer-Regiment 11 within the 6th Panzer Division.

During the Battle of Kursk in July 1943 Bäke again demonstrated extraordinary initiative and personal courage. On 11 July the reinforced Panzer-Regiment 11 advanced twelve kilometers beyond the Donets River northeast of Belgorod and reached the village of Kasatschja. Defying divisional orders Bäke convinced his regimental commander to launch a nighttime assault on the village of Rschawez to seize a bridgehead across the Northern Donets. His forward detachment consisting of his own battalion and the half-track battalion of Panzergrenadier-Regiment 114 bypassed enemy antitank positions only to find itself alongside a column of twenty T-34s. Six of the Soviet tanks began encircling Bäke's command vehicle which was camouflaged with a wooden dummy gun. Bäke and his ordnance officer Leutnant Zobel dismounted under fire and destroyed four T-34s using hand-held magnetic antitank grenades. When the charges on the fifth and sixth tanks failed to detonate Bäke climbed aboard a supporting Panzer that had arrived and directed its fire to eliminate both remaining enemy vehicles. The partially demolished bridge at Rschawez was captured and the bridgehead secured. These exploits earned him the Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross on 1 August 1943 still as Major der Reserve commanding the same battalion within the 6th Panzer Division under Armee-Abteilung Kempf.

By mid-July 1943 Bäke had assumed temporary command of the entire Panzer-Regiment 11 and on 1 November 1943 he was promoted to Oberstleutnant der Reserve and confirmed as regimental commander. In January 1944 he was given leadership of a specially assembled heavy armored formation known as schwere Panzer-Regiment Bäke comprising the staff of Panzer-Regiment 11 thirty-four Tiger I tanks from schwere Panzer-Abteilung 503 and forty-seven Panther tanks from the second battalion of Panzer-Regiment 23 together with supporting artillery and engineers. From 23 January to 1 February this ad-hoc regiment conducted a daring thrust via Shaskow to relieve pressure on the III Panzer Corps during the fighting around the Cherkassy Pocket. In the Balabonovka pocket alone the formation accounted for 268 Soviet tanks and assault guns plus 156 guns while Bäke personally destroyed three additional enemy tanks at point-blank range using infantry weapons earning three Tank Destruction Badges in Silver. The operation helped open a corridor that allowed thousands of encircled German troops to escape. For this outstanding leadership and success he was awarded the Swords to the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves on 21 February 1944 becoming the 49th recipient of the Swords as Oberstleutnant der Reserve and commander of Panzer-Regiment 11.

Following the Cherkassy fighting the regiment continued operations in the Kamenets-Podolsky pocket in March 1944. Promoted to Oberst on 1 May 1944 Bäke was appointed commander of Panzer-Brigade 106 Feldherrnhalle in July 1944. The brigade saw heavy action in the West particularly on 7 and 8 September 1944 when it launched a counterattack against the American 90th Infantry Division near Aumetz in Lorraine suffering severe losses including thirty tanks and nearly a hundred other vehicles reducing its strength to barely twenty-five percent. Transferred to Hungary the brigade fought in defensive actions before Bäke on 9 March 1945 assumed command of Panzer-Division Feldherrnhalle 2 formerly the 13th Panzer Division within the Feldherrnhalle Corps. On 1 January 1945 he had been transferred from the reserve to the active officer list and on 20 April 1945 he was promoted to Generalmajor while officially confirmed as divisional commander. His division conducted a fighting withdrawal through Hungary and into Czechoslovakia until the final surrender on 8 May 1945 when Bäke and his remaining troops capitulated to American forces.

Held as a prisoner of war for approximately two years he was released in 1947 and returned to Hagen where he reopened his dental practice and lived quietly until his death on 12 December 1978 at the age of eighty. He is buried in Hagen. Throughout his career Bäke was mentioned by name in the Wehrmachtbericht on 31 January 1944 and 6 December 1944 and he received numerous additional decorations including the Panzer Combat Badge in Silver with the special 100-engagement clasp the Honour Cross for Front Fighters the Eastern Front Medal the Sudetenland Medal the German Sports Badge in Gold and the Wound Badge in Gold from both world wars. He was nominated for the Diamonds to the Knight's Cross by the 1st and 19th Armies for his leadership of Panzer-Brigade 106 but the recommendation was rejected at the highest level. As a non-professional soldier and practicing dentist who volunteered for every major campaign Bäke exemplified the effectiveness of reserve officers in the panzer forces. His combination of bold tactical decisions personal bravery in close combat and skillful handling of armored formations under overwhelming odds made him one of the most respected tank leaders of the German Army. Post-war accounts sometimes exaggerated his exploits particularly in popular literature but the documented record of his leadership in Nowo Marjewka Rschawez and the Cherkassy relief remains among the most impressive of any reserve officer in the Wehrmacht.


Source:  
- https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/  
- https://en.wikipedia.org/  
- https://www.tracesofwar.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.bundesarchiv.de/en/  
- https://www.geni.com/  
- Scherzer, Veit. Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939-1945. Jena 2007.  
- Stockert, Franz. Die Ritterkreuzträger der Deutschen Wehrmacht. Osnabrück 2012.  
- Wegmann, Günter. Die Ritterkreuzträger der Deutschen Wehrmacht. Osnabrück 2004.

Bio of General der Panzertruppe Hermann Breith (1892-1964)


Full name: Hermann Albert Breith  
Nickname: none  

Date of Birth: 07.05.1892 - Pirmasens, Rheinland-Pfalz (German Empire) 
Date of Death: 03.09.1964 - Pech district of Wachtberg, Nordrhein-Westfalen (West Germany)

Battles and operations: World War I (Western Front including Battles of the Somme, Verdun, Flanders; Eastern Front including Kowel and Naratsch-See), Invasion of Poland 1939, Battle of France 1940, Operation Barbarossa, Battle of Moscow, defensive battles north of Kursk 1942, Case Blue 1942, Battle of Kharkov, Operation Citadel, relief of the Cherkassy Pocket 1944, defensive battles in Galicia, Baranow bridgehead, Hungary and Austria 1944-1945  

NSDAP number: none (regular Heer officer)  
Religion: unknown  
Parents: unknown  
Siblings: unknown  
Spouse: unknown  
Children: unknown  

Promotions  
16.04.1910 Fahnenjunker  
13.08.1910 Fahnenjunker-Unteroffizier  
10.11.1910 Fähnrich  
13.09.1911 Leutnant  
25.11.1916 Oberleutnant  
17.03.1924 Hauptmann  
01.12.1933 Major  
01.04.1936 Oberstleutnant  
01.01.1939 Oberst  
01.08.1941 Generalmajor  
01.11.1942 Generalleutnant  
13.02.1943 General der Panzertruppe  

