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Hans von Luck

Hans–Ulrich Freiherr von Luck und Witten (15 July 1911 – 1 August 1997), usually shortened to Hans von Luck, was a German officer in the Wehrmacht of Nazi Germany during World War II. Luck served with the 7th Panzer Division and 21st Panzer Division. Luck is author of the book Panzer Commander.

Hans von Luck
Oberstleutnant Hans von Luck 1944
Born(1911-07-15)15 July 1911
Flensburg
Died1 August 1997(1997-08-01) (aged 86)
Hamburg
Allegiance Weimar Republic
 Nazi Germany
Service/branchArmy
Years of service1929–45
RankOberst
Unit7th Panzer-Division
21st Panzer-Division
Battles/wars
AwardsKnight's Cross of the Iron Cross
Spouse(s)Regina von Luck
Other workMilitary lecturer, author

Early life and interwar period edit

Luck was born in Flensburg, into a Prussian family with old military roots. Luck's father, Otto von Luck, served in the Imperial German Navy and died during July 1918 of an influenza virus. His mother remarried a Reichsmarine Chaplain. In 1929, Luck joined the Reichswehr (army). Through the winter of 1931−1932, Luck attended a nine-month course for officer cadets, led by then Captain Erwin Rommel, at the infantry school in Dresden.[1] On 30 June 1934 Luck's unit took part in the Night of the Long Knives, arresting several Sturmabteilung (SA) members in Stettin.[2] In 1939 Luck was posted to the 2nd Light Division, serving in its armoured reconnaissance battalion.

World War II edit

Invasions of Poland and France edit

 
Motorcycle reconnaissance forces in Poland, September, 1939

On 1 September 1939 the 2nd Light Division, under General Georg Stumme, participated in the invasion of Poland. Luck served as a company commander in the division's reconnaissance battalion.[3] The division was reorganized and reequipped to form the 7th Panzer Division, with Rommel assuming command on 6 February 1940. Luck served as a company commander in an armoured reconnaissance battalion.[4]

The 7th Panzer Division was a part of the XV Army Corps under General Hermann Hoth in Army Group A. On 10 May 1940 the division participated in the invasion of France. Luck's reconnaissance battalion led the division's advance into Belgium, reaching the Meuse in three days.[5] In his memoir Luck describes the division's crossing of the Meuse and Rommel's active role in gaining the crossing.[6] On 28 May, Luck was appointed commander of the reconnaissance battalion.[7] Luck's unit advanced through Rouen, Fecamp, and Cherbourg. In February 1941 Rommel was replaced by General Freiherr von Funk, and in June Luck moved with his division to East Prussia in preparation for the invasion of the Soviet Union.[citation needed]

Invasion of the Soviet Union edit

 
Luck's map marked up during 7th Panzer's movements across the Moscow-Volga Canal, just north of Moscow

Luck was made Hauptmann and attached to 7th Panzer Division's headquarters staff.[8] His division was a part of the 3rd Panzer Group of Army Group Center.[9] In this capacity he participated in the Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union. The 7th Panzer Division spearheaded the 3rd Panzer Group as it drove east and the capture of Vilnius in Lithuania, before driving on Minsk to form the northern inner encirclement arm of the Bialystok-Minsk pocket.[9] Following the capture of Minsk the armored group continued east towards Vitebsk.[9] At Vitebsk, Luck was assigned as commander of the division's reconnaissance battalion.[10]

The division participated in creating the large pocket around Smolensk, cutting the Smolensk–Moscow road.[9] Luck and his unit continued on towards Moscow. In his memoirs he describes the stiffening Soviet resistance and problems the German forces faced relating to weather and road conditions.[11] Since November Rommel had requested Luck be transferred to Africa to take over command of one of his reconnaissance battalions.[1] The transfer was approved in late January once the crisis of the Soviet winter offensive had passed.[12]

North Africa edit

Luck was promoted to major, spending February and March 1942 on leave. Reporting back for duty on 1 April 1942, he reached Africa on 8 April and assumed command over the 3rd Panzer Reconnaissance Battalion of the 21st Panzer Division.[13][14] Luck spent June to mid-September in Germany, recuperating from a combat wound. Returning to Africa, he resumed command of the 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion.[15]

On 23 October 1942 the British launched the attack of the Second Battle of El Alamein.[16] The Axis position deteriorated leading to a retreat. Luck was one of Rommel's most experienced commanders, and he called upon Luck's reconnaissance battalion to screen his withdrawal.[17] By December the Axis forces had retreated to Tripoli. On 6 May the forces in Africa surrendered, with more than 130,000 Germans taken prisoner. By that time Luck was in Germany.

The Normandy invasion edit

 
Map showing territory gained in Operations Atlantic and Goodwood

After North Africa and leave in Berlin Luck was assigned in August 1943 as instructor at a panzer reconnaissance school in Paris. In March 1944 he was to be appointed as commander of a panzer regiment in the new Panzer Lehr Division in France under Fritz Bayerlein. However in mid-April he was told by Bayerlein that as Feuchtinger apparently had more influence at Headquarters he was to serve under Feuchtinger.[18]

Luck was assigned to the 21st Panzer Division, stationed in Brittany and commanded by Edgar Feuchtinger. In early May, Luck was placed in command of the 125th Panzer Grenadier Regiment.[19][20] Luck's regiment was stationed at Vimont, southeast of Caen, with two companies of assault guns in support.

On 6 June 1944 the invasion of Normandy started. During the night Luck was startled by the reports of paratroopers landing in his area, and establishing a bridgehead on the east side of the Orne River. Luck requested permission to attack, but Feuchtinger, the 21st Panzer Division's commander, refused to allow him to do so, citing strict orders not to engage in major operations unless cleared to do so by high command.[21] Apart from an order at 4:30 a.m. directing other elements of the division to move against the paratroopers of the British 6th Airborne Division, the 21 Panzer Division remained mostly motionless. As the morning wore on, the defenders on the coast were overcome and the British beachheads secured.

