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1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler

The 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler or SS Division Leibstandarte,[1] abbreviated as LSSAH (German: 1. SS-Panzerdivision "Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler"), began as Adolf Hitler's personal bodyguard unit, responsible for guarding the Führer's person, offices, and residences. Initially the size of a regiment, the LSSAH eventually grew into an elite division-sized unit during World War II.

1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
1. SS-Panzerdivision Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
— 1. SS-PzDiv LSSAH —
Unit insignia, a skeleton key
Active9 November 1933 – 8 May 1945
CountryNazi Germany
BranchWaffen-SS
TypePanzer
RoleArmoured warfare
SizeDivision
PatronAdolf Hitler
Engagements World War II
Commanders
Notable
commanders

The LSSAH participated in combat during the invasion of Poland, and was amalgamated into the Waffen-SS together with the SS-Verfügungstruppe (SS-VT) and the combat units of the SS-Totenkopfverbände (SS-TV) prior to Operation Barbarossa in 1941. By mid-1942 it had been increased in size from a regiment to a Panzergrenadier division and was designated SS Panzergrenadier Division "Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler". It received its final form as a Panzer division in October 1943.

Members of the LSSAH perpetrated numerous atrocities and war crimes, including the Malmedy massacre. They killed an estimated 5,000 prisoners of war in the period 1940–1945, mostly on the Eastern Front.[2]

Early history (1923–1933) Edit

In the early days of the Nazi Party, the leadership realized that a bodyguard unit composed of reliable men was needed. Ernst Röhm formed a guard formation from the 19.Granatwerfer-Kompanie; from this formation the Sturmabteilung (SA) soon evolved. Adolf Hitler in early 1923, ordered the formation of a small separate bodyguard dedicated to his service rather than "a suspect mass", such as the SA.[3] Originally the unit was composed of only eight men, commanded by Julius Schreck and Joseph Berchtold.[4] It was designated the Stabswache (staff guard).[5] The Stabswache were issued unique badges, but at this point was still under SA control. Schreck resurrected the use of the Totenkopf ("death's head") as the unit's insignia, a symbol various elite forces had used in the past, including specialized assault troops of Imperial Germany in World War I who used Hutier infiltration tactics.[6]

In May 1923, the unit was renamed Stoßtrupp (Shock Troop)–Hitler.[4] The unit numbered no more than 20 members at that time.[7] On 9 November 1923, the Stoßtrupp, along with the SA and several other Nazi paramilitary units, took part in the abortive Beer Hall Putsch in Munich. In the aftermath, Hitler was imprisoned and his party and all associated formations, including the Stoßtrupp, were disbanded.[8]

 
The second model of the LSSAH Standard, modelled after the Roman Vexillum.

In the mid-1920s, violence remained a large part of Bavarian politics.[9] Hitler was a potential target. In 1925, Hitler ordered the formation of a new bodyguard unit, the Schutzkommando (protection command).[9] The unit was renamed the Sturmstaffel (assault squadron) and in November was renamed the Schutzstaffel, abbreviated to SS.[10] By 1933 the SS had grown from a small bodyguard unit to a formation of over 50,000 men. The decision was made to form a new bodyguard unit, again called the Stabswache, which was mostly made up of men from the 1st SS-Standarte.[11] By 1933 this unit was placed under the command of Sepp Dietrich, who selected 117 men to form the SS-Stabswache Berlin on 17 March 1933.[12] The unit replaced the army guards at the Reich Chancellery.[12] Out of this initial group, three eventually became divisional commanders, at least eight would become regimental commanders, fifteen became battalion commanders, and over thirty became company commanders in the Waffen-SS.[13] Eleven men from the first company of 117 went on to win the Knights Cross, and forty of them were awarded the German Cross in gold for bravery.[14] Later in 1933, two further training units were formed: SS-Sonderkommando Zossen on 10 May, and a second unit, designated SS-Sonderkommando Jüterbog on 8 July.[15] These were the only SS units to receive military training at that time. Most of the training staff came from the ranks of the army.[15] On 3 September 1933 the two Sonderkommando merged into the SS-Sonderkommando Berlin under Dietrich's command.[16] Most of their duties involved providing outer security for Hitler at his residences, public appearances and guard duty at the Reich Chancellery.[5]

In November 1933, on the 10th anniversary of the Beer Hall Putsch, the Sonderkommando took part in the rally and memorial service for the Nazi Party members who had been killed during the putsch. During the ceremony, the members of the Sonderkommando swore personal allegiance to Hitler. At the conclusion the unit received the new title, "Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler" (LAH).[17] The term Leibstandarte was derived partly from Leibgarde – a somewhat archaic German translation of "Guard of Corps" or personal bodyguard of a military leader ("Leib" = lit. "body, torso") – and Standarte: the Schutzstaffel (SS) or Sturmabteilung (SA) term for a regiment-sized unit, also the German word for a specific type of heraldic flag (Standard).

Expansion Edit

 
December 1935 parade for Adolf Hitler at the LSSAH Barracks in Berlin-Lichterfelde. Sepp Dietrich is on the far right.

On 13 April 1934, Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS, ordered the Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler (LAH) to be renamed "Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler" (LSSAH). Himmler inserted the SS initials into the name to make it clear that the unit was independent from the SA or the army.[17] The LSSAH was designated a "National Socialist" unit, which eventually grew into an elite Panzer division of the Waffen-SS.[18] Although nominally under Himmler, Dietrich was the real commander and handled day-to-day administration.[19]

During 1934, Stabschef-SA Ernst Röhm continued to push for greater political influence for his already powerful SA. Hitler decided that the SA had to be eliminated as an independent political force and ordered the LSSAH to prepare for the action. The LSSAH formed two companies under the control of Jürgen Wagner and Otto Reich, these formations were moved to Munich on 30 June.[20]

Hitler ordered all SA leaders to attend a meeting at the Hanselbauer Hotel in Bad Wiessee, near Munich. Hitler along with Sepp Dietrich and a unit from the LSSAH travelled to Bad Wiessee to personally oversee Röhm's arrest on 30 June. Later at around 17:00 hours, Dietrich received orders from Hitler for the LSSAH to form an "execution squad" and go to Stadelheim prison where certain SA leaders were being held.[20] There in the prison courtyard, the LSSAH firing squad shot five SA generals and an SA colonel.[21] Additional alleged "traitors" were shot in Berlin by a unit of the Leibstandarte.[22] On 1 July Hitler finally agreed with Göring and Himmler that Röhm should be executed.[23] In what the Nazis called the Röhm Putsch, but otherwise came to be known as the Night of the Long Knives, companies of the LSSAH, together with the Gestapo and Göring's Landespolizeigruppe, performed Death Squad actions. At least 85, but most likely no less than twice that number of people, were executed without trial over the next few days.[23][24]

This action succeeded in effectively decapitating the SA and removing Röhm's threat to Hitler's leadership. In recognition of their actions, both the LSSAH and the Landespolizeigruppe General Göring were expanded to regimental size and motorized. In addition, the SS became an independent organization, no longer part of the SA.[25]

 
The Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler barracks in Berlin, 1938

The LSSAH provided the honor guard at many of the Nuremberg Rallies, and in 1935 took part in the reoccupation of the Saarland.[26] On 6 June 1935, the LSSAH officially adopted a field-grey uniform to identify itself more with the army, which wore a similar uniform.[27] The LSSAH was later in the vanguard of the march into Austria as part of the Anschluss, and in 1938 the unit took part in the occupation of the Sudetenland.[28] By 1939, the LSSAH was a full infantry regiment with three infantry battalions, an artillery battalion, and anti-tank, reconnaissance and engineer sub-units.[28] Soon after its involvement in the annexation of Bohemia and Moravia, the LSSAH was redesignated "Infanterie-Regiment Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler (mot.)". When Hitler ordered the formation of an SS division in mid-1939, the Leibstandarte was designated to form its own unit, unlike the other Standarten of the SS-Verfügungstruppe (SS-VT) (SS-Standarte Deutschland, SS-Standarte Germania, and SS-Standarte Der Führer).[29] The Polish crisis of August 1939 put these plans on hold, and the LSSAH was ordered to join XIII. Armeekorps, a part of Army Group South, which was preparing for the attack on Poland.

The Leibstandarte division's symbol was a skeleton key, in honor of its first commander, Josef "Sepp" Dietrich (Dietrich is German for skeleton key or lock pick); it was retained and modified to later serve as the symbol for I SS Panzer Corps.[30]

Invasion of Poland Edit

During the initial stages of the invasion of Poland, the LSSAH was attached to the 17.Infanterie-Division[31] and tasked with providing flank protection for the southern pincer. The regiment was involved in several battles against Polish cavalry brigades attempting to hit the flanks of the German advance. At Pabianice, a town near Łódź, the LSSAH fought elements of the Polish 28th Infantry Division and the Wołyńska Cavalry Brigade in close combat.[32] Throughout the campaign, the unit was notorious for burning villages.[33] In addition, members of the LSSAH committed atrocities in numerous Polish towns, including the murder of 50 Jews in Błonie and the massacre of 200 civilians, including children, who were machine gunned in Złoczew. Shootings also took place in Bolesławiec, Torzeniec, Goworowo, Mława, and Włocławek.[34]

After the success at Pabianice, the LSSAH was sent to the area near Warsaw and attached to the 4.Panzer-Division under then Generalmajor (brigadier general) Georg-Hans Reinhardt. The unit saw action preventing encircled Polish units from escaping, and repelling several attempts by other Polish troops to break through. In spite of the swift military victory over Poland, the regular army had reservations about the performance of the LSSAH and SS-VT units due to their higher casualty rate than the army units.[35]

Invasion of France Edit

In early 1940 the LSSAH was expanded into a full independent motorized infantry regiment and a Sturmgeschütz (Assault Gun) battery was added to their establishment.[29] The regiment was shifted to the Dutch border for the launch of Fall Gelb. It was to form the vanguard of the ground advance into the Netherlands, tasked with capturing a vital bridge over the IJssel, attacking the main line of defense at the Grebbeberg (the Grebbeline), and linking up with the Fallschirmjäger of Generaloberst Kurt Student's airborne forces, the 7.Flieger-Division and the 22.Luftlande-Infanterie-Division.