Career  
16.04.1910-1918 Infantry service in Infanterie-Regiment 60 and transfers including Infanterie-Regiment 166 (MG company leader, regimental adjutant, brigade adjutant on Western and Eastern Fronts)  
1919-1920 Freikorps and transitional Reichswehr service (Ersatz-Bataillon, Radfahrkompanie, Schützen-Regiment 18)  
1920-1925 Adjutant and company officer roles in infantry regiments  
01.10.1925-1931 Kraftfahr units and company commander in motorised formations  
01.06.1931-1934 Referent for Panzer and anti-tank affairs in Reichswehrministerium  
1935-1938 Commanding Officer II. Abteilung / Panzer-Regiment 5  
10.11.1938-14.02.1940 Commanding Officer Panzer-Regiment 36 (4. Panzer-Division)  
15.02.1940-14.11.1940 Commanding Officer 5. Panzer-Brigade  
14.11.1940-03.06.1941 Staff of General der Schnellen Truppen / OKH  
22.10.1941-01.10.1942 Commanding Officer 3. Panzer-Division  
02.10.1942-02.01.1943 Führerreserve OKH  
03.01.1943-08.05.1945 Commanding General III. Panzerkorps (with brief attachment periods)  
08.05.1945-05.1947 Prisoner of war in American custody  
05.1947 Released  

Awards and decorations  
10.09.1914 Iron Cross 2nd Class 1914  
30.07.1916 Iron Cross 1st Class 1914  
16.04.1917 Hanseatic Cross of Hamburg  
28.10.1918 Knight's Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern with Swords  
23.09.1939 Clasp to Iron Cross 2nd Class 1939  
02.10.1939 Clasp to Iron Cross 1st Class 1939  
03.06.1940 Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes, as Oberst and commander of 5. Panzer-Brigade. Awarded for his leadership in the first major tank battle against French armoured forces. On 13 May 1940 near Merdorp (approximately 6 km southwest of Hannut in Belgium), his brigade encountered and decisively engaged the leading French armour formations. The press citation published at the time stated: “Oberst Hermann Breith and his Panzer-Brigade bloodily brushed aside the first formation of French armour they encountered, destroying a large number of hostile tanks in the process. Later on he overcame the heaviest enemy defensive fire with exemplary attacking spirit and personally led his Brigade to victory despite being wounded himself.” Breith’s units were officially credited with the destruction of more than 30 French tanks in this single engagement. He continued to direct operations even after being wounded on 15 May 1940, personally leading the brigade forward under intense artillery and anti-tank fire until the French resistance in the sector was broken. The recommendation was submitted on 29 May 1940 and the award was presented on 3 June 1940. This action formed part of the larger Battle of Hannut, one of the earliest large-scale tank clashes of the war.
01.06.1940 Wound Badge in Black  
20.05.1940 Panzer Badge in Silver  
31.01.1942 Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #69, as Generalmajor and commander of 3. Panzer-Division. Awarded for a successful defensive counterattack operation north of Kursk in late January 1942. On 30 January 1942 his division eliminated a dangerous Soviet penetration in the sector Butyrki–Judinka–Stakanowo. Through coordinated armoured and infantry assaults, the 3. Panzer-Division inflicted heavy losses on the attacking Soviet forces (including numerous tanks) and forced the surviving enemy units to withdraw across the Tim River. The Wehrmachtbericht of 31 January 1942 explicitly mentioned the division and its commander for this achievement. The Oak Leaves were awarded the same day, recognising not only the immediate tactical success but also the stabilising effect of the counterattacks on the wider sector of Army Group Centre during the difficult winter fighting of 1941/42.
1942 Eastern Front Medal  
21.02.1944 Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #48, as General der Panzertruppe and commanding general of III. Panzerkorps. Awarded for his leadership during the relief operation for the Cherkassy Pocket (Kessel von Tscherkassy) in February 1944. His corps, composed of several Heer divisions and one Waffen-SS division, conducted the main relief attack from the west. The corps successively broke through multiple Soviet defensive lines and advanced to within a few kilometres of the encircled Kampfgruppe Stemmermann. In doing so it drew the bulk of the Soviet forces onto itself, creating the corridor that enabled the encircled German troops to break out. The official press citation read: “General der Panzertruppe Breith led an Armee-Korps comprised of several Heer Divisionen and one of the Waffen-SS that succeeded in forcing its way through to a point just to the west of the encircled Kampfgruppe Stemmermann. In the process one enemy position after another was broken through, and the bulk of the Soviet forces were drawn to the Korps. During this fighting General Breith repeatedly distinguished himself through his bravery and the skillful leadership of his Armee-Korps, and he repeatedly intervened at the hotspots of the combat from the foremost line.” From 18 February 1944 onwards the corps destroyed 728 Soviet tanks during the operation. Breith and his units were mentioned in the Wehrmachtbericht of 20 February 1944. The Swords were awarded the following day. 
Wehrmachtbericht mentions (31.01.1942, 20.02.1944, 09.09.1944, 30.10.1944)  
Honour Cross for Front Fighters  

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Hermann Albert Breith was born on 7 May 1892 in Pirmasens, a town in the German Empire. He entered the German Army in 1910 and served through the entirety of the First World War, earning the Iron Cross Second Class on 10 September 1914 and the First Class on 30 July 1916. Additional decorations from that conflict included the Knight's Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern with Swords on 28 October 1918 and the Hanseatic Cross of Hamburg on 16 April 1917. After the armistice, Breith remained in the Reichswehr and later the Wehrmacht, serving as an advisor in the Reichswehrministerium between 1931 and 1934. 

By the mid-1930s the German Army was expanding its armored forces, and Breith found himself at the forefront of this development. On 15 October 1935 he took command of the 2nd Battalion of the 5th Panzer Regiment, holding the post until 10 November 1938. He then assumed command of Panzer-Regiment 36, which he led until 14 February 1940. With the outbreak of the Second World War, Breith advanced quickly. Promoted to colonel on 1 January 1939, he took charge of the 5th Panzer Brigade on 15 February 1940 and held that position through the campaign in the West. 

During the fighting in Belgium and France in May 1940, Breith distinguished himself in combat near Merdorp on 13 May. His brigade encountered the first major French armored formation it had faced, destroyed dozens of enemy tanks, and pressed forward under heavy fire despite Breith himself being wounded. For these actions he received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 3 June 1940 as the 69th recipient, along with the Wound Badge in Black and the Panzer Badge in Silver. He was also mentioned in the Wehrmachtbericht. After the French campaign he served briefly in staff roles, attached to the General of Mobile Troops at Army High Command until early June 1941, followed by a short period of unemployment and attachment to the 3rd Panzer Division.

On 22 October 1941 Breith was given command of the 3rd Panzer Division, one of the most experienced armored formations on the Eastern Front. He led it through the harsh winter of 1941-42 and into the following year, rising to the rank of major general on 1 August 1941 and lieutenant general on 1 November 1942. His division played a key role in defensive fighting north of Kursk in late January 1942, where it eliminated a dangerous Soviet penetration near Butyrki, Judinka, and Stakanowo, inflicting heavy losses and forcing the enemy back across the Tim River. For this success Breith was awarded the Oak Leaves to his Knight's Cross on 31 January 1942 as the 69th recipient. He continued to command the division until 2 October 1942, after which he spent several months in the Führerreserve at OKH.

Breith returned to active duty in early 1943. On 3 January he was appointed acting commander of III Panzer Corps, and on 1 March 1943 he was promoted to general of panzer troops and confirmed in permanent command of the corps. He would lead this formation, with brief interruptions, until the final days of the war. The corps fought in the southern sector of the Eastern Front through the intense battles of 1943 and 1944. One of its most notable achievements came during the Korsun-Cherkassy Pocket in February 1944. Breith personally directed a relief force composed of several army divisions and a Waffen-SS unit. His corps broke through successive Soviet defensive lines, drew the bulk of enemy forces onto itself, and advanced close enough to allow the encircled German troops to break out. Breith repeatedly placed himself at the hottest points of the fighting, demonstrating both bravery and tactical skill. For this operation he received the Swords to his Knight's Cross on 21 February 1944 as the 48th recipient. He was mentioned again in the Wehrmachtbericht on several occasions, including 20 February and 9 October 1944.

