Showing posts with label Staff Officer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Staff Officer. Show all posts

Sunday, March 12, 2023

Bio of Major Paul Block

Paul Block

Date of Birth: 16.05.1915 - Pommern (German Empire)
Date of Death: unknown

Religion: Evangelist
Father: Eduard Block (priest)
Mother: Frieda Schmidt
Wife: Gisela Leistikow (born 25.09.1921)
Children: Two sons (born in 13.11.1932 and 03.11.1942)

Promotions:
20.04.1936 Leutnant, RDA 01.04.1936 (850)
31.03.1939 Oberleutnant, RDA 01.04.1939 (129)
15.02.1942 Hauptmann, RDA 01.03.1942 (105)
01.03.1944 Major (19a)

Career:
04.06.1934 Entered Infanterie-Regiment 4
16.06.1934 Sworn-in
06.10.1936 Member of II.Bataillon / Infanterie-Regiment 94
26.08.1939 - 27.09.1941 Chef 12.Kompanie / III.Bataillon / Infanterie-Regiment 94
28.09.1941 - 11.06.1942 Chef MG-Kompanie / Infanterie-Regiment 94
15.06.1942 - 19.01.1943 Inspektionschef Schule V für Offiziersanwärter der Infanterie
20.01.1943 - 28.02.1943 Führerreserve OKH
01.03.1943 - 24.03.1943 Stabsoffizier 321. Infanterie-Division
25.03.1943 - 09.11.1943 Adjutant 321. Infanterie-Division
10.11.1943 - 09.12.1943 Führerreserve OKH
10.12.1943 Adjutant 352. Infanterie-Division

Awards and Decorations:
03.10.1939 Eisernes Kreuz II.Klasse
19.08.1941 Eisernes Kreuz I.Klasse
15.12.1941 Infanterie-Sturmabzeichen in Silber

LINK DOCUMENT FILE IN THE GENERALKARTEI



Source:
Bundesarchiv

Saturday, October 22, 2022

Oberleutnant Diekmann of Afrikakorps


Both the sun and washing worked to bleach out the colours of the clothes. The young officer in this picture, dated 3 May 1942, was Oberleutnant Diekmann, aide to General Erwin Rommel of Afrikakorps. The picture was taken by Kriegsberichter Ernst Alexander Zwilling.

Source :
"Deutsche Afrikakorps (1941-1943)" by Ricardo Recio Cardona

Sunday, July 11, 2021

Bio of Generalmajor (Luftwaffe) Maximilian Hantelmann



Generalmajor Maximilian Hantelmann

Born: 29 Jan 1884 in Rastatt
Died: 09 Mar 1963 in Bad Godesberg

Promotions:
Fähnrich (02 Mar 1903); Leutnant (27 Jan 1904); Oberleutnant (16 Jun 1911); Hauptmann (08 Nov 1914); Charakter als Major (09 Dec 1919); Major (01 Nov 1934); Oberstleutnant (01 Mar 1936); Oberst (01 Mar 1939); Generalmajor (01 Feb 1942)

Career:
Entered the Army as an Fahnenjunker and Company-Officer in the 25th Infantry-Regiment (02 Mar 1903-30 Sep 1913)
Training with the 3rd Flying-Battalion (01 Oct 1913-01 Aug 1914)
Leader of the 10th Field-Flying-Battalion (02 Aug 1914-02 Sep 1914)
In French Captivity (02 Sep 1914-15 Sep 1917)
Interned in Switzerland (16 Sep 1917-16 Mar 1919)
Released and Granted Leave (16 Mar 1919-09 Dec 1919)
Retired (09 Dec 1919)
Leader of the Weimar Air-Base of the German Air Shipping Company (17 Mar 1919-19 Feb 1920)
Company-Director of the Firm Rhenania Vereingte Chemical Factory, Mannheim (01 Mar 1922-15 May 1925)
Director of the Transport Air Base Cologne (01 Dec 1925-31 Oct 1934)
Entered Luftwaffe Service as a Supplemental-Officer (fully activated on 01 Mar 1936) and Air-Base-Commandant Cologne (01 Nov 1934-30 Sep 1936)
Air-Base-Commandant Stuttgart-Böblingen (01 Oct 1936-31 Mar 1937)
Leader of the Air-Office Nuremberg (01 Apr 1937-06 Nov 1939)
Airport-Area-Commandant Bayreuth (07 Nov 1939-31 Jan 1940)
With the Staff of Air-Region-Command XII, Wiesbaden (01 Feb 1940-1940)
Airport-Area-Commandant Reims (1940-15 Aug 1940)
Airport-Area-Commandant 2/XIII, Orleans (15 Aug 1940-31 Oct 1943)
Retired (31 Oct 1943)
In British Captivity (01 Feb 1946-14 Dec 1946)
Released (14 Dec 1946)

