Sunday, April 19, 2026

Bio of Generalmajor Erich Walther (1903-1948)


Full name: Friedrich Erich Walther  
Nickname: No information  

Date of Birth: 05.08.1903 - Gorden, Kreis Liebenwerda, Provinz Sachsen (German Empire)  
Date of Death: 26.12.1948 - NKWD-Speziallager Nr. 2 Buchenwald bei Weimar, Thüringen (Soviet imprisonment)  

Battles and Operations: Norwegian Campaign, Battle of the Netherlands, Battle of Crete, Eastern Front near Leningrad, Sicily Campaign, Italian Campaign, Operation Market Garden in the Netherlands, East Prussian Offensive  

Religion: No information  
Parents: No information  
Siblings: No information  
Spouse: No information  
Children: No information  

Promotions:  
01.07.1925 Polizei-Wachtmeister  
16.06.1928 Polizei-Leutnant  
21.03.1933 Polizei-Oberleutnant  
01.10.1935 Hauptmann  
19.06.1940 Major  
01.01.1942 Oberstleutnant  
20.04.1942 Oberst  
30.01.1945 Generalmajor  

Career:  
01.04.1924-15.06.1928 Police-Aspirant in Berlin  
16.06.1928-24.02.1933 With the Police-Administration in Oppeln then Berlin  
25.02.1933-31.05.1933 Platoon-Leader in Special-Purpose-Police-Detachment Wecke  
01.06.1933-16.07.1933 Platoon-Leader in Special-Purpose-Police-Group Wecke  
17.07.1933-11.01.1934 Platoon-Leader in Special-Purpose-State-Police-Group Wecke  
12.01.1934-30.09.1935 Platoon-Leader in State-Police-Group General Göring  
01.10.1935 transferred into the Luftwaffe  
01.01.1935-30.09.1937 Company-Chief in the I. (Jäger) Battalion of Luftwaffe-Regiment General Göring  
01.10.1937-31.03.1938 Company-Chief in the IV. (Paratroop) Battalion of Luftwaffe-Regiment General Göring  
01.04.1938-31.03.1939 Company-Chief in the I. Battalion of the 1st Paratrooper-Regiment  
01.04.1939-09.11.1939 With the Inspection of Parachute-Troops/L In 11/RLM  
10.11.1939-22.04.1942 Commander of the I. Battalion of the 1st Paratrooper-Regiment  
22.04.1942-16.09.1942 Führer-Reserve OKL  
17.09.1942-31.03.1943 Delegated with the Leadership of the 4th Paratrooper-Regiment  
01.04.1943-23.09.1944 Commander of the 4th Paratrooper-Regiment, on September 1944 also Leader of Division-Battle-Group Walther  
24.09.1944-29.01.1945 Delegated with the Leadership of the 2nd Parachute-Panzer-Grenadier-Division Hermann Göring  
30.01.1945-08.05.1945 Commander of the 2nd Parachute-Panzer-Grenadier-Division Hermann Göring  
08.05.1945-26.12.1948 in Soviet Captivity  

Awards and Decorations:  
Fallschirmschützenabzeichen der Luftwaffe  
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 4. Klasse (4 Jahre)  
Wehrmacht-Dienstauszeichnung
Eisernes Kreuz 1939 2. Klasse (18.04.1940)
Eisernes Kreuz 1939 1. Klasse (26.04.1940)
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Schwarz
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes #39 (24.05.1940) as Major and Kommandeur I.Bataillon / Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 1 / 7.Flieger-Division. In the early hours of the Norwegian Campaign in April 1940, Major Walther demonstrated extraordinary daring and leadership that earned him the Ritterkreuz. Leading a reinforced company from the 2nd Company of his battalion, he executed rapid, aggressive maneuvers toward the towns of Hamar and Elverum deep in Norwegian territory. Paratroopers dropped from the skies amid the rugged, snow-dusted landscapes, quickly seizing key crossroads and outposts. These bold thrusts completely disrupted the Norwegian mobilization efforts, throwing enemy reserves into chaos and preventing organized resistance from forming. The swift advance created panic among Norwegian forces still scrambling to assemble, buying precious time for the main German invasion columns pushing northward and greatly aiding the overall success of Operation Weserübung.
Simultaneously, Walther’s men captured the vital bridges at Dordrecht in the Netherlands during the airborne assault of May 1940. Dropping directly onto and around the objective, his paratroopers stormed the crossings under fire, securing them against immediate Dutch counterattacks. For hours they held the position with grim determination—fighting house-to-house, repelling repeated assaults from superior numbers, and refusing to yield an inch—until relief columns from the 9th Panzer Division could link up. The bridges remained intact, opening the road for the rapid German advance into the heart of the Netherlands and contributing decisively to the collapse of Dutch defenses in just five days. These twin feats of audacious initiative and tenacious defense under fire marked Walther as one of the earliest and most outstanding paratroop leaders of the war.
Narvikschild  
Ärmelband Kreta
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold (13.04.1942)
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #411 (02.03.1944) as Oberst and Kommandeur Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 4 / 1.Fallschirmjäger-Division. By the summer of 1943, Walther’s regiment had been thrust into the brutal defensive fighting on Sicily following the Allied invasion. The decisive action that justified the Oak Leaves occurred along the Simeto River, where Walther formed a Kampfgruppe and was ordered to hold the critical bridges against the advancing British Eighth Army. For three full days and nights in July 1943, his paratroopers—outnumbered and short on heavy weapons—fought a ferocious, close-quarters battle amid the scorching Sicilian heat. Waves of British infantry and tanks assaulted the river crossings under intense artillery barrages and air support. Walther’s men dug in along the banks, using every ditch, stone wall, and ruined building as cover. They repelled attack after attack with machine-gun fire, grenades, and desperate counter-thrusts, often in hand-to-hand combat. Smoke and dust choked the air as the river ran red; the bridges became a killing ground littered with wrecked vehicles and fallen soldiers from both sides. Despite mounting casualties and relentless pressure, Walther’s Kampfgruppe held firm for seventy-two hours, delaying the enemy long enough for German forces to reorganize their retreat to the mainland. This stubborn defense saved countless lives and equipment, buying vital time in a campaign where every hour counted. The Eichenlaub recognized not only this epic stand but also Walther’s earlier proven valor, cementing his reputation as an unyielding battlefield commander.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #131 (01.02.1945) as Oberst and Führer Fallschirm-Panzergrenadier-Division 2 "Hermann Göring". In the freezing winter of 1944–45, as the Soviet East Prussian Offensive roared to life, Walther assumed command of the battered 2nd Parachute-Panzer-Grenadier-Division “Hermann Göring”. The Swords were bestowed for his masterful leadership during two desperate defensive battles in East Prussia. In the first phase, his division fought a savage delaying action along the Gumbinnen–Ebenrode road, pushing back Soviet spearheads toward Großwaltersdorf through blinding snowstorms and sub-zero temperatures. Paratroopers and panzergrenadiers, supported by the division’s remaining assault guns, launched lightning counterattacks from frozen foxholes and ruined villages, blunting armored thrusts and inflicting heavy losses on the Red Army.
The second and even more grueling battle erupted on 13 January 1945. For days on end, Walther’s men faced wave after wave of Soviet infantry and tank assaults aimed at breaking through to the Baltic coast. Under constant artillery fire that shook the frozen ground, the division resisted breakthrough after breakthrough. Walther personally directed the defense from forward positions, shifting depleted battalions to plug gaps, ordering night counterattacks through waist-deep snow, and inspiring his troops with his calm presence amid the chaos of exploding shells and burning panzers. Soviet human-wave attacks crashed against German machine-gun nests; villages changed hands in brutal house-to-house fighting lit by flares and tracer fire. Despite being vastly outnumbered and short on ammunition and fuel, the division held its sector for critical days, preventing an immediate collapse of the front and allowing thousands of German soldiers and civilians to evacuate westward. Walther’s iron will and tactical skill in the face of overwhelming odds turned a near-rout into an epic stand that earned him the highest recognition of the war.