 
Heinrich Himmler inspecting a Sturmgeschütz III, Metz, September 1940

Fall Gelb—the invasion of France and the Low Countries—was launched on 10 May 1940. On that day, the LSSAH crossed the Dutch border,[29] covered over 75 kilometres (47 mi), and secured a crossing over the IJssel near Zutphen after discovering that their target bridge had been destroyed. Over the next four days, the LSSAH covered over 215 kilometres (134 mi), and upon entering Rotterdam, several of its soldiers accidentally shot at and seriously wounded General Student.[36] After the surrender of Rotterdam, the LSSAH left for The Hague, which they reached on 15 May, after capturing 3,500 Dutch soldiers as prisoners of war.[37] After the surrender of the Netherlands on 15 May, the regiment was then moved south to France.[38]

After the British counterattack at Arras, the LSSAH, along with the SS-Verfügungs-Division, were moved to hold the perimeter around Dunkirk and reduce the size of the pocket containing the encircled British Expeditionary Force and French forces.[39] The LSSAH took up a position 15 miles south west of Dunkirk along the line of the Aa Canal, facing the Allied defensive line near Watten.[37] That night the OKW ordered the advance to halt, with the British Expeditionary Force trapped. The LSSAH paused for the night. However, on the following day of 25 May, in defiance of Hitler's orders, Dietrich ordered his 3rd battalion to cross the canal and take the Wattenberg Heights beyond, where British artillery observers were putting the regiment at risk. They assaulted the heights and drove the observers off. Instead of being censured for his act of defiance, Dietrich was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross.[40]

On 26 May the German advance resumed. By 28 May the LSSAH had taken the village of Wormhout, only ten miles from Dunkirk.[37] After their surrender, soldiers from the 2nd Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment, along with some other units (including French soldiers) were taken to a barn in La Plaine au Bois near Wormhout and Esquelbecq. It was there that troops of the LSSAH 2nd battalion, under the command of SS-Hauptsturmführer Wilhelm Mohnke committed the Wormhoudt massacre, where 80 British and French prisoners of war were killed.[41][42] Although it is unarguable that the massacre occurred, Mohnke's level of involvement is impossible to know; he was never formally charged and brought to trial.[29][43]

Invasion of Yugoslavia and Greece Edit

After the conclusion of the Western campaign on 22 June 1940, the LSSAH spent six months in Metz (Moselle). It was expanded to brigade size (6,500 men). A 'Flak battalion' and a StuG Batterie were among the units added to the LSSAH. A new flag was presented by Heinrich Himmler in September 1940.[44] During the later months of 1940, the regiment trained in amphibious assaults on the Moselle River in preparation for Operation Seelöwe, the invasion of England. After the Luftwaffe's failure in the Battle of Britain and the cancellation of the planned invasion, the LSSAH was shifted to Bulgaria in February 1941 in preparation for Operation Marita, part of the planned invasion of Greece and Yugoslavia.[45]

The operation was launched on 6 April 1941 by aerial bombings of central-southern Yugoslavia, specially over Belgrade causing enormous destructions and thousands of victims and wounded. After the LSSAH entered on 12 April into the Yugoslavian capital, then to follow the route of the 9.Panzer-Division, part of General der Panzertruppe Georg Stumme's XL Panzer Corps. The LSSAH crossed the border near Bitola and was soon deep in Greek territory.

 
Sd.Kfz. 231 armored cars of the LSSAH advance into the Balkans near Sofia, Bulgaria, with the Vitosha mountain in the background.

The LSSAH captured Vevi on 10 April. SS-Sturmbannführer Kurt Meyer's reinforced Aufklärungs-Abteilung (reconnaissance battalion), LSSAH was tasked with clearing resistance from the Kleisoura Pass south-west of Vevi and driving through to the Kastoria area to cut off retreating Greek and British Commonwealth forces.[46] Despite stiff resistance, Meyer's unit captured the pass.[46]

The brigade participated in the clearing the Klidi Pass just south of Vevi, which was defended by a "scratch force" of Greek, Australian, British and New Zealand troops. An Australian artillery officer wrote of the Germans' "insolence" in driving "trucks down the main road – to within 3,000 yards (2,700 m) of our infantry" and there unloading the troops. The Germans were forced off the road by artillery fire and faced fierce resistance for more than two days. On the morning of 12 April the Germans renewed their attack, and by late afternoon the pass was cleared.[47]

With the fall of the two passes the main line of resistance of the Greek Epirus army was broken, and the campaign became a battle to prevent the escape of the enemy. On 20 April, following a pitched battle in the 5,000-foot-high (1,500 m) Metsovon Pass in the Pindus Mountains, the commander of the Greek Epirus army surrendered the entire force to Dietrich. British Commonwealth troops were now the only Allied forces remaining in Greece, and they were falling back across the Corinth Canal to the Peloponnesos. By 26 April the LSSAH had reached the Gulf of Patras, and in an effort to cut off the retreating British Commonwealth forces, Dietrich ordered that his regiment cross the Gulf and secure the town of Patras in the Peloponnesos. Since no transport vessels were available, the LSSAH commandeered fishing boats and successfully completed the crossing, but were forced to leave much of their heavy equipment behind. By 30 April the last British Commonwealth troops had either been captured or escaped. The LSSAH occupied a position of honor in the victory parade through Athens. After Operation Marita, the LSSAH was ordered north to join the forces of Army Group South massing for the launch of Operation Barbarossa.[48]

Invasion of the Soviet Union Edit

Following LSSAH's outstanding performance during Marita, Himmler ordered that it should be upgraded to divisional status.[48] The regiment, already the size of a reinforced brigade, was to be given motorized transport and redesignated "SS-Division (mot.) Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler". It was moved to Czechoslovakia in mid May for reorganization until being ordered to assemble in Poland[49] for Operation Barbarossa, as part of Gerd von Rundstedt's Army Group South. There was not enough time to deliver all its equipment and refit it to full divisional status before the launch of the invasion of the Soviet Union, so the new "division" remained the size of a reinforced brigade, even though its expansion and development was of concern at the very highest ranks of command. Franz Halder, chief of the OKH General Staff noted on 20 June that "SS 'Adolf Hitler' will not be ready in time. Tracked components leave on 22 June, others not before 25 June," then more hopefully the next day; "Materiel position of SS 'Adolf Hitler' has improved, Div. may yet get ready in time."[50]

 
Wehrmacht horse drawn artillery and armored cars of the LSSAH pass a burning Soviet village, August 1941.

Despite Halder's hopes, LSSAH was held in reserve attached to XIV Panzer Corps[49] as part of Generalfeldmarschall Ewald von Kleist's 1st Panzer Group during the opening stages of the attack. Through July it was attached to III Panzer Corps before finishing August as part of XLVIII Panzer Corps.[49] During this time, the LSSAH was involved in the Battle of Uman and the subsequent capture of Kiev. According to a postwar report by Waffen-SS journalist Erich Kern, the division murdered 4,000 Soviet prisoners in reprisal on 18 August, after finding the mutilated bodies of six dead divisional members who had been executed at Nowo Danzig, north of Kherson. These allegations have been researched using local units' war diaries; no mention of executed German soldiers during those dates has been found. For want of reliable evidence, not even accusations by the Soviet authorities, the allegations remained unproven.[51][52]

 
LSSAH enters burning Taganrog, October 1941

In early September, the division was shifted to LIV Army Corps, as part of the 11th Army under Eugen Ritter von Schobert during the advance east after the fall of Kiev. Hoping to capitalize on the collapse of the Red Army defense on the Dnepr River the reconnaissance battalion of LSSAH was tasked with making a speedy advance to capture the strategically vital choke point of the Perekop Isthmus through a "coup de main" but were rebuffed by entrenched defenders at the town of Perekop.[53] That same day, 12 September, 11th Army's commander was killed in an aircraft accident, and Hitler appointed Erich von Manstein to command. It took five days for Manstein to take matters in hand, and the operation to clear the Crimean Peninsula was not launched until 17 September. Manstein deployed LSSAH to create diversions while preparing for the main assault, intending to employ it to exploit an eventual breakthrough, but was forced to throw pioneers into the attack on the "Tatar Ditch" in the face of a furious counterattacks and did not break the Soviet defense for ten days.[54]

On 8 October 1941, the LSSAH captured the major coastal city of Mariupol, catching the Soviets off guard.[55]

In October, the LSSAH was transferred back north to help solidify the Axis line against fresh Soviet attacks against the Romanian 3rd Army and later took part in the heavy fighting for the city of Rostov-on-Don, which was captured in late November; there, the LSSAH took over 10,000 Red Army prisoners. However by the end of the year, the German advance faltered as Soviet resistance grew stronger.[46]

Under pressure from heavy Soviet counterattacks during the winter, the LSSAH and Army Group South retreated from Rostov to defensive lines on the river Mius.[46] After the spring rasputitsa (seasonal mud) had cleared, the division joined in Fall Blau, participating in the fighting to retake Rostov-on-Don, which fell in late July 1942. Severely understrength, the LSSAH was transferred to the Normandy region of occupied France to join the newly formed SS Panzer Corps and to be reformed as a Panzergrenadier division.[56]

Kharkov Edit

 
Sepp Dietrich in a medal ceremony for men of the LSSAH, Soviet Union 1942. Sepp Dietrich with von Westernhagen, Wiesemann, Max Wünsche and Karl Rettlinger.

