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Hjalmar Siilasvuo

Hjalmar Fridolf Siilasvuo (born Hjalmar Fridolf Strömberg, 18 March 1892 – 11 January 1947) was a Finnish lieutenant general (Finnish: kenraaliluutnantti), a knight of the Mannerheim Cross and a member of the Jäger Movement. He participated in the Eastern Front of World War I, the Finnish Civil War, the Winter War, Continuation War and the Lapland War.

Hjalmar Siilasvuo
Hjalmar Siilasvuo (right) receiving a situation report during the Battle of Raate-Road
Born(1892-03-18)18 March 1892
Helsinki, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire
Died11 January 1947(1947-01-11) (aged 54)
Oulu, Finland
Buried
Allegiance
Service/branch
Years of service1915–1947
RankLieutenant General
Commands held
  • 1st Division (1944–47)
  • III Corps (1941–42; 1944)
  • 9th Division (1939–1940)
Battles/warsWorld War I

Finnish Civil War

Winter War

Continuation War

Lapland War
Awards
RelationsGeneral Ensio Siilasvuo (son)
Other workWritings, Municipal Council

Early life

Hjalmar Fridolf Siilasvuo was born as Hjalmar Fridolf Strömberg on 18 March 1892 in Helsinki to newspaper reporter Frans Strömberg and Hulda Röman. He graduated as an ylioppilas in 1911 from Svenska normallyceum i Helsingfors and began to study law. During his studies, he became involved in the Jäger Movement,[1] which aimed at sending Finnish volunteers to receive military training in Germany.[2] As a member of the movement, Siilavuo left for Germany in early 1915.[1] While in Germany, the Finnish volunteers formed the 27th Royal Prussian Jäger Battalion, fighting for the Imperial German Army on the Eastern Front of World War I.[2] During this time, Siilasvuo took part in several battles in the regions of Misa, Gulf of Riga and Lielupe.[1]

Siilasvuo returned to Finland in 1918 together with the bulk of the Finnish Jägers, taking part in the Finnish Civil War on the side of the Whites. First a lieutenant, but soon promoted to a captain, Siilasvuo saw action as a company commander in the Battles of Tampere and Viipuri. Siilasvuo was given command of a battalion in late 1918. In 1920, he was promoted to a major and married pharmacist Salli Kolsi. The couple had three children between 1922 and 1926.[1]

In 1926, Siilasvuo graduated from War College, was promoted to a lieutenant colonel and transferred to the Ministry of Defence Department of War Affairs (Finnish: sota-asiain osasto) where he was promoted to a chief of office (Finnish: toimistopäällikkö) in 1927 and to head of department in 1928. Later in 1928, he again took command of a battalion, which was followed by a promotion to both the rank of colonel and the command of a brigade/regiment in 1933. He was given command of the Pohjanmaa Military District in 1934. In 1936, he finnicized his surname from the Swedish Strömberg to Siilasvuo and became a member of the Oulu city council. He held the position until 1940.[1]

Winter War and Interim Peace

 
General Hjalmar Siilasvuo in 1939

During the Finno-Soviet Winter War of 1939–1940, Siilasvuo was in charge of the Finnish forces in the region of Suomussalmi. The initially approximately brigade-sized formation under his command eventually grew to a size where it was reorganized as the 9th Division. The Battle of Suomussalmi, as the actions in the region came to be known, resulted in the shattering of the Soviet 163rd Rifle Division which had been encircled in Suomussalmi, as well as the destruction of the Soviet 44th Rifle Division, which was attempting to reinforce the 163rd Division, in the Battle of Raate Road. The defense of Siilasvuo's forces prevented the Soviet 9th Army from reaching Oulu, which would have resulted in the bisection of Finland into two separate theatres of operation. Siilasvuo's forces were still engaged in the Battle of Kuhmo when the war ended.[1][3]

In 1940, Siilasvuo was promoted to major general and was given command of the peace-time army's V Corps. The same year, he also published a book on the Battle of Suomussalmi. Historian Mikko Uola describes the book as "taking all credit for the success of Suomussalmi and completely ignoring other commanders who influenced the events, such as Siilasvuo's superiors Viljo Tuompo and Paavo Susitaival, as well as his subordinates such as Alpo Marttinen."[1]

Continuation War and Lapland War

 
General Nikolaus von Falkenhorst (left) with Major General Hjalmar Siilasvuo (right) at the start of the Continuation War.

