Saturday, April 11, 2026

Bio of General der Infanterie Hermann Recknagel (1892-1945)


Full name: Hermann Recknagel  
Nickname: No information  

Date of Birth: 18.07.1892 - Strauchmühle bei Hofgeismar, Hessen-Nassau (German Empire)  
Date of Death: 23.01.1945 - near Petrikau (Piotrków Trybunalski), General Government (Poland)

Battles and Operations: World War I (Western Front and Eastern Front), Invasion of Poland 1939, Battle of France 1940, Operation Barbarossa, Donets Basin operations, Caucasus campaign, Eastern Front defensive battles 1943-1944, Lviv-Sandomierz Offensive, Vistula-Oder Offensive  

NSDAP-Number: No information  
SS-Number: No information  
Religion: No information  
Parents: Adolf Karl Ferdinand Recknagel (estate tenant/Gutspächter) and Marie Nanny Lydia Recknagel, née vom Hof  
Siblings: No information (youngest son of the family)  
Spouse: Carola von Hertzberg (born 23.02.1903 in Borkau, died 19.09.1961 in Kassel; married 28.10.1924 in Beulwitz)  
Children: No information  

Promotions:
25.09.1913 Fahnenjunker/Offiziersanwärter (Infanterie-Regiment 83)  
06.08.1914 Leutnant  
18.04.1918 Oberleutnant  
01.10.1926 Hauptmann  
01.08.1934 Major  
01.03.1937 Oberstleutnant  
01.02.1940 Oberst  
01.05.1942 Generalmajor  
01.06.1943 Generalleutnant  
01.07.1944 General der Infanterie  

Career:
25.09.1913-1918 Zugführer and Regimentsadjutant, Infanterie-Regiment 83 (WWI service on Western and Eastern Fronts, wounded multiple times)  
1919 Freikorps Maercker, then transferred to Reichswehr-Brigade 16  
1919-1920 various staff and regimental posts in Weimar and Infanterie-Regiment 32/12  
01.10.1921-30.09.1922 Batterieoffizier for Führergehilfenausbildung, Artillerie-Regiment 4 (Dresden)  
1922-1934 regimental adjutant and company commander, Infanterie-Regiment 12 (Halberstadt/Quedlinburg)  
01.10.1934 Kommandeur II. Bataillon, Infanterie-Regiment 54 (Glogau, later 18. Infanterie-Division)  
26.08.1939-1941 Kommandeur Infanterie-Regiment 54 (Poland and Western campaigns)  
01.01.1942-15.08.1943 and 30.08.1943-01.11.1943 Kommandeur 111. Infanterie-Division (Eastern Front)  
15.11.1943-25.02.1944 Leiter Sonderstab I (Operationsabteilung Ost), OKH  
28.04.1944-14.06.1944 stellvertretender Führer, then 14.06.1944-23.01.1945 Kommandierender General XXXXII. Armeekorps (Eastern Front)  
Posthumously listed in Wehrmachtbericht for defensive actions  