Throughout 1944 and early 1945 III Panzer Corps remained heavily engaged in Ukraine, Romania, and later defensive actions farther west as the Red Army advanced. Breith maintained command through the final collapse of German forces in the East. On 8 May 1945 he was taken into American captivity along with the remnants of his corps. He remained a prisoner of war until his release in May 1947. 

After returning to civilian life, Hermann Breith lived quietly in West Germany. He died on 3 September 1964 at the age of 72 in the Pech district of Wachtberg, near Bonn. Over the course of his long career he had risen from a young officer in the Imperial Army to one of the Wehrmacht's most experienced panzer leaders. In addition to the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords, he had accumulated the 1939 Clasp to both classes of the Iron Cross, the Eastern Front Medal, and numerous other campaign and service awards. His leadership of armored formations in both offensive and defensive operations on multiple fronts left a lasting record in the history of the German Army during the Second World War.


Source:  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermann_Breith  
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermann_Breith  
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/28682/Breith-Hermann.htm  
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Personenregister/B/BreithH.htm  
https://generals.dk/general/Breith/Hermann/Germany.html  
https://rk.balsi.de/ (Ritterkreuzträger database)  
https://www.unithistories.com/  
https://grokipedia.com/page/Hermann_Breith  
https://forum.axishistory.com/  
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/  
https://www.bundesarchiv.de/en/  
https://www.geni.com/  
Wegmann, Günter. Die Ritterkreuzträger der Deutschen Wehrmacht 1939-1945. Teil VIIIa: Panzertruppe Band 1: A-E. Bissendorf 2004.  
Scherzer, Veit. Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939-1945. Jena 2007.  
Additional biographical sketches from books.google.com searches on Ritterkreuzträger der Panzertruppe.

Bio of Generalmajor Erich Bärenfänger (1915-1945)


Full name: Erich Bärenfänger  
Nickname: No information

Date of Birth: 12.01.1915 - Menden, Westfalen (German Empire)  
Date of Death: 02.05.1945 or 03.05.1945 - Prenzlauer Berg, Berlin (Germany)  

Battles and Operations: Polish Campaign, Western Campaign, Operation Barbarossa, Siege of Sevastopol, Caucasus Campaign, Kuban Bridgehead, Kerch Peninsula defensive battles, Battle of Berlin  

Religion: No information  
Parents: Father postman (name unknown), mother unknown  
Siblings: No information  
Spouse: Unknown name (committed suicide together with him)  
Children: No information  

Promotions:  
01.10.1937 Gefreiter  
01.06.1938 Unteroffizier  
20.04.1939 Leutnant der Reserve (RDA 01.04.1939)  
15.10.1941 Oberleutnant (RDA 01.02.1939)  
31.08.1942 Hauptmann (RDA 01.08.1942)  
10.06.1943 Major (RDA 01.04.1943)  
23.01.1944 Oberstleutnant (RDA 01.02.1944)  
25.04.1945 Generalmajor (RDA 20.04.1945, skipping Oberst)  

Career:  
16.10.1936 entered the Wehrmacht as conscript, Infanterie-Regiment 67  
Later transferred to Infanterie-Regiment 123, 50. Infanterie-Division  
01.04.1939 Leutnant der Reserve shortly before mobilisation  
1939-1940 Polish and Western Campaigns, platoon leader  
1941 transferred to active service, Oberleutnant  
End of September 1941 Führer 7. Kompanie, Infanterie-Regiment 123  
January 1942 Kompaniechef, Infanterie-Regiment 123  
1942 Führer III. Bataillon, Infanterie-Regiment 123 / 50. Infanterie-Division  
Later Kommandeur III. Bataillon, Grenadier-Regiment 123, 50. Infanterie-Division  
1943-1944 heavy defensive fighting on the Kerch Peninsula  
Early 1944 transferred to Führerreserve, Regimentskommandeur-Lehrgang Döberitz  
Mid-June 1944 Inspector for Wehrertüchtigung with Reichsjugendführer  
01.08.1944 Generalinspekteur für den Führernachwuchs  
01.11.1944 again Führerreserve, kommandiert to Reichsjugendführung  
April 1945 Kommandeur Verteidigungsabschnitt A (later also B) in the Battle of Berlin  
25.04.1945 promoted Generalmajor for services in Berlin defence  

Awards and Decorations:  
Goldenes SA-Sportabzeichen (12.11.1934)  
DRL-Sportabzeichen in Gold  
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 4. Klasse (02.10.1936)  
Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse (12.06.1940)  
Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse (21.06.1940)  
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Schwarz (01.07.1940)  
Infanterie-Sturmabzeichen in Silber (23.07.1941)  
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Silber (09.08.1941)  
Ritterkreuz des Ordens der Krone von Rumänien (13.08.1941)  
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold (26.12.1941)  
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Gold (10.01.1942)  
Bulgarischer Militärorden für Tapferkeit IV. Stufe, I. Klasse (07.02.1942)  
Medaille Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/42 (05.08.1942)  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (07.08.1942. some sources list 27.08.1942 due to administrative processing) as Oberleutnant and Führer III. Bataillon / Infanterie-Regiment 123 / 50. Infanterie-Division. Awarded for a bold night attack launched on his own initiative during the final assault on Sevastopol (Crimea campaign). On the night of 29/30 June 1942, Bärenfänger led his battalion against a heavily fortified Soviet bunker position south of Hill 1658. The surprise attack succeeded with minimal German losses, allowing friendly forces to encircle and destroy Soviet troops in the "Champagne ravine" (Champagner-Schlucht). This breakthrough enabled the regiment to storm another bunker line near Hill 1670 the next morning and permitted the entire 50. Infanterie-Division to advance rapidly to the southeastern edge of Sevastopol on 30 June 1942 without facing unexpectedly heavy resistance. The action was decisive in the division's push during the siege.  
Ehrenblattspange des Heeres (14.08.1942)  
Krimschild (02.11.1942)  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #243 (17.05.1943) as Hauptmann and Kommandeur III. Bataillon / Grenadier-Regiment 123 / 50. Infanterie-Division. Awarded for outstanding tactical skill, personal bravery, and leadership during heavy defensive and withdrawal fighting in the Caucasus and Kuban bridgehead. Key deed: In spring 1943 (after Romanian units on his flank collapsed), Bärenfänger personally led a counterattack that repelled two Soviet regiments ("leitete er einen Gegenangriff ein, bei dem zwei sowjetische Regimenter zurückgeschlagen werden konnten"). His battalion distinguished itself in sustained combat along the Terek River and during the subsequent withdrawal to the Kuban bridgehead (evacuated February 1943). These actions helped stabilize the front and prevent a Soviet breakthrough despite intense pressure. 
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #45 (23.01.1944) as Major and Kommandeur III. Bataillon / Grenadier-Regiment 123 / 50. Infanterie-Division (simultaneously promoted Oberstleutnant). Awarded for exceptional defensive leadership and counterattacks on the Kerch Peninsula (Crimea) against repeated Soviet offensives. Specific actions included: From 13–17 November 1943 and 4–6 December 1943: His battalion repulsed numerous Soviet storm attacks; Bärenfänger stayed in the line with his men despite suffering his 6th and 7th wounds; On 10 January 1944: He personally led an assault that recaptured the important Hill 125.6; Sustained bitter close-quarters fighting to hold and defend Hill 133.3 (north of Kerch, northeast of Bulganak), a key height that was critical to the peninsula's defense. These stands prevented Soviet breakthroughs on the Kerch front and demonstrated extraordinary determination. The division commander (Generalmajor Sixt) recommended the Schwerter specifically for these Crimea/Kerch actions.
Mentioned in Wehrmachtbericht

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Erich Bärenfänger was born on January 12, 1915, in Menden, a town in the Province of Westphalia within the German Empire. He grew up during a period of political and economic turmoil in Germany following the First World War. In 1933, he joined the Sturmabteilung, the Nazi Party's paramilitary wing commonly known as the brownshirts or SA. This early affiliation reflected his alignment with the rising National Socialist movement.