During the 1941 Finno-German negotiations regarding plans for a future war with the Soviet Union, the Germans proposed that the Finns would be in charge of operations in the South-Eastern Finland and east of Lake Ladoga, with overall command of both Finnish and German troops in the area falling under the Finnish commander-in-chief, Marshal Mannerheim. In turn, the Finns would subordinate Siilasvuo's peace-time V Corps (which would become the war time III Corps) to the headquarters of the German Army of Norway.[4] Following the start of the Finnish mobilization on 10 June 1941, the corps was subordinated to the headquarters of the German Army of Norway on 15 June 1941,[5] and was designated III Corps on 18 June 1941.[6]

 
Original plan for Operation Silver Fox

According to the German plans, Siilasvuo's III Corps was to secure the southern flank of Operation Silver Fox, the German-led operation whose goal was the capture of Murmansk. The corps was to advance first to the UkhtaKestenga line and then to the Murmansk railroad and Kem.[7] It soon became apparent that III Corps was the only corps-level unit of the Army of Norway to make significant progress. Operations of the two German corps of the Army of Norway were thus largely halted, and German reinforcements were allocated to support the attack of the III Corp. The main objective of the III Corps was to be the Murmansk railroad in the area of Loukhi.[8] Despite the German reinforcements, III Corps was unable to reach Loukhi and by August both sides had settled for stationary warfare.[9][10]

By 6 October 1941, the situation at the front had improved to a point where Nikolaus von Falkenhorst and Siilasvuo discussed continuing the III Corps's advance towards Loukhi. Due to Hitler's August order that the forces in the area were to go on the defensive, the plan was phrased as III Corp improving its positions.[11][12] The Finnish high command was informed about the operation on 25 October, but nobody informed the German high command, OKH.[12] The operation began on 30 October,[11] but already on 5 November Siilasvuo was informed by the Finnish high command that the attack should be halted for political reasons, and that no additional Finnish reinforcements would be forthcoming despite Siilasvuo's wishes. The United States of America had given the Finnish government a note demanding the attack be stopped, which in turn had resulted in the Finnish President Risto Ryti expressing his concern over the operation to Mannerheim. By 11 November, Siilasvuo was actively slowing down the attack by ordering construction of further field fortifications and on 17 November he gave a written order to halt the attack. By December the fighting in the area had calmed down.[13] Siilasvuo was promoted to lieutenant general in 1942 and, in late 1942, was made the inspector of military schools. Siilasvuo himself viewed this transfer as a punishment.[1]

Following the end of the Siege of Leningrad in January 1944, the Finnish high command began preparations for a Soviet offensive. As part of the these preparations it split the Kannas Group, responsible for the defence of the Karelian Isthmus, into two corps-level formations on 4 March 1944. The eastern side of the isthmus was handed to the III Corps, the headquarters of which was moved to the area from northern Finland,[14] with Siilasvuo reinstated as the commander of the corps.[1] The Soviet Vyborg–Petrozavodsk offensive began on 9 July 1944.[15] Threatened to be cut off, III Corps fell back and eventually took defensive positions along Vuoksi.[16][17] The III Corps front stabilized along the Vuoksi for the rest of the war, with the Soviet forces failing to break through on the III Corps sector despite several attempts.[18]

As one of the terms of the Moscow Armistice, Finland had to remove of any German forces remaining in Finland. [19] German forces in the Finnish north initially fell back towards Norway in unofficial cooperation with the Finnish forces. However, following the failure of Operation Tanne Ost which involved a German attempt to capture Gogland from its Finnish defenders, the Finno-German cooperation completely broke down.[20][21] During the subsequent Lapland War, Siilasvuo's III Corps was moved to northern Finland where it took overall command of all the Finnish forces participating in the operation.[22] Over the following months, Siilasvuo's forces slowly pushed the Germans out of Lapland,[23] with the final German forces leaving Finland on 27 April 1945.[24] Siilasvuo was awarded with the Mannerheim Cross in December 1944, with the bestowal document referencing his actions in the Winter War, the Continuation War and the Lapland War.[1]