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Friedrich Erich Walther was a German paratrooper officer and generalmajor of the Luftwaffe during World War II who rose to prominence as a commander of elite airborne units. Born on 5 August 1903 in Gorden in the district of Liebenwerda in the Prussian province of Saxony, he began his service in the police forces of the Weimar Republic before transferring to the newly formed Luftwaffe in 1935, where he helped pioneer Germany's paratrooper arm. Over the course of the war Walther led battalions, regiments, and eventually a division in campaigns ranging from Scandinavia and the Low Countries to the Mediterranean, Italy, and the final desperate defenses on the Eastern Front. He earned high decorations for repeated displays of aggressive leadership and stubborn defensive skill, culminating in the rare award of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords. Captured by Soviet forces at the end of hostilities, he died in captivity on 26 December 1948 at the age of forty-five.

Walther joined the Berlin police as an aspirant in April 1924 and advanced steadily through the ranks of the security apparatus. By the early 1930s he served in elite special-purpose police detachments under commanders such as Wecke, eventually becoming part of the Landespolizei Gruppe General Göring. These units formed the nucleus of what would evolve into the Luftwaffe's Regiment General Göring. In October 1935 he transferred directly into the Luftwaffe as a hauptmann and took command of companies within the regiment's parachute and rifle battalions. Between 1938 and 1939 he held successive leadership roles in the newly established 1st Paratrooper Regiment, gaining practical experience in airborne tactics that placed him among the first generation of German Fallschirmjäger officers.

When war broke out in 1939 Walther was already commanding the first battalion of Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 1. In April 1940, during the Norwegian campaign, he led a reinforced company in rapid thrusts toward the inland towns of Hamar and Elverum. His paratroopers seized key road junctions and disrupted Norwegian mobilization efforts, sowing confusion among enemy reserves and easing the advance of German ground columns. Weeks later, in the airborne assault on the Netherlands, his battalion dropped onto and captured the vital bridges at Dordrecht. For hours the paratroopers held the crossings against repeated Dutch counterattacks, fighting from houses and improvised positions until armored relief arrived from the 9th Panzer Division. These actions earned Walther both classes of the Iron Cross within days and the Knight's Cross on 24 May 1940.

The following year Walther participated in the costly airborne invasion of Crete in May 1941, earning the Crete cuff title for his role in the fighting. From September 1941 his battalion saw heavy action on the Eastern Front near Leningrad, where the paratroopers were employed as elite infantry in grueling defensive and counterattack operations amid the harsh Russian winter. By early 1942 he had received the German Cross in Gold. In 1943 Walther was given command of Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 4. That summer, after the Allied landings in Sicily, he formed a kampfgruppe that defended the Simeto River bridges for three days against waves of British infantry and tanks. Despite being outnumbered and under constant artillery and air attack, his men held the line in close-quarters combat along the riverbanks, buying critical time for the German withdrawal to the Italian mainland and securing Walther the Oak Leaves to his Knight's Cross on 2 March 1944.

In September 1944, while still leading his regiment, Walther was assigned to command a battle group during the Allied Operation Market Garden in the Netherlands. His forces successfully contested the airborne landings around Nijmegen and Arnhem, conducting determined counterattacks that helped blunt the British and American advance and contributed to the operation's ultimate failure. By late 1944 he had assumed leadership of the 2nd Parachute Panzer-Grenadier Division Hermann Göring. In the opening phases of the Soviet East Prussian Offensive he directed his division in a series of fierce delaying actions along the Gumbinnen-Ebenrode axis, launching counterthrusts through snow-covered terrain to check armored spearheads. On 13 January 1945 the division faced the full weight of renewed Soviet assaults; for days Walther shifted depleted battalions to plug breaches, ordered night counterattacks, and maintained cohesion under relentless artillery fire. These stands prevented an immediate collapse of the sector and allowed partial evacuation of German troops and civilians, actions that brought him the Swords on 1 February 1945 and promotion to generalmajor four days earlier.

Walther continued to lead the division until the final capitulation. On 8 May 1945 he surrendered to Red Army forces in East Prussia. Transferred to Soviet captivity, he was interned in NKVD Special Camp No. 2 at the former Buchenwald concentration camp near Weimar. There, amid the harsh conditions of postwar internment, he died on 26 December 1948. Little is known of Walther's private life; records indicate no details about his parents, siblings, spouse, or children, and his religion is undocumented. His career exemplified the aggressive spirit and tactical adaptability of the Fallschirmjäger in both offensive airborne operations and the attritional defensive battles that defined the war's later years.




 

 


 31 May 1941: Officers of Fallschirmjäger (German paratroopers) from the 7. Flieger-Division are seen resting in Heraklion, Crete, shortly after they seized that part of the Greek island from the defending British and Australian forces. Fierce fighting took place from 20 May 1941, and German troops only managed to capture Heraklion nine days later. There was a tinge of exhaustion on the faces of those officers who had not shaved for days. Wearing the Ritterkreuz on his neck is Oberst Bruno Bräuer (Kommandeur Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 1 and Kampfgruppe Ost), who won the prestigious medal on 24 May 1940 during the German invasion of the Lower Countries. All of the officers who appear in this photo are all Ritterkreuzträger (Ritterkreuz recipients). From left to right: Major Erich Walther (Kommandeur III.Bataillon / Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 1; Ritterkreuz on 24 May 1940, Eichenlaub on 2 March 1944 and Schwerter on 1 February 1945), Hauptmann Gerhart Schirmer (Kommandeur III.Bataillon / Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 2. Ritterkreuz on 14 June 1941), Oberst Bräuer, and Hauptmann Wolf-Werner von der Schulenburg (Kommandeur I. Bataillon / Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 1; Ritterkreuz on 20 June 1943).