The LSSAH spent the remainder of 1942 refitting as a panzergrenadier division. Thanks to the efforts of Himmler, along with SS-Obergruppenführer Paul Hausser, the SS Panzer Corps commander, the three SS Panzergrenadier divisions, LSSAH, Das Reich and Totenkopf, were to be formed with a full regiment of tanks rather than only a battalion. This meant that the SS Panzergrenadier divisions were full-strength Panzer divisions in all but name. The division also received nine Tiger 1 tanks, and these were formed into the 13th (schwere) Company/1st SS Panzer Regiment.[56]

The collapse of the front around Stalingrad and the encirclement of the 6th Army created a threat to Field Marshal Erich von Manstein's Army Group Don. Manstein requested reinforcements to halt the Soviet attack near Kharkov. The SS Panzer Corps was then ordered east to join Manstein's forces.[56]

 
Fritz Witt, Kharkov March 1943

Arriving at the front in late January 1943, the LSSAH was engaged in fighting in and around Kharkov as a part of Hausser's SS Panzer Corps.[56] In March 1943 the division participated in the recapture of Kharkov. On 12 March 1943, the LSSAH made progress into the city's center by breaking through the Soviet defenses in the northern suburbs. By the end of the day, the division had reached a position just two blocks north of Dzerzhinsky Square.[57] The 2nd Panzergrenadier Regiment's 2nd Battalion was able to surround the square, after taking heavy casualties from Soviet snipers and other defenders, by evening. When taken, the square was renamed "Platz der Leibstandarte".[58] Despite the declaration that the city had fallen, fighting continued on 15 and 16 March, as German units cleared the remnants of resistance in the tractor works factory complex, in the southern outskirts of the city. The city was taken on 17 March.[59] While in Kharkov, troops of the LSSAH engaged in the murder of wounded Soviet soldiers that were located in the city's military hospital; several hundred were killed. Additionally, captured Soviet officers and commissars were routinely executed.[60]

The division was pulled back to rest and refit. Division commander Sepp Dietrich was promoted to form a new Corps, the 1st SS Panzer Corps Leibstandarte, and the LSSAH was to supply all the senior officers for the new headquarters. At the same time a new SS division would be formed from members of the Hitler Youth and the LSSAH would supply all of the regimental, battalion and most of the company commanders. This new division would become the 12th SS Panzer Division (Hitlerjugend).[61]

Massacre of civilians on the Eastern Front Edit

During the fighting around Kharkov, a unit under the command of Joachim Peiper gained a nickname "Blowtorch Battalion", after the inhabitants of two Soviet villages were shot or burned.[62][63][64] Ukrainian sources, including surviving witness Ivan Kiselev, who was 14 at the time of the massacre, described the killings at the villages of Yefremovka and Semyonovka on 17 February 1943. On 12 February Waffen-SS troops of the LSSAH occupied the two villages, where retreating Soviet forces had wounded two SS officers. In retaliation, five days later LSSAH troops killed 872 men, women and children. Some 240 of these were burned alive in the church of Yefremovka.[65]

The reputation of the "Blowtorch Battalion" was confirmed in August 1944, when Sturmbannführer Jacob Hanreich was captured south of Falaise in France and interrogated by the Allies. He stated that Peiper was "particularly eager to execute the order to burn villages". Hanreich had previously served with Leibstandarte but was with SS Division Hitlerjugend at the time of his capture.[66]

Additional sources support the division's reputation for brutality. The following statement, taken from the surreptitious recording of POWs' conversations by the Allies, describes the atrocities on the Eastern Front. SS-Untersturmführer Krämer (captured on the Western Front during his service with the SS Division Hitlerjugend) recounted the following from his time with the LSSAH:[67]

I have experienced it in Russia at Orel. An MG 42 was set up in the main aisle of a church, [...] and the Russian men, women and children were taken into the church, without knowing at all what was happening. Then they were shot immediately with the MG 42 and petrol was poured on them and the whole place was set on fire.

Fabrikaktion Operation Edit

Elements of LSSAH took part in Fabrikaktion "factory action" a/k/a/ Großaktion Juden "Major Action (on) Jews", an operation to capture remaining German Jews that worked in the arms industry. Men of the LSSAH helped the Gestapo round up Jews in Berlin; people were taken from their jobs and herded in to cattle wagons on 27–28 February 1943. Most of the captured perished either in Auschwitz or other camps in the East.[68][69][70] In May 1943, Hans Frank shipped 500 watches collected from Auschwitz prisoners to soldiers of the 3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf.[71]

Battle of Kursk Edit

The spring rasputitsa halted offensive operations, giving the LSSAH time to rest and refit. By early June 1943, the division had been fully refitted and was now under the command of SS-Brigadeführer, Theodor Wisch.[72] Its armor strength was 12 Tiger Is, 72 Panzer IVs, 16 Panzer III and Panzer IIs, and 31 StuGs. In late June 1943, the formation of I SS Panzer Corps meant that Hausser's SS Panzer Corps was renamed II SS Panzer Corps.[73]

 
Joachim Peiper, commander of the division's 1st SS Panzer Regiment

The II SS Panzer Corps was moved north to Belgorod in preparation for the upcoming summer offensive Operation Citadel. The LSSAH, along with the SS Divisions Totenkopf and Das Reich, was to form the spearhead of General Hermann Hoth's 4th Panzer Army, tasked with breaching the southern flank of the Kursk salient. Field Marshal Walter Model's 9th Army was to breach the northern flank, and the two forces were to meet near the city of Kursk, to the east, thereby encircling a large Soviet force.

The attack commenced on 5 July. The LSSAH's panzers, advancing in Panzerkeils (wedges), soon ran into the elaborate defenses of the Red Army, which slowed the advance. Untersturmführer Michael Wittman, a Tiger commander in Leibstandarte's heavy company, destroyed eight enemy tanks and seven anti-tank guns on the first day of battle.[74]

On 08 July, Unterscharführer Franz Staudegger, another Tiger commander, became separated from his company in the town of Teterevino, having halted for mechanical repairs. He became aware of a nearby Soviet armored counterattack developing, and rushed the repairs on his tank to meet the threat. Staudegger and his crew spotted the enemy vanguard and took out seventeen T-34s in two hours.[74] The Russian attack was now faltering, so Staudegger pressed his Tiger forward into the retreating enemy flanks, switching to high-explosive shells after exhausting his armor-piercing ammmunition. By day's end, Staudegger's Tiger had destroyed twenty-two T-34s, for which he won the Knight's Cross.[74]

By 9 July, the II SS Panzer Corps had advanced 48 km (30 mi) north, and were nearing the small town of Prokhorovka. The LSSAH again took the lead; by now its strength was reduced to just 77 armored vehicles. The 2nd SS Panzergrenadier Regiment, supported by several tanks, advanced up the road to Prokhorovka against heavy resistance. By midday, the infantry had cleared the Komsomolets State Farm and begun the attack on Hill 241.6, which they secured shortly after nightfall on 10 July.

The next day the advance resumed, with the division capturing Oktiabr'skii State Farm and Hill 252.2 in heavy fighting against Soviet Paratroops of the 9th Guards Airborne Division. On 12 July, the Soviets threw the 5th Guards Tank Army into a counterattack near Prokhorovka. Two tank corps faced the LSSAH, hitting the Germans around Oktiabr'skii State Farm and Hill 252.2. In the ensuing fighting, the Germans inflicted heavy casualties on the Soviets. The Soviet counterattack had stalled the German advance, and the division was forced to fall back to Oktiabr'skii. Fighting continued the next day, but the focus of the Soviet attack had then shifted to the Totenkopf, on the left of the LSSAH.

With the battle at Prokhorovka still in the balance, Soviet High Command launched an offensive of their own, Operation Kutuzov, near Orel causing Hitler to order the cessation of Citadel. The II SS Panzer Corps was pulled back. The LSSAH was ordered out of the line, having suffered 2,753 casualties including 474 killed.[72] Eleven tanks were also lost during Citadel. The division was sent to Italy to help stabilize the situation there caused by the deposal of Benito Mussolini by the Badoglio government and the Allied invasion of Sicily which began on the night of 9–10 July 1943. The division left behind its heavy equipment, which was given to Das Reich and Totenkopf.[75]

Italy and subsequent operations Edit

 
LSSAH Panzer IV Ausf. H in Milan, Italy, September 1943

The division, re-equipped with vehicles, arrived on the Po River Plain on 8 August 1943. The LSSAH was given the task of guarding several vital road and rail junctions in the area of Trento-Verona. After several weeks, the division was moved to the Parma-Reggio area. During this period, the Leibstandarte was involved in several skirmishes with partisans. With Italy having announced an armistice with the Allies of 8 September 1943, the division was ordered to begin disarming nearby Royal Italian Army units.[75] This went smoothly, with the exception of brief, bloody fights with Italian troops stationed in Parma, Cremona and Piacenza on 9 September. By 19 September, all Italian forces in the Po River Plain had been disarmed.[75]

While on rear security duties in Italy, LSSAH men murdered 49 Jewish refugees near Lake Maggiore, in the Lake Maggiore massacres, who had fled there after the German takeover.[76] The murders happened between 15 and 24 September. Some of the victims had their feet and hands tied and were drowned.[77]

The LSSAH was sent to the Istria Peninsula and was engaged in several anti-partisan operations as part of Nazi security warfare. During its period in Italy, the LSSAH was reformed as a full panzer division, and redesignated 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler.[75] In early November, the division was ordered back to the Eastern Front, arriving in the Zhitomir area in mid-November.[75]

The division was assigned to XLVIII Panzer Corps, a part of 4th Panzer Army, which was struggling to hold the line near Zhitomir.[78] The division was transferred to the Cherkassy area at the end of January, where it was assigned to the III Panzer Corps, part of 1st Panzer Army. As part of the corps, the division took part in the relief attempt of German forces of Army Group South encircled in the Korsun Pocket in January–February 1944.