Death and legacy

Following the end of the Lapland War, Siilasvuo remained in military service, acting as the commander of the 1st Division from 1944 to 1947. He died in Oulu on 11 January 1947, and is buried in the Oulu Cemetery.[1][25]

Siilasvuo's son Ensio Siilasvuo, who had served as a platoon leader, staff officer and company commander in III Corps during the Continuation War, also became a Finnish general following service in peace-keeping duties for the United Nations.[26]

During his life, Siilasvuo was granted several Finnish awards, the most notable of which are Mannerheim Cross 2nd Class, the Grand Cross of the Order of the White Rose of Finland and the Order of the Cross of Liberty. He also received the German Iron Cross (both 1st and 2nd Class) and the Order of the German Eagle; and the Swedish Order of the Sword.[1]

Notes

References

  • Chew, Allen F. (1981). "Fighting the Russians in Winter: Three Case studies" (PDF). Leavenworth Papers. 5. Combat Studies Institute, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College. Retrieved 11 November 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Harju, Anja (26 October 2008). "Hjalmar Siilasvuo veti Walon talon täyteen" [Hjalmar Siilasvuo fills the Walo house]. Kaleva (in Finnish). Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  • Leskinen, Jari; Juutilainen, Antti, eds. (2005). Jatkosodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish). Helsinki: Werner Söderström Osakeyhtiö. ISBN 951-0-28690-7.
  • Nenye, Vesa; Munter, Peter; Wirtanen, Toni; Birks, Chris (2016). Finland at War: The Continuation and Lapland Wars 1941–45. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-47-281528-6.
  • Sotatieteen laitos, ed. (1988). Jatkosodan historia 1. Sotatieteen laitoksen julkaisuja XXV (in Finnish). Vol. 1. Porvoo: Werner Söderström Osakeyhtiö. ISBN 951-0-15327-3.
  • Sotatieteen laitos, ed. (1993). Jatkosodan historia 4. Sotatieteen laitoksen julkaisuja XXV (in Finnish). Vol. 4. Porvoo: Werner Söderström Osakeyhtiö. ISBN 951-0-15330-3.
  • Tuunainen, Pasi (2015). "The transfer of military knowledge and the Finnish Civil War: The Finnish volunteers in the Royal Prussian Jaeger Battalion 27 as adopters and disseminators of the German art of war, 1915–1918". Kirchliche Zeitgeschichte. 28 (1): 91–97. doi:10.13109/kize.2015.28.1.91. JSTOR 24574785.
  • Uola, Mikko (2006). "Siilasvuo, Hjalmar (1892–1947)". Kansallisbiografia. Studia Biographica (in Finnish). Vol. 4. The Finnish Literature Society. ISSN 1799-4349. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  • Uola, Mikko (2000). "Siilasvuo, Ensio (1922–2003)". Kansallisbiografia. Studia Biographica (in Finnish). Vol. 4. The Finnish Literature Society. ISSN 1799-4349. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  • Ziemke, Earl F. (1959). The German Northern Theater of Operations 1940–1945 (PDF). United States Government Printing. ISBN 0-16-001996-6. Retrieved 21 October 2021.