Decorations & Awards:
1914 Eisernes Kreuz II.Klasse
Kriegsverdienstkreuz II. und I.Klasse mit Schwertern

Source :
https://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?p=2352653#p2352653
https://www.oocities.org/~orion47/WEHRMACHT/LUFTWAFFE/Generalmajor/HANTELMANN_MAXIMILIAN.html

Saturday, June 12, 2021

General Walter Sommé with His Officers


General der Flieger Walter Sommé reading while sitting in a hay, while his officers is waiting behind him. On 1st April 1935 Sommé was given command of Aufklärungsschule 1 F (Heer) which he commanded until 31st March 1936. with the rank of Oberst he commanded as Kommodore the Kampfgeschwader 153 from 1st April 1936 until 1st May 1939. With the rank of Generalleutnant he assumed command of Luftgaustab z.b.V. Russland between 29th June and 23rd October 1941. From 23rd october 1941 until 9th August 1944 he was with the rank of General der Flieger the commanding general of Luftgau VIII.

Source :
Gregg Tolbert photo collection
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/40345/Somm%C3%A9-Walter.htm

Sunday, January 24, 2021

Bio of Generalmajor Bernhard von Lossberg

 


Bernhard Viktor Hans Wolfgang von Lossberg, who was described by David Irving as “a towering figure with a game leg and a fearless nature,” was born in Berlin-Wilmersdorf on July 26, 1899. His father was General of Infantry Friedrich-Karl “Fritz” von Lossberg, who had a brilliant career as a General Staff officer in the Kaiser’s army, ending up as chief of staff of the 4th Army in Flanders in 1918. Educated in the gymnasiums at Eisenach and Stuttgart, Bernhard entered the service in 1916 (just before his 17th birthday) and saw action in the Great War as a member of the elite 2nd Grenadier Regiment in Russia and France, and was wounded three times. One of these wounds left him with a permanent limp. He was commissioned second lieutenant in 1917.

Selected for the Reichsheer, young Lossberg served in the Prussian 5th Infantry Regiment at Stettin (now Szczecin, Poland) from 1920 to 1927, where he commanded a signals platoon at Prenzlau and served as a battalion adjutant. He was promoted to first lieutenant in 1925, joined the staff of the 3rd Infantry Division in 1930 at Frankfurt/Oder, and later Group Command 2 (1932). Lossberg was then posted to the staff of Wehrkreis III in Berlin, and while there, he received his promotion to captain on January 4, 1933. Recognized for his hard work and ability to assimilate data into meaningful military strategy, Lossberg was assigned to the operational planning department of the Defense Ministry and was promoted to major in 1936. (Lossberg was also a noted bridge player.)

With the expansion of the Wehrmacht in Hitler’s Reich, Lossberg was transferred to the 44th Infantry Regiment at Bartenstein, East Prussia, where he commanded a company. He continued to impress his superiors and in 1938 was attached to the OKW to plan joint service maneuvers. In the fall of 1938, he was sent to Spain, where he worked with Special Staff W, which recruited volunteers and transported war material to the Condor Legion. On January 2, 1939, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel and later that month assumed duties with the OKW Planning Staff, where he remained for much of World War II.