Around 10:30 a.m. General Erich Marcks, commander of the German LXXXIV Corps to which 21st Panzer Division was attached, ordered the entire 21st to leave a single company from the division's 22nd Panzer Regiment to deal with the paratroopers and move the rest of the division to attack the British forces advancing from the beachhead toward Caen.[22] Feuchtinger finally ordered his division forward, leaving a company of panzers as ordered, but also leaving Luck's 125 Panzergrenadier Regiment. This order was later countermanded, this time from 7th Army, and only Luck's detachment was left to attack the paratroopers east of Orne. The confusion and inflexibility of the German command situation markedly delayed the German response. Nevertheless, at 1700 p.m. Luck attempted to break through to the Orne river bridges at Bénouville with his armoured personnel carriers, but heavy fire from the warships supporting the British paratroopers, under Major John Howard, holding the bridges drove his forces back.[23] Added to this, more British paratroopers landed in the rear area of the regiment, causing some of Luck's forces to fall back.

On the morning of 9 June Luck's command was designated Kampfgruppe von Luck, and in addition to the elements of 125th Panzer Grenadier Regiment already under Luck's command it consisted of a battalion, three assault-gun batteries and one antitank company with 88mm guns. With this force Luck was tasked with assaulting the Orne bridges, and recapturing them from the British paratroopers. Starting one hour before dawn to avoid the worst of the British naval and aerial support, the Kampfgruppe advanced on the village of Ranville, dislodging the enemy there, but it could not penetrate the British lines to reach the bridges. The British paratroopers, reinforced by the British 51st (Highland) Division and the 4th Armoured Brigade, then attempted to advance around the eastern edge of Caen as the left side of an envelopment attack, but their efforts were thwarted by Luck's unit.[24] Over the next several days Luck's group initiated what amounted to a spoiling attack, tying up the British units. On 12 June Kampfgruppe von Luck engaged in the fighting for the village of Sainte-Honorine, lying on a hill overlooking the invasion beaches.[25] The British forces east of the Orne were unable to move forward until 16 June.[24]

Operation Goodwood edit

In the beginning of July, the area defended by Luck's Kampfgruppe came under the control of I SS Panzer Corps under the command of Obergruppenführer Sepp Dietrich. Nearby was the Heavy Tank Battalion 503 equipped with one company of Tiger II tanks and two companies of Tiger I tanks. On 18 July, Field Marshall Bernard Montgomery launched Operation Goodwood; an operation aimed to wear down the German armoured forces in Normandy in addition to seizing territory, on the eastern flank of Caen, to the extent of the Bourguébus–Vimont–Bretteville area. If successful, the British hoped to follow this limited attack by pushing reconnaissance forces south towards Falaise.[26][27][28] The offensive opened with a massive aerial bombardment, followed by artillery and naval gun fire, intended to suppress or destroy all defences in the path of the attack.[29]

During the morning, Luck had just returned from a three-day leave in Paris. Informed of the air raids, he moved forward to determine the exact situation and soon realized that a major offensive was underway.[30][31] The air raid had neutralized the remnants of the 16th Luftwaffe Field Division, which held the front line, as well as elements of the 21st Panzer Division (in particular, elements of the 22nd Panzer Battalion and the 1st battery of Assault Gun Battalion 200) leaving a hole in the German defensive line.[32][33] While elements of the advancing British 11th Armoured Division were held up in an engagement with self-propelled guns of the 200th Assault Gun Battalion, the 2nd Fife and Forfar Yeomanry advanced past Cagny. As the regiment did, they came under heavy anti-tank fire resulting in the loss of four tanks.[34][35][36]

After the war, Luck wrote that he was responsible for this barrage of anti-tank fire, saying that he used his sidearm to threaten a Luftwaffe officer into action, to fire upon the advancing tanks with 88 mm flak guns.[37] Luck's account has been widely repeated,[35][38] although competing theories have also been suggested: The British 8 Corps history states that German anti-tank guns based in Soliers, which had escaped the aerial bombardment, were responsible.[39]

Ian Daglish, critical of Luck's account, stated "there turns out to be surprisingly little" evidence to support Luck's version of events, and that all accounts of 88 mm flak guns in Cagny being used in an anti-tank capacity "can be traced directly to Luck and no one else." He further wrote that neither the commander of the 200th Assault Gun Battalion or the commander of Luftwaffe flak guns made any comment in regards to this action and that based on locations of flak positions, it was illogical for a heavy flak battery to have been located there.[40] Daglish also wrote that Luck's account of the placement of the guns "is imprecise" and "expert analysis of aerial photographs of the area taken at midday ... reveals no trace of [the battery] nor of any towing vehicles or their distinctive tracks". Such weapons and vehicles "could not be hidden within a mere couple of hours of relocation".[41] Daglish argued that Luck embellished his role during post-war official British tours of the battlefield, with his version of events eventually coming into question (off the record).[42] Daglish wrote that elements of the 200th Assault Gun Battalion were in the area and that any number of German anti-tank guns could have fired on the 2nd Fife and Forfar and that 88 mm anti-tank guns were deployed to the Cagny area throughout the day.[43] John Buckley is also critical of Luck's account, and called it "colourful and enthralling". He argued that despite there being "no doubt that heavy anti-tank gunfire from in and around Cagny began to account for British tanks", no evidence that the Luftwaffe had guns in Cagny at the time given the dispositions of other Luftwaffe batteries. Buckley wrote that Luck had embroidered his role.[37]