hjalmar, siilasvuo, hjalmar, fridolf, siilasvuo, born, hjalmar, fridolf, strömberg, march, 1892, january, 1947, finnish, lieutenant, general, finnish, kenraaliluutnantti, knight, mannerheim, cross, member, jäger, movement, participated, eastern, front, world, . Hjalmar Fridolf Siilasvuo born Hjalmar Fridolf Stromberg 18 March 1892 11 January 1947 was a Finnish lieutenant general Finnish kenraaliluutnantti a knight of the Mannerheim Cross and a member of the Jager Movement He participated in the Eastern Front of World War I the Finnish Civil War the Winter War Continuation War and the Lapland War Hjalmar SiilasvuoHjalmar Siilasvuo right receiving a situation report during the Battle of Raate RoadBorn 1892 03 18 18 March 1892Helsinki Grand Duchy of Finland Russian EmpireDied11 January 1947 1947 01 11 aged 54 Oulu FinlandBuriedOulu CemeteryAllegianceGerman Empire 1915 1918 Finland from 1918 Service wbr branchImperial German Army Finnish Jager troops Finnish ArmyYears of service1915 1947RankLieutenant GeneralCommands held1st Division 1944 47 III Corps 1941 42 1944 9th Division 1939 1940 Battles warsWorld War I Eastern FrontFinnish Civil War Battle of Tampere Battle of ViipuriWinter War Battle of Suomussalmi Battle of Raate Road Battle of KuhmoContinuation War Operation Silver Fox Svir Petrozavodsk offensiveLapland WarAwardsMannerheim Cross Grand Cross of the Order of the White Rose of Finland Order of the Cross of Liberty Order of the Sword Sweden Order of the German Eagle Iron Cross 1st Class Germany RelationsGeneral Ensio Siilasvuo son Other workWritings Municipal Council Contents 1 Early life 2 Winter War and Interim Peace 3 Continuation War and Lapland War 4 Death and legacy 5 Notes 6 ReferencesEarly life EditHjalmar Fridolf Siilasvuo was born as Hjalmar Fridolf Stromberg on 18 March 1892 in Helsinki to newspaper reporter Frans Stromberg and Hulda Roman He graduated as an ylioppilas in 1911 from Svenska normallyceum i Helsingfors and began to study law During his studies he became involved in the Jager Movement 1 which aimed at sending Finnish volunteers to receive military training in Germany 2 As a member of the movement Siilavuo left for Germany in early 1915 1 While in Germany the Finnish volunteers formed the 27th Royal Prussian Jager Battalion fighting for the Imperial German Army on the Eastern Front of World War I 2 During this time Siilasvuo took part in several battles in the regions of Misa Gulf of Riga and Lielupe 1 Siilasvuo returned to Finland in 1918 together with the bulk of the Finnish Jagers taking part in the Finnish Civil War on the side of the Whites First a lieutenant but soon promoted to a captain Siilasvuo saw action as a company commander in the Battles of Tampere and Viipuri Siilasvuo was given command of a battalion in late 1918 In 1920 he was promoted to a major and married pharmacist Salli Kolsi The couple had three children between 1922 and 1926 1 In 1926 Siilasvuo graduated from War College was promoted to a lieutenant colonel and transferred to the Ministry of Defence Department of War Affairs Finnish sota asiain osasto where he was promoted to a chief of office Finnish toimistopaallikko in 1927 and to head of department in 1928 Later in 1928 he again took command of a battalion which was followed by a promotion to both the rank of colonel and the command of a brigade regiment in 1933 He was given command of the Pohjanmaa Military District in 1934 In 1936 he finnicized his surname from the Swedish Stromberg to Siilasvuo and became a member of the Oulu city council He held the position until 1940 1 Winter War and Interim Peace Edit General Hjalmar Siilasvuo in 1939 Main articles Battle of Suomussalmi Battle of Raate Road and Battle of Kuhmo During the Finno Soviet Winter War of 1939 1940 Siilasvuo was in charge of the Finnish forces in the region of Suomussalmi The initially approximately brigade sized formation under his command eventually grew to a size where it was reorganized as the 9th Division The Battle of Suomussalmi as the actions in the region came to be known resulted in the shattering of the Soviet 163rd Rifle Division which had been encircled in Suomussalmi as well as the destruction of the Soviet 44th Rifle Division which was attempting to reinforce the 163rd Division in the Battle of Raate Road The defense of Siilasvuo s forces prevented the Soviet 9th Army from reaching Oulu which would have resulted in the bisection of Finland into two separate theatres of operation Siilasvuo s forces were