Bärenfänger entered military service in the reserves on October 16, 1936, with the 67th Infantry Regiment. He progressed through the enlisted ranks before being commissioned as a Leutnant der Reserve in 1939. His active officer career accelerated after the outbreak of the Second World War. He participated in the invasions of Poland in 1939 and France in 1940, gaining combat experience as an infantry platoon leader.

During Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, Bärenfänger served on the Eastern Front. He rose steadily through the ranks: Leutnant in September 1941, Oberleutnant shortly thereafter, Hauptmann in 1942, Major in June 1943, and Oberstleutnant in February 1944. He commanded the III. Battalion of Infanterie-Regiment 123 (later redesignated Grenadier-Regiment 123) within the 50th Infantry Division.

His battlefield performance earned him significant decorations. On August 7, 1942, as an Oberleutnant and battalion leader, he received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross for actions on the Eastern Front. On May 17, 1943, as a Hauptmann commanding the same battalion, he was awarded the Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross. On January 23, 1944, as a Major still leading the battalion, he received the Swords to the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves, one of the highest distinctions bestowed by Nazi Germany for military valor. These awards placed him among the most highly decorated officers of the Wehrmacht.

In the later stages of the war, Bärenfänger was involved in defensive operations, including on the Crimean Peninsula in early 1944. By April 1945, as the Red Army advanced toward Berlin, he found himself in the capital. Adolf Hitler personally promoted the 30-year-old Oberstleutnant to Generalmajor on April 20 or 22, 1945, skipping the rank of Oberst entirely. This made Bärenfänger one of the youngest generals in the Heer and the second-youngest in the entire Wehrmacht after Dietrich Peltz.

During the Battle of Berlin, Bärenfänger commanded defense sectors in the eastern part of the city, particularly Sector A, where he organized resistance against the advancing Soviet forces. His wife reportedly remained by his side during the fighting. He directed troops in desperate counterattacks and attempts to hold key positions amid the collapsing German defenses. One notable incident involved him allegedly directing from the turret of a Tiger tank in a makeshift armored formation.

As the situation became hopeless in the final days of April and early May 1945, Bärenfänger attempted a breakout toward Oranienburg with small combat groups on the night of May 1 to 2. The effort failed. On May 2, 1945, in a side street near the Prenzlauer Berg underground station in Berlin, he committed suicide alongside his young wife and her brother. A devoted Nazi to the end, he chose death over capture as Soviet troops overran the city. He was 30 years old.

Erich Bärenfänger's rapid rise from a junior officer to general exemplified the combination of aggressive leadership and ideological commitment that the Nazi regime rewarded during the war. His career ended in the ruins of Berlin, symbolizing the final collapse of the Third Reich.


Source :  
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/  
https://en.wikipedia.org/  
https://www.tracesofwar.com/  
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erich_B%C3%A4renf%C3%A4nger  
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.bundesarchiv.de/en/  
https://www.geni.com/  
https://books.google.com/  
Generalmajor Erich Bärenfänger. Vom Leutnant zum General. Flechsig Verlag, Würzburg.  
Scherzer, Veit: Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939-1945. Scherzers Militaer-Verlag, Ranis/Jena 2007.  
Additional biographical references from unit histories of the 50. Infanterie-Division and Wehrmacht award documentation.

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Bio of Major Heinrich Prinz zu Sayn-Wittgenstein (1916-1944)


Full name: Heinrich Alexander Ludwig Peter Prinz zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Sayn  
Nickname: Heini

Date of Birth: 14.08.1916 - Kopenhagen, Denmark  
Date of Death: 21.01.1944 - near Luebars by Stendal, Germany
Buried at: German War Cemetery Ysselsteyn, Netherlands (Plot TH, Row 1, Grave 2)

Battles and Operations: Battle of France, Battle of Britain, Operation Barbarossa, Defence of the Reich  
No party number (Luftwaffe officer)  
Religion: Protestant (family background)  
Parents: Prince Gustav Alexander zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Sayn (diplomat) and Walburga Baroness von Friesen  
Siblings: two brothers (Ludwig and Alexander)  
Spouse: none (unmarried)  
Children: none  

Promotions:  
01.06.1938 Leutnant  
00.08.1942 Oberleutnant  
00.10.1942 Hauptmann  
01.01.1944 Major  

Career:  
00.00.1916-17.12.1935 various schools in Copenhagen, Switzerland (Lake Geneva, Davos, Montreux), Neubeuern and Freiburg im Breisgau (Abitur at Realgymnasium)  
12.04.1932 joined Hitler Youth (later Kameradschaftsfuehrer and Wehrsportleiter)  
04.1937 joined 17. Kavallerie-Regiment Bamberg after Reichsarbeitsdienst  
Summer 1937 transferred to Luftwaffe  
10.1937 flight training at Fliegerschule Braunschweig  
06.1938 officer commission  
Winter 1938-39 Kampfbeobachter with KG 54  
1940 observer and later pilot with KG 1 Hindenburg (He 111)  
03.1941 combat missions with KG 1 and KG 51 during Operation Barbarossa (150 missions total as bomber crew)  
08.1941 transferred to night fighter force  
01.11.1941 Staffelkapitaen 9./Nachtjagdgeschwader 2  
01.12.1942 Gruppenkommandeur IV./Nachtjagdgeschwader 5 (later redesignated I./NJG 100)  
15.08.1943 Gruppenkommandeur II./Nachtjagdgeschwader 3  
01.12.1943 Gruppenkommandeur II./Nachtjagdgeschwader 2  
01.01.1944 Geschwaderkommodore Nachtjagdgeschwader 2  