Early on, Lossberg (along with Warlimont, Jodl, and others) envisioned a unified command structure for the armed forces. Although Wilhelm Keitel, the chief of OKW, supported this very rational concept,
Hitler rejected it; indeed, the Fuehrer treated the armed forces as he did other state organizations, by dividing authority and power. In any event, Lossberg continued his work on operational plans for OKW, including Case White—the invasion of Poland. In August 1939, Lossberg and Keitel were invited to Hitler’s home in Munich. The Fuehrer assured both officers that Case White would “never” be cause for a world war. Events were to prove otherwise.

The first major challenge for the OKW was the Norwegian campaign. Serving directly as Hitler’s personal staff, the OKW operations staff planned the invasion, with Hitler acting as commander-in-chief of the operation. While the Germans successfully landed forces in Narvik in early April 1940, the British sank all the German Navy’s destroyers there and threatened Dietl’s combat group at Narvik with defeat or with internment in Sweden. Hitler was on the edge of despair. For the first time he exhibited the panic and indecisiveness that he sometimes showed later. On April 14, a nervous and agitated Fuehrer told Keitel to order Dietl to evacuate Narvik. “The hysteria is frightful,” Jodl wrote in his diary. The coded message was given to Lossberg, who angrily refused to send it. Instead, he visited Jodl, who sent him to see Colonel General Walter von Brauchitsch, the commander in chief of the army. Lossberg wanted him to appeal to Hitler to reverse this decision, but the weak-willed Brauchitsch refused on the grounds that he had nothing to do with the Norwegian campaign. He did, however, sign another message to Dietl (apparently drafted by Lossberg), congratulating him on his promotion to lieutenant general and stating: “I am sure you will defend your position [i.e., Narvik] to the last man.” Lossberg then returned to Jodl and tore up Keitel’s handwritten message before his eyes.

Adolf Hitler, however, still paced nervously. He sent Lossberg to General von Falkenhorst’s headquarters near Oslo to observe the situation. Lossberg returned on April 22 and reported that the British had landed only five thousand troops. Once again Hitler panicked and suggested how Falkenhorst should move his forces. Lossberg rejoined that the general controlled all the key points and Hitler should leave everything in Falkenhorst’s hands—in other words, Hitler should mind his own business. The Nazi dictator did not enjoy being lectured to and for weeks afterward would not allow Lossberg into his presence. The colonel’s analysis, however, proved correct, and Falkenhorst’s forces seized control of the entire country.

Meanwhile, Lossberg returned to his operational planning duties at OKW, and his next task was a significant one indeed. He carried out a feasibility study of a Russian campaign. Lossberg finished his 30-page report in July 1940, and gave it the code name Fritz, his son’s name. Lossberg stated that for Germany to defeat Russia, the Berlin and Silesian industrial areas would have to be protected from enemy bombing. Hence, the invasion must penetrate deep into the Soviet Union, allowing the Luftwaffe to devastate important rear areas.

The primary targets in the Russian campaign, Lossberg concluded, should be Leningrad and the north, where better roads and railroads existed (or at least the Abwehr reported them to exist). German success there would also remove Soviet influence from the Baltic region and would bring both Leningrad and Moscow under German artillery fire. Furthermore, the push north would be bolstered by Group XXI, operating from Norway via Finland. He proposed the thrust north as follows: “An attack by two army groups from the general line east of Warsaw to Koenigsberg, with the southern group the more powerful [the group assembling around Warsaw and southern East Prussia] and being allocated the bulk of the armored and mechanized units.”

The key to the success of his plan would be the encirclement of the Soviet armies from the north and their failure to withstand a rapid onslaught. Lossberg also wrote that Russia’s only hope would be to take the offensive and invade the Rumanian oil fields. Such a move would be forestalled by a German-Rumanian military agreement. Besides, Lossberg argued, the Soviets would not abandon the Baltic region, which they had seized only a few months before.

Although OKH drafted the operational plan for what was to be codenamed Barbarossa, it basically followed Lossberg’s plan, except that a third army group (Army Group South) was added. Although the Wehrmacht invasion of Russia proceeded rapidly in the summer of 1941, the invading armies bogged down in the mud of early winter. Then they struggled forward—but only very slowly—in subfreezing temperatures. Once again concern appeared on the faces of the men at Fuehrer Headquarters, with army generals pleading for a retreat so defensive lines could be set up. Hitler, however, insisted that the Wehrmacht continue the advance. Lossberg, believing there to be a need for a firm, unified command, tried to convince Jodl to form a unitary German staff to coordinate all services. It should be commanded by an officer who clearly demonstrated exceptional leadership—General Erich von Manstein. Jodl refused, for he knew that Manstein and Hitler did not get along.