still engaged in the Battle of Kuhmo when the war ended 1 3 In 1940 Siilasvuo was promoted to major general and was given command of the peace time army s V Corps The same year he also published a book on the Battle of Suomussalmi Historian Mikko Uola describes the book as taking all credit for the success of Suomussalmi and completely ignoring other commanders who influenced the events such as Siilasvuo s superiors Viljo Tuompo and Paavo Susitaival as well as his subordinates such as Alpo Marttinen 1 Continuation War and Lapland War EditMain article Finnish III Corps Continuation War General Nikolaus von Falkenhorst left with Major General Hjalmar Siilasvuo right at the start of the Continuation War During the 1941 Finno German negotiations regarding plans for a future war with the Soviet Union the Germans proposed that the Finns would be in charge of operations in the South Eastern Finland and east of Lake Ladoga with overall command of both Finnish and German troops in the area falling under the Finnish commander in chief Marshal Mannerheim In turn the Finns would subordinate Siilasvuo s peace time V Corps which would become the war time III Corps to the headquarters of the German Army of Norway 4 Following the start of the Finnish mobilization on 10 June 1941 the corps was subordinated to the headquarters of the German Army of Norway on 15 June 1941 5 and was designated III Corps on 18 June 1941 6 Original plan for Operation Silver Fox According to the German plans Siilasvuo s III Corps was to secure the southern flank of Operation Silver Fox the German led operation whose goal was the capture of Murmansk The corps was to advance first to the Ukhta Kestenga line and then to the Murmansk railroad and Kem 7 It soon became apparent that III Corps was the only corps level unit of the Army of Norway to make significant progress Operations of the two German corps of the Army of Norway were thus largely halted and German reinforcements were allocated to support the attack of the III Corp The main objective of the III Corps was to be the Murmansk railroad in the area of Loukhi 8 Despite the German reinforcements III Corps was unable to reach Loukhi and by August both sides had settled for stationary warfare 9 10 By 6 October 1941 the situation at the front had improved to a point where Nikolaus von Falkenhorst and Siilasvuo discussed continuing the III Corps s advance towards Loukhi Due to Hitler s August order that the forces in the area were to go on the defensive the plan was phrased as III Corp improving its positions 11 12 The Finnish high command was informed about the operation on 25 October but nobody informed the German high command OKH 12 The operation began on 30 October 11 but already on 5 November Siilasvuo was informed by the Finnish high command that the attack should be halted for political reasons and that no additional Finnish reinforcements would be forthcoming despite Siilasvuo s wishes The United States of America had given the Finnish government a note demanding the attack be stopped which in turn had resulted in the Finnish President Risto Ryti expressing his concern over the operation to Mannerheim By 11 November Siilasvuo was actively slowing down the attack by ordering construction of further field fortifications and on 17 November he gave a written order to halt the attack By December the fighting in the area had calmed down 13 Siilasvuo was promoted to lieutenant general in 1942 and in late 1942 was made the inspector of military schools Siilasvuo himself viewed this transfer as a punishment 1 Following the end of the Siege of Leningrad in January 1944 the Finnish high command began preparations for a Soviet offensive As part of the these preparations it split the Kannas Group responsible for the defence of the Karelian Isthmus into two corps level formations on 4 March 1944 The eastern side of the isthmus was handed to the III Corps the headquarters of which was moved to the area from northern Finland 14 with Siilasvuo reinstated as the commander of the corps 1 The Soviet Vyborg Petrozavodsk offensive began on 9 July 1944 15 Threatened to be cut off III Corps fell back and eventually took defensive positions along Vuoksi 16 17 The III Corps front stabilized along the Vuoksi for the rest of the war with the Soviet forces failing to break through on the III Corps sector despite several attempts 18 As one of the terms of the Moscow Armistice Finland had to remove of any German forces remaining in Finland 19 German forces