Awards and Decorations:  
Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse (05.06.1940)  
Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse (26.06.1940)  
Luftwaffe Ehrenpokal (15.09.1941)  
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold (21.08.1942) as Oberleutnant in 6./NJG 2  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (02.10.1942) as Hauptmann and Staffelkapitaen 9./Nachtjagdgeschwader 2, after reaching 22 confirmed aerial victories, all at night. He transferred to night fighters in early 1942 after earlier bomber/observer service. His first nocturnal victory came on the night of 6/7 May 1942 (a Bristol Blenheim or similar). He rapidly built his score during operations over the Netherlands and later the Eastern Front, often flying the Junkers Ju 88. By October 1942 he had 22 kills, earning the Ritterkreuz. The award was presented by General Josef Kammhuber (head of the night fighter force). No single “decisive mission” is cited—it was the cumulative result of his early effectiveness in the Nachtjagd.
Front Flying Clasp for Night Fighters in Gold  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #290 (31.08.1943) as Hauptmann and Kommandeur I./Nachtjagdgeschwader 100, after reaching 54 aerial victories (most sources; one lists 47 at confirmation).
By mid-1943 he was a proven Experte. Notable feats contributing to this total included: An “ace-in-a-day” performance on 20 July 1943 near Oryol (Eastern Front), where he shot down seven Soviet aircraft in one night (six of them within 47 minutes, taking his score to victories 36–41); Additional multi-kill nights in July–August 1943 (e.g., three victories on 1 August and three more on 3 August). The Eichenlaub recognized his leadership as a group commander and his rising score during the intense Eastern Front night fighting and early Defence of the Reich operations. The award was personally presented by Adolf Hitler at the Wolf’s Lair (Führerhauptquartier) in East Prussia on 22 September 1943, alongside other aces (Günther Rall and Walter Nowotny received Swords that day). He also received a congratulatory letter from the 4. Jagd-Division commander.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #44 (23.01.1944) posthumously as Major and Geschwaderkommodore Nachtjagdgeschwader 2, for overall record of 83 victories (including leadership of night fighter wings) and, crucially, his final extraordinary mission on 21 January 1944. On the night of 21 January 1944, flying a Ju 88 R-4 (R4+XM) in a “Zahme Sau” (Tame Boar) free-hunting mission near Berlin, Wittgenstein and his crew (Feldwebel Friedrich Ostheimer as radio operator and Unteroffizier Kurt Matzuleit as mechanic) engaged a large RAF bomber stream. Between approximately 22:00 and 22:40 he claimed five four-engined Lancasters in rapid succession: First at ~22:05 (observed exploding), Second at 22:10–22:15, Third at ~22:30 (exploded), Fourth at 22:40 (hit the ground), Fifth during a final attack (the bomber was already burning when Wittgenstein came under attack). During the fifth engagement, British escort fighters (possibly Mosquitos) hit his Ju 88; the left wing caught fire. He ordered his crew to bail out (they survived). Wittgenstein attempted to nurse the burning aircraft back or bail out himself, but his parachute was found unopened. His body was recovered the next day near the wreckage in a forest near Lübars (Stendal area), with the cause of death listed as a closed fracture of the skull and facial bones (likely from striking the aircraft’s tail fin during egress). At the time of his death he was the Luftwaffe’s leading night fighter ace. The Swords were awarded just two days later in recognition of his total score, command achievements, and this final act of aggression in which he downed five bombers before perishing. These awards reflect the Luftwaffe’s system of honoring night fighter aces for cumulative success in the brutal nocturnal air war over Europe. Wittgenstein remains one of the top three night fighter aces in history (behind only Heinz-Wolfgang Schnaufer and Helmut Lent). His remains were later reinterred at Ysselsteyn German war cemetery in the Netherlands.

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Heinrich Prinz zu Sayn-Wittgenstein was born into an aristocratic family in Copenhagen where his father served as a German diplomat. After a peripatetic education across Europe he completed his Abitur in Freiburg and joined the Wehrmacht via the cavalry before transferring to the Luftwaffe. He flew as observer and pilot in bomber units during the campaigns in France and Britain and then over 150 missions in the East with KG 1 and KG 51.  

In August 1941 he volunteered for the night fighter arm and quickly rose to Staffelkapitaen of 9./NJG 2. His first nocturnal victory came on the night of 6/7 May 1942 when he downed a Bristol Blenheim west of Walcheren. By early October 1942 he had reached 22 confirmed night victories, including multiple three-victory nights such as 31 July and 10 September 1942. These achievements, combined with his leadership of the Staffel, earned him the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 2 October 1942. The award recognised not only his personal score but also his aggressive tactics and ability to locate and engage bombers in darkness using early Lichtenstein radar and visual contact.  

Transferred to the Eastern Front as Gruppenkommandeur of IV./NJG 5 (later I./NJG 100) in December 1942, he continued to excel. On the night of 20/21 July 1943 alone he claimed seven Soviet aircraft near Oryol, six of them within 47 minutes, demonstrating exceptional skill in target-rich night conditions. Additional triple victories followed on 1 August and 3 August. By 31 August 1943 his total stood at 54 victories and he received the Eichenlaub (290th award). The Oak Leaves were presented personally by Adolf Hitler at the Wolfsschanze on 22 September 1943 together with other aces. At that time he flew mainly the Ju 88, which he preferred over the Bf 110 for its range and firepower.  

On 1 January 1944 he was appointed Geschwaderkommodore of NJG 2. His score had reached 68 by then. On the night of 20/21 January 1944, during a Zahme Sau intercept mission near Berlin in a Ju 88 (Werknummer 750467), he claimed five four-engined RAF bombers (Lancasters and a Halifax) between 22:00 and 22:40. During the fifth attack his own aircraft was hit by defensive fire from a bomber or possibly a Mosquito escort, setting the wing ablaze. He ordered his radio operator Friedrich Ostheimer and mechanic Kurt Matzuleit to bale out; both survived. Wittgenstein attempted to nurse the burning aircraft back but crashed in a forest near Luebars. His body was found the next day with a fractured skull; the parachute had not opened. At the time of his death his total stood at 83 nocturnal victories (33 on the Eastern Front, 50 on the Western Front). He was mentioned in the Wehrmachtbericht and posthumously awarded the Schwerter (44th award) on 23 January 1944 in recognition of his outstanding record and command achievements. He was initially buried at Deelen airfield and re-interred in 1948 at Ysselsteyn German War Cemetery alongside fellow aristocratic night fighter pilot Egmont Prinz zur Lippe-Weißenfeld.  

Unique and interesting facts include that Sayn-Wittgenstein came from one of Germany's oldest princely houses and was a descendant of a Russian field marshal. He possessed an almost intuitive sixth sense for locating enemy aircraft, described by comrades as a personal radar. He was known for strict discipline in the air, once confining a radio operator to quarters for losing contact, yet pardoning him after a successful mission. By 1943 he had grown disillusioned with the regime and reportedly contemplated actions against Hitler, though he continued fighting out of duty and ambition to surpass other aces. He flew over 320 combat missions in total.