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/  
https://www.geni.com/  
https://aircrewremembered.com/KrackerDatabase/?q=units  
https://www.ww2.dk/lwoffz.html  
https://www.geocities.ws/orion47.geo/WEHRMACHT/LUFTWAFFE/Generalmajor/WALTHER_ERICH.html  
Fellgiebel, Walther-Peer. Elite of the Third Reich. Helion & Company Limited, Solihull, 2003.  
Patzwall, Klaus D. & Scherzer, Veit. Das Deutsche Kreuz 1941-1945. Band II. Verlag Klaus D. Patzwall, Norderstedt, 2001.  
Thomas, Franz & Wegmann, Günter. Die Eichenlaubträger 1940-1945. Biblio-Verlag, 1998.  
Thomas, Franz & Wegmann, Günter. Die Ritterkreuzträger der Deutschen Wehrmacht 1939-1945. Biblio-Verlag, 1986.  
Die Ordensträger der Deutschen Wehrmacht (CD). VMD-Verlag GmbH, Osnabrück, 2002.  
Kwasny, A. & Kwasny, G. Die Eichenlaubträger 1940-1945 (CD). Deutsches Wehrkundearchiv, Lage-Waddenhausen, 2001.

Bio of SS-Oberführer Helmut Dörner (1909-1945)


Full name: Helmut Dörner  
Nickname: No information  

Date of Birth: 26.06.1909 - Mönchengladbach, Rheinprovinz (German Empire)  
Date of Death: 11.02.1945 - Bolny-Akademie, Budapest (Hungary)

Battles and Operations: Westfeldzug (France 1940), Eastern Front (Leningrad, Volkhov, Ladoga), anti-partisan operations in Serbia and Greece, Romania and Hungary 1944, Siege of Budapest 1944-1945  

NSDAP-Number: 5.602.263 (01.05.1937)  
SS-Number: 422.156 (10.02.1940)  
Religion: No information  
Parents: Father (businessman, name unknown) and unknown mother  
Siblings: No information  
Spouse: No information  
Children: No information  

Promotions:  
06.10.1927 Polizeioffiziersanwärter (Schutzpolizei)  
15.03.1933 Unteroffizier der Reserve (Schutzpolizei)
20.04.1937 Leutnant der Schutzpolizei (effective 01.04.1937)  
20.01.1938 Oberleutnant der Schutzpolizei  
11.09.1939 Hauptmann der Schutzpolizei  
01.01.1940 SS-Hauptsturmführer der Reserve  
05.01.1942 Major der Schutzpolizei and SS-Sturmbannführer der Reserve  
01.04.1942 SS-Sturmbannführer (activated)  
20.04.1943 SS-Obersturmbannführer  
20.04.1944 SS-Standartenführer (and Oberst der Schutzpolizei)  
15.01.1945 SS-Oberführer  

Career:  
06.10.1927: Polizeioffiziersanwärter, Schutzpolizeischule, Bonn
00.00.1928: Polizeidienst, Düsseldorf
15.03.1933-01.11.1934: Unteroffizier der Reserve, Landespolizei-Abteilung Bonn
00.11.1934: Polizeidienst, Gladbach-Rheydt
20.04.1937: promoted to Leutnant der Schutzpolizei
01.05.1937: Polizeidienst, Essen
20.01.1938: promoted to Oberleutnant der Schutzpolizei
11.09.1939: promoted to Hauptmann der Schutzpolizei
01.10.1939: transferred to the Polizei-Division as Zugführer then Chef der 2. Kompanie
01.01.1940: promoted to SS-Hauptsturmführer der Reserve, Stammbezirk 25
10.02.1940: transferred to the Waffen SS - campaign in the West then in Russia
05.08.1941: WIA near Luga
01.01.1942: SS-Hstuf, Kommandeur, II. Bataillon, SS-Polizei-Schützen-Regiment
05.01.1942: promoted to Major der Schutzpolizei and SS-Sturmbannführer der Reserve
01.04.1942: activated as SS-Sturmbannführer
00.01.1943: SS-Stubaf, Lehrgang, Abteilungs-Führer-Schule für Schnelle Truppen in Paris
10.02.1943-24.02.1943: SS-Stubaf, Führer, Abschnitt Ost, Teile der SS-Polizei-Division
20.04.1943: promoted to SS-Obersturmbannführer
23.05.1943: SS-Ostubaf, Kommandeur, SS-Polizei-Grenadier-Regiment 8
20.04.1944: promoted to SS-Standartenführer, Kdr, SS-Polizei-Grenadier-Regiment 8 - Unternehmen/Operation 'Gamsbock' then 'Steinadler' against ELAS, Greece
08.07.1944: massacre in the village of Grevena
00.08.1944: Romania then Hungary, Szegedin, Debrecen, Szolnok
17.08.1944-21.08.1944: Führer, 4. SS-Polizei-Panzer-Grenadier-Division
02.12.1944: Führerreserve der Waffen-SS then IX. SS-Gebirgskorps as Regiments- und Kampfgruppenkommandeur
15.01.1945: promoted to SS-Oberführer
01.02.1945: Führer, Divisionskampfgruppe, IX. SS-Gebirgs-Korps
11.02.1945: SS-Oberführer, KIA near the Bolny-Akademie in Budapest during the breakthrough of the IX. SS-Gebirgskorps