Stephen Napier reassessed these criticisms of Luck's account. He wrote that "heavy anti-aircraft guns were located in the outlying villages of Caen" and "photographic evidence of the Luftwaffe batteries in the area exists", in addition the wreckage of three 88mm guns were found by the Guards division that afternoon in Cagny, which would corroborate Luck's claim to have ordered the destruction of the guns upon abandoning Cagny.[44] Napier wrote that Luck's account of threatening a Luftwaffe officer is plausible given that "88mm anti-aircraft crews did not expect to become embroiled in fighting as per III Flak Korps policy, and their direct involvement occasionally took some persuasion."[44] Napier also asserts that the timeline of Luck's stated confrontation with the Luftwaffe battery commander, just after 09:00 hours, correlates with the losses the 2nd Fife and Forfar Yeomanry at 09:30 hours since a "88mm flak battery would only need about 15 minutes to relocate a short distance".[45] Napier further writes that the fact that two Tiger tanks were destroyed by German friendly fire "suggests the actions of an inexperienced Luftwaffe crew" unable to identify retreating German tanks.[44] According to Napier the 75mm Pak 40 anti-tank guns were incapable of the clean armour penetrations found on the Tigers at that range and the only other alternative unit that could have engaged the British tanks was Becker's 4th Battery located in Le Mensnil Frementel. Napier notes "if this company did not move before 0930 hours, it would have been cut off when the leading tanks of the 29th brigade crossed the railway" and reasoned "since the battery "Was able to relocate successfully to just south of Four where it was in action for the rest of the day and so must have moved well before 0930 hours."[44] Napier stated that an officer of the 2nd Fife and Forfar wrote in his memoirs "of his surprise at seeing a German officer in dress uniform surveying the battlefield from Cagny".[44] Napier concluded that Luck "correctly attributed credit where it was due and his only sin is the assumption of a mantle previously worn by Rommel who stopped the British tank attack at Arras in 1940 by ordering the 88mm flak guns to engage the ground targets of the British tank forces."[46]

Luck spent the rest of the day using the resources he had to check the gaps in the line. In the afternoon, the first elements of the 1st SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler had moved up in support and the situation was somewhat stabilized. The following day, Luck's Kampfgruppe, supported by the armour of 1st SS, held the British in check, and launched counterattacks on the British flanks. The British attack ended on 20 July.[47] In the evening, the 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend relieved Luck's men. For his service during Operation Goodwood, Luck was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross, and on 8 August, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel.

The Falaise Pocket and Retreat to Germany edit

A week later, after a brief rest and refit, the 21st Panzer Division was sent to the Villers Bocage area south of Bayeux. On 26 July Panzer Lehr's lines were broken, and 21st Panzer Division reoriented themselves on this new threat. On 31 July General Patton's forces broke through at Avranches into open country.[48] The German motorized forces were brought west to counterattack in an effort to cut the supply and communication lines of the advancing American forces, but the counterattack was known due to Ultra decrypts and the attacking formations were heavily shelled and bombarded, stopping the attack before it could jump off.[49] Unable to check the advancing American armour, all the German divisions in Normandy were in danger of being encircled.[50]

Luck reached Falaise after two weeks of delaying action. On 17 August a British attack split the 21st Panzer Division, leaving half inside the now emerging Falaise Pocket, while Luck's command found itself on the outside. Kampfgruppe von Luck was now tasked with holding the Western end of the gap open, which it did until 21 August. About half of the 100,000 trapped troops managed to escape, though most of the heavy materiel and vehicles were destroyed in the pocket. A new threat was already emerging, with Patton threatening to create yet another pocket, south of the Seine River. Luck was put in command of the remains of 21st Panzer Division.[citation needed]

The Defense of Germany edit

On 9 September Luck's command reached Strasbourg, where it was attached to General Hasso von Manteuffel's Fifth Panzer Army. During the Battle of Dompaire which was fought a few days later, the 112 Panzer Brigade had suffered heavy tank losses. Luck attempted to salvage a desperate situation but ended up having to retreat in order to conserve his forces. In January 1945, when the division was moved to the Oder front, the division took part in fighting along the Reitwein Spur. Luck surrendered to the Soviet forces while attempting a breakout from the Halbe pocket on 27 April 1945.[citation needed]

After the war edit

After the war Luck was interned at GUPVI forced labor camp 518/I in Tkibuli Georgia, a camp for POWs and internees, similar to a GULAG camp.[51] He was released in December 1949 and returned to West Germany.[52] He became involved in veterans' associations, and was frequently asked to lecture at military schools. He spoke annually for the British Staff college during their summer tours of the Normandy battlefields, and subsequently was asked to speak at a number of other military seminars.[53] He was a participant in the UK's Ministry of Defence Army Department film presentation on Operation Goodwood Lectures.[54]

Through his involvement as a speaker at military lectures he came to be good friends with several of his former adversaries, including Brigadier David Stileman, Major Alastair Morrison of the 4th/7th Royal Dragoon Guards, and Major John Howard of the British 6th Airborne Division.[53] He also formed a friendship with popular historian Stephen Ambrose, who encouraged him to write his memoirs, which was titled Panzer Commander.

Hans von Luck died in Hamburg on 1 August 1997 at the age of 86.[55]

