Nickname: None widely documented
Date of birth: 5 July 1908 - Rotterode, Thuringia (German Empire)
Date of death: 12 May 1984 (Koblenz, Rheinland-Pfalz (West Germany)
Religion: Not publicly specified in available sources.
Family name: Limited public details are available. Parents, siblings, spouse, and children are not extensively documented in open military biographies or genealogical records. He was born into a family in rotterode, thuringia. No confirmed information on marital status or descendants appears consistently across primary military lexicons and award records.
Promotions:
1 April 1933 Polizei-Leutnant
1 April 1934 Polizei-Oberleutnant
1 October 1935 Oberleutnant
1 July 1941 Major
1 September 1942 Oberstleutnant
1 October 1943 Oberst
30 January 1945 Generalmajor
1946 Brigadegeneral (Bundeswehr)
Generalleutnant (Bundeswehr)
Career:
- April 1, 1928: Joined the German police as an officer candidate. Attended the Bonn State Police Academy, state police school for weapons and physical training in Spandau, eiche higher state police school, and school for technology and transport in berlin-tempelhof.
- April 1, 1933: Promoted to police lieutenant.
- April 1, 1934: Promoted to police oberleutnant.
- October 1, 1935: Transferred from the police to the wehrmacht as oberleutnant.
- September 1939: Served as a junior officer and staff officer with the 34th infantry division.
- January to April 1940: Completed a general staff course at the war academy in dresden.
- Spring 1940: As oberleutnant, commanded the 14th company of the 522nd infantry regiment in the 297th infantry division (the division was not deployed in the battle of france).
- Late 1940: Appointed commander of the III battalion of the 522nd infantry regiment.
- 1941: The 297th infantry division was assigned to army group south for operation barbarossa. It advanced toward kyiv and rostov and participated in subsequent defensive actions.
- June 27, 1941: Awarded the iron cross 2nd class as hauptmann and commander of III./infanterie-regiment 522.
- August 1, 1941: Awarded the iron cross 1st class.
- Winter 1941-1942: Led defensive actions with his battalion during the harsh winter fighting on the eastern front.
- April 3, 1942: Awarded the knight's cross of the iron cross as major and commander of iii./infanterie-regiment 522 for his leadership in a bold river crossing of the mosh river. This action enabled his division to bypass fortified positions and continue the pursuit across the udy and donez rivers.
- July 1942: Promoted to major and assumed command of the entire 522nd infantry regiment. The regiment fought at kharkiv, the izyum pocket, and voronezh during the advance toward the don river.
- September 1, 1942: Promoted to oberstleutnant.
- Late 1942 to early 1943: Led the regiment as part of the 6th army into the stalingrad area. Directed battle groups during intense defensive fighting in december 1942 and january 1943. Suffered a serious wound and was evacuated by air before the final collapse of the 6th army. Placed in the führerreserve during recovery.
- October 1, 1943: Promoted to oberst.
- Early 1944: Commanded the eingreifbrigade narwa on the northern sector of the eastern front. Successfully halted localized soviet attacks before being severely wounded again.
- After recovery: Appointed commander of the heeresgruppen waffenschule nord (army group weapons school north), a training establishment. Also led the infanterie-lehrbrigade nord.
- July 1944: During the soviet summer offensive, organized the defense of the vital railway junction at siauliai (schaulen) as kampfkommandant with scratch units including security companies and alarm units. Held the position under heavy attack, allowing retreating german forces to withdraw. Continued defensive actions with improvised units afterward.
- August 27, 1944: Awarded the oak leaves to the knight's cross (560th award) as oberst and leader of the lehr-brigade nord / heeresgruppen waffenschule nord, and simultaneously combat commander of siauliai.
- Autumn 1944: Briefly commanded the 7th panzer division on the northern russian front.
- End of 1944: Assigned command of the elite führer-begleit-brigade (part of panzerkorps großdeutschland). Led it during the ardennes offensive.
- December 24, 1944: Took command of the führer-begleit-brigade.
- January 30, 1945: Promoted to generalmajor. The brigade was expanded into the führer-grenadier-division, and he was appointed its commander.