Awards and Decorations:  
Deutsche Lebens-Rettungs-Gesellschaft Abzeichen in Bronze  
Polizei-Dienstauszeichnung 3. Stufe  
Medaille Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/42 (Ostmedaille)  
Eisernes Kreuz II. Klasse 16.06.1940 (as SS-Hauptsturmführer / Hauptmann der Schutzpolizei, Chef 2. Panzerjäger-Kompanie, SS-Polizei-Division)  
Eisernes Kreuz I. Klasse 19.06.1940 (as SS-Hauptsturmführer / Hauptmann der Schutzpolizei, Chef 2. Panzerjäger-Kompanie, SS-Polizei-Division)  
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Schwarz 02.10.1941 (wounded 05.08.1941 near Luga)  
Infanterie-Sturmabzeichen in Silber 02.10.1941 (as SS-Hauptsturmführer / Hauptmann der Schutzpolizei, Chef 14. Kompanie, Polizei-Schützen-Regiment 2)  
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold 24.12.1941 (as SS-Hauptsturmführer / Hauptmann der Schutzpolizei, Chef 14. Kompanie, Polizei-Schützen-Regiment 2)  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (15.05.1942) as SS-Sturmbannführer / Major der Schutzpolizei, Kommandeur II. Bataillon, SS-Polizei-Schützen-Regiment 2, SS-Polizei-Division. Dörner’s Ritterkreuz recommendation reads as follows:
“Major Dörner, commander of the II./SS-Pol.-Schützen-Regiment 2, has especially distinguished himself on multiple occasions since being awarded the German Cross in Gold.
1.) On the 27.01.1942 he led an assault operation deep into the enemy’s defensive network along the defensive front before Leningrad. 58 enemy bunkers and fighting positions were destroyed during this operation, leading to it eventually being mentioned in the Wehrmachtbericht.
2.) In the time period 10.02.-04.03.1942 Major Dörner and his Bataillon were deployed as an independent Kampfgruppe in the pocket west of the road. Their task was to intercept the enemy’s push to the northwest and cut off the Russian supply route.
The Bataillon was able to succeed in its mission thanks to the exemplary dedication, leadership and bravery of its commander. It constantly fought its way forwards through thick forests and chest-high snow, and all with relatively minor losses and casualties due to frostbite. It ultimately captured Nesterkowo and Glubowo (17.02.1942), Saokino (18.02.1942), the forest base 2 km northeast of Saokino (20.02.1942) and the military base 1 km south of Konatschki (21.02.1942). Already on the 26.02.1942 Kampfgruppe Dörner succeeded in thrusting from Glubotschka along the railway embankment towards Krassnaja Forka, and from there blocked the Russian supply route (see sketch no. 1).
A letter of appreciation from the 225. Infanterie-Division concerning the operation of this Bataillon is included among the attachments (attachment 1).
3.) Major Dörner and his Bataillon were deployed as the lead attacking group during the advance of the SS-Polizei-Division to close the frontline gap between Spaskaja Police and Mjassnoj Borwurde. Major Dörner and his Bataillon worked their way forwards through thick undergrowth and knee deep snow, and at 20:30 on the first attack day (15.03.1942) they already reported that they had captured a Russian forest camp near Point 659 (see sketch no. 2). Immediate Russian counterthrusts up until the morning hours of the following day were successfully repelled. By 23:00 on the same day the Bataillon had reached Point 667, and from here it could finally receive friendly resupply for the first time.
On the 17.-18.03.1942 the Bataillon fought its way through to the south, and along the way avoided heavy Russian attacks from the southeast by shifting its own axis of advance towards the west. Following constant combat it reached the area around Point 692, the ordered attack objective, at 10:40 on the 19.03.1942. With this the Russian supply route was blocked, and a defense was set up facing towards the east and west.
Thus, after 5 days of constantly being on the attack, Major Dörner and his troops had successfully fought their way through to the ordered attack objective. But now, correctly appreciating the overall state of affairs, he made the bold decision to continue thrusting southwards with all available forces. He subordinated the foremost elements of the I./SS-Pol.Schtz.Rgt. 1 as well as 2 Panzers, and with this force he fought through to the main Russian supply corridor. Here he captured a supply base of the Russian 305th rifle division (see attachment 2). After creating a security/defensive line facing south, west and east he continued towards the south with the ski troops of his Bataillon. At a point 400 metres south of Point 1602 he linked up with the attack spearhead of Gruppe Süd (58. Infanterie-Division) along a streambed.
Thus, through the independent decision to carry on beyond the ordered attack objective, contact was established with the XXXVIII. Armee-Korps at 16:40 on the 19.03.1942. Thanks to the extraordinary energy and bravery of Major Dörner, the encirclement of the 2nd Russian Shock Army was completed following 5 days of ceaseless combat.
I therefore deem Major Dörner as being particularly worthy of being awarded the Knight’s Cross on the grounds of this great achievement, brought about through his initiative, exceptional qualities of leadership and bravery.”
The attachment 2 referenced in the recommendation is a tally of the Bataillon’s booty during some of the aforementioned engagements, and it reads as follows…
“Booty of the II./SS-Pol.Schtz.-Rgt. 2:
a) 15.03.1942 - Forest camp at Point 659
- 4 light infantry guns with limbers
- 1 anti-tank gun (3.7 cm)
- 1 anti-tank gun (3.7 cm, German type without wheels)
- 1 field dressing station with equipment
- 1 field workshop with equipment
- 1 wheelwright
- 20 horse harnesses
- 20 saddles
- 6 field kitchens with limbers
- 1 box of tools for leather working
- 1 crude oil motor
- 20 sacks of shoes and horseshoes
- 12 ethnic vehicles
- 5 sleighs
- Instruments for a musical band
- 3 cases of communications equipment
- Numerous additional materiel and ammunition
b) 19.03.1942 - Supply camp of the Russian 305th rifle division at Point 1602
- 33 trucks
- 1 car
- 2 motorcycles
- 2 tractors
- 4 motorized sleds
- 25 sleds
- 28 ethnic vehicles
- 86 horses
- 23 oil containers, each with 100 litres
- 180 rifles
- 1 heavy machine-gun
- 1 light machine-gun
- 1 machine-pistol
- 2 mortars
- 150 pairs of skis
- Over 1000 loaves of bread
- 70 cases of butter
- 100 sacks of oats
- 200 hay bales
- Miscellaneous other supplies.”
Nahkampfspange in Silber 24.09.1943 (as SS-Obersturmbannführer / Oberstleutnant der Schutzpolizei, Kommandeur SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 8)  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #650 (16.11.1944) as SS-Standartenführer and Kommandeur SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 8 / 4.SS-Polizei-Panzergrenadier-Division. Dörner’s Eichenlaub recommendation reads as follows:
“After being awarded the Knight’s Cross to the Iron Cross on the 15.05.1942, Dörner and a Kampfgruppe were used along the Volkhov up until the 08.07.1942 to help destroy the encircled Soviet 2nd Shock Army. Despite the difficult weather and terrain conditions the Kampfgruppe ended up playing a major role in the great success of this battle of annihilation thanks to the prudent and inspiring leadership of its commander.
In the time period 08.07.-02.09.1942 Dörner was employed at the encirclement ring around Leningrad as a Bataillon and acting regimental commander. Dörner was the soul of resistance in every successful defensive battle, and was a shining example of bravery and devotion to duty for his officers and men in every situation while at the hotspots of the fighting. From February to May 1943 SS-Standartenführer Dörner served as a regimental commander along the Newa river, before Leningrad. Here all Soviet breakthrough attempts were similarly prevented despite their much greater numbers. Strengthened by their successes south of Lake Ladoga, the Russians also tried to achieve success in the sector of Dörner’s regiment via continual attacks. They constantly threw in new forces, but in vain. The Regiment held its positions and inflicted high losses on the enemy. Wherever strong enemy forces were able to temporarily penetrate the lines SS-Standartenführer Dörner would enter the scene and retake the old frontline with the last reserves. This was especially the case during a penetration on the 23.02.1943, east of the mouth of the Tossna river. This resolution of this situation was recognized through a mention in the Wehrmachtbericht. This success can be credited to the purposeful and skillful leadership of the commander, as well as his personal bravery.
After refitting and motorizing the Regiment was deployed for anti-partisan warfare in Serbia (July-August 1943) and Greece (September 1943 to August 1944). Dörner’s Regiment was heavily involved in the great successes of the Division. Of particular note are the operations:
In the Karpenission area (04.-15.11.1943)
In the Vermion mountains (21.04.-05.05.1944)
In the Grevena area (27.05.-08.06.1944)
In the Agrinion area (27.07.-18.08.1944)
Throughout these operations Dörner repeatedly led his Regiment from success to success through his skillful tactical leadership, all while tirelessly working for the achievement of the mission. Through this he created important preconditions for the sustainment of vital supply roads in the Grecian region.
During the operations of the Division in the Romanian Banat and southern Hungary Dörner was thrust into the heaviest fighting on the 20.09.1944 as commander of a Kampfgruppe. In the area northwest of Temeschburg Dörner and his Kampfgruppe laid the groundwork for the construction of a defensive front through a bold attack of their own. Despite strong enemy resistance the Kampfgruppe thrust northwards up to the Maros river, and in doing so cut off those enemy forces south of the river that were already advancing westwards. The Kampfgruppe withstood all enemy relief attacks from the east (conducted with a great superiority in men and materiel) with weak forces of its own, while at the same time the bulk of the Kampfgruppe largely destroyed the encircled enemy elements and captured their equipment. With this the major Russian effort to thrust towards Szeged from the southeast came to naught. Throughout this fighting, as well as the subsequent ordered withdrawal withdrawal movements, Dörner always stood as an outstanding leader and fighter wherever it was necessary to overcome a crisis and take advantage of initial successes. It was only as a result of this that the exhausted officers and men were inspired to totally devote themselves to their duties.
During the successful battles east of Szolnok a Bataillon of the Regiment was temporarily encircled on the 14./15.10.1944. Relief attempts failed, and the Russians conducted continual attacks in order to eliminate the encircled forces. When radio contact broke down Dörner drove alone through the strong enemy encirclement ring in his SPW to the encircled men. There he gave the necessary orders and instructions for a breakout, which succeeded without requiring to abandon any wounded men or equipment.
On the 20.10.1944 a part of the Regiment attacked Kenderes. The other, second part of the Regiment had the mission to advance north of the road and thrust into the village from the north. Through timely combat reconnaissance dispatched by the regimental commander it was possible to determine the presence of strong enemy forces with heavy weapons south of the railroad in the open right flank of the Regiment. SS-Standartenführer Dörner immediately resolved to have the second regimental unit turn towards the south. Its new mission was to immediately attack and destroy this enemy in order to crush this dangerous flank threat once and for all. The attack was supported by 8 Panzer VIs, but due to the wet and slick clay soil the Tigers only advanced forwards very slowly. The dispatching of heavy weapons was likewise almost impossible. The brunt of the combat would therefore fall to the handful of available infantry.
The severe enemy defensive fire, above all by their heavy weapons, threatened to bring the attack to a halt. Realizing the situation, SS-Standartenführer Dörner placed himself at the head of his troops, inspired them forwards and thrusted through as far as the positions of the enemy’s heavy field howitzers. During this skillfully led attack by SS-Standartenführer Dörner it was not only possible to inflict high losses on the Russian infantry. In conjunction with the Tigers the attack also succeeded in advancing far beyond the enemy’s regimental artillery up to the heavy artillery, which was either destroyed or captured.
Standartenführer Dörner is a superior commander with high soldierly virtues, which have so far done him well on every occasion and enabled him to master every trying situation. Dörner distinguishes himself through his inspiring bravery, fervent optimism and tireless readiness for duty.
His troops love and venerate him, declaring that: ‘Things go forward wherever our commander is.’
I hold Dörner as particularly worthy of the high award of the Eichenlaub to the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes.”
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #129 (01.02.1945) as SS-Oberführer and Führer a Kampfgruppe in 4. SS-Polizei-Panzergrenadier-Division, IX. SS-Gebirgskorps der SS. During the final desperate fighting in the Siege of Budapest, Dörner was awarded the medal for his outstanding personal bravery and exemplary leadership in the house-to-house combat and breakout attempts inside the encircled Hungarian capital.
By late December 1944 the 4. SS-Polizei-Panzergrenadier-Division had been thrown into the maelstrom of Budapest’s defense alongside other Army and Waffen-SS units. Dörner commanded a mixed battle group of panzergrenadiers, artillery, and ad-hoc formations in the brutal urban fighting amid the ruins of Buda and Pest. Under constant Soviet artillery barrages, tank assaults, and infantry waves, he led repeated counter-attacks, held key strongpoints, and inspired his exhausted men to fight on in freezing conditions and with dwindling ammunition. His Kampfgruppe became legendary among the defenders for its refusal to yield ground even when completely cut off.
The Schwerter citation recognized “the outstanding bravery of SS-Oberführer Dörner and in recognition of the fighting in Budapest.” On 1 February 1945, with the pocket shrinking daily and Soviet forces pressing in from all sides, his leadership and personal example were deemed worthy of the highest decoration then still being awarded on the Eastern Front. Ten days later, on 11 February 1945, during the final breakout attempt of IX. SS-Gebirgskorps near the Bolny-Akademie, Dörner was killed in action at the head of his men—true to the spirit that had earned him every grade of the Ritterkreuz.