Awards edit

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Butler 2015, p. 393.
  2. ^ Luck 1989, p. 9−16.
  3. ^ Luck 1989, p. 32.
  4. ^ Luck 1989, p. 37.
  5. ^ Deighton 1980, p. 211.
  6. ^ Luck 1989, p. 38.
  7. ^ Luck 1989, pp. 41–42.
  8. ^ Luck 1989, p. 66.
  9. ^ a b c d Askey 2013, p. 379.
  10. ^ Luck 1989, p. 70.
  11. ^ Luck 1989, p. 76.
  12. ^ Luck 1989, pp. 77–83.
  13. ^ Fraser 1993, p. 389.
  14. ^ Butler 2015, p. 392.
  15. ^ Luck 1989, p. 110.
  16. ^ Lewin 1998, p. 173.
  17. ^ Fraser 1993, p. 413.
  18. ^ Margaritis, Peter (2019). Countdown to D-Day: The German perspective. Oxford, UK & PA, USA: Casemate. pp. 319–321. ISBN 978-1-61200-769-4.
  19. ^ Luck 1989, p. 167.
  20. ^ Keegan 1982, p. 202.
  21. ^ Mitcham 1983, p. 82.
  22. ^ Mitcham 1983, p. 83.
  23. ^ Ambrose, D-Day
  24. ^ a b Mitcham 1983, p. 103.
  25. ^ Luck 1989, p. 187.
  26. ^ Jackson 2006, p. 79.
  27. ^ Trew, p. 66
  28. ^ Ellis, pp. 330–331
  29. ^ Keegan 1982, p. 193.
  30. ^ Luck 1989, pp. 187, 192.
  31. ^ Keegan 1982, pp. 205–206.
  32. ^ Luck 1989, p. 192.
  33. ^ Keegan 1982, p. 205.
  34. ^ Dunphie, p. 74
  35. ^ a b Trew, p. 80
  36. ^ Napier, p. 249
  37. ^ a b Buckley (2013), p. 105
  38. ^ D'Este, p. 375
  39. ^ Jackson, p. 98
  40. ^ Daglish, pp. 255, 258–261
  41. ^ Daglish, p. 256
  42. ^ Daglish, p. 258
  43. ^ Daglish, pp. 260 186
  44. ^ a b c d e Napier (2015), p. 250
  45. ^ Napier (2015), p. 249
  46. ^ Napier (2015), p. 248-251
  47. ^ Keegan 1982, p. 216.
  48. ^ Hastings 2006, p. 260.
  49. ^ Hastings 2006, p. 262.
  50. ^ Hastings 2006, p. 263.
  51. ^ Karner, Stefan, Im Archipel GUPVI. Kriegsgefangenschaft und Internierung in der Sowjetunion 1941-1956. Wien-München 1995. ISBN 978-3-486-56119-7 (book review, English) (in German)
  52. ^ Luck 1989, p. 328.
  53. ^ a b "Obituary Brigadier David Stileman". The Times. 10 August 2011. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  54. ^ Ministry of Defense; Army Department: Operation Goodwood
  55. ^ Mitcham 2009, p. xcvii.
  56. ^ Patzwall & Scherzer 2001, p. 286.
  57. ^ Scherzer 2007, p. 516.

Bibliography edit

  • Ambrose, Stephen E (1994). D-Day, June 6, 1944, The Battle for the Normandy beaches, Pocket Books. ISBN 0-7434-4974-6
  • Ambrose, Stephen E (2001). Pegasus Bridge. Touchstone Books. ISBN 0-671-67156-1.
  • Askey, Nigel (2013). Operation Barbarossa: the complete organisational and statistical analysis, and military simulation. Lulu Publishing.
  • Biess, Frank (2006). Homecomings : returning POWs and the legacies of defeat in postwar Germany. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
  • Butler, Daniel Allen (2015). Field Marshal: The Life and Death of Erwin Rommel. Havertown, PA; Oxford: Casemate. ISBN 978-1-61200-297-2.
  • Daglish, Ian (2005). Goodwood. Over the Battlefield. Leo Cooper. ISBN 1-84415-153-0.
  • Deighton, Len (1980). Blitzkrieg: from the rise of Hitler to the fall of Dunkirk. New York: Knopf, Distributed by Random House.
  • Dunphie, Chris (2005). The Pendulum of Battle: Operation Goodwood - July 1944. MLRS Books. ISBN 978-1-844-15278-0.
  • Ellis, Major L. F.; with Allen RN, Captain G. R. G. Allen; Warhurst, Lieutenant-Colonel A. E. & Robb, Air Chief-Marshal Sir James (2004) [1st. pub. HMSO 1962]. Butler, J. R. M. (ed.). Victory in the West: The Battle of Normandy. History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series. Vol. I. Naval & Military Press. ISBN 1-84574-058-0.
  • Fraser, David (1993). Knight's Cross: A Life of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-018222-9.
  • Hastings, Max (2006) [1985]. Overlord: D-Day and the Battle for Normandy. Vintage Books USA; Reprint edition. ISBN 0-307-27571-X.
  • Jackson, G. S. (2006) [1945]. 8 Corps: Normandy to the Baltic. MLRS Books. ISBN 978-1-905696-25-3.
  • Keegan, John (1982). Six Armies in Normandy: from D-Day to the liberation of Paris, June 6th-August 25th, 1944. New York: Viking Press. ISBN 0-14-02-3542-6.
  • Luck, Hans von (1989). Panzer Commander: The Memoirs of Colonel Hans von Luck. New York: Dell Publishing of Random House. ISBN 0-440-20802-5.
  • Luck, Hans von (1991). Panzer Commander: The Memoirs of Colonel Hans von Luck. Dell Publishing. ISBN 0-440-20802-5.
  • Lewin, Ronald (1998) [1968]. Rommel As Military Commander. New York: B&N Books. ISBN 978-0-7607-0861-3.
  • Mitcham, Samuel W (2009). Defenders of Fortress Europe. Washington, D.C.: Potomac Books. ISBN 978-1-59797-274-1.
  • Mitcham, Samuel W (1983). Rommel's last battle : the Desert Fox and the Normandy campaign. New York: Stein and Day.
  • Napier, Stephen (2015). The Armoured Campaign in Normandy June-August 1944. The History Press. pp. 248–251. ISBN 9780750964739.
  • Patzwall, Klaus D.; Scherzer, Veit (2001). Das Deutsche Kreuz 1941 – 1945 Geschichte und Inhaber Band II [The German Cross 1941 – 1945 History and Recipients Volume 2] (in German). Norderstedt, Germany: Verlag Klaus D. Patzwall. ISBN 978-3-931533-45-8.
  • Scherzer, Veit (2007). Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939–1945 Die Inhaber des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939 von Heer, Luftwaffe, Kriegsmarine, Waffen-SS, Volkssturm sowie mit Deutschland verbündeter Streitkräfte nach den Unterlagen des Bundesarchives [The Knight's Cross Bearers 1939–1945 The Holders of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross 1939 by Army, Air Force, Navy, Waffen-SS, Volkssturm and Allied Forces with Germany According to the Documents of the Federal Archives] (in German). Jena, Germany: Scherzers Militaer-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-938845-17-2.
  • Trew, Simon; Badsey, Stephen (2004). Battle for Caen. Battle Zone Normandy. Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-7509-3010-1.