The majority of the LSSAH, which amounted to 41 officers and 1,188 men, were withdrawn to Belgium for rest and refit,[78] however a Kampfgruppe was left behind. On 25 March, the 1st Panzer Army was encircled in the Kamenets-Podolsky pocket. The battle group took part in the fighting to escape the encirclement, forming a part of the spearhead which linked up with the II SS Panzer Corps near Buczacz on 6 April.[78] The LSSAH Division was reformed in Belgium and was at full strength by 25 April 1944.[79]

Western Front Edit

The division was transferred again as part of the I SS Panzer Corps which at this time consisted of the 101 SS Heavy Panzer Battalion, SS Division Hitlerjugend, SS Division Götz von Berlichingen and the Panzer Lehr Division.[45] The LSSAH had been positioned north of the River Seine to counter any possible landing in the area of the Pas de Calais so the first units did not arrive in Normandy until after the Allied invasion there on 6 June 1944; part of it arrived on the night of 27–28 June with the whole division taking another week.[80] By 4 July the I SS Panzer Corps was reformed, and now consisted of the LSSAH and the Hitlerjugend.[81] The first action they were involved in was the defense of Carpiquet village and airfield in the Allied Operation Windsor.[82] There then followed a number of Allied attacks – Operations Charnwood and Jupiter. On 12 July the LSSAH was holding the Caen south sector from Maltot in the west to the Caen – Falaise road in the east.[83] During the night of 14–15 July, LSSAH was relieved by the 272nd Infantry Division and pulled back to an assembly area astride the Caen – Falaise road between Ifs and Cintheaux.[84]

Operation Goodwood Edit

 
The front line at the beginning of Operation Spring, showing the layout of forces for both sides

The British Operation Goodwood took place between 18 and 20 July 1944. British VIII Corps, with three armored divisions, launched the attack aiming to seize the German-held Bourguébus Ridge, along with the area between Bretteville-sur-Laize and Vimont. The operation was preceded by a three-hour bombing by 2,500 aircraft.[85] The Division strength prior to Goodwood was reported as 59 Panzer IVs, 46 Panthers and 35 StuG IIIs.[86]

II/1st SS Panzer Regiment, located near Garcelles, received orders to attack the British at Soliers. While moving its 13 Panthers towards Bourguébus, the unit engaged 60 British tanks, destroying 20 of them and capturing Soliers. Around 12:00, the Panther Battalion, I/1st SS Panzer regiment, was engaged in combat with the British 29th Armoured Brigade of the British 11th Armoured Division. The body of the LSSAH was rushed to the front from Falaise, where it was being held in reserve. It counterattacked at 17:00, together with the 21st Panzer Division, and halted the British offensive on the left front.[87]

The British resumed their assault at around 13:00 on 19 July, having brought up reinforcements to continue the attack. They overran some of the forward German units and approached Bourguébus Ridge at 16:00. They came under fire from Panthers of the Leibstandarte, who had taken up positions on the ridge. Reinforcements of the 12th SS Panzer Division arrived at the right flank at around 15:00. The Canadians attacked next in the Battle of Verrières Ridge and Operation Spring (see map), where the LSSAH came up against a number of Allied divisions, including the Guards Armoured Division, 7th Armoured, 2nd and 3rd Canadian Divisions.[88]

Operation Lüttich Edit

On 25 July 1944, US forces under General Omar Bradley succeeded in breaking through the German defenses as part of Operation Cobra and entered Brittany.[89][90] Hitler forbade any retreat, and ordered a counteroffensive, codenamed Operation Lüttich,[91] by the XLVII Panzer Corps, consisting of the 2nd Panzer Division, part of the LSSAH, the SS Division Das Reich and the 116th Panzer Division.[92] The plan for the attack was to hit the 30th Infantry Division east of Mortain, then cut through American defenses to reach the coast.[89] The US response was aided by Ultra intelligence, which had revealed the plans for Operation Lüttich by 4 August.[93] As a result, Bradley was able to obtain air support from both the US 9th Air Force and the RAF.[94]

The LSSAH and other divisions went on the attack on 7 August. The 1st SS Panzer Regiment, along with two battalions of motorized infantry, one combat engineer company, and the division's flak battalion, were used for the attack. The weather was not suitable for flying that morning, which disadvantaged the Allies. The SS Division Das Reich recaptured Mortain, and an armored battle group under Joachim Peiper reached Bourlopin, but had to halt due to US counterattacks and air strikes.

The much-reduced division was encircled in the Falaise pocket by US, Canadian, and Polish forces. Some LSSAH units broke out of the pocket on 22 August, leaving behind all their tanks and artillery. The division sustained 5,000 casualties during the Normandy campaign.[95] During their retreat from France, members of the LSSAH and the SS Division Hitlerjugend division murdered 34 French civilians in the towns of Tavaux and Plomion.[96]

Ardennes Offensive Edit

 
Kampfgruppe Knittel's troops on the road to Stavelot to support Peiper

The Ardennes Offensive (16 December 1944 – 25 January 1945) was a major German offensive launched through the forested Ardennes Mountains region of Belgium, France and Luxembourg. The offensive was called Unternehmen Wacht am Rhein (Operation "Watch on the Rhine") by the Germans. The 'bulge' was the initial incursion the Germans put into the Allies' line of advance, as seen in maps presented in contemporary newspapers.[97][page needed]

 
A preserved Tiger II tank left by the Kampfgruppe Peiper at La Gleize in December 1944

Wilhelm Mohnke, now in command of the LSSAH, attached to the I SS Panzer Corps, was the spearhead of the operation. The fuel crisis in Nazi Germany meant that the LSSAH had insufficient amounts of fuel for its vehicles.[98] On 16 December the operation began, with then SS-Obersturmbannführer Joachim Peiper's Kampfgruppe leading the push to the Meuse.[99]

Malmedy massacre Edit

 
A GI surveys the scene of the Malmedy massacre. The victims' bodies were preserved under the snow until Allied forces recaptured the area in January 1945.

Peiper was supposed to reach the Meuse River on the first day of the offensive. Instead, it was delayed by almost an entire day by a recon platoon at Lanzerath Ridge. Then, unable to dislodge the 99th Infantry Division from Elsenborn Ridge, it diverted to an alternative road to the south. At 07:00 on 17 December, the unit seized a US fuel depot at Büllingen, and refueled before continuing westward. At 12:30, near the hamlet of Baugnez, on the height halfway between the town of Malmedy and Ligneuville, Peiper's Kampfgruppe encountered a convoy of the 285th Field Artillery Observation Battalion, US 7th Armored Division.[100][101]

After a brief battle the Americans surrendered. Along with other Americans captured earlier (127 men total), they were disarmed and sent to stand in a field near the crossroads, where the Germans shot them en masse with machine guns and pistols.[102] Of the 84 men killed, 41 were killed by a pistol shot to the head at close range and six were killed by having their skulls bashed in.[103] After feigning death in the field for several hours while the Germans moved among them shooting survivors, a group of about 30 men escaped.[104] Researcher Danny S. Parker believe that Peiper or one of his subordinates made the decision to kill the prisoners.[105] There is no record of an SS officer giving an execution order.[106] News of the killings raced through the Allied lines.[107] Captured SS men who were part of Kampfgruppe Peiper were tried during the Malmedy massacre trial following the war for this massacre and several others in the area. Many of the perpetrators were sentenced to hang, but the sentences were commuted. Peiper himself was imprisoned for eleven years for his role in the killings.[105]

Peiper entered Stavelot on 18 December but encountered fierce resistance from the American defenders. Unable to defeat them, he left a smaller support force in town and headed for the bridge at Trois-Ponts with the bulk of his strength, but by the time he reached it, retreating US engineers had already destroyed it. Peiper then headed for the village of La Gleize and from there on to Stoumont. There, as Peiper approached, engineers blew up the bridge. US defenders were entrenched and ready. Peiper's men were cut off from the main German force and supplies when the Americans recaptured the poorly defended Stavelot on 19 December. As their situation in Stoumont was becoming hopeless, Peiper decided to pull back to La Gleize where he set up his defenses, waiting for the German relief force. Since no such force was able to penetrate the US line, Peiper decided to break out back to the German lines on 23 December. The men of the Kampfgruppe abandoned their vehicles and heavy equipment, although most of the men were able to escape.

With each passing day, enemy resistance stiffened and the advance was eventually halted on all fronts. The German High Command ordered that a renewed attack begin on 1 January 1945. Yet by this time, the Allies had regrouped their forces and were ready to repulse any attack launched by the Germans. The operation formally ended on 27 January 1945, and three days later Mohnke was promoted to SS-Brigadeführer. LSSAH and the I SS Panzer Corps were then transferred to Hungary to bolster the crumbling situation there. Mohnke was wounded in an air raid.[108] In his place, SS-Brigadeführer Otto Kumm was appointed the new Division Commander as of 15 February 1945.[108]

Killing of Wereth 11 Edit

 
Memorial to the Wereth 11

During Battle of the Bulge, troops from 3./SS-PzAA1 LSSAH captured eleven African-American soldiers from the 333rd Artillery Battalion in the hamlet of Wereth. Subsequently the prisoners were shot and their remains found by Allied troops two months later. The soldiers had their fingers cut off, legs broken, and at least one was shot while trying to bandage a comrade's wounds.[109]

Eastern Front 1945 Edit

Operation Spring Awakening Edit

Operation Spring Awakening (6 March 1945 – 16 March 1945) was the last major German offensive launched during World War II. It began in great secrecy on 6 March 1945. The German forces launched attacks in Hungary near Lake Balaton. This area included some of the last oil reserves still available to the Axis. The operation involved many German units withdrawn from the failed Ardennes Offensive on the Western Front, including the 6th SS Panzer Army and the LSSAH. Operation Spring Awakening was a failure for the German side. Within a week, the early gains were halted by massive counter-attacks by Soviet forces. The overwhelming numerical superiority of the Red Army made any defense impossible, yet Hitler somehow had believed victory was attainable.[110]

After the failure of Operation Spring Awakening, Sepp Dietrich's 6th SS Panzer Army retreated in stages to the Vienna area. The Germans prepared defensive positions in an attempt to hold the city against the fast arriving Red Army, in what become known as the Vienna Offensive. The Germans could not hold Vienna, which fell to the Soviet forces on 13 April.[111]

This defeat resulted in the Ärmelstreifen (Cuff Titles Order) or "armband order", which was issued by Hitler to the commander of the 6th SS Panzer Army, Sepp Dietrich. Hitler claimed that the troops "did not fight as the situation demanded."[111] As a mark of disgrace, Hitler ordered the Waffen-SS units involved to remove their cuff titles (German: Ärmelstreifen). Dietrich refused to carry out the order and did not relay the message to the troops.[112] According to Heinz Guderian, most cuff titles had already been removed; he later wrote that the removal of unit cuffs from the Leibstandarte, Totenkopf, Hohenstaufen, and the Das Reich Divisions was accomplished for security reasons.[113]

Battle of Berlin Edit

 
U.S. flag raised over Berlin at the Leibstandarte barracks on 4 July 1945; Soviet honor guard in foreground[114]