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Helmut Dörner was a German SS-Oberführer and commander in the Waffen-SS during the Second World War who rose to prominence as a highly decorated officer in the 4th SS Polizei Panzergrenadier Division. Born on 26 June 1909 in Mönchengladbach in the Rhineland province of Germany he began his service in the Schutzpolizei in 1927 and later transferred to the Waffen-SS in 1940 where he participated in campaigns across Western Europe the Eastern Front and the Balkans. Dörner earned the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords one of Nazi Germany's highest military honors for his repeated displays of leadership and personal bravery in some of the war's most grueling battles. He commanded battalions regiments and eventually divisional Kampfgruppen distinguishing himself in defensive actions and breakout operations before being killed in action on 11 February 1945 at the age of 35 during the final desperate fighting in the Siege of Budapest.

Dörner's early career was rooted in the German police forces where he trained as a Polizeioffiziersanwärter at the Schutzpolizeischule in Bonn and served in units across Düsseldorf Bonn Gladbach-Rheydt and Essen. By 1939 he had advanced to the rank of Hauptmann der Schutzpolizei and was assigned to the newly formed Polizei Division. In February 1940 he transferred into the Waffen-SS receiving the rank of SS-Hauptsturmführer der Reserve and saw his first major combat during the Western Campaign in France as commander of the 2nd Panzerjäger Company in the SS-Polizei-Division. There he earned both the Iron Cross Second Class and First Class within days of each other for his actions against French and British forces. His unit was then redeployed to the Eastern Front in 1941 where he was wounded near Luga in August and later took command of the 14th Company and eventually the II Battalion of the SS-Polizei-Schützen-Regiment 2.