External links edit

  • Army Department film: Operation Goodwood

hans, luck, hans, ulrich, freiherr, luck, witten, july, 1911, august, 1997, usually, shortened, german, officer, wehrmacht, nazi, germany, during, world, luck, served, with, panzer, division, 21st, panzer, division, luck, author, book, panzer, commander, obers. Hans Ulrich Freiherr von Luck und Witten 15 July 1911 1 August 1997 usually shortened to Hans von Luck was a German officer in the Wehrmacht of Nazi Germany during World War II Luck served with the 7th Panzer Division and 21st Panzer Division Luck is author of the book Panzer Commander Hans von LuckOberstleutnant Hans von Luck 1944Born 1911 07 15 15 July 1911FlensburgDied1 August 1997 1997 08 01 aged 86 HamburgAllegiance Weimar Republic Nazi GermanyService wbr branchArmyYears of service1929 45RankOberstUnit7th Panzer Division21st Panzer DivisionBattles warsSee battlesWorld War II Invasion of Poland Battle of Lodz Siege of Warsaw Battle of France Battle of Arras Operation Barbarossa Battle of Bialystok Minsk Battle of Smolensk Battle of Moscow North African Campaign Battle of Gazala Second Battle of El Alamein Battle of Kasserine Pass Normandy Campaign Battle for Caen Falaise pocket Operation Nordwind Battle of HalbeAwardsKnight s Cross of the Iron CrossSpouse s Regina von LuckOther workMilitary lecturer author Contents 1 Early life and interwar period 2 World War II 2 1 Invasions of Poland and France 2 2 Invasion of the Soviet Union 2 3 North Africa 2 4 The Normandy invasion 2 4 1 Operation Goodwood 2 4 2 The Falaise Pocket and Retreat to Germany 2 4 3 The Defense of Germany 3 After the war 4 Awards 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Bibliography 7 External linksEarly life and interwar period editLuck was born in Flensburg into a Prussian family with old military roots Luck s father Otto von Luck served in the Imperial German Navy and died during July 1918 of an influenza virus His mother remarried a Reichsmarine Chaplain In 1929 Luck joined the Reichswehr army Through the winter of 1931 1932 Luck attended a nine month course for officer cadets led by then Captain Erwin Rommel at the infantry school in Dresden 1 On 30 June 1934 Luck s unit took part in the Night of the Long Knives arresting several Sturmabteilung SA members in Stettin 2 In 1939 Luck was posted to the 2nd Light Division serving in its armoured reconnaissance battalion World War II editInvasions of Poland and France edit nbsp Motorcycle reconnaissance forces in Poland September 1939On 1 September 1939 the 2nd Light Division under General Georg Stumme participated in the invasion of Poland Luck served as a company commander in the division s reconnaissance battalion 3 The division was reorganized and reequipped to form the 7th Panzer Division with Rommel assuming command on 6 February 1940 Luck served as a company commander in an armoured reconnaissance battalion 4 The 7th Panzer Division was a part of the XV Army Corps under General Hermann Hoth in Army Group A On 10 May 1940 the division participated in the invasion of France Luck s reconnaissance battalion led the division s advance into Belgium reaching the Meuse in three days 5 In his memoir Luck describes the division s crossing of the Meuse and Rommel s active role in gaining the crossing 6 On 28 May Luck was appointed commander of the reconnaissance battalion 7 Luck s unit advanced through Rouen Fecamp and Cherbourg In February 1941 Rommel was replaced by General Freiherr von Funk and in June Luck moved with his division to East Prussia in preparation for the invasion of the Soviet Union citation needed Invasion of the Soviet Union edit nbsp Luck s map marked up during 7th Panzer s movements across the Moscow Volga Canal just north of MoscowLuck was made Hauptmann and attached to 7th Panzer Division s headquarters staff 8 His division was a part of the 3rd Panzer Group of Army Group Center 9 In this capacity he participated in the Operation Barbarossa the invasion of the Soviet Union The 7th Panzer Division spearheaded the 3rd Panzer Group as it drove east and the capture of Vilnius in Lithuania before driving on Minsk to form the northern inner encirclement arm of the Bialystok Minsk pocket 9 Following the capture of Minsk the armored group continued east towards Vitebsk 9 At Vitebsk Luck was assigned as commander of the division s reconnaissance battalion 10 The division participated in creating the large pocket around Smolensk cutting the Smolensk Moscow road 9 Luck and his unit continued on towards Moscow In his memoirs he describes the stiffening Soviet resistance and problems the German forces faced relating to weather and road conditions 11 Since November Rommel had requested Luck be transferred to Africa to take over command of one of his reconnaissance battalions 1 The transfer was approved in late January once the crisis of the Soviet winter offensive had passed 12 North Africa edit Luck was promoted to major spending February and March 1942 on leave Reporting back for duty on 1 April 1942 he reached Africa on 8 April and assumed command over the 3rd Panzer Reconnaissance Battalion of the 21st Panzer Division 13 14 Luck spent June to mid September in Germany recuperating from a combat wound Returning to Africa he resumed command of the 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion 15 On 23 October 1942 the British launched the attack of the Second Battle of El Alamein 16 The Axis position deteriorated leading to a retreat Luck was one of Rommel s most experienced commanders and he called upon Luck s reconnaissance battalion to screen his withdrawal 17 By December the Axis forces had retreated to Tripoli On 6 May the forces in Africa surrendered with more than 130 000 Germans taken prisoner By that time Luck was in Germany The Normandy invasion edit nbsp Map showing territory gained in Operations Atlantic and GoodwoodAfter North Africa and leave in Berlin Luck was assigned in August 1943 as instructor at a panzer reconnaissance school in Paris In March 1944 he was to be appointed as commander of a panzer regiment in the new Panzer Lehr Division in France under Fritz Bayerlein However in mid April he was told by Bayerlein that as