Part of the LSSAH ended the war fighting in Berlin. On 23 April 1945, Hitler appointed Brigadeführer Mohnke the commander for the central government district (Zitadelle sector) that included the Reich Chancellery and Führerbunker.[115] Mohnke's command post was under the Reich Chancellery in the bunkers therein. He formed Kampfgruppe Mohnke which was divided into two weak regiments made up of approximately 2,000 men.[116] The core group were the 800 of the Leibstandarte Guard Battalion (assigned to guard the Führer).[117] After Hitler's suicide, they received orders to break out. Prior to the attempt, Mohnke briefed all commanders who could be reached within the Zitadelle sector about Hitler's death and the planned break out.[118] It started at 2300 hours on 1 May. Mohnke led the first of ten small groups.[119] Several very small groups managed to reach the Americans at the Elbe's west bank, but most, including Mohnke's group, could not get through the Soviet lines. Many were taken prisoner and some committed suicide. On 2 May hostilities officially ended by order of Helmuth Weidling, Commandant of the Berlin Defense Area.[120]

After Vienna was captured, the LSSAH had fewer than 1,600 men and 16 tanks.[121] Apart from the remains of Berlin Guard Battalion, the LSSAH surrendered to US forces in the Steyr area on 8 May 1945.[122] On 4 July (Independence Day) 1945, the United States flag was raised over Berlin for the first time at the Leibstandarte barracks.[114]

Organisation Edit

Structure of the division:[123][124]

  • Headquarters
  • 1st SS Panzer Reconnaissance Battalion
  • 1st SS Panzer Regiment
  • 1st SS Panzergrenadier Regiment
  • 2nd SS Panzergrenadier Regiment
  • 1st SS Panzer Engineer Battalion
  • 1st SS Panzer Artillery Regiment
  • 1st SS Panzer Assault Gun Regiment
  • 1st SS Panzer Tank Destroyer Battalion
  • 1st SS Panzer Anti-Aircraft Battalion
  • 1st SS Rocket Launcher Battalion (added September 1944)
  • 1st SS Panzer Signal Battalion
  • 1st SS Panzer Divisional Supply Group

Commanders Edit

No. Portrait Commander Took office Left office Time in office
1
 
Dietrich, SeppSS-Oberst-Gruppenführer
Sepp Dietrich
(1892–1966)
15 August 19384 July 19434 years, 323 days
2
 
Wisch, TheodorSS-Brigadeführer
Theodor Wisch
(1907–1995)
4 July 194320 August 19441 year, 47 days
3
 
Mohnke, WilhelmSS-Brigadeführer
Wilhelm Mohnke
(1911–2001)
20 August 19446 February 1945170 days
4
 
Kumm, OttoSS-Brigadeführer
Otto Kumm
(1909–2004)
6 February 19458 May 194591 days

Notable members Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Williamson 1994, p. 244.
  2. ^ Margolian 2000, p. 14.
  3. ^ McNab 2009, pp. 14, 16.
  4. ^ a b Weale 2012, p. 16.
  5. ^ a b Hoffmann 2000, p. 45.
  6. ^ McNab 2009, p. 16.
  7. ^ McNab 2009, pp. 10, 16.
  8. ^ Wegner 1990, p. 62.
  9. ^ a b Weale 2012, p. 26.
  10. ^ Weale 2012, pp. 26–29.
  11. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 3.
  12. ^ a b Cook & Bender 1994, p. 9.
  13. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 1.
  14. ^ Johnson 1999, p. 15.
  15. ^ a b Cook & Bender 1994, p. 11.
  16. ^ Cook & Bender 1994, p. 13.
  17. ^ a b Cook & Bender 1994, pp. 17, 19.
  18. ^ Stein 1984, pp. xxv, 12, 18, 58, 202, 203, 285.
  19. ^ Cook & Bender 1994, pp. 19, 33.
  20. ^ a b Cook & Bender 1994, pp. 22, 23.
  21. ^ Cook & Bender 1994, p. 23.
  22. ^ Cook & Bender 1994, p. 24.
  23. ^ a b Kershaw 2008, pp. 309–314.
  24. ^ Evans 2005, p. 39.
  25. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 316.
  26. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 2.
  27. ^ Cook & Bender 1994, p. 44.
  28. ^ a b Reynolds 1997, p. 4.
  29. ^ a b c d Reynolds 1997, p. 6.
  30. ^ Cook & Bender 1994, p. 421.
  31. ^ Butler 2001, p. 23.
  32. ^ McNab 2013, p. 157.
  33. ^ Butler 2001, p. 45.
  34. ^ Rossino 2003, pp. 114, 159–161.
  35. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 5.
  36. ^ McNab 2013, p. 158.
  37. ^ a b c Flaherty 2004, p. 154.
  38. ^ Stein 1984, p. 65.
  39. ^ Stein 1984, pp. 65–69.
  40. ^ Flaherty 2004, pp. 143, 154.
  41. ^ Butler 2001, pp. 81–83.
  42. ^ Weale 2012, pp. 251–253.
  43. ^ Weale 2012, p. 253.
  44. ^ Stein 1984, p. 28, n.7: Ansprache des Reichsführers SS aus Anlass der Übergabe der Führer-standarte an die Leibstandarte 'Adolf Hitler', Metz, Fort Alvensleben, am 7. September 1940, RFSS/T-175, 90/2612641.
  45. ^ a b Reynolds 1997, p. 7.
  46. ^ a b c d McNab 2013, p. 159.
  47. ^ Australian Veterans Affairs.
  48. ^ a b Reynolds 1997, p. 8.
  49. ^ a b c "German Captured Documents: NARA Inventory". Maparchive.ru. American Historical Association. National Archives of the United States. from the original on 7 August 2014.
  50. ^ Halder, Franz (21 February 1941 – 31 July 1943). War Diaries Vol 6. pp. 157–158.
  51. ^ Stein 1984, p. 133.
  52. ^ Lehmann 1980, p. 116.
  53. ^ Forczyk, Robert (20 September 2014). Where the Iron Crosses Grow: The Crimea 1941–44. Osprey Publishing. p. 44. ISBN 9781782006251.
  54. ^ Forczyk, Robert (20 September 2014). Where the Iron Crosses Grow: The Crimea 1941–44. Osprey Publishing. pp. 46–56. ISBN 9781782006251.
  55. ^ Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler’s Drive to the Don
  56. ^ a b c d Reynolds 1997, p. 9.
  57. ^ Margry 2001, p. 27.
  58. ^ Margry 2001, p. 30.
  59. ^ Margry 2001, p. 39.
  60. ^ Ripley 2000, p. 73.
  61. ^ Reynolds 1997, pp. 10–11.
  62. ^ Bishop & Williams 2003, p. 170.
  63. ^ Arnold 1990, p. 51.
  64. ^ Mitcham 2006, p. 33.
  65. ^ Parker 2014, pp. 356–357.
  66. ^ Parker 2014, p. 354.
  67. ^ Neitzel & Welzer 2012, p. 309.
  68. ^ Friedman 2004, p. 173.
  69. ^ Strauss 1999a, p. 127.
  70. ^ Strauss 1999b, p. 74–119.
  71. ^ Sydnor 1990, p. 332.
  72. ^ a b Reynolds 1997, p. 14.
  73. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 10.
  74. ^ a b c Gilbert 2019, p. 226.
  75. ^ a b c d e Reynolds 1997, p. 15.
  76. ^ Moseley 2004, p. 42.
  77. ^ Zuccotti 2007, p. 123.
  78. ^ a b c Reynolds 1997, p. 16.
  79. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 21.
  80. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 131.
  81. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 145.
  82. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 148.
  83. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 165.
  84. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 166.
  85. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 174.
  86. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 172.
  87. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 178.
  88. ^ Reynolds 1997, p. 192.
  89. ^ a b Van der Vat 2003, p. 163.
  90. ^ D'Este 1984, p. 410.
  91. ^ Lewin 1978, p. 38.
  92. ^ Van der Vat 2003, p. 164.
  93. ^ D'Este 1984, p. 415.
  94. ^ D'Este 1984, p. 416.
  95. ^ Reynolds 1997, pp. 262–264.
  96. ^ Beevor 2010, p. 446.
  97. ^ Cole 1965.
  98. ^ Evans 2008, p. 657.
  99. ^ Stein 1984, p. 231.
  100. ^ Cole 1965, p. 75.
  101. ^ MacDonald 1997, p. 216.
  102. ^ Parker 2012, pp. 123, 271.
  103. ^ Parker 2012, p. 271.
  104. ^ Parker 2012, pp. 162, 173.
  105. ^ a b Parker 2012, p. 278.
  106. ^ MacDonald 1997, p. 2016.
  107. ^ MacDonald 1997, p. 459.
  108. ^ a b Fischer 2008, p. 41.
  109. ^ U.S. Wereth Memorial.
  110. ^ Ziemke 1968, p. 450.
  111. ^ a b Dollinger 1967, p. 198.
  112. ^ Stein 1984, p. 238.
  113. ^ Guderian 1952, p. 419.
  114. ^ a b "U.S. Flag Raised over Adolph Hitler Barracks in Berlin". Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  115. ^ Fischer 2008, p. 42.
  116. ^ Beevor 2002, p. 287.
  117. ^ Fischer 2008, pp. 42–43.
  118. ^ Fischer 2008, p. 49.
  119. ^ Beevor 2002, p. 382.
  120. ^ Fischer 2008, pp. 49–50.
  121. ^ McNab 2013, p. 280.
  122. ^ McNab 2009, p. 182.
  123. ^ German Order of Battle, Panzer, Panzer Grenadier, and Waffen SS Division in WWII. p. 67.
  124. ^ "Leibstandarte SS-Adolf Hitler, Waffen-SS, 22.06.1941". niehorster.org. Retrieved 22 January 2019.