Later that winter, sensing Lossberg’s criticisms, Hitler demanded that the colonel be replaced. (The Fuehrer had not forgotten the Norwegian incident, either.) On January 1, 1942, Lossberg was promoted to full colonel and became Ia (operations officer) on the staff of the Wehrmacht commander, Norway (i.e., Falkenhorst). After two and a half years in this backwater theater, Lossberg was named chief of staff to Admiral Wilhelm Marschall, the special commissioner, Danube, in June 1944, and was promoted to major general on September 1, 1944. His last assignment was as chief of staff of Wehrkreis VIII, headquartered in Breslau, a post he held until the Replacement Army was dissolved and its various components were sent to the fronts in March 1945. Without an assignment at the end of the war, Bernhard Lossberg surrendered to the British at Neustadt/Holstein on May 5, 1945. Released in July 1946, he retired to Wiesbaden, where he wrote Wehrmachtfuehrungsstab: Bericht eines Generalstabs-offizier (In the Armed Forces Operations Staff: Report of a General Staff Officer). He died in Wiesbaden on March 15, 1965.


Source :
"Hitler's Commanders: Officers of the Wehrmacht, the Luftwaffe, the Kriegsmarine, and the Waffen-SS" by Samuel W. Mitcham and Gene Mueller
http://www.specialcamp11.co.uk/Generalmajor%20Bernhard%20von%20Lossberg.htm

Friday, January 1, 2021

Divisionskommandeur Hans Kratzert with his Staff Officers

 

Sitting in the middle is Generalleutnant Hans Kratzert (Kommandeur 251. Infanterie-Division); at right is Hauptmann i.G. Zabel; at left is Hauptmann Kratzenberg (Kommandant Stabsquartier 251. Infanterie-Division), followed by Kriegsgerichtsrat kalmereit. Just come in outside the gate is Hauptmann Breitenstein.


Source :
Denis Daum photo collection

Friday, December 25, 2020

Staff Officers of IV. SS-Panzerkorps



The IV. SS-Panzerkorps was formed in August 1943 in Poitiers, France. The formation was originally to be a skeleton formation to supervise those SS divisions that were being reformed as SS Panzer divisions.

On 30 June 1944, the formation absorbed the VII. SS-Panzerkorps and was reformed as a headquarters for the SS Division Totenkopf and SS Division Wiking. The Corps was placed under the control of former Wiking commander SS-Obergruppenführer Herbert Otto Gille.

The corps was placed into the line around Warsaw, Poland, where it saw action against the Red Army as a part of the 9th Army. In August, 1944, elements of the corps took part in the suppression of the Warsaw Uprising. After holding the line near Warsaw, the corps was pushed back to the area near Modlin, where it saw heavy fighting until December.

When SS-Obergruppenführer Karl Pfeffer Wildenbruch's IX SS Mountain Corps and large numbers of Hungarian troops were encircled in Budapest in December 1944, the corps was shifted south from Army Group A to join 6th Army and to take part in the relief efforts. The operations were named Konrad. In Operation Konrad III, the largest of the relief operations, IV SS Panzer Corps destroyed all the tanks of the Soviet 3rd Ukrainian Front in an intense two-week battle in Transdanubia but could not relieve the city.

After the failure of Operation Konrad III, the corps was moved west to the area around Lake Balaton, where it was responsible for defending the left flank of the Operation Spring Awakening (Frühlingserwachen), near Stuhlweissenberg. After the failure of this operation, the Soviet Vienna Offensive tore a gap between the IV SS-Panzerkorps and the neighboring Third Hungarian Army. After escaping an encirclement thanks to the efforts of the 9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen, the corps withdrew towards Vienna. The remnants of the corps surrendered to the Americans on 9 May 1945.