- March 1945: The division fought near stettin and in the battle for lauban. On march 4, 1945, it linked up with the 8th panzer division, cut off soviet spearheads, inflicted heavy losses, and contributed to the recapture of lauban (one of the last notable german operational successes in the east).
- April 18, 1945: Awarded the swords to the knight's cross (143rd award) as generalmajor and commander of the führer-grenadier-division. The division continued fighting on the eastern front, retreating toward the outskirts of vienna in the final battles for austria.
- May 1945: Surrendered to american forces at the end of the war but was handed over to soviet custody.
- 1945-1955: Held in soviet captivity.
- 1956: Joined the newly formed bundeswehr of west germany with the rank of brigadegeneral. Commanded the infanterieschule hammelburg (infantry school at hammelburg).
- Later years in bundeswehr: Rose to the rank of generalleutnant before retirement.
- 1974: Arrested and convicted of embezzlement of funds and inconsistencies in expense reports related to his bundeswehr service. Sentenced to two years imprisonment. He denied the accusations until his death.
- May 12, 1984: Died in konstanz (some sources note koblenz in connection with records) at age 75.
Awards and Decorations:
Eisernes Kreuz II.Klasse (27 June 1941)
Eisernes Kreuz I.Klasse (1 August 1941)
Infanterie-Sturmabzeichen in Silber
Verwundetenabzeichen in Schwarz
Verwundetenabzeichen in Silber
Nahkampfspange in Bronze
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (3 April 1942) as Major and Kommandeur III.Bataillon / Infanterie-Regiment 522 / 297.Infanterie-Division, awarded for a bold and decisive river crossing operation during the spring advance on the Eastern Front under Heeresgruppe Süd. In early 1942, his battalion faced a strongly fortified soviet position blocking the main advance route. Instead of launching a costly frontal assault, Mäder led his men in a daring crossing of the Mosh river under difficult conditions. His troops established a bridgehead on the far bank through aggressive infiltration and rapid assault, overcoming resistance with close-quarters combat and determined leadership. This unexpected maneuver allowed the bulk of the 297th infantry division to cross the river on the same day without heavy losses. The bridgehead bypassed the main soviet defenses, enabling the division to maintain momentum and continue its pursuit across the udy and donez rivers near tschugujoff the following day. Mäder's action demonstrated exceptional initiative and tactical skill, turning a potential stalemate into a successful continuation of the offensive.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #560 (27 August 1944) as Oberst and Infanterie-Lehrbrigade der Heeresgruppen-Waffenschule Nord und Kampfkommandant von die Stadt Schaulen. During the Soviet Šiauliai offensive (part of the later phases of Operation Bagration), Soviet forces (mainly from the 1st Baltic Front) advanced toward the important rail junction at Schaulen in late July 1944.
On or around 26 July 1944, Soviet spearheads (including elements of the 3rd Guards Tank Corps) reached the city. Mäder had only weak forces available—various security companies, alarm units, and ad-hoc troops.
Mäder quickly formed a Kampfgruppe (battle group) from these scratch units, defended the city for about a day and night, and then broke out toward Libau (Liepāja) on the night of 27–28 July. This helped keep the route open for other retreating German units.
Fighting in the broader Schaulen area continued into August 1944. Mäder continued to lead scratch units in the defense against the ongoing Soviet offensive.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #143 (18 April 1945) as Generalmajor and Kommandeur Führer-Grenadier-Division, awarded for the division's role in the battle for Lauban in early march 1945 — one of the last notable German operational successes on the Eastern Front. After heavy fighting near Stettin, the division moved southwest and engaged Soviet forces threatening Lauban. Between March 1 and 5, 1945, the spearheads of the Führer-Grenadier-Division executed a skillful counterattack and linked up with the 8th Panzer Division on March 4. This coordinated thrust cut off advancing Soviet units in a classic pincer movement. In fierce engagements involving panzergrenadiers, tanks, and artillery, German forces encircled the enemy spearheads. Although most Soviet troops managed to break out on foot, they were forced to abandon the majority of their heavy weapons, tanks, and equipment in the process. Lauban itself was recaptured, delivering a sharp local defeat to the Red Army at a time when such victories were extremely rare. Mäder's energetic command of the elite division in fluid, high-intensity combat amid the collapsing front contributed directly to this tactical success and helped stabilize the immediate sector during the desperate final battles before the retreat toward Vienna and Austria.