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Further reading Edit

  • Bartmann, Erwin (2013). Für Volk and Führer: The Memoir of a Veteran of the 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler. Helion and Company. ISBN 9781911628361.
  • Glantz, David M.; House, Jonathan M. (1995). When Titans Clashed: How the Red Army Stopped Hitler. ISBN 978-0-7006-0717-4.
  • Parrish, Michael (1996). The Lesser Terror: Soviet State Security, 1939–1953. Praeger Press. ISBN 978-0-275-95113-9.

panzer, division, leibstandarte, adolf, hitler, division, leibstandarte, abbreviated, lssah, german, panzerdivision, leibstandarte, adolf, hitler, began, adolf, hitler, personal, bodyguard, unit, responsible, guarding, führer, person, offices, residences, init. The 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler or SS Division Leibstandarte 1 abbreviated as LSSAH German 1 SS Panzerdivision Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler began as Adolf Hitler s personal bodyguard unit responsible for guarding the Fuhrer s person offices and residences Initially the size of a regiment the LSSAH eventually grew into an elite division sized unit during World War II 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler1 SS Panzerdivision Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler 1 SS PzDiv LSSAH Unit insignia a skeleton keyActive9 November 1933 8 May 1945CountryNazi GermanyBranchWaffen SSTypePanzerRoleArmoured warfareSizeDivisionPatronAdolf HitlerEngagementsAnschlussGerman occupation of Czechoslovakia World War II Invasion of Poland Battle of the Netherlands Battle of France Battle of Greece Operation Barbarossa Third Battle of Kharkov Western Front 1943 Battle of Kursk Western Front 1944 Operation Luttich Falaise pocket Ardennes Offensive Operation Spring AwakeningCommandersNotablecommandersJulius Schreck January 9 November 1923 Sepp Dietrich 17 March 1933 1 August 1944 Paul Hausser 1 28 August 1944 The LSSAH participated in combat during the invasion of Poland and was amalgamated into the Waffen SS together with the SS Verfugungstruppe SS VT and the combat units of the SS Totenkopfverbande SS TV prior to Operation Barbarossa in 1941 By mid 1942 it had been increased in size from a regiment to a Panzergrenadier division and was designated SS Panzergrenadier Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler It received its final form as a Panzer division in October 1943 Members of the LSSAH perpetrated numerous atrocities and war crimes including the Malmedy massacre They killed an estimated 5 000 prisoners of war in the period 1940 1945 mostly on the Eastern Front 2 Contents 1 Early history 1923 1933 2 Expansion 3 Invasion of Poland 4 Invasion of France 5 Invasion of Yugoslavia and Greece 6 Invasion of the Soviet Union 6 1 Kharkov 6 2 Massacre of civilians on the Eastern Front 6 3 Fabrikaktion Operation 7 Battle of Kursk 8 Italy and subsequent operations 9 Western Front 9 1 Operation Goodwood 9 2 Operation Luttich 9 3 Ardennes Offensive 9 4 Malmedy massacre 9 4 1 Killing of Wereth 11 10 Eastern Front 1945 10 1 Operation Spring Awakening 10 2 Battle of Berlin 11 Organisation 12 Commanders 13 Notable members 14 See also 15 References 15 1 Citations 15 2 Bibliography 15 3 Further readingEarly history 1923 1933 EditIn the early days of the Nazi Party the leadership realized that a bodyguard unit composed of reliable men was needed Ernst Rohm formed a guard formation from the 19 Granatwerfer Kompanie from this formation the Sturmabteilung SA soon evolved Adolf Hitler in early 1923 ordered the formation of a small separate bodyguard dedicated to his service rather than a suspect mass such as the SA 3 Originally the unit was composed of only eight men commanded by Julius Schreck and Joseph Berchtold 4 It was designated the Stabswache staff guard 5 The Stabswache were issued unique badges but at this point was still under SA control Schreck resurrected the use of the Totenkopf death s head as the unit s insignia a symbol various elite forces had used in the past including specialized assault troops of Imperial Germany in World War I who used Hutier infiltration tactics 6 In May 1923 the unit was renamed Stosstrupp Shock Troop Hitler 4 The unit numbered no more than 20 members at that time 7 On 9 November 1923 the Stosstrupp along with the SA and several other Nazi paramilitary units took part in the abortive Beer Hall Putsch in Munich In the aftermath Hitler was imprisoned and his party and all associated formations including the Stosstrupp were disbanded 8 nbsp The second model of the LSSAH Standard modelled after the Roman Vexillum In the mid 1920s violence remained a large part of Bavarian politics 9 Hitler was a potential target In 1925 Hitler ordered the formation of a new bodyguard unit the Schutzkommando protection command 9 The unit was renamed the Sturmstaffel assault squadron and in November was renamed the Schutzstaffel abbreviated to SS 10 By 1933 the SS had grown from a small bodyguard unit to a formation of over 50 000 men The decision was made to form a new bodyguard unit again called the Stabswache which was mostly made up of men from the 1st SS Standarte 11 By 1933 this unit was placed under the command of Sepp Dietrich who selected 117 men to form the SS Stabswache Berlin on 17 March 1933 12 The unit replaced the army guards at the Reich Chancellery 12 Out of this initial group three eventually became divisional commanders at least eight would become regimental commanders fifteen became battalion commanders and over thirty became company commanders in the Waffen SS 13 Eleven men from the first company of 117 went on to win the Knights Cross and forty of them were awarded the German Cross in gold for bravery 14 Later in 1933 two further training units were formed SS Sonderkommando Zossen on 10 May and a second unit designated SS Sonderkommando Juterbog on 8 July 15 These were the only SS units to receive military training at that time Most of the training staff came from the ranks of the army 15 On 3 September 1933 the two Sonderkommando merged into the SS Sonderkommando Berlin under Dietrich s command 16 Most of their duties involved providing outer security for Hitler at his residences public appearances and guard duty at the Reich Chancellery 5 In November 1933 on the 10th anniversary of the Beer Hall Putsch the Sonderkommando took part in the rally and memorial service for the Nazi Party members who had been killed during the putsch During the ceremony the members of the Sonderkommando swore personal allegiance to Hitler At the conclusion the unit received the new title Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler LAH 17 The term Leibstandarte was derived partly from Leibgarde a somewhat archaic German translation of Guard of Corps or personal bodyguard of a military leader Leib lit body torso and Standarte the Schutzstaffel SS or Sturmabteilung SA term for a regiment sized unit also the German word for a specific type of heraldic flag Standard Expansion Edit nbsp December 1935 parade for Adolf Hitler at the LSSAH Barracks in Berlin Lichterfelde Sepp Dietrich is on the far right On 13 April 1934 Heinrich Himmler head of the SS ordered the Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler LAH to be renamed Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler LSSAH Himmler inserted the SS initials into the name to make it clear that the unit was independent from the SA or the army 17 The LSSAH was designated a National Socialist unit which eventually grew into an elite Panzer division of the Waffen SS 18 Although nominally under Himmler Dietrich was the real commander and handled day to day administration 19 During 1934 Stabschef SA Ernst Rohm continued to push for greater political influence for his already powerful SA Hitler decided that the SA had to be eliminated as an independent political force and ordered the LSSAH to prepare for the action The LSSAH formed two companies under the control of Jurgen Wagner and Otto Reich these formations were moved to Munich on 30 June 20 Hitler ordered all SA leaders to attend a meeting at the Hanselbauer Hotel in Bad Wiessee near Munich Hitler along with Sepp Dietrich and a unit from the LSSAH travelled to Bad Wiessee to personally oversee Rohm s arrest on 30 June Later at around 17 00 hours Dietrich received orders from Hitler for the LSSAH to form an execution squad and go to Stadelheim prison where certain SA leaders were being held 20 There in the prison courtyard the LSSAH firing squad shot five SA generals and an SA colonel 21 Additional alleged traitors were shot in Berlin by a unit of the Leibstandarte 22 On 1 July Hitler finally agreed with Goring and Himmler that Rohm should be executed 23 In what the Nazis called the Rohm Putsch but otherwise came to be known as the Night of the Long Knives companies of the LSSAH together with the Gestapo and Goring s Landespolizeigruppe performed Death Squad actions At least 85 but most likely no less than twice that number of people were executed without trial over the next few days 23 24 This action succeeded in effectively decapitating the SA and removing Rohm s threat to Hitler s leadership In recognition of their actions both the LSSAH and the Landespolizeigruppe General Goring were expanded to regimental size and motorized In addition the SS became an independent organization no longer part of the SA 25 nbsp The Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler barracks in Berlin 1938The LSSAH provided the honor guard at many of the Nuremberg Rallies and in 1935 took part in the reoccupation of the Saarland 26 On 6 June 1935 the LSSAH officially adopted a field grey uniform to identify itself more with the army which wore a similar uniform 27 The LSSAH was later in the vanguard of the march into Austria as part of the Anschluss and in 1938 the unit took part in the occupation of the Sudetenland 28 By 1939 the LSSAH was a full infantry regiment with three infantry battalions an artillery battalion and anti tank reconnaissance and engineer sub units 28 Soon after its involvement in the annexation of Bohemia and Moravia the LSSAH was redesignated Infanterie Regiment Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler mot When Hitler ordered the formation of an SS division in mid 1939 the Leibstandarte was designated to form its own unit unlike the other Standarten of the SS Verfugungstruppe SS VT SS Standarte Deutschland SS Standarte Germania and SS Standarte Der Fuhrer 29 The Polish crisis of August 1939 put these plans on hold and the LSSAH was ordered to join XIII Armeekorps a part of Army Group South which was preparing for the attack on Poland The Leibstandarte division s symbol was a skeleton key in honor of its first commander Josef Sepp Dietrich Dietrich is German for skeleton key or lock pick it was retained and modified to later serve as the symbol for I SS Panzer Corps 30 Invasion of Poland EditDuring the initial stages of the invasion of Poland the LSSAH was attached to the 17 Infanterie Division 31 and tasked with providing flank protection for the southern pincer The regiment was involved in several battles against Polish cavalry brigades attempting to hit the flanks of the German advance At Pabianice a town near Lodz the LSSAH fought elements of the Polish 28th Infantry Division and the Wolynska Cavalry Brigade in close combat 32 Throughout the campaign the unit was notorious for burning villages 33 In addition members of the LSSAH committed atrocities in numerous Polish towns including the murder of 50 Jews in Blonie and the massacre of 200 civilians including children who were machine gunned in Zloczew Shootings also took place in Boleslawiec Torzeniec Goworowo Mlawa and Wloclawek 34 After the success at Pabianice the LSSAH was sent to the area near Warsaw and attached to the 4 Panzer Division under then Generalmajor brigadier