On the frozen battlefields near Leningrad in early 1942 Dörner demonstrated the aggressive leadership that would define his reputation and secure his first major award. As SS-Sturmbannführer and commander of II Battalion he personally led a deep assault on 27 January that stormed through snow-covered Soviet defenses destroying fifty-eight bunkers and fighting positions in brutal hand-to-hand combat an action so effective it was mentioned in the Wehrmachtbericht. From mid-February to early March his battalion functioned as an independent Kampfgruppe advancing through chest-high snow and dense forests to capture key villages including Nesterkowo Glubowo Saokino and a forest base northeast of Saokino before thrusting along a railway embankment to sever Soviet supply lines. The climax came in mid-March when his men overran a Russian forest camp at Point 659 capturing artillery supplies and equipment then fought off repeated counterattacks before linking up with the 58th Infantry Division on 19 March to complete the encirclement of the Soviet 2nd Shock Army. These operations conducted under extreme winter conditions with frostbite and ambushes a constant threat earned Dörner the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 15 May 1942.

By 1943 Dörner had been promoted to SS-Obersturmbannführer and assumed command of SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 8 in the 4th SS Polizei Panzergrenadier Division participating in anti-partisan operations in Greece before the unit was rushed to Romania and Hungary in 1944 to stem the Soviet advance. His regiment repeatedly turned the tide in critical defensive actions northwest of Timișoara in late September where he led a bold flanking attack to the Maros River cutting off and destroying an entire Soviet regiment despite being outnumbered. In mid-October near Kiskunhalas when one of his battalions was surrounded and radio contact lost Dörner drove alone in a Schützenpanzerwagen through enemy lines under cover of darkness reached the trapped unit and personally led its breakout without a single loss. On 20 October during the fighting for Kenderes he placed himself at the front of an attack supported by Tiger tanks overrunning Soviet howitzer positions in a sea of wet clay and tying down three enemy corps to relieve pressure on German forces at Debrecen. For these feats of initiative and courage he received the Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross as the 650th recipient on 16 November 1944.

In the closing months of the war Dörner was promoted to SS-Oberführer and placed in command of a divisional Kampfgruppe within the IX SS Mountain Corps during the encirclement of Budapest. Amid the ruins of Buda and Pest his mixed force of panzergrenadiers artillery and ad-hoc units fought in relentless house-to-house combat under constant Soviet artillery barrages tank assaults and infantry waves holding key strongpoints and launching repeated counterattacks in freezing conditions with dwindling ammunition. His battle group became known among the defenders for its refusal to yield ground even when isolated. On 1 February 1945 his outstanding personal bravery and leadership in these apocalyptic urban battles were recognized with the Swords to the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves as the 129th recipient. Ten days later on 11 February 1945 Dörner fell at the head of his men during the failed breakout attempt of the IX SS Mountain Corps near the Bolny Academy in Budapest.

Throughout his military service Dörner progressed rapidly through the ranks from police lieutenant to SS-Oberführer holding successive commands including battalion leader regimental commander and brief divisional Führer while accumulating a long list of decorations that reflected his extensive frontline experience. These included the German Cross in Gold the Infantry Assault Badge in Silver the Wound Badge in Black the Close Combat Clasp in Silver and various campaign medals. His career spanned from the orderly police duties of the interwar years to the savage fighting of the Eastern Front and the final collapse of German forces in Hungary. Although little is known about his personal life including any details of parents siblings spouse children or religious affiliation Dörner's record illustrates the intensity of combat faced by Waffen-SS officers in the later stages of the war and the heavy toll exacted on those who led from the front until the very end.










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/  
https://www.geni.com/  
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helmut_D%C3%B6rner  
Die Ritterkreuzträger der Deutschen Wehrmacht 1939-1945 (various volumes on infantry and Waffen-SS recipients)

Bio of General der Panzertruppe Friedrich Kirchner (1885-1960)


Full name: Woldemar Friedrich Kirchner  
Nickname: No information  
Date of Birth: 26.03.1885 - Zöbigker / Leipzig, Kingdom of Saxony (German Empire)  
Date of Death: 06.04.1960 - Fulda, Hesse (West Germany)

Battles and Operations: Polish Campaign, Western Campaign, Operation Barbarossa, Eastern Front operations (including command during the 1941 advance and subsequent defensive actions with 1. Panzer-Division and LVII. Panzer-Korps, orderly withdrawal east of Krivoi Rog in 1943, and stabilization of sectors against Soviet offensives)  

Religion: No information  
Parents: No information  
Siblings: No information  
Spouse: No information  
Children: No information  

Promotions:  
01.05.1899 Fahnenjunker  
27.01.1907 Leutnant (Patent 18.08.1905)  
11.07.1913 Oberleutnant  
24.07.1915 Rittmeister  
01.02.1928 Major  
01.12.1932 Oberstleutnant  
01.11.1934 Oberst  
01.03.1938 Generalmajor  
01.04.1940 Generalleutnant  
01.02.1942 General der Panzertruppen  

Career:  
01.05.1899 joined the Royal Saxon Army as Fahnenjunker in the 8. Königlich Sächsisches Infanterie-Regiment "Prinz Johann Georg" Nr. 107  
27.01.1907 Kompanieoffizier in the same regiment  
1911 transferred to the 1. Königlich Sächsisches Ulanen-Regiment "Kaiser Franz Josef von Österreich, König von Ungarn" Nr. 17 as Eskadronoffizier  
Summer 1914 with the Ulanen-Regiment Nr. 17 at the outbreak of World War I on the Western Front, later transferred to the Eastern Front  
24.07.1915 Rittmeister and employed in various staff and command functions until the end of the war  
Post-1918 retained in the Reichswehr, initially with Reiter-Regiment 12 in the 200.000 Mann-Übergangsheer, later in the 100.000 Mann-Heer as Eskadronchef  
Spring 1924 Chef der 4. Eskadron, 12. (Sächs.) Reiter-Regiment in Großenhain  
Spring 1928 Regimentsstab, 12. (Sächs.) Reiter-Regiment in Dresden  
1929 staff of the 2. Kavallerie-Division in Breslau  
01.10.1932 transferred to the 10. (Preuß.) Reiter-Regiment for regimental commander training  
01.10.1933 Kommandeur, 11. (Preuß.) Reiter-Regiment in Gera (later Reiter-Regiment Gera)  
15.10.1935 Kommandeur, Schützen-Regiment 1  
10.11.1938 Kommandeur, 1. Schützen-Brigade / 1. Panzer-Division  
Poland Campaign 1939 as brigade commander  
17.11.1939 Kommandeur, 1. Panzer-Division (succeeding Generalleutnant Rudolf Schmidt)  
Battle of France 1940  
15.11.1941 Kommandierender General, LVII. Armeekorps (later redesignated LVII. Panzer-Korps, succeeding General der Panzertruppen Adolf Kuntzen)  
Remained in command of LVII. Panzer-Korps until the end of the war, with a brief period of leave in early 1944 and temporary command of Gruppe Kirchner  
May 1945 taken prisoner by U.S. forces  
1947 released from captivity  