Feuchtinger apparently had more influence at Headquarters he was to serve under Feuchtinger 18 Luck was assigned to the 21st Panzer Division stationed in Brittany and commanded by Edgar Feuchtinger In early May Luck was placed in command of the 125th Panzer Grenadier Regiment 19 20 Luck s regiment was stationed at Vimont southeast of Caen with two companies of assault guns in support On 6 June 1944 the invasion of Normandy started During the night Luck was startled by the reports of paratroopers landing in his area and establishing a bridgehead on the east side of the Orne River Luck requested permission to attack but Feuchtinger the 21st Panzer Division s commander refused to allow him to do so citing strict orders not to engage in major operations unless cleared to do so by high command 21 Apart from an order at 4 30 a m directing other elements of the division to move against the paratroopers of the British 6th Airborne Division the 21 Panzer Division remained mostly motionless As the morning wore on the defenders on the coast were overcome and the British beachheads secured Around 10 30 a m General Erich Marcks commander of the German LXXXIV Corps to which 21st Panzer Division was attached ordered the entire 21st to leave a single company from the division s 22nd Panzer Regiment to deal with the paratroopers and move the rest of the division to attack the British forces advancing from the beachhead toward Caen 22 Feuchtinger finally ordered his division forward leaving a company of panzers as ordered but also leaving Luck s 125 Panzergrenadier Regiment This order was later countermanded this time from 7th Army and only Luck s detachment was left to attack the paratroopers east of Orne The confusion and inflexibility of the German command situation markedly delayed the German response Nevertheless at 1700 p m Luck attempted to break through to the Orne river bridges at Benouville with his armoured personnel carriers but heavy fire from the warships supporting the British paratroopers under Major John Howard holding the bridges drove his forces back 23 Added to this more British paratroopers landed in the rear area of the regiment causing some of Luck s forces to fall back On the morning of 9 June Luck s command was designated Kampfgruppe von Luck and in addition to the elements of 125th Panzer Grenadier Regiment already under Luck s command it consisted of a battalion three assault gun batteries and one antitank company with 88mm guns With this force Luck was tasked with assaulting the Orne bridges and recapturing them from the British paratroopers Starting one hour before dawn to avoid the worst of the British naval and aerial support the Kampfgruppe advanced on the village of Ranville dislodging the enemy there but it could not penetrate the British lines to reach the bridges The British paratroopers reinforced by the British 51st Highland Division and the 4th Armoured Brigade then attempted to advance around the eastern edge of Caen as the left side of an envelopment attack but their efforts were thwarted by Luck s unit 24 Over the next several days Luck s group initiated what amounted to a spoiling attack tying up the British units On 12 June Kampfgruppe von Luck engaged in the fighting for the village of Sainte Honorine lying on a hill overlooking the invasion beaches 25 The British forces east of the Orne were unable to move forward until 16 June 24 Operation Goodwood edit Main article Operation Goodwood In the beginning of July the area defended by Luck s Kampfgruppe came under the control of I SS Panzer Corps under the command of Obergruppenfuhrer Sepp Dietrich Nearby was the Heavy Tank Battalion 503 equipped with one company of Tiger II tanks and two companies of Tiger I tanks On 18 July Field Marshall Bernard Montgomery launched Operation Goodwood an operation aimed to wear down the German armoured forces in Normandy in addition to seizing territory on the eastern flank of Caen to the extent of the Bourguebus Vimont Bretteville area If successful the British hoped to follow this limited attack by pushing reconnaissance forces south towards Falaise 26 27 28 The offensive opened with a massive aerial bombardment followed by artillery and naval gun fire intended to suppress or destroy all defences in the path of the attack 29 During the morning Luck had just returned from a three day leave in Paris Informed of the air raids he moved forward to determine the exact situation and soon realized that a major offensive was underway 30 31 The air raid had neutralized the remnants of the 16th Luftwaffe Field Division which held the front line as well as elements of the 21st Panzer Division in particular elements of the 22nd Panzer Battalion and the 1st battery of Assault Gun Battalion 200 leaving a hole in the German defensive line 32 33 While elements of the advancing British 11th Armoured Division were held up in an engagement with self propelled guns of the 200th Assault Gun Battalion the 2nd Fife and Forfar Yeomanry advanced past Cagny As the regiment did they came under heavy anti tank fire resulting in the loss of four tanks 34 35 36 After the war Luck wrote that he was responsible for this barrage of anti tank fire saying that he used his sidearm to threaten a Luftwaffe officer into action to fire upon the advancing tanks with 88 mm flak guns 37 Luck s account has been widely repeated 35 38 although competing theories have also been suggested The British 8 Corps history states that German anti tank guns based in Soliers which had escaped the aerial bombardment were responsible 39 Ian Daglish critical of Luck s account stated there turns out to be surprisingly little evidence to support Luck s version of events and that all accounts of 88 mm flak guns in Cagny being used in an anti tank capacity can be traced directly to Luck and no one else He further wrote that neither the commander of the 200th Assault Gun Battalion or the commander of Luftwaffe flak guns made any comment in regards to this action and that based on locations of flak positions it was illogical for a heavy flak battery to have been located there 40 Daglish also wrote that Luck s account of the placement of the guns is imprecise and expert