Source:  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinrich_Prinz_zu_Sayn-Wittgenstein  
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/26218/Sayn-Wittgenstein-Prinz-zu--Heinrich.htm  
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Personenregister/S/SaynWittgensteinHPv.htm  
https://grokipedia.com/page/Heinrich_Prinz_zu_Sayn-Wittgenstein  
https://ww2gravestone.com/people/sayn-wittgenstein-heinrich-alexander-ludwig-peter-prinz-zu/  
https://www.ww2.dk/lwoffz.html  
https://aircrewremembered.com/KrackerDatabase/?q=units  
https://forum.axishistory.com/  
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/  
https://www.bundesarchiv.de/en/  
https://www.geni.com/  
https://books.google.com/ (searches on Luftwaffe night fighters)  
Scherzer, Veit. Die Ritterkreuztraeger 1939-1945. Jena 2007.  
Goss, Christopher. Princes of Darkness: The Lives of Luftwaffe Night Fighter Aces Heinrich Prinz zu Sayn-Wittgenstein and Egmont Prinz zur Lippe-Weißenfeld. 2003.  
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

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Bio of Hajo Herrmann (1913-2010)


Full name: Hans-Joachim Herrmann
Nickname: Hajo

Date of Birth: 1 August 1913 - Kiel, Schleswig-Holstein (Germany)
Date of Death: 5 November 2010 - Düsseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia (Germany)

Battles and Operations: Spanish Civil War, Polish Campaign, Norwegian Campaign, Western Campaign, Battle of Britain, Mediterranean Campaign, Arctic Convoys (including PQ-17), Defense of the Reich

NSDAP-Number: No information
SS-Number: No information (Luftwaffe officer)
Religion: No information
Parents: No information
Siblings: No information
Spouse: Ingeborg Reichelt (married 1959)
Children: Two sons (Benno and Thilo Martinho)

Promotions:
1 June 1935 Polizei-Leutnant (Hamburg State Police)
1 June 1938 Oberleutnant
1 December 1940 Hauptmann
1 March 1943 Major
1 August 1943 Oberstleutnant
1 December 1943 Oberst

Career:
May 1933 joined Hamburg State Police
1 August 1935 transferred to Luftwaffe
1936-1937 bomber pilot with Condor Legion in Spanish Civil War (flew He 111 with Kampfgruppe 88)
September 1939 transferred to 7. Staffel/KG 4
20 June 1940 Staffelkapitän 7./KG 4 "General Wever"
October 1940 transferred to KG 30
February 1941 operations in Mediterranean with III./KG 30 (Malta, Greece)
1 September 1941 Gruppenkommandeur III./KG 30 (Norway, Arctic convoys)
July 1942 transferred to Luftwaffenführungsstab (OKL staff)
April 1943 formed Nachtjagdversuchskommando and later Geschwaderkommodore JG 300 "Wilde Sau"
December 1943 Inspector of Night Fighters and later Inspector General of Night Fighters
End of 1944 commander 1. Jagddivision and 9. Fliegerdivision
April 1945 led Sonderkommando Elbe (Rammjäger unit)
11 May 1945 captured by Soviet forces, held in captivity until October 1955
1955 studied law
1965 Rechtsanwalt in Düsseldorf

Awards and Decorations:
Spanienkreuz in Bronze mit Schwertern
Eisernes Kreuz II.Klasse (October 1939)
Eisernes Kreuz I.Klasse (27 May 1940)
Luftwaffe Ehrenpokale für besondere Leistungen im Luftkrieg (28 September 1940)
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (13 October 1940) as Oberleutnant and Staffelkapitän of the 7./Kampfgeschwader 4 "General Wever". Awarded for distinguished service as a bomber pilot (primarily He 111 and later Ju 88). By this point he had flown numerous combat missions across several campaigns. Specific operations highlighted in the award citation include: Attacks on Polish troop concentrations in the Kutno pocket (September 1939), The attack on Fortress Dröbak during the Norwegian campaign (April 1940), Reconnaissance and anti-submarine sorties in the Skagerrak–Kattegat area, Raids on British landing positions at Namsos and Andalsnes (Norway), Attacks on Dutch airfields at Amsterdam-Schiphol and Bergen op Zoom (May 1940), and Mining operations in the mouth of the Thames. He had already participated in the invasion of Poland (first mission on 1 September 1939 bombing railways), operations over Norway, the Battle of Britain (including the first attack on London on the night of 7/8 September 1940 and 21 missions over the city by mid-October), and earlier Condor Legion service in Spain. By the time of the award he had completed dozens of missions and sunk or damaged significant shipping.
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold #1/61 (5 June 1942)
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #269 (2 August 1943) as Major and Geschwaderkommodore of Jagdgeschwader 300. The award recognised a mix of an earlier spectacular success as a bomber pilot, the creation of a revolutionary night-fighting tactic, and his first personal aerial victories: On the night of 6/7 April 1941 (while operating from Sicily/Greece with KG 4 or KG 30), Herrmann scored a direct hit on the British ammunition ship Clan Fraser in Piraeus harbour (Greece). The resulting explosion destroyed or damaged 11 other ships (total ~41,942 GRT) and closed the port for months. (Note: Some secondary sources incorrectly list the location as Malta; the decisive strike occurred in Piraeus during support of the Greek campaign). Development of “Wilde Sau” single-engined night-fighter tactics. In 1942–43 he recognised the limitations of the rigid Kammhuber Line (“Himmelbett”) system against RAF bomber streams. He proposed using day fighters (Bf 109 and Fw 190) at night, illuminated by the fires of the target cities. After initial rejection, he gained approval in March 1943, formed the experimental Nachtjagdversuchskommando, and established JG 300 in mid-1943. The tactic dramatically improved the defence against night raids. By the award date he had achieved at least 6 (of his eventual 9) nocturnal victories against four-engined bombers while flying Wilde Sau missions himself (he was forced to bail out twice). The combination of the earlier shipping destruction, the new tactic that was already proving effective, and his personal score earned him the Eichenlaub.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #43 (23 January 1944) as Oberst and Inspekteur der Deutschen Luftverteidigung. The award recognised his continued outstanding leadership in the defence of the Reich and the full success of his innovations: He had by then personally claimed a total of 9 aerial victories against RAF four-engined bombers (Lancasters and Halifaxes) while flying Wilde Sau sorties with JG 300 and the 30. Jagd-Division (confirmed claims include victories on 4 July, 26/28/31 July, 3 August, 24 August 1943, and two on 3 January 1944 over Berlin). The “Wilde Sau” tactic (and its further development) had become a key element of German night defence. JG 300 and follow-on units inflicted heavy losses on RAF Bomber Command during the Battle of Berlin and other raids. As Inspector General he oversaw the broader integration of single-engine night fighters and continued to fly operational missions. The award specifically cited the 9 bomber victories plus his “development of innovative fighter tactics.” By this stage he had also flown ~320 bomber missions earlier in the war and was one of the most influential tactical thinkers in the Luftwaffe’s night-fighter arm.
Gemeinsames Flugzeugfuhrer-Beobachter Abzeichen mit Brillianten

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Hans-Joachim Herrmann, often affectionately called Hajo by his comrades, was a highly decorated Luftwaffe bomber and night fighter pilot who flew more than 320 combat missions and later became a key innovator in the defense of the Reich. Starting his career in the Hamburg State Police in 1933, he transferred to the Luftwaffe in 1935 and gained early combat experience in the Spanish Civil War and the early campaigns of World War II. As Staffelkapitän of 7./KG 4 he led daring raids over Poland, Norway, the Low Countries and Britain, sinking or damaging significant shipping and earning rapid recognition for his leadership and precision bombing. 

Transferred to KG 30, Herrmann continued his successes in the Mediterranean, most notably striking the ammunition ship Clan Fraser in Piraeus harbor on 6/7 April 1941, an explosion that destroyed eleven vessels and rendered the port unusable for months. By 1942 he had moved to staff duties but soon proposed revolutionary single-engine night-fighting tactics using day fighters in illuminated skies over German cities. Authorized in 1943, these "Wilde Sau" operations with JG 300 allowed him to claim several victories himself while greatly improving the effectiveness of night defenses against Allied bomber streams. 