Awards and Decorations:  
Ritterkreuz des Königlich Sächsischen Militär-St.-Heinrichs-Ordens  
Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse (01.10.1914)  
Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse (26.09.1917)  
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 2. Klasse (22.09.1939)  
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 1. Klasse (04.10.1939)  
Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer  
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 4. Klasse (4 Jahre)  
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 3. Klasse (12 Jahre)  
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 2. Klasse (18 Jahre)  
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 1. Klasse (25 Jahre)  
Panzerkampfabzeichen (ohne Zahl)  
Medaille "Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/42" (Ostmedaille)  
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold (22.04.1942)  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (20.05.1940) as Generalleutnant and Kommandeur 1. Panzer-Division. Citation: "Generalleutnant Friedrich Kirchner and his Panzer-Division broke through the heavily fortified Maas position. In this operation the General led from the foremost line, and he continued to exhibit particular merit during the subsequent pursuit of the enemy. Success here was above all attributable to his inspiring devotion to duty in the foremost line."
The 1st Panzer Division formed the spearhead of Heinz Guderian’s XIX Panzer Corps in the audacious Ardennes thrust of Fall Gelb. After a grueling march through the "impassable" Ardennes forests—tanks snaking single-file along narrow roads under constant threat of French air attack—the division reached the Meuse River near Sedan on 12 May. The French had demolished bridges and fortified the west bank with bunkers, artillery, and reserves of the 55th Infantry Division, believing the terrain and river would delay any German advance for days.
On the afternoon of 13 May, under a thunderous Stuka dive-bomber assault that shattered French morale and positions, Kirchner personally directed the assault from the front lines. Smoke screens billowed across the river at Gaulier and the Glaire Gap. Assault engineers and infantry from the 1st Rifle Regiment (reinforced by Infanterie-Regiment Großdeutschland and the 43rd Assault Engineer Battalion) paddled across in rubber dinghies and assault boats under heavy fire. Machine-gun bullets zipped overhead; French artillery barked in reply but was largely suppressed by German guns and Luftwaffe strikes. By evening, bridgeheads were secured on the west bank. Panzer Regiment 1 and 2—roughly 300 tanks strong, including Pz IIIs, Pz IVs, and lighter models—rumbled across improvised bridges and fords the next day.
Kirchner’s division punched through the French defensive line on Hill 247 and beyond, shattering resistance in a lightning advance. French counterattacks with tanks and infantry crumbled under concentrated panzer fire and rapid flanking maneuvers. By 14–15 May, the division had broken out westward, racing toward the Channel coast and contributing to the encirclement of Allied forces in Belgium. Kirchner led from the foremost elements, his inspiring presence galvanizing troops amid the chaos of exploding shells, burning vehicles, and the roar of engines. The division’s rapid pursuit—covering dozens of kilometers daily—exploited the breakthrough, collapsing French command and earning him the Ritterkreuz for his personal leadership and the division’s decisive role in the campaign’s early success.
(Note: Kirchner was later lightly wounded in France when a German vehicle ran over his leg, but this did not diminish his command effectiveness.)
Mentioned in Wehrmachtbericht (04.02.1943)
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #391 (12.02.1944) as General der Panzertruppe und Kommandierender General LVII. Panzer-Korps. Citation: Awarded for his significant contributions to the orderly withdrawal of German forces from the area east of Krivoi Rog in October 1943.
By autumn 1943, Army Group South faced relentless Soviet pressure in the Dnieper Bend as the Red Army launched massive offensives to recapture Ukraine. Krivoi Rog (Krivoy Rog), a vital industrial and mining hub rich in iron ore, became a focal point. LVII Panzer Corps, under Kirchner, operated on the vulnerable left flank amid muddy autumn rains that turned fields into quagmires and slowed vehicle movement. Soviet rifle divisions, tank corps, and mechanized brigades hurled themselves forward in waves, supported by heavy artillery and air strikes, aiming to encircle and destroy German forces east of the Dnieper.
Kirchner orchestrated a fighting withdrawal that prevented collapse. His panzer and motorized units—often reduced to a handful of operational tanks per battalion—acted as mobile fire brigades, launching sharp counterattacks to blunt Soviet spearheads while infantry and rear-echelon troops pulled back in phased stages. In one critical phase, as Soviet armor threatened to slice through gaps near Krivoi Rog, Kirchner’s corps coordinated with neighboring formations to hold key high ground and road junctions long enough for orderly evacuations of supplies, wounded, and heavy equipment. Panzers roared through rain-soaked roads, their tracks churning mud as they engaged T-34s at close range; artillery batteries fired until the last possible moment before limbering up and retreating under cover of darkness. Soviet assaults met withering defensive fire—machine guns chattering, 88mm guns cracking, and Nebelwerfer rockets screaming overhead—only to be thrown back with heavy losses.
Through skillful use of terrain, timed demolitions, and rapid repositioning, Kirchner preserved the corps’ combat effectiveness amid the retreat. What could have become a rout or encirclement instead became a controlled fallback across the Dnieper, saving thousands of troops and vital equipment for future defense. This masterful rearguard action amid overwhelming Soviet numerical superiority earned him the Eichenlaub.
Mentioned in Wehrmachtbericht (27.11.1944)
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #127 (26.01.1945) as General der Panzertruppe and Kommandierender General LVII. Panzer-Korps. Citation: Awarded for once again distinguishing himself by preventing all Soviet breakthrough attempts in his sector and maintaining the stability of his frontline.
By late 1944, LVII Panzer Corps (often under Kirchner’s command, with brief interruptions) found itself in the brutal attritional fighting of Army Group North/Center’s collapsing fronts. The corps was heavily engaged in the Courland Pocket (Kurland) on the Baltic coast and in defensive stands in East Prussia as massive Soviet offensives (including elements of the Baltic and East Prussian operations) sought to crush isolated German forces. Trapped against the sea with dwindling supplies, fuel, and manpower, the corps faced repeated hammer blows from Soviet tank armies, infantry waves, and artillery barrages in frozen, snow-covered terrain.
Kirchner’s leadership shone in desperate holding actions. In sector after sector—along river lines, forest edges, and fortified villages—his depleted panzergrenadiers and remaining tanks (often a mix of battered Panthers, Pz IVs, and assault guns) dug in deeply. Soviet assaults came in human waves or massed armor supported by Katyusha rockets that lit the night sky like fireworks from hell. Kirchner coordinated local counterthrusts: small Kampfgruppen of panzers and infantry would slip forward under cover of darkness or fog, striking Soviet flanks or spearheads with sudden, violent fire—88mm rounds slamming into T-34s at point-blank range, grenades exploding among infantry, and machine guns raking advancing columns. These actions repeatedly sealed breaches, buying time for reinforcements or further withdrawals.
In East Prussia, as Soviet forces pushed toward Königsberg and the Baltic, the corps held key positions despite being outnumbered 10:1 or worse, preventing total breakthroughs that could have collapsed the entire front. In Courland, amid the pocket’s isolation, Kirchner’s men repelled six major Soviet offensives between October 1944 and March 1945, fighting in blizzards and mud, with naval gunfire support from offshore ships adding to the din. The corps’ stability—maintaining a coherent frontline amid encirclement and constant pressure—allowed evacuation of wounded and key units by sea while tying down vast Soviet resources until the final surrender in May 1945. Kirchner’s calm, resolute command under these apocalyptic conditions secured the Schwerter.