analysis of aerial photographs of the area taken at midday reveals no trace of the battery nor of any towing vehicles or their distinctive tracks Such weapons and vehicles could not be hidden within a mere couple of hours of relocation 41 Daglish argued that Luck embellished his role during post war official British tours of the battlefield with his version of events eventually coming into question off the record 42 Daglish wrote that elements of the 200th Assault Gun Battalion were in the area and that any number of German anti tank guns could have fired on the 2nd Fife and Forfar and that 88 mm anti tank guns were deployed to the Cagny area throughout the day 43 John Buckley is also critical of Luck s account and called it colourful and enthralling He argued that despite there being no doubt that heavy anti tank gunfire from in and around Cagny began to account for British tanks no evidence that the Luftwaffe had guns in Cagny at the time given the dispositions of other Luftwaffe batteries Buckley wrote that Luck had embroidered his role 37 Stephen Napier reassessed these criticisms of Luck s account He wrote that heavy anti aircraft guns were located in the outlying villages of Caen and photographic evidence of the Luftwaffe batteries in the area exists in addition the wreckage of three 88mm guns were found by the Guards division that afternoon in Cagny which would corroborate Luck s claim to have ordered the destruction of the guns upon abandoning Cagny 44 Napier wrote that Luck s account of threatening a Luftwaffe officer is plausible given that 88mm anti aircraft crews did not expect to become embroiled in fighting as per III Flak Korps policy and their direct involvement occasionally took some persuasion 44 Napier also asserts that the timeline of Luck s stated confrontation with the Luftwaffe battery commander just after 09 00 hours correlates with the losses the 2nd Fife and Forfar Yeomanry at 09 30 hours since a 88mm flak battery would only need about 15 minutes to relocate a short distance 45 Napier further writes that the fact that two Tiger tanks were destroyed by German friendly fire suggests the actions of an inexperienced Luftwaffe crew unable to identify retreating German tanks 44 According to Napier the 75mm Pak 40 anti tank guns were incapable of the clean armour penetrations found on the Tigers at that range and the only other alternative unit that could have engaged the British tanks was Becker s 4th Battery located in Le Mensnil Frementel Napier notes if this company did not move before 0930 hours it would have been cut off when the leading tanks of the 29th brigade crossed the railway and reasoned since the battery Was able to relocate successfully to just south of Four where it was in action for the rest of the day and so must have moved well before 0930 hours 44 Napier stated that an officer of the 2nd Fife and Forfar wrote in his memoirs of his surprise at seeing a German officer in dress uniform surveying the battlefield from Cagny 44 Napier concluded that Luck correctly attributed credit where it was due and his only sin is the assumption of a mantle previously worn by Rommel who stopped the British tank attack at Arras in 1940 by ordering the 88mm flak guns to engage the ground targets of the British tank forces 46 Luck spent the rest of the day using the resources he had to check the gaps in the line In the afternoon the first elements of the 1st SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler had moved up in support and the situation was somewhat stabilized The following day Luck s Kampfgruppe supported by the armour of 1st SS held the British in check and launched counterattacks on the British flanks The British attack ended on 20 July 47 In the evening the 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend relieved Luck s men For his service during Operation Goodwood Luck was awarded the Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross and on 8 August he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel The Falaise Pocket and Retreat to Germany edit A week later after a brief rest and refit the 21st Panzer Division was sent to the Villers Bocage area south of Bayeux On 26 July Panzer Lehr s lines were broken and 21st Panzer Division reoriented themselves on this new threat On 31 July General Patton s forces broke through at Avranches into open country 48 The German motorized forces were brought west to counterattack in an effort to cut the supply and communication lines of the advancing American forces but the counterattack was known due to Ultra decrypts and the attacking formations were heavily shelled and bombarded stopping the attack before it could jump off 49 Unable to check the advancing American armour all the German divisions in Normandy were in danger of being encircled 50 Luck reached Falaise after two weeks of delaying action On 17 August a British attack split the 21st Panzer Division leaving half inside the now emerging Falaise Pocket while Luck s command found itself on the outside Kampfgruppe von Luck was now tasked with holding the Western end of the gap open which it did until 21 August About half of the 100 000 trapped troops managed to escape though most of the heavy materiel and vehicles were destroyed in the pocket A new threat was already emerging with Patton threatening to create yet another pocket south of the Seine River Luck was put in command of the remains of 21st Panzer Division citation needed The Defense of Germany edit On 9 September Luck s command reached Strasbourg where it was attached to General Hasso von Manteuffel s Fifth Panzer Army During the Battle of Dompaire which was fought a few days later the 112 Panzer Brigade had suffered heavy tank losses Luck attempted to salvage a desperate situation but ended up having to retreat in order to conserve his forces In January 1945 when the division was moved to the Oder front the division took part in fighting along the Reitwein Spur Luck surrendered to the Soviet forces while attempting a breakout from the Halbe pocket on 27 April 1945 citation needed After the war editAfter the war Luck was interned at GUPVI forced labor camp 518 I in Tkibuli Georgia a camp for POWs