Commanders  
SS-Obergruppenführer Alfred Wünnenburg (8 June 1943 - 23 Oct 1943)
SS-Obergruppenführer Walther Krüger (23 Oct 1943 - 14 Mar 1944)
SS-Obergruppenführer Matthias Kleinheisterkamp (1 July 1944 - 20 July 1944)
SS-Brigadeführer Nikolaus Heilmann (20 July 1944 - 6 Aug 1944)
SS-Obergruppenführer Herbert Otto Gille (6 Aug 1944 - 8 May 1945)

Chef des Stabes  
SS-Standartenführer Nikolaus Heilmann (1 Apr 1943 - 1 Aug 1944)
SS-Obersturmbannführer Manfred Schönfelder (1 Aug 1944 - 8 May 1945)

Area of operations  
France (June 1943 - July 1944)
Poland (July 1944 - Jan 1945)
Hungary & Austria (Jan 1945 - May 1945)

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The corps staff of the IV. SS Panzer Corps, like all German higher level staffs at the time, was essentially divided into two elements: The Operations and Intelligence section (known as the Führungsabteilung) and the Logistics and Administrative section (known as the Adjutantur and Quartiermeisterabteilung). They often were located in two separate and distinct areas, with the Operations and Intelligence staffs usually located closer to the front  line, where the corps commander spent most of his time. Here, the various key officers who made up the Führungsabteilung are represented. Mostly these men were hidden behind the scenes, and wanted it that way, resulting in few photos being taken of them during the war (after all, what's sexy about pushing paper?).


SS-Obersturmbannführer Manfred Schönfelder, who was the IV. SS-Panzerkorps chief of Staff from August 1944 until May 1945.


The first chief of staff of the corps was SS-Standartenführer Nicolaus Heilmann, who held the position until the first week of August 1944.


The corps' first Ia or operations officer was SS-Hauptsturmführer Richard Pauly, who held the position until the beginning of August 1944.


The second Ia of the corps was SS-Hauptsturmführer Werner Westphal, who served as its acting Ia from 17 August until 9 November 1944.


The third acting Ia of the corps was SS-Hauptsturmführer Wilhelm Klose, who replaced Westphal in November 1944 until 16 January 1945, when he became the Ia of the Wiking Division.


The fourth Ia of the Corps staff was SS-Sturmbannführer Fritz Rentrop, who served in the position from 16 January until he was captured/killed in action on 2 February 1945. Is it more known about the death of Rentrop: He was captured and beaten up near Dinnyes and his death was 2 February 1945.


After his loss, Rentrop was temporarily replaced by SS-Hauptsturmführer Hans Velde, who was a general staff candidate but was serving as the assistant corps operations officer or O1 at the time.


The fifth and final Ia of the corps was SS-Sturmbannführer Friedrich Rauch, who performed the duty from 1 March to 8 May 1945.

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Besides the operations officers in the Führungsabteilung, there was also an intelligence or Ic staff section. For most of the time that the IV. SS-Panzerkorps served in combat, its Ic was SS-Sturmbannführer Herbert Jahnkuhn. Jahnkuhn was an interesting character; not only was he an anthropologist and archaeologist, he had been a college professor at the University of Goettingen before the war. Like the Nazi nemesis in Steven Spielberg's "Raiders of the Lost Ark," Jahnkuhn along with others scoured the globe, including the Middle East, for artifacts which would allegedly "prove" the origins of the so-called "Aryan Ideal" type of civilization, often resorting to unsavory methods to acquire cultural objects. When the war in the East began on 22 June 1941, Jahnkuhn led a team that was established to search the Ukraine and Crimea for such items, and helped to catalog many of the riches confiscated by a special battalion established by Himmler to loot the occupied Eastern territories. After the war and his rehabilitation, Jahnkuhn was able to regain his chair at Goettigen's anthropology department, though by the mid-1970s, his Nazi past finally began to catch up with him.


Photo of Jankuhn taken February 1945 in Hungary.


Photo of Jahnkuhn taken November 1944 in Modlin.