Appointed Inspector of Night Fighters and later commander of the 1. Jagddivision, Herrmann oversaw critical phases of the Reich air defense and in the final months of the war directed the experimental Rammjäger unit Sonderkommando Elbe. Captured by Soviet forces in May 1945, he endured ten years of harsh captivity before returning to Germany in 1955. He studied law, qualified as a Rechtsanwalt in Düsseldorf in 1965 and maintained a public profile into his later years. Herrmann is remembered as both a skilled aviator who sank approximately 65,000 tons of Allied shipping and a pioneering tactician whose ideas shaped late-war Luftwaffe night operations.


Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hajo_Herrmann
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans-Joachim_Herrmann_(Flieger)
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/34538/Herrmann-Hans-Joachim-Hajo.htm
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/
https://rk.balsi.de/index.php?action=list&cat=300
https://aircrewremembered.com/KrackerDatabase/?q=units
https://www.ww2.dk/lwoffz.html
https://forum.axishistory.com/
Scherzer, Veit. Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939-1945. Jena 2007.
Fellgiebel, Walther-Peer. Die Träger des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939-1945. Friedberg 2000.
Stockert, Franz. Die Ritterkreuzträger der Luftwaffe. Band 3. Bad Friedrichshall 2012.
Bundesarchiv personnel files references.

Bio of General der Panzertruppe Gerhard Graf von Schwerin (1899-1980)


Full name: Gerhard Helmut Detleff Graf von Schwerin
Nickname: Gerd

Date of Birth: 23.06.1899 - Hannover, German Empire
Date of Death: 29.10.1980 - Rottach-Egern, Bavaria, West Germany

Battles and Operations: World War I (Eastern and Western Fronts), Western Campaign (France 1940), North African Campaign (Mechili oasis), Operation Barbarossa, fighting near Mga and Schlüsselburg (approaches to Leningrad), Caucasus Campaign, retreat from the Caucasus, Mius Front, Zaporozhye bridgehead, Normandy Campaign, Battle of Aachen, Italian Campaign 1945

Religion: No information
Parents: Father was a civil official in the Prussian State Government (name unknown)
Siblings: No information
Spouse: Married three times (first to Herta Kannengiesser, second to Julia Zulich, third to Esther Klippel)
Children: Gabrielle (born August 1932), Christian (born January 1939)

Promotions:
10.08.1914 Fähnrich
18.07.1915 Leutnant (Patent: 02.06.1916)
01.07.1923 Leutnant (RDA: 01.03.1918)
01.04.1925 Oberleutnant
01.06.1933 Hauptmann
01.03.1937 Major (RDA: 01.10.1936)
10.11.1938 Major (RDA: 01.04.1936)
01.04.1939 Oberstleutnant (RDA: 01.08.1938)
01.08.1941 Oberst
01.10.1942 Generalmajor (RDA: 01.10.1942)
01.06.1943 Generalleutnant
01.04.1945 General der Panzertruppe

Career:
00.00.1914 entered Prussian Army as Fähnrich in 2. Foot Guards Regiment, later transferred to 2. (1st Pomeranian) Grenadier Regiment
1918 company commander and battalion adjutant on Eastern and Western Fronts (wounded 26.09.1918)
1920 discharged from army
1920-1922 managerial apprenticeship in coffee import firm (Bremen) and petroleum company (Berlin)
01.07.1923 rejoined Reichswehr as Leutnant in Infanterie-Regiment 1
1931 Infanterie-Regiment 18 (Paderborn)
01.06.1933 Hauptmann
1933-1935 General Staff course at Prussian Military Academy Berlin
1935-1937 various General Staff and company command positions (including Chef 13. Kompanie, Infanterie-Regiment 17)
10.11.1938 3. Abteilung, Generalstab des Heeres
01.04.1939 Oberstleutnant
1938-1939 staff officer at Oberkommando des Heeres and attaché duties in London (clandestine contacts with British officials warning of impending war and suggesting anti-Hitler coup support)
09.09.1939 Kommandeur I. Bataillon, Infanterie-Regiment Grossdeutschland
15.12.1940 Kommandeur Infanterie-Regiment 254
17.01.1941 Kommandeur Infanterie-Regiment z.b.V. 200 (5. leichte Division, North Africa)
28.07.1941 Kommandeur Infanterie-Regiment (mot.) 76, 20. Infanterie-Division (mot.)
29.05.1942 Führerreserve OKH
02.07.1942 m.d.F.b. 8. Jäger-Division
27.09.1942 Stab Oberfeldkommandantur 365
05.11.1942 Stab 16. Infanterie-Division (mot.)
13.11.1942 Kommandeur 16. Infanterie-Division (mot.), later 16. Panzergrenadier-Division
01.05.1944 Kommandeur 116. Panzer-Division (Windhund-Division)
20.09.1944 Führerreserve OKH
19.10.1944 Reserve-Lazarett
10.12.1944 Kommandeur 90. Panzergrenadier-Division
03.02.1945 m.d.F.b. LXXVI. Panzerkorps
01.04.1945 Kommandeur LXXVI. Panzerkorps (Italian front)
26.04.1945 captured by British forces
late 1947 released from POW camp
1950 chief advisor on military and security policy to Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and head of Dienststelle Schwerin (Zentrale für Heimatdienst)
1950-1950s advisor on military policy for Free Democratic Party parliamentary group
post-war resident in Rottach-Egern

Awards and Decorations:
Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse 1914 (World War I)
Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse 1914 (World War I)
Verwundetenabzeichen in Silber 1918 (wounded 26.09.1918)
Ritter des Königlich Preußischen Hausordens von Hohenzollern mit Schwertern (World War I)
Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer
DRL-Sportabzeichen in Bronze (14.03.1930)
DRL-Sportabzeichen in Silber (11.03.1932)
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 4. Klasse (4 years)
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 3. Klasse (12 years)
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 2. Klasse (18 years)
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 1. Klasse (25 years)
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 2. Klasse (11.05.1940) as Oberstleutnant and Kommandeur I. Bataillon, Infanterie-Regiment Grossdeutschland
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 1. Klasse (19.05.1940) as Oberstleutnant and Kommandeur I. Bataillon, Infanterie-Regiment Grossdeutschland
Panzerkampfabzeichen (ohne Zahl) (15.06.1941) as Oberstleutnant and Kommandeur Infanterie-Regiment z.b.V. 200
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes #803 (17.01.1942) as Oberst and Kommandeur Infanterie-Regiment (mot.) 76, 20. Infanterie-Division (mot.). During the fighting near Mga-Cory (on the approaches to Leningrad) from 30 August to 5 September 1941, Schwerin led a Kampfgruppe that became encircled and came under attack from all sides for three days. Despite a direct order from corps headquarters to break out toward Mga, he chose to hold the position with his troops until relief arrived. Through his outstanding leadership and decisive command, the Kampfgruppe held firm, was successfully relieved, and played a key role in the subsequent capture of Schlüsselburg just three days later. This action contributed significantly to German operations in the Leningrad sector during Operation Barbarossa. At the time, his regiment was advancing deep into Soviet territory as part of the broader drive eastward.
Medaille Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/42 (22.07.1942)
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #240 (17.05.1943) as Generalmajor and Kommandeur 16. Infanterie-Division (mot.)/ Schwerin demonstrated exceptional leadership during the difficult winter retreat of the division from the Caucasus (1942–43). He successfully extricated the division while it was under constant pressure from pursuing Soviet forces, eventually repositioning it along the Mius front by March 1943. His greatest achievement in this period was the destruction of the Soviet 4th Guards Mechanized Corps during the intense fighting for the Fedorenko gorge (18–23 February 1943). These actions prevented the collapse of the sector and preserved combat effectiveness under extreme conditions. The 16. Infanterie-Division (mot.) had been heavily engaged in the fighting around Stalingrad and the subsequent Soviet counteroffensives before the retreat.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #41 (04.11.1943) as Generalleutnant and Kommandeur 16. Panzergrenadier-Division. The Schwerter recognized Schwerin’s continued outstanding leadership of the division during its retreat from the Mius position in late summer 1943, followed by its successful defensive and offensive achievements in the fighting for the Zaporozhye bridgehead. These operations occurred under relentless Soviet pressure, and his command prevented encirclement while maintaining the division’s fighting capability. Adolf Hitler personally presented the Swords to him at a ceremony in the Berghof upon his return to Germany.
Ärmelband Afrika (17.12.1943)
Medaglia commemorativa della campagna italo-tedesca in Africa
Ordine della Corona d'Italia - Commendatore
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Silber
Mentioned in Wehrmachtbericht (27.10.1943)