and internees similar to a GULAG camp 51 He was released in December 1949 and returned to West Germany 52 He became involved in veterans associations and was frequently asked to lecture at military schools He spoke annually for the British Staff college during their summer tours of the Normandy battlefields and subsequently was asked to speak at a number of other military seminars 53 He was a participant in the UK s Ministry of Defence Army Department film presentation on Operation Goodwood Lectures 54 Through his involvement as a speaker at military lectures he came to be good friends with several of his former adversaries including Brigadier David Stileman Major Alastair Morrison of the 4th 7th Royal Dragoon Guards and Major John Howard of the British 6th Airborne Division 53 He also formed a friendship with popular historian Stephen Ambrose who encouraged him to write his memoirs which was titled Panzer Commander Hans von Luck died in Hamburg on 1 August 1997 at the age of 86 55 Awards editGerman Cross in Gold on 2 January 1942 as Hauptmann in Kradschutzen Bataillon 7 56 Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross on 8 August 1944 as Major and leader of Panzergrenadier Regiment 125 57 See also edit nbsp Biography portalReferences editCitations edit a b Butler 2015 p 393 Luck 1989 p 9 16 Luck 1989 p 32 Luck 1989 p 37 Deighton 1980 p 211 Luck 1989 p 38 Luck 1989 pp 41 42 Luck 1989 p 66 a b c d Askey 2013 p 379 Luck 1989 p 70 Luck 1989 p 76 Luck 1989 pp 77 83 Fraser 1993 p 389 Butler 2015 p 392 Luck 1989 p 110 Lewin 1998 p 173 Fraser 1993 p 413 Margaritis Peter 2019 Countdown to D Day The German perspective Oxford UK amp PA USA Casemate pp 319 321 ISBN 978 1 61200 769 4 Luck 1989 p 167 Keegan 1982 p 202 Mitcham 1983 p 82 Mitcham 1983 p 83 Ambrose D Day a b Mitcham 1983 p 103 Luck 1989 p 187 Jackson 2006 p 79 Trew p 66 Ellis pp 330 331 Keegan 1982 p 193 Luck 1989 pp 187 192 Keegan 1982 pp 205 206 Luck 1989 p 192 Keegan 1982 p 205 Dunphie p 74 a b Trew p 80 Napier p 249 a b Buckley 2013 p 105 D Este p 375 Jackson p 98 Daglish pp 255 258 261 Daglish p 256 Daglish p 258 Daglish pp 260 186 a b c d e Napier 2015 p 250 Napier 2015 p 249 Napier 2015 p 248 251 Keegan 1982 p 216 Hastings 2006 p 260 Hastings 2006 p 262 Hastings 2006 p 263 Karner Stefan Im Archipel GUPVI Kriegsgefangenschaft und Internierung in der Sowjetunion 1941 1956 Wien Munchen 1995 ISBN 978 3 486 56119 7 book review English in German Russian translation 2002 ISBN 5 7281 0424 X Luck 1989 p 328 a b Obituary Brigadier David Stileman The Times 10 August 2011 Retrieved 22 February 2016 Ministry of Defense Army Department Operation Goodwood Mitcham 2009 p xcvii Patzwall amp Scherzer 2001 p 286 Scherzer 2007 p 516 Bibliography edit Ambrose Stephen E 1994 D Day June 6 1944 The Battle for the Normandy beaches Pocket Books ISBN 0 7434 4974 6 Ambrose Stephen E 2001 Pegasus Bridge Touchstone Books ISBN 0 671 67156 1 Askey Nigel 2013 Operation Barbarossa the complete organisational and statistical analysis and military simulation Lulu Publishing Biess Frank 2006 Homecomings returning POWs and the legacies of defeat in postwar Germany Princeton N J Princeton University Press Butler Daniel Allen 2015 Field Marshal The Life and Death of Erwin Rommel Havertown PA Oxford Casemate ISBN 978 1 61200 297 2 Daglish Ian 2005 Goodwood Over the Battlefield Leo Cooper ISBN 1 84415 153 0 Deighton Len 1980 Blitzkrieg from the rise of Hitler to the fall of Dunkirk New York Knopf Distributed by Random House Dunphie Chris 2005 The Pendulum of Battle Operation Goodwood July 1944 MLRS Books ISBN 978 1 844 15278 0 Ellis Major L F with Allen RN Captain G R G Allen Warhurst Lieutenant Colonel A E amp Robb Air Chief Marshal Sir James 2004 1st pub HMSO 1962 Butler J R M ed Victory in the West The Battle of Normandy History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series Vol I Naval amp Military Press ISBN 1 84574 058 0 Fraser David 1993 Knight s Cross A Life of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 018222 9 Hastings Max 2006 1985 Overlord D Day and the Battle for Normandy Vintage Books USA Reprint edition ISBN 0 307 27571 X Jackson G S 2006 1945 8 Corps Normandy to the Baltic MLRS Books ISBN 978 1 905696 25 3 Keegan John 1982 Six Armies in Normandy from D Day to the liberation of Paris June 6th August 25th 1944 New York Viking Press ISBN 0 14 02 3542 6 Luck Hans von 1989 Panzer Commander The Memoirs of Colonel Hans von Luck New York Dell Publishing of Random House ISBN 0 440 20802 5 Luck Hans von 1991 Panzer Commander The Memoirs of Colonel Hans von Luck Dell Publishing ISBN 0 440 20802 5 Lewin Ronald 1998 1968 Rommel As Military Commander New York B amp N Books ISBN 978 0 7607 0861 3 Mitcham Samuel W 2009 Defenders of Fortress Europe Washington D C Potomac Books ISBN 978 1 59797 274 1 Mitcham Samuel W 1983 Rommel s last battle the Desert Fox and the Normandy campaign New York Stein and Day Napier Stephen 2015 The Armoured Campaign in Normandy June August 1944 The History Press pp 248 251 ISBN 9780750964739 Patzwall Klaus D Scherzer Veit 2001 Das Deutsche Kreuz 1941 1945 Geschichte und Inhaber Band II The German Cross 1941 1945 History and Recipients Volume 2 in German Norderstedt Germany Verlag Klaus D Patzwall ISBN 978 3 931533 45 8 Scherzer Veit 2007 Die Ritterkreuztrager 1939 1945 Die Inhaber des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939 von Heer Luftwaffe Kriegsmarine Waffen SS Volkssturm sowie mit Deutschland verbundeter Streitkrafte nach den Unterlagen des Bundesarchives The Knight s Cross Bearers 1939 1945 The Holders of the Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross 1939 by Army Air Force Navy Waffen SS Volkssturm and Allied Forces with Germany According to the Documents of the Federal Archives in German Jena Germany Scherzers Militaer Verlag ISBN 978 3 938845 17 2 Trew Simon Badsey Stephen 2004 Battle for Caen Battle Zone Normandy Faber and Faber ISBN 0 7509 3010 1 External links editArmy Department film Operation Goodwood Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hans von Luck amp oldid 1205297330, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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