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Hellmuth Mäder was a German army officer who rose through the ranks to become a general during the Second World War. Born on 5 July 1908 in Rotterode in Thuringia, he initially served in the police before transferring to the Wehrmacht in 1936. By the outbreak of war in September 1939 he was a staff officer with the 34th Infantry Division. His early wartime service included staff duties and then command of a company in the 297th Infantry Division during the preparations for the invasion of the Soviet Union. Mäder demonstrated leadership in infantry operations on the Eastern Front, where his unit participated in the advance under Army Group South toward the Don River and engagements around Kharkov and the Izyum sector.
In the spring of 1942, as a major commanding the third battalion of Infantry Regiment 522, Mäder led a bold assault crossing of the Mosh River that allowed the bulk of his division to advance successfully. For this action he received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 3 April 1942. He later took command of the full regiment and continued to serve with distinction in defensive and offensive operations. By 1944 his reputation for determined leadership under pressure earned him further recognition. In July 1944, while serving with an infantry training brigade attached to Army Group North and acting as battle commander of the city of Schaulen, Mäder organized scratch forces to delay a major Soviet armored thrust. His Kampfgruppe held the position for a full day and night before breaking out, contributing to the stabilization of the sector and earning him the Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross on 27 August 1944.
In the autumn of 1944 Mäder was briefly assigned command of the veteran 7th Panzer Division on the northern sector of the Eastern Front, succeeding officers such as Dr. Karl Mauss. His tenure with the division was short but occurred during intense defensive fighting. Toward the end of 1944 he received a more prestigious posting as commander of the Führer-Begleit-Brigade, an elite formation within Panzerkorps Großdeutschland under General Dietrich von Saucken. He led this mechanized brigade during the Ardennes Offensive in the West before it was rapidly expanded in early 1945 into the Führer-Grenadier-Division. Promoted to Generalmajor, Mäder assumed full command of the new division as it was redeployed to the Eastern Front.
The Führer-Grenadier-Division under Mäder first saw heavy combat near Stettin before being shifted southward to help defend the approaches to Vienna in the final weeks of the war. In March 1945 the division participated in the successful counterattack at Lauban, where its spearheads linked with the 8th Panzer Division, cutting off Soviet forces, inflicting heavy equipment losses on the enemy, and temporarily liberating the town in what proved to be one of the last notable German operational victories on the Eastern Front. During the desperate fighting on the outskirts of the Austrian capital in April 1945, Mäder continued to direct his division amid collapsing German lines. On 18 April 1945 he was awarded the Swords to his Knight's Cross, becoming the 143rd recipient of this high decoration as Generalmajor and divisional commander.
With the collapse of German resistance in May 1945, Mäder surrendered to American forces but was subsequently handed over to the Soviets. He endured ten years of captivity in the Soviet Union before his release in 1955. Upon returning to West Germany he joined the newly formed Bundeswehr in 1956 with the rank of Brigadegeneral. He served as commander of the Infantry School at Hammelburg and rose to the rank of Generalleutnant before retiring. His postwar career ended controversially when, in 1974, he was convicted of embezzlement and irregularities in expense reporting related to his Bundeswehr service and sentenced to two years in prison, a charge he maintained his innocence of until the end of his life.
Hellmuth Mäder died on 12 May 1984 at the age of 75 in Konstanz on Lake Constance, though some records note Koblenz as the place of death. He was buried in the Hauptfriedhof in Koblenz. Throughout his military career he was recognized for personal courage and tactical skill in both offensive and defensive roles across multiple fronts, culminating in the highest grades of the Knight's Cross. His service spanned the Wehrmacht in the Second World War and the Bundeswehr in the Cold War era, reflecting the complex transition many former German officers made in the postwar period.
Source:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/hellmuth_m%C3%A4der
- https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/34592/m%C3%A4der-hellmuth.htm
- https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/personenregister/m/maederh.htm
- https://ww2gravestone.com/people/mader-hellmuth/
- https://www.feldgrau.com/ww2-german-officer-hellmuth-mader
- https://rk.balsi.de/ (lists of ritterkreuzträger)







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