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Gerhard Helmut Detleff Graf von Schwerin was born on 23 June 1899 in Hanover in the German Empire into a Prussian aristocratic family whose father served as a civil official in the Prussian State Government. At the age of fifteen he entered the cadet school at Koslin and soon joined the Prussian Army as a Fahnrich in the 2nd Foot Guards Regiment before transferring to the 2nd Pomeranian Grenadier Regiment. During the closing months of the First World War in 1918 he saw combat on both the Eastern and Western Fronts as a company commander and battalion adjutant until he was wounded on 26 September 1918 and hospitalized until the armistice. For his wartime service he received the Iron Cross Second Class and First Class along with the Wound Badge in Silver and the Honour Cross for Front Fighters.

After the war Schwerin was discharged from the army in 1920 and spent several years in civilian occupations including a managerial apprenticeship with a coffee import firm in Bremen and work for a petroleum company in Berlin. In 1923 he rejoined the Reichswehr as a lieutenant in Infantry Regiment 1 and progressed through a series of infantry postings including service in Infantry Regiment 3 and later Infantry Regiment 18 in Paderborn. He was promoted to captain in June 1933 and from 1933 to 1935 attended the General Staff course at the Prussian Military Academy in Berlin. By October 1938 he had reached the rank of major and served on the staff of the Oberkommando des Heeres. In January 1939 while attached to the UK and US intelligence section at the German Embassy in London he made clandestine contact with British officials urging them to abandon the policy of appeasement and instead support a potential military coup within Germany by deploying naval and air forces to pressure Adolf Hitler over the impending invasion of Poland. These overtures which carried the risk of high treason were conveyed to Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain but ultimately rejected.

With the outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939 Schwerin took command of the 1st Battalion of the motorized Infantry Regiment Grossdeutschland and led it through the 1940 campaign in France and the Low Countries where elements of his unit were later investigated for the massacre of disarmed French Senegalese Tirailleurs prisoners. He subsequently commanded Rifle Regiment 86 and other formations before transferring in April 1941 to North Africa as commander of Special Purposes Regiment 200 within the Afrika Korps. There he led a joint German-Italian commando raid deep behind British lines capturing the Mechili oasis and taking nearly three thousand prisoners including three generals an action that helped open the way for Erwin Rommel’s early successes. Returning to Europe late in 1941 he assumed command of Infantry Regiment 76 during Operation Barbarossa on the Eastern Front and for his leadership in holding a cut-off Kampfgruppe near Mga and Schlüsselburg he was awarded the Knight’s Cross of the Iron Cross on 17 January 1942 as an Oberst.

Brief command of the 254th Infantry Brigade followed in spring 1942 before he took over the 8th Jäger Division on the Eastern Front and was promoted to Generalmajor in October 1942. In November 1942 he was given command of the 16th Infantry Division later redesignated the 16th Panzergrenadier Division which he led through the bitter fighting around Stalingrad and the subsequent retreats from the Caucasus and the Mius River line. For his skill in extricating the division and destroying Soviet mechanized forces during these operations he received the Oak Leaves to the Knight’s Cross on 17 May 1943 as Generalmajor and the Swords on 4 November 1943 as Generalleutnant the latter personally presented by Hitler at the Berghof. The division was transferred to France in March 1944 and upgraded to the 116th Panzer Division known as the Windhund or Greyhound Division with Schwerin assuming command on 1 May 1944.

During the Normandy campaign the 116th Panzer Division crossed the Seine on 20 July 1944 and engaged American forces between Beaucoudray and Percy retaking the former village but failing to secure Mont Robin amid difficult terrain that hampered the Panzer IV and Panther tanks. In Operation Lüttich in early August the division advanced toward Brécey but suffered from delayed commitment flank exposure and Allied bombing that severed supplies contributing to the failure of the counter-offensive and leading to Schwerin’s temporary relief from command. Reappointed he led the battered formation which by September 1944 had been reduced to roughly six hundred men twelve serviceable tanks and no artillery during the early fighting around Aachen. Facing the American advance and concerned for the several thousand unevacuated civilians and the historic status of the ancient Holy Roman Empire capital he made the unilateral decision to withdraw his forces declare the city an open city and leave a communiqué at the post office requesting that American commanders treat the civilian population humanely. When the note fell into SS hands he was relieved of command placed under close arrest and replaced by Gerhard Wilck but after intervention by Gerd von Rundstedt and Walter Model he received only a reprimand rather than harsher punishment.

In December 1944 Schwerin was transferred to the Italian front where he succeeded Traugott Herr as commander of the LXXVI Panzer Corps. He was promoted to General der Panzertruppe on 1 April 1945 and continued defensive operations until he was captured by British forces on 26 April 1945. Released from captivity in late 1947 he returned to civilian life and in May 1950 was appointed chief advisor on military and security policy to Chancellor Konrad Adenauer heading the covert Dienststelle Schwerin to lay the groundwork for West German rearmament under American occupation. He was replaced in October 1950 by Theodor Blank after public statements but later served as a military policy advisor to the parliamentary group of the Free Democratic Party. In the post-war decades he cultivated the image of the saviour of Aachen which earned him a street named Graf-Schwerin-Strasse and civic honours in the 1950s and 1970s though the name was changed in 2008 amid renewed scrutiny of incidents under his command including the execution of two fourteen-year-old looters in September 1944.

Schwerin married three times first to Herta Kannengiesser then to Julia Zulich with whom he had two children and finally to Esther Klippel. He died on 29 October 1980 in Rottach-Egern Bavaria at the age of eighty-one and was buried in the local cemetery. Throughout his long career he had also accumulated additional decorations including the 1939 Clasp to the Iron Cross Second and First Class the Panzer Combat Badge the Eastern Front Medal the Africa Cuff Title the Italian-German African Campaign Medal the Order of the Crown of Italy as Commander and various long-service awards reflecting more than three decades of military and advisory service across two world wars and the early years of the Federal Republic.


Source:
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/
Additional sources: Walther-Peer Fellgiebel, Die Träger des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939-1945 (2000); Veit Scherzer, Ritterkreuzträger 1939-1945 (2007); various unit histories and Wehrmacht documents referenced on the above websites.