Subordinate to Jahnkuhn, though not a member of the corps staff, was SS-Untersturmführer Erich Kernmayr, who was the commander of the Psychological Warfare Platoon for Hungary (Kampf-Propaganda-Zug "Ungarn"). Though a member of the SS Kriegsberichter Regiment "Kurt Eggers," Kernmayr received his daily assignments from Jankuhn, based upon his estimate as to where PSYOP leaflets and broadcast messages targeted towards Soviet and Hungarian troops would be most effective. After the war, writing under the name Erich Kern, he became a prolific author and member of various far-right German political parties.


Jahnkuhn's assistant or Deputy Ic was SS-Hauptsturmführer Dr. Herbert Metowsich, shown here in February 1945 in Hungary.


Although not a member of the Headquarters staff, SS-Hauptsturmführer Gerhard Dieckmann was the commander of the 2nd Company, SS-Nachrichten-Abteilung 104, the corps' signal battalion.

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Far less glamorous than the operations and intelligence staff sections but just as important to the success of the corps' engagements and battles were the Administration and Supply staffs, along with some of the specialized staffs that focused on artillery matters, engineering, legal, communications, and propaganda. Here are a few of those senior officers who were responsible for the orderly performance of those mundane tasks so necessary for a successful corps in battle.

 

The officer responsible for coordinating the corps' artillery supporting effort was the ARKO, the abbreviation for Artilleriekommandur. The IV. SS-Panzerkorps' ARKO for most of its existence was SS-Brigadeführer und Generalmajor der Waffen-SS Kurt Brasack, shown here in a prewar photo as a SS-Obersturmbannführer. An artillery veteran from World War I, Brasack was instrumental in the successful prosecution of artillery strikes, counterstrikes, and deep strikes.



Just as important as Panzers, assault guns, and artillery were signal troops. Without the means to communicate orders and messages via radio, land line telephone, or telex, a corps would be virtually unable to adequately coordinate the activities of all of its combat arms. To carry out this specialized function, the corps was authorized its own corps signal battalion, SS-Nachrichten-Abteilung 104. The commander of the battalion for the last several months of the war was Wiking veteran SS-Obersturmbannführer Hubert Hüppe, shown here before the war as an SS Sergeant.



A Panzer Corps, with two or three panzer or mechanized divisions operating under its banner, usually had thousands of motor vehicles assigned, as well as hundreds of armored vehicles, including tanks, assault guns, self-propelled artillery, and armored half-tracks. To keep track of the readiness of these vehicles and their maintenance requirements to keep them combat ready, each corps staff had an officer called a TFK, short for Technischer Führer für Kraftfahrwesen, or simply motor transport maintenance officer. The IV. SS-Panzerkorps' TFK for most of its existence was SS-Sturmbannführer Otto Brandt, shown here before the war in civilian clothes.



The corps staff was authorized a senior engineer advisor, the Korpspionierführer, who was responsible for planning and supervising the execution of various engineering tasks, such as road repair, barrier construction, bridge construction and maintenance, minefield emplacement, and so on. The Corps Engineer Officer for most of the IV. SS-Panzerkorps' existence was SS-Obersturmbannführer Fritz Braune, who was supervised by the corps' chief of staff and who resided in the operations and intelligence staff section.



Just like any military organization, it could not ignore matters that arose in the legal and judge advocate arena. The corps' Staff Judge Advocate, or Korpsrichter, was SS-Obersturmbannführer Hans Heinz, who worked in the Adjutantur under the supervision of the Staff IIa, Karl-Willi Schulze.



The 2nd General Staff Officer, or Ib, was SS-Obersturmbannführer Hans Scharff, another Wiking Division veteran elevated to the corps staff when Herbert Gille was named as the corps commander. The Ib was responsible for coordinating and planning the supply requirements of not only the subordinate divisions, but also that of corps troops, attached army troops, and the corps heaquarters itself.



Within the Ib Staff, was another officer designated as the Officer for Transportation and Traffic Regulation, called the Id or Offizier für Verkehrsregelung. Although he was subornated to the Ib, Hans Scharff. the corps' Id actually worked within the operations and intelligence staff element. The corps' 1d for the first six months of its existence was SS-Obersturmbannführer Wilhelm Honsell, shown here as an SS Captain before the war. By the turn of the year 1944/45, he was designated as the Ib of the Wiking Division.