Awards and Decorations:
Eisernes Kreuz (1914) 2. Klasse (01.10.1914)  
Eisernes Kreuz (1914) 1. Klasse (30.09.1916)  
Verwundetenabzeichen 1918 in Silber  
Waldeckisches Verdienstkreuz IV. Klasse mit Schwertern  
Österreichisches Militärverdienstkreuz III. Klasse mit Kriegsdekoration  
Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz (1939) 2. Klasse (22.09.1939)  
Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz (1939) 1. Klasse (02.10.1939)  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (05.08.1940 as Oberst and Kommandeur Infanterie-Regiment 54 / 18. Infanterie-Division. In the final phase of the Westfeldzug, during the fierce fighting for the fortress-port of Dunkirk on 3 June 1940, Recknagel personally led the vanguard elements of his regiment in a direct assault against heavily fortified British and French rearguard positions. The city was still shrouded in smoke from the evacuation beaches, with enemy machine-gun nests, artillery observers, and barricaded buildings turning every street into a killing zone. Under Recknagel’s command the regiment smashed through the outer perimeter in bitter house-to-house combat, overrunning strongpoints that had held up larger German formations for days. His forward presence inspired the troops to press the attack despite heavy casualties from sniper fire and mortar barrages; by nightfall key heights and the eastern approaches had fallen. The following day, 4 June, the city was fully secured. The Wehrmachtbericht of 8 June 1940 explicitly praised the regiment’s outstanding performance in the capture of the Dunkirk fortress, noting that one infantry regiment under an unnamed but clearly identifiable commander had distinguished itself above all others. This action sealed Recknagel’s reputation as a front-line regimental leader who could break the toughest resistance when everything hung in the balance.
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold (11.02.1943 als Generalmajor und Kommandeur 111. Infanterie-Division)  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #319 (06.11.1943) as Generalleutnant and Kommandeur 111. Infanterie-Division. By the high summer of 1943 the Soviet Donets Basin offensive had torn open the German lines north of Taganrog. Recknagel, now commanding the 111. Infanterie-Division and temporarily elevated to lead Korpsgruppe Recknagel (a battle group built around the 111th and elements of the 336th Infantry Division), found his forces encircled against the coast of the Sea of Azov. For two desperate weeks, from mid-August until 30 August, the Kampfgruppen fought a series of savage defensive actions in the villages of Kamyschewacha, Many, and Uspenskaja. In blinding dust and 40-degree heat, German grenadiers and anti-tank crews destroyed 273 Soviet tanks in close combat—Panzerfaust teams stalking T-34s through burning wheat fields, 8.8 cm guns firing over open sights at point-blank range, and infantry assaults that left the steppe littered with wrecked armor and corpses. When the ring finally closed and the XXIX. Armeekorps was pressed against the sea, Recknagel refused to wait for relief. On the morning of 31 August he personally directed the breakout of the main Kampfgruppe 111./336. Infanterie-Division. Under cover of a violent artillery barrage and the last remaining assault guns, the columns slipped through the Soviet cordon in a night march across open steppe, fighting off repeated tank-infantry counterattacks, wading rivers, and carrying their wounded. By dawn they had linked up with German lines near Mariupol-Melitopol, saving thousands of men who would otherwise have been lost. The citation highlighted this masterful fighting withdrawal and the enormous tank-kill tally as the decisive factor that prevented the total collapse of the southern sector.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #104 (23.10.1944) as General der Infanterie and Kommandierender General XXXXII. Armeekorps. After the catastrophe of Operation Bagration and the simultaneous Lvov-Sandomierz Offensive, Recknagel’s XXXXII. Armeekorps became the anchor of the collapsing front in the great bend of the Vistula in early August 1944. Soviet armored spearheads had crossed the river at Baranow and were threatening to rip the entire German line apart. With only two understrength divisions—the 88. Infanterie-Division (Franco-Sudeten) and the 72. Infanterie-Division (Hessian-Moselle)—Recknagel faced massed tank armies in swampy, forested terrain criss-crossed by streams and ravines. For weeks the corps fought a textbook mobile defense: Recknagel shuttled his few reserves from crisis to crisis, launching sharp counterattacks at dawn and dusk, using the river bends and villages as natural strongpoints, and coordinating every available artillery piece and Nebelwerfer battery into concentrated fire missions that shredded Soviet infantry waves. On 19 August the Wehrmachtbericht praised the “unshakeable courage and bold recklessness” of the troops under his command in the great bend of the Vistula. A second communique on 9 September noted that his corps had sealed off the dangerous Soviet bridgehead west of Baranow through repeated counter-thrusts, preventing a major breakout that could have unhinged the entire central sector. Despite being outnumbered ten to one in armor and constantly threatened with encirclement, Recknagel’s leadership held the line long enough for the front to be stabilized, turning a potential rout into an orderly fighting withdrawal that bought the German high command critical breathing space.
Infanterie-Sturmabzeichen  
Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer  

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Hermann Recknagel was a German general of the infantry who served with distinction in both world wars and rose to command a corps on the Eastern Front during the Second World War. Born on 18 July 1892 in Strauchmühle near Hofgeismar in the Prussian province of Hesse-Nassau, he came from a family of estate tenants with possible Huguenot roots and was the youngest son of Adolf Karl Ferdinand Recknagel and Marie Nanny Lydia Recknagel. Recknagel entered the Imperial German Army in 1913 as a cadet in Infantry Regiment 83 and fought on both the Western and Eastern Fronts in the First World War, where he was wounded several times and earned the Iron Cross in both classes along with other decorations. After the armistice he briefly served in the Freikorps Maercker before transferring into the Reichswehr, steadily advancing through regimental and staff positions during the interwar years until he commanded Infantry Regiment 54 at the outbreak of the new conflict in 1939.

Recknagel’s regiment participated in the invasion of Poland and the subsequent campaign in the West, where it distinguished itself in the final assault on the port of Dunkirk in June 1940. On 3 June, with the beaches still shrouded in smoke from the ongoing British evacuation, Recknagel personally led the vanguard of his regiment against heavily fortified British and French rearguard positions. Machine-gun nests, artillery observers hidden in upper floors, and barricaded buildings turned every street corner into a deadly ambush. Undeterred, he pushed his men forward in bitter house-to-house fighting, overrunning strongpoints that had stalled larger formations for days. By nightfall key heights overlooking the eastern approaches had fallen, and the following day the fortress city was secured. The Wehrmacht communiqué of 8 June praised the regiment’s outstanding performance, and for this action Recknagel received the Knight’s Cross of the Iron Cross on 5 August 1940.