general Georg Hans Reinhardt The unit saw action preventing encircled Polish units from escaping and repelling several attempts by other Polish troops to break through In spite of the swift military victory over Poland the regular army had reservations about the performance of the LSSAH and SS VT units due to their higher casualty rate than the army units 35 Invasion of France EditIn early 1940 the LSSAH was expanded into a full independent motorized infantry regiment and a Sturmgeschutz Assault Gun battery was added to their establishment 29 The regiment was shifted to the Dutch border for the launch of Fall Gelb It was to form the vanguard of the ground advance into the Netherlands tasked with capturing a vital bridge over the IJssel attacking the main line of defense at the Grebbeberg the Grebbeline and linking up with the Fallschirmjager of Generaloberst Kurt Student s airborne forces the 7 Flieger Division and the 22 Luftlande Infanterie Division nbsp Heinrich Himmler inspecting a Sturmgeschutz III Metz September 1940Fall Gelb the invasion of France and the Low Countries was launched on 10 May 1940 On that day the LSSAH crossed the Dutch border 29 covered over 75 kilometres 47 mi and secured a crossing over the IJssel near Zutphen after discovering that their target bridge had been destroyed Over the next four days the LSSAH covered over 215 kilometres 134 mi and upon entering Rotterdam several of its soldiers accidentally shot at and seriously wounded General Student 36 After the surrender of Rotterdam the LSSAH left for The Hague which they reached on 15 May after capturing 3 500 Dutch soldiers as prisoners of war 37 After the surrender of the Netherlands on 15 May the regiment was then moved south to France 38 After the British counterattack at Arras the LSSAH along with the SS Verfugungs Division were moved to hold the perimeter around Dunkirk and reduce the size of the pocket containing the encircled British Expeditionary Force and French forces 39 The LSSAH took up a position 15 miles south west of Dunkirk along the line of the Aa Canal facing the Allied defensive line near Watten 37 That night the OKW ordered the advance to halt with the British Expeditionary Force trapped The LSSAH paused for the night However on the following day of 25 May in defiance of Hitler s orders Dietrich ordered his 3rd battalion to cross the canal and take the Wattenberg Heights beyond where British artillery observers were putting the regiment at risk They assaulted the heights and drove the observers off Instead of being censured for his act of defiance Dietrich was awarded the Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross 40 On 26 May the German advance resumed By 28 May the LSSAH had taken the village of Wormhout only ten miles from Dunkirk 37 After their surrender soldiers from the 2nd Battalion Royal Warwickshire Regiment along with some other units including French soldiers were taken to a barn in La Plaine au Bois near Wormhout and Esquelbecq It was there that troops of the LSSAH 2nd battalion under the command of SS Hauptsturmfuhrer Wilhelm Mohnke committed the Wormhoudt massacre where 80 British and French prisoners of war were killed 41 42 Although it is unarguable that the massacre occurred Mohnke s level of involvement is impossible to know he was never formally charged and brought to trial 29 43 Invasion of Yugoslavia and Greece EditMain article Battle of Greece After the conclusion of the Western campaign on 22 June 1940 the LSSAH spent six months in Metz Moselle It was expanded to brigade size 6 500 men A Flak battalion and a StuG Batterie were among the units added to the LSSAH A new flag was presented by Heinrich Himmler in September 1940 44 During the later months of 1940 the regiment trained in amphibious assaults on the Moselle River in preparation for Operation Seelowe the invasion of England After the Luftwaffe s failure in the Battle of Britain and the cancellation of the planned invasion the LSSAH was shifted to Bulgaria in February 1941 in preparation for Operation Marita part of the planned invasion of Greece and Yugoslavia 45 The operation was launched on 6 April 1941 by aerial bombings of central southern Yugoslavia specially over Belgrade causing enormous destructions and thousands of victims and wounded After the LSSAH entered on 12 April into the Yugoslavian capital then to follow the route of the 9 Panzer Division part of General der Panzertruppe Georg Stumme s XL Panzer Corps The LSSAH crossed the border near Bitola and was soon deep in Greek territory nbsp Sd Kfz 231 armored cars of the LSSAH advance into the Balkans near Sofia Bulgaria with the Vitosha mountain in the background The LSSAH captured Vevi on 10 April SS Sturmbannfuhrer Kurt Meyer s reinforced Aufklarungs Abteilung reconnaissance battalion LSSAH was tasked with clearing resistance from the Kleisoura Pass south west of Vevi and driving through to the Kastoria area to cut off retreating Greek and British Commonwealth forces 46 Despite stiff resistance Meyer s unit captured the pass 46 The brigade participated in the clearing the Klidi Pass just south of Vevi which was defended by a scratch force of Greek Australian British and New Zealand troops An Australian artillery officer wrote of the Germans insolence in driving trucks down the main road to within 3 000 yards 2 700 m of our infantry and there unloading the troops The Germans were forced off the road by artillery fire and faced fierce resistance for more than two days On the morning of 12 April the Germans renewed their attack and by late afternoon the pass was cleared 47 With the fall of the two passes the main line of resistance of the Greek Epirus army was broken and the campaign became a battle to prevent the escape of the enemy On 20 April following a pitched battle in the 5 000 foot high 1 500 m Metsovon Pass in the Pindus Mountains the commander of the Greek Epirus army surrendered the entire force to Dietrich British Commonwealth troops were now the only Allied forces remaining in Greece and they were falling back across the Corinth Canal to the Peloponnesos By 26 April the LSSAH had reached the Gulf of Patras and in an effort to cut off the retreating British Commonwealth forces Dietrich ordered that his regiment cross the Gulf and secure the town of Patras in the Peloponnesos Since no transport vessels were available the LSSAH commandeered fishing boats and successfully completed the crossing but were forced to leave much of their heavy equipment behind By 30 April the last British Commonwealth troops had either been captured or escaped The LSSAH occupied a position of honor in the victory parade through Athens After Operation Marita the LSSAH was ordered north to join the forces of Army Group South massing for the launch of Operation Barbarossa 48 Invasion of the Soviet Union EditFollowing LSSAH s outstanding performance during Marita Himmler ordered that it should be upgraded to divisional status 48 The regiment already the size of a reinforced brigade was to be given motorized transport and redesignated SS Division mot Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler It was moved to Czechoslovakia in mid May for reorganization until being ordered to assemble in Poland 49 for Operation Barbarossa as part of Gerd von Rundstedt s Army Group South There was not enough time to deliver all its equipment and refit it to full divisional status before the launch of the invasion of the Soviet Union so the new division remained the size of a reinforced brigade even though its expansion and development was of concern at the very highest ranks of command Franz Halder chief of the OKH General Staff noted on 20 June that SS Adolf Hitler will not be ready in time Tracked components leave on 22 June others not before 25 June then more hopefully the next day Materiel position of SS Adolf Hitler has improved Div may yet get ready in time 50 nbsp Wehrmacht horse drawn artillery and armored cars of the LSSAH pass a burning Soviet village August 1941 Despite Halder s hopes LSSAH was held in reserve attached to XIV Panzer Corps 49 as part of Generalfeldmarschall Ewald von Kleist s 1st Panzer Group during the opening stages of the attack Through July it was attached to III Panzer Corps before finishing August as part of XLVIII Panzer Corps 49 During this time the LSSAH was involved in the Battle of Uman and the subsequent capture of Kiev According to a postwar report by Waffen SS journalist Erich Kern the division murdered 4 000 Soviet prisoners in reprisal on 18 August after finding the mutilated bodies of six dead divisional members who had been executed at Nowo Danzig north of Kherson These allegations have been researched using local units war diaries no mention of executed German soldiers during those dates has been found For want of reliable evidence not even accusations by the Soviet authorities the allegations remained unproven 51 52 nbsp LSSAH enters burning Taganrog October 1941In early September the division was shifted to LIV Army Corps as part of the 11th Army under Eugen Ritter von Schobert during the advance east after the fall of Kiev Hoping to capitalize on the collapse of the Red Army defense on the Dnepr River the reconnaissance battalion of LSSAH was tasked with making a speedy advance to capture the strategically vital choke point of the Perekop Isthmus through a coup de main but were rebuffed by entrenched defenders at the town of Perekop 53 That same day 12 September 11th Army s commander was killed in an aircraft accident and Hitler appointed Erich von Manstein to command It took five days for Manstein to take matters in hand and the operation to clear the Crimean Peninsula was not launched until 17 September Manstein deployed LSSAH to create diversions while preparing for the main assault intending to employ it to exploit an eventual breakthrough but was forced to throw pioneers into the attack on the Tatar Ditch in the face of a furious counterattacks and did not break the Soviet defense for ten days 54 On 8 October 1941 the LSSAH captured the major coastal city of Mariupol catching the Soviets off guard 55 In October the LSSAH was transferred back north to help solidify the Axis line against fresh Soviet attacks against the Romanian 3rd Army and later took part in the heavy fighting for the city of Rostov on Don which was captured in late November there the LSSAH took over 10 000 Red Army prisoners However by the end of the year the German advance faltered as Soviet resistance grew stronger 46 Under pressure from heavy Soviet counterattacks during the winter the LSSAH and Army Group South retreated from Rostov to defensive lines on the river Mius 46 After the spring rasputitsa seasonal mud had cleared the division joined in Fall Blau participating in the fighting to retake Rostov on Don which fell in late July 1942 Severely understrength the LSSAH was transferred to the Normandy region of occupied France to join the newly formed SS Panzer Corps and to be reformed as a Panzergrenadier division 56 Kharkov Edit nbsp Sepp Dietrich in a medal ceremony for men of the LSSAH Soviet Union 1942 Sepp Dietrich with von Westernhagen Wiesemann Max Wunsche and Karl Rettlinger The LSSAH spent the remainder of 1942 refitting as a panzergrenadier division Thanks to the efforts of Himmler along with SS Obergruppenfuhrer Paul Hausser the SS Panzer Corps commander the three SS Panzergrenadier divisions LSSAH Das Reich and Totenkopf were to be formed with a full regiment of tanks rather than only a battalion This meant that the SS Panzergrenadier divisions were full strength Panzer divisions in all but name The division also received nine Tiger 1 tanks and these were formed into the 13th schwere Company 1st SS Panzer Regiment 56 The collapse of the front around Stalingrad and the encirclement of the 6th Army created a threat to Field Marshal