With an organization encompassing at times more than 40,000 men, the proper administration of the corps' manpower needs and concerns was a very demanding job. The staff officer responsible for personnel administration was SS-Obersturmbannführer (shown here as a Sturmbannführer) Karl-Willy Schulze, another Wiking Division veteran chosen by Gille to follow him to the IV. SS-Panzerkorps at the end of July 1944. Schulze had been the Adjutant of the Wiking, and as such was fully qualified to perform a similar function one level higher.



Hubert Hüppe's predecessor as Corps Signal Officer was SS-Hauptsturmführer Martin Müller, shown here in his prewar Allgemeine SS uniform.


The corps' "Morale" officer, also known as the NSFO, was SS-Hauptsturmführer Franz Wehofsich, an Austrian officer known for his pre-war activity in the Austrian Nazi Party. Officially designated as the Staff "VI" Officer, he not only looked after the morale of the troops, but was responsible for their political education in the proper aspects of National Socialism.

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Two other individuals who performed an important role within the corps headquarters were the two officers who served as Gille's Begleitoffizier, or escort officer, a position designated as the O5. The U.S. Army or British equivalent was the general's aid, or aide-de-camp. These two men, SS Lieutenants Günther Lange and Joachim Barthel, served both the corps commander and chief of staff (the latter was not authorized an O5, but Barthel, who had suffered an incapacitating head wound, performed the role) between the end of July 1944 and the end of the war.  Their duties included ensuring that the corps commander's coffee cup was always filled and his cigarettes were always available; ensuring that his staff car and driver (SS Sergeant Pippo) were always ready to go to the front; to make sure that his personal situation maps was always up to date, that Gille's spare uniforms were always cleaned and ready for wear, and that he, as the escort officer, would always know the routes to and from their destination, as well as what the "threat" level ways there and back. A truly demanding job, one that was only given to the most intelligent and experienced young officers.


On the right, SS-Untersturmführer Günther Lange holds a situation map for his corps commander, SS-Gruppenführer und Generalleutnant der Waffen-SS Herbert-Otto Gille. Lange had been serving as a platoon leader in the 2nd Battalion of SS Panzer Regiment 5 until he was selected to replace Hermann Kaufmann as Gille's O5. After the war, Lange returned to his art studio and earned a master's degree equivalent in art, while pursuing a career as an officer in the Bundeswehr, where he finally retired as a Lieutenant Colonel after 20 years of service.


SS-Untersturmführer Joachim Barthel, Wiking Division veteran and recipient of the German Cross in Gold for the manner of his performance while serving in the 3rd Company of the Germania Regiment. His fate after the war still remains unknown.


SS-Obersturmführer Hermann Kaufmann was Lange's predecessor as Gille's O5 in the Wiking Division. When he was replaced by Lange, Kaufmann went on the command the 1st Company of SS Armored Reconaissance Battalion 5 of the Wiking Division, where he was killed in action in Hungary on 25 January 1945.

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A Panzer Corps is more than just staff officers, radios, and motorcycle messengers; it also consists of divisions, usually two or more. And these divisions are led by men who have proven themselves in subordinate positions, such as battalion and regimental commanders who learned their trade while serving as subalterns before the war or during the war in the crucible of combat. During the Tank Battle of Praga, the IV. SS-Pz.Korps was fortunate, in that at one time or another before, during, and after the battle, it had several of the finest (and one of the not-so-finest) divisions of the Wehrmacht subordinated to it. These includes the 4th and 19th Panzer Divisions, the Herman Goering Panzer Division, the ill-fated 73rd Infantry Division, and Grenadier-Brigade 1131. For most of the next three months, the corps with its two SS divisions, the Wiking and Totenkopf, would cooperate closely with these units of the Heer and Luftwaffe, enabling General Gille and the 9th Army to keep Marshal Rokossovskiy and his armies away from their goal of Warsaw.

The commander of Fallschirm-Panzer-Division Hermann Göring during the Tank Battle of Praga was Luftwaffe Generalmajor (Major General) Wilhelm Schmalz, who went on to command Fallschirm-Panzer-Korps Hermann Göring.