in the Finnish north initially fell back towards Norway in unofficial cooperation with the Finnish forces However following the failure of Operation Tanne Ost which involved a German attempt to capture Gogland from its Finnish defenders the Finno German cooperation completely broke down 20 21 During the subsequent Lapland War Siilasvuo s III Corps was moved to northern Finland where it took overall command of all the Finnish forces participating in the operation 22 Over the following months Siilasvuo s forces slowly pushed the Germans out of Lapland 23 with the final German forces leaving Finland on 27 April 1945 24 Siilasvuo was awarded with the Mannerheim Cross in December 1944 with the bestowal document referencing his actions in the Winter War the Continuation War and the Lapland War 1 Death and legacy EditFollowing the end of the Lapland War Siilasvuo remained in military service acting as the commander of the 1st Division from 1944 to 1947 He died in Oulu on 11 January 1947 and is buried in the Oulu Cemetery 1 25 Siilasvuo s son Ensio Siilasvuo who had served as a platoon leader staff officer and company commander in III Corps during the Continuation War also became a Finnish general following service in peace keeping duties for the United Nations 26 During his life Siilasvuo was granted several Finnish awards the most notable of which are Mannerheim Cross 2nd Class the Grand Cross of the Order of the White Rose of Finland and the Order of the Cross of Liberty He also received the German Iron Cross both 1st and 2nd Class and the Order of the German Eagle and the Swedish Order of the Sword 1 Notes Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Uola 2006 a b Tuunainen 2015 p 91 Chew 1981 pp 17 18 Sotatieteen laitos 1988 p 172 Sotatieteen laitos 1988 pp 177 179 Sotatieteen laitos 1988 p 183 Sotatieteen laitos 1993 pp 14 15 Sotatieteen laitos 1993 pp 21 22 Sotatieteen laitos 1993 p 22 Ziemke 1959 p 179 a b Ziemke 1959 p 180 a b Sotatieteen laitos 1993 p 100 Sotatieteen laitos 1993 pp 101 102 Sotatieteen laitos 1993 p 179 Sotatieteen laitos 1993 pp 292 295 Sotatieteen laitos 1993 pp 370 374 Sotatieteen laitos 1993 pp 343 347 Nenye et al 2016 pp 245 249 Leskinen amp Juutilainen 2005 p 1124 Leskinen amp Juutilainen 2005 p 1129 Ziemke 1959 p 296 Leskinen amp Juutilainen 2005 p 1131 Leskinen amp Juutilainen 2005 p 1136 Leskinen amp Juutilainen 2005 p 1148 Harju 2008 Uola 2000 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hjalmar Siilasvuo Chew Allen F 1981 Fighting the Russians in Winter Three Case studies PDF Leavenworth Papers 5 Combat Studies Institute U S Army Command and General Staff College Retrieved 11 November 2021 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Harju Anja 26 October 2008 Hjalmar Siilasvuo veti Walon talon tayteen Hjalmar Siilasvuo fills the Walo house Kaleva in Finnish Retrieved 11 November 2021 Leskinen Jari Juutilainen Antti eds 2005 Jatkosodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Helsinki Werner Soderstrom Osakeyhtio ISBN 951 0 28690 7 Nenye Vesa Munter Peter Wirtanen Toni Birks Chris 2016 Finland at War The Continuation and Lapland Wars 1941 45 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 47 281528 6 Sotatieteen laitos ed 1988 Jatkosodan historia 1 Sotatieteen laitoksen julkaisuja XXV in Finnish Vol 1 Porvoo Werner Soderstrom Osakeyhtio ISBN 951 0 15327 3 Sotatieteen laitos ed 1993 Jatkosodan historia 4 Sotatieteen laitoksen julkaisuja XXV in Finnish Vol 4 Porvoo Werner Soderstrom Osakeyhtio ISBN 951 0 15330 3 Tuunainen Pasi 2015 The transfer of military knowledge and the Finnish Civil War The Finnish volunteers in the Royal Prussian Jaeger Battalion 27 as adopters and disseminators of the German art of war 1915 1918 Kirchliche Zeitgeschichte 28 1 91 97 doi 10 13109 kize 2015 28 1 91 JSTOR 24574785 Uola Mikko 2006 Siilasvuo Hjalmar 1892 1947 Kansallisbiografia Studia Biographica in Finnish Vol 4 The Finnish Literature Society ISSN 1799 4349 Retrieved 11 November 2021 Uola Mikko 2000 Siilasvuo Ensio 1922 2003 Kansallisbiografia Studia Biographica in Finnish Vol 4 The Finnish Literature Society ISSN 1799 4349 Retrieved 11 November 2021 Ziemke Earl F 1959 The German Northern Theater of Operations 1940 1945 PDF United States Government Printing ISBN 0 16 001996 6 Retrieved 21 October 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hjalmar Siilasvuo amp oldid 1144596726, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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