Transferred to the Eastern Front with the 18th Infantry Division and later given command of the 111th Infantry Division in January 1942, Recknagel led his formation through the grueling campaigns in the Donets Basin and the Caucasus. By high summer 1943 the Soviet summer offensive had torn open the German lines north of Taganrog, and Recknagel found himself temporarily elevated to command Korpsgruppe Recknagel, a battle group built around the 111th and elements of the 336th Infantry Division. Encircled against the coast of the Sea of Azov, his troops fought a desperate two-week defensive battle in the villages of Kamyschewacha, Many, and Uspenskaja under blinding dust and scorching heat. German grenadiers and anti-tank crews destroyed 273 Soviet tanks in close combat, with Panzerfaust teams stalking T-34s through burning wheat fields and 8.8 cm guns firing over open sights at point-blank range. When the ring finally closed, Recknagel refused to await relief. On the morning of 31 August he directed a violent breakout under cover of artillery and the last assault guns; the columns slipped through the Soviet cordon in a night march across open steppe, fighting off repeated tank-infantry counterattacks, wading rivers, and carrying their wounded until they linked up with German lines near Mariupol-Melitopol. For this masterful fighting withdrawal he was awarded the Oak Leaves to the Knight’s Cross on 6 November 1943.

In April 1944 Recknagel assumed command of the XLII Army Corps, which he led through the catastrophic Soviet summer offensive that followed Operation Bagration and the simultaneous Lvov-Sandomierz Offensive. With only two understrength divisions—the 88th Infantry Division and the 72nd Infantry Division—he faced massed Soviet tank armies in swampy, forested terrain criss-crossed by streams and ravines in the great bend of the Vistula. For weeks the corps conducted a textbook mobile defense, shuttling its few reserves from crisis point to crisis point, launching sharp counterattacks at dawn and dusk, and using river bends and villages as natural strongpoints. Every available artillery piece and Nebelwerfer battery was coordinated into concentrated fire missions that shredded Soviet infantry waves. On 19 August the Wehrmacht communiqué praised the unshakeable courage and bold recklessness of the troops under his command, and a second report on 9 September noted that the corps had sealed off the dangerous Soviet bridgehead west of Baranow through repeated counter-thrusts, preventing a major breakout that could have unhinged the entire central sector. For these defensive actions Recknagel received the Swords to the Knight’s Cross on 23 October 1944.

Despite being outnumbered ten to one in armor and constantly threatened with encirclement, Recknagel’s leadership held the line long enough for the front to be stabilized, turning a potential rout into an orderly fighting withdrawal that bought the German high command critical breathing space. By January 1945, however, the Vistula-Oder Offensive had shattered the German defenses once more. As his corps remnants fought as a wandering pocket amid the chaos, Recknagel was killed in action on 23 January 1945 near Petrikau when Soviet partisans shot him during close-quarters fighting. At the time of his death he held the rank of General der Infanterie and was one of the last high-ranking Wehrmacht generals to fall in combat on the Eastern Front.

Recknagel was married in 1924 to Carola von Hertzberg, a noblewoman from Borkau, and the couple remained together until his death; he left no known children. Throughout his career he was remembered by contemporaries as a calm, decisive leader whose personal example and tactical skill repeatedly turned near-disaster into successful resistance. His progression from regimental assault commander in the West to corps commander on the collapsing Eastern Front traced the arc of the German Army’s fortunes across two world wars, and his three highest decorations—the Knight’s Cross, Oak Leaves, and Swords—were each earned through direct, hands-on command in the most desperate battles of the conflict.









Source:  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermann_Recknagel  
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermann_Recknagel_(General)  
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/16350/Recknagel-Hermann-General-der-Infanterie.htm  
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Personenregister/R/RecknagelH.htm  
https://rk.balsi.de/index.php?action=list&cat=300  
https://www.geni.com/people/Hermann-Recknagel/6000000200628949835  
Scherzer, Veit. Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939-1945. Jena 2007.  
Patzwall, Klaus D. & Scherzer, Veit. Das Deutsche Kreuz 1941-1945. Norderstedt 2001.  
https://www.unithistories.com/units_index/index.php?file=/officers/personsx.html  
https://forum.axishistory.com/  
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/  
https://web.archive.org/web/20091027052912fw_/http://geocities.com/orion47.geo/index2.html  
https://books.google.com/ (various references to Scherzer and unit histories)  
https://grokipedia.com/ (cross-reference for award details)

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