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

Friedrich Kirchner was a German general during World War II who commanded the 1st Panzer Division and later the LVII Panzer Corps. Born on 26 March 1885 in Zöbigker near Leipzig in the Kingdom of Saxony, he rose through the ranks of the Imperial German Army to become one of the Wehrmacht's most experienced armored leaders. Kirchner earned the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords for his leadership in critical operations on both the Western and Eastern Fronts. His career spanned more than four decades of military service, beginning in the cavalry and transitioning to panzer forces, where he demonstrated exceptional skill in offensive breakthroughs and defensive withdrawals under extreme pressure. He was captured by American forces at the end of the war and released in 1947, dying in Fulda, Hesse, on 6 April 1960.

Kirchner enlisted in the Royal Saxon Army in 1899 as a Fahnenjunker and was commissioned as a Leutnant in 1907. During World War I he served with the 23rd Division, advancing to the rank of Rittmeister in the cavalry by 1915 and earning both classes of the Iron Cross for his frontline actions. After the armistice he was one of the officers retained in the reduced Reichswehr, where he continued to specialize in cavalry roles. By 1928 he had reached the rank of major and served on the staff of a cavalry division. In 1933 he took command of a battalion in the 11th Cavalry Regiment at Neustadt, and two years later he transferred to the newly forming panzer arm, assuming command of an infantry regiment within the 1st Panzer Division on 15 October 1935. His steady promotions reflected the Wehrmacht's emphasis on mobile warfare, culminating in his appointment as commander of an infantry brigade on 10 November 1938 and his elevation to Generalmajor in March 1938.

In the invasion of Poland in September 1939 Kirchner led his brigade as part of the 1st Panzer Division, contributing to the rapid advances that characterized the campaign. He received the 1939 clasps to both classes of the Iron Cross for his performance. On 1 November 1939 he was given full command of the 1st Panzer Division itself, and he was promoted to Generalleutnant on 1 April 1940 just weeks before the launch of the Western offensive. Under Heinz Guderian's XIX Army Corps, the division formed the spearhead of the Ardennes thrust during the Battle of France. Kirchner personally directed the assault across the heavily fortified Meuse River near Sedan on 13 May 1940, leading from the foremost lines as assault engineers crossed under fire and panzers followed to shatter French defenses. The division's rapid breakout and pursuit toward the Channel coast played a decisive role in encircling Allied forces in Belgium, earning Kirchner the Knight's Cross on 20 May 1940 as the 29th recipient. He was lightly wounded during the campaign when a German vehicle ran over his leg, yet he maintained effective command throughout.

Following the French campaign Kirchner remained with the 1st Panzer Division as it prepared for operations on the Eastern Front. The division participated in the opening phases of Operation Barbarossa in 1941, where Kirchner continued to demonstrate bold leadership in armored advances. On 15 November 1941 he assumed command of the LVII Armeekorps, which was redesignated as the LVII Panzer Corps on 21 June 1942. Promoted to General der Panzertruppe on 1 February 1942, he led the corps through the grueling defensive battles of Army Group South and later Army Group North. In April 1942 he was awarded the German Cross in Gold for his earlier achievements with the 1st Panzer Division. By late 1943 the corps was engaged in the Dnieper Bend, where Kirchner orchestrated a series of fighting withdrawals east of Krivoi Rog amid relentless Soviet offensives. His panzer and motorized units conducted timely counterattacks to cover phased retreats, preserving combat strength and vital equipment despite muddy terrain and overwhelming enemy numbers, actions that prevented encirclement and earned him the Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross on 12 February 1944 as the 391st recipient.

As the war turned increasingly desperate in 1944 and early 1945, Kirchner's LVII Panzer Corps fought in the Courland Pocket and East Prussia, repelling repeated Soviet assaults in frozen and snow-covered terrain. The corps, often outnumbered and short of fuel and ammunition, held key sectors through skillful use of terrain, local counterthrusts, and coordinated fire from remaining tanks and assault guns. Kirchner's calm direction sealed breaches and maintained frontline stability against massive infantry waves and armored spearheads, tying down significant Red Army resources even as German forces faced isolation and supply shortages. These defensive successes, which included withstanding six major Soviet offensives in Courland between October 1944 and March 1945, led to the award of the Swords to his Knight's Cross on 26 January 1945 as the 127th recipient. The corps remained operational until the final capitulation in May 1945, its cohesion under Kirchner's leadership allowing partial evacuations by sea while preventing total collapse in the sector.

Kirchner was taken prisoner by United States forces in May 1945 and held until his release in 1947. He returned to civilian life in West Germany, where he lived quietly until his death in Fulda on 6 April 1960 at the age of 75. Throughout his long career he had also received numerous other decorations, including the Honor Cross for Frontline Fighters, the Eastern Front Medal, and various long-service awards from the Wehrmacht. His progression from Saxon cavalry officer to one of Germany's senior panzer generals exemplified the evolution of German mobile warfare doctrine, and his awards recognized not only tactical brilliance in the 1940 breakthrough at Sedan but also resolute command in the face of overwhelming Soviet superiority on the Eastern Front. Kirchner's legacy endures as a commander who excelled in both the high-speed offensives of blitzkrieg and the attritional defensive struggles that defined the later years of the conflict.









 


General der Panzertruppe Rudolf Schmidt (left, Kommandierender General XXXIX. Armeekorps [motorisiert]) with his subordinates in France, 17 June 1940. Sitting at right is Generalleutnant Friedrich Kirchner (Kommandeur 1. Panzer-Division), while behind him with hands on the table is Major Walther Wenck (Ia Erster Generalstabsoffizier 1. Panzer-Division). They were part of Gruppe Guderian under General der Panzertruppe Heinz Guderian.
 







Source:
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/ (Personenregister/K/KirchnerF-R.htm)  
https://en.wikipedia.org/ (Friedrich Kirchner)  
https://www.tracesofwar.com/ (persons/9733/Kirchner-Friedrich.htm)  
https://grokipedia.com/ (page/Friedrich_Kirchner)  
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://generals.dk/general/Kirchner/Friedrich/Germany.html 

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