The commander of the 19th Panzer Division was Generalmajor Hans Källner, who brought his division from Holland, where it had recently undergone complete reconstitution, and deployed it quite effectively during the Tank Battle of Praga.



Oberst Franz Schlieper (shown here as a Generalmajor) took command of the ill-fated 73rd Infantry Division only two days before its collapse during the Battle of Praga in September 1944. He later proved to be an adept commander who rebuilt his division and led it competently during the remainder of its existence.



Generalmajor Clemens Betzel, who expertly led the veteran 4th Panzer Division as it conducted its lethal counterattack at a critical moment during the Tank Battle of Praga, sealing the fate of the Soviet III Tank Corps.



Oberst Wilhelm Söth, the Afrika Korps veteran who commanded and expertly led the newly-raised Grenadier Brigade 1131.


Source :
"From the Realm of a Dying Sun. Volume I: IV. SS-Panzerkorps and the Battles for Warsaw, July–November 1944" by Douglas E. Nash, Sr.
https://www.axishistory.com/books/118-germany-waffen-ss/germany-waffen-ss-corps-etc/1227-iv-ss-panzerkorps
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IV_SS_Panzer_Corps
https://www.facebook.com/Latewareasternfront

Saturday, August 15, 2020

Saturday, November 16, 2019

Eckhard Christian and Werner Kreipe

Beginning of August 1944: Eventual General der Flieger Werner Kreipe in conversation with Oberst Eckhard Christian. During his time at the Military College in Munich, Kreipe participated in Hitler’s march on the Feldherrnhalle, and therefore he wears the ribbon of 9 November 1923, the so-called Blood Order“ award, on his right breast pocket. Following the assassination attempt on 20 July 1944, from which Giinther Korten was critically wounded and died shortly afterwards, Kreipe was temporarily entrusted with the business of the Luftwaffe Chief of the General Staff.


Source :
Fotos aus dem Führerhauptquartier - Hermann Historica München

Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Luftwaffe Officers at Feldkommandostelle "Steinbruch"

1942-1943: One side of a stereograph of Luftwaffe officials at a German Air Force headquarters location in Vinnitsa, Ukraine. Original caption in German reads: "Im fahrbaren und somit schnell beweglichen Hauptquartier der Luftwaffe werden die Operationen der Luftverbände geleitet" (In the mobile and thus rapidly moving headquarters of the Air Force, the operations of the combined Luftwaffe staffs are conducted). Hermann Göring's Feldkommandostelle "Steinbruch" was built during the same time when the "Werwolf" complex was built. It was blown up in 1944 by retreating German forces. Parts of the large bunker that stood here can be found in the forest north of the village of Hulivtsi (near Kordeliwka and close to the Luftwaffe airfield in Kalinowka – Google Earth: 49°29'51.85"N – 28°35'51.54"E). The complex was once attacked by a group of partisans, led by general Naumova, in February 1943.


Source :
https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/pa1180077
https://www.tracesofwar.com/sights/64587/Remains-Headquarters-Hermann-G%F6ring-Steinbruch.htm

Sunday, June 19, 2016

General der Infanterie Rudolf Schmundt

 Nice picture of Generalmajor Rudolf Schmundt as Chefadjutant des Heeres beim Führer und Oberbefehlshaber der Wehrmacht (Chief Army Adjutant of Hitler). It was taken at the time of Hitler's secret visit to Finland, 4 June 1942.


Source :
http://sa-kuva.fi/neo#

General der Flieger Hans-Georg von Seidel

Nice picture of General der Flieger Hans-Georg von Seidel as Generalquartiermeister der Luftwaffe (General-Quartermaster of the Luftwaffe). It was taken at the time of Hitler's secret visit to Finland, 4 June 1942.


Source :
http://sa-kuva.fi/neo#

Saturday, March 12, 2016

Staff of Luftgau-Kommando VI Münster in 1944

The staff of Luftgau-Kommando VI Münster in 1944. At that time, the commander was Generalleutnant Ernst Dörffler.


Source :
http://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Gliederungen/Luftgaue/Luftgau6.htm