Erich von Manstein s Army Group Don Manstein requested reinforcements to halt the Soviet attack near Kharkov The SS Panzer Corps was then ordered east to join Manstein s forces 56 nbsp Fritz Witt Kharkov March 1943Arriving at the front in late January 1943 the LSSAH was engaged in fighting in and around Kharkov as a part of Hausser s SS Panzer Corps 56 In March 1943 the division participated in the recapture of Kharkov On 12 March 1943 the LSSAH made progress into the city s center by breaking through the Soviet defenses in the northern suburbs By the end of the day the division had reached a position just two blocks north of Dzerzhinsky Square 57 The 2nd Panzergrenadier Regiment s 2nd Battalion was able to surround the square after taking heavy casualties from Soviet snipers and other defenders by evening When taken the square was renamed Platz der Leibstandarte 58 Despite the declaration that the city had fallen fighting continued on 15 and 16 March as German units cleared the remnants of resistance in the tractor works factory complex in the southern outskirts of the city The city was taken on 17 March 59 While in Kharkov troops of the LSSAH engaged in the murder of wounded Soviet soldiers that were located in the city s military hospital several hundred were killed Additionally captured Soviet officers and commissars were routinely executed 60 The division was pulled back to rest and refit Division commander Sepp Dietrich was promoted to form a new Corps the 1st SS Panzer Corps Leibstandarte and the LSSAH was to supply all the senior officers for the new headquarters At the same time a new SS division would be formed from members of the Hitler Youth and the LSSAH would supply all of the regimental battalion and most of the company commanders This new division would become the 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend 61 Massacre of civilians on the Eastern Front Edit During the fighting around Kharkov a unit under the command of Joachim Peiper gained a nickname Blowtorch Battalion after the inhabitants of two Soviet villages were shot or burned 62 63 64 Ukrainian sources including surviving witness Ivan Kiselev who was 14 at the time of the massacre described the killings at the villages of Yefremovka and Semyonovka on 17 February 1943 On 12 February Waffen SS troops of the LSSAH occupied the two villages where retreating Soviet forces had wounded two SS officers In retaliation five days later LSSAH troops killed 872 men women and children Some 240 of these were burned alive in the church of Yefremovka 65 The reputation of the Blowtorch Battalion was confirmed in August 1944 when Sturmbannfuhrer Jacob Hanreich was captured south of Falaise in France and interrogated by the Allies He stated that Peiper was particularly eager to execute the order to burn villages Hanreich had previously served with Leibstandarte but was with SS Division Hitlerjugend at the time of his capture 66 Additional sources support the division s reputation for brutality The following statement taken from the surreptitious recording of POWs conversations by the Allies describes the atrocities on the Eastern Front SS Untersturmfuhrer Kramer captured on the Western Front during his service with the SS Division Hitlerjugend recounted the following from his time with the LSSAH 67 I have experienced it in Russia at Orel An MG 42 was set up in the main aisle of a church and the Russian men women and children were taken into the church without knowing at all what was happening Then they were shot immediately with the MG 42 and petrol was poured on them and the whole place was set on fire Fabrikaktion Operation Edit Elements of LSSAH took part in Fabrikaktion factory action a k a Grossaktion Juden Major Action on Jews an operation to capture remaining German Jews that worked in the arms industry Men of the LSSAH helped the Gestapo round up Jews in Berlin people were taken from their jobs and herded in to cattle wagons on 27 28 February 1943 Most of the captured perished either in Auschwitz or other camps in the East 68 69 70 In May 1943 Hans Frank shipped 500 watches collected from Auschwitz prisoners to soldiers of the 3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf 71 Battle of Kursk EditThe spring rasputitsa halted offensive operations giving the LSSAH time to rest and refit By early June 1943 the division had been fully refitted and was now under the command of SS Brigadefuhrer Theodor Wisch 72 Its armor strength was 12 Tiger Is 72 Panzer IVs 16 Panzer III and Panzer IIs and 31 StuGs In late June 1943 the formation of I SS Panzer Corps meant that Hausser s SS Panzer Corps was renamed II SS Panzer Corps 73 nbsp Joachim Peiper commander of the division s 1st SS Panzer RegimentThe II SS Panzer Corps was moved north to Belgorod in preparation for the upcoming summer offensive Operation Citadel The LSSAH along with the SS Divisions Totenkopf and Das Reich was to form the spearhead of General Hermann Hoth s 4th Panzer Army tasked with breaching the southern flank of the Kursk salient Field Marshal Walter Model s 9th Army was to breach the northern flank and the two forces were to meet near the city of Kursk to the east thereby encircling a large Soviet force The attack commenced on 5 July The LSSAH s panzers advancing in Panzerkeils wedges soon ran into the elaborate defenses of the Red Army which slowed the advance Untersturmfuhrer Michael Wittman a Tiger commander in Leibstandarte s heavy company destroyed eight enemy tanks and seven anti tank guns on the first day of battle 74 On 08 July Unterscharfuhrer Franz Staudegger another Tiger commander became separated from his company in the town of Teterevino having halted for mechanical repairs He became aware of a nearby Soviet armored counterattack developing and rushed the repairs on his tank to meet the threat Staudegger and his crew spotted the enemy vanguard and took out seventeen T 34s in two hours 74 The Russian attack was now faltering so Staudegger pressed his Tiger forward into the retreating enemy flanks switching to high explosive shells after exhausting his armor piercing ammmunition By day s end Staudegger s Tiger had destroyed twenty two T 34s for which he won the Knight s Cross 74 By 9 July the II SS Panzer Corps had advanced 48 km 30 mi north and were nearing the small town of Prokhorovka The LSSAH again took the lead by now its strength was reduced to just 77 armored vehicles The 2nd SS Panzergrenadier Regiment supported by several tanks advanced up the road to Prokhorovka against heavy resistance By midday the infantry had cleared the Komsomolets State Farm and begun the attack on Hill 241 6 which they secured shortly after nightfall on 10 July The next day the advance resumed with the division capturing Oktiabr skii State Farm and Hill 252 2 in heavy fighting against Soviet Paratroops of the 9th Guards Airborne Division On 12 July the Soviets threw the 5th Guards Tank Army into a counterattack near Prokhorovka Two tank corps faced the LSSAH hitting the Germans around Oktiabr skii State Farm and Hill 252 2 In the ensuing fighting the Germans inflicted heavy casualties on the Soviets The Soviet counterattack had stalled the German advance and the division was forced to fall back to Oktiabr skii Fighting continued the next day but the focus of the Soviet attack had then shifted to the Totenkopf on the left of the LSSAH With the battle at Prokhorovka still in the balance Soviet High Command launched an offensive of their own Operation Kutuzov near Orel causing Hitler to order the cessation of Citadel The II SS Panzer Corps was pulled back The LSSAH was ordered out of the line having suffered 2 753 casualties including 474 killed 72 Eleven tanks were also lost during Citadel The division was sent to Italy to help stabilize the situation there caused by the deposal of Benito Mussolini by the Badoglio government and the Allied invasion of Sicily which began on the night of 9 10 July 1943 The division left behind its heavy equipment which was given to Das Reich and Totenkopf 75 Italy and subsequent operations Edit nbsp LSSAH Panzer IV Ausf H in Milan Italy September 1943The division re equipped with vehicles arrived on the Po River Plain on 8 August 1943 The LSSAH was given the task of guarding several vital road and rail junctions in the area of Trento Verona After several weeks the division was moved to the Parma Reggio area During this period the Leibstandarte was involved in several skirmishes with partisans With Italy having announced an armistice with the Allies of 8 September 1943 the division was ordered to begin disarming nearby Royal Italian Army units 75 This went smoothly with the exception of brief bloody fights with Italian troops stationed in Parma Cremona and Piacenza on 9 September By 19 September all Italian forces in the Po River Plain had been disarmed 75 While on rear security duties in Italy LSSAH men murdered 49 Jewish refugees near Lake Maggiore in the Lake Maggiore massacres who had fled there after the German takeover 76 The murders happened between 15 and 24 September Some of the victims had their feet and hands tied and were drowned 77 The LSSAH was sent to the Istria Peninsula and was engaged in several anti partisan operations as part of Nazi security warfare During its period in Italy the LSSAH was reformed as a full panzer division and redesignated 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler 75 In early November the division was ordered back to the Eastern Front arriving in the Zhitomir area in mid November 75 The division was assigned to XLVIII Panzer Corps a part of 4th Panzer Army which was struggling to hold the line near Zhitomir 78 The division was transferred to the Cherkassy area at the end of January where it was assigned to the III Panzer Corps part of 1st Panzer Army As part of the corps the division took part in the relief attempt of German forces of Army Group South encircled in the Korsun Pocket in January February 1944 The majority of the LSSAH which amounted to 41 officers and 1 188 men were withdrawn to Belgium for rest and refit 78 however a Kampfgruppe was left behind On 25 March the 1st Panzer Army was encircled in the Kamenets Podolsky pocket The battle group took part in the fighting to escape the encirclement forming a part of the spearhead which linked up with the II SS Panzer Corps near Buczacz on 6 April 78 The LSSAH Division was reformed in Belgium and was at full strength by 25 April 1944 79 Western Front EditThe division was transferred again as part of the I SS Panzer Corps which at this time consisted of the 101 SS Heavy Panzer Battalion SS Division Hitlerjugend SS Division Gotz von Berlichingen and the Panzer Lehr Division 45 The LSSAH had been positioned north of the River Seine to counter any possible landing in the area of the Pas de Calais so the first units did not arrive in Normandy until after the Allied invasion there on 6 June 1944 part of it arrived on the night of 27 28 June with the whole division taking another week 80 By 4 July the I SS Panzer Corps was reformed and now consisted of the LSSAH and the Hitlerjugend 81 The first action they were involved in was the defense of Carpiquet village and airfield in the Allied Operation Windsor 82 There then followed a number of Allied attacks Operations Charnwood and Jupiter On 12 July the LSSAH was holding the Caen south sector from Maltot in the west to the Caen Falaise road in the east 83 During the night of 14 15 July LSSAH was relieved by the 272nd Infantry Division and pulled back to an assembly area astride the Caen Falaise road between Ifs and Cintheaux 84 Operation Goodwood Edit Main article Operation Goodwood nbsp The front line at the beginning of Operation Spring showing the layout of forces for both sidesThe British Operation Goodwood took place between 18 and 20 July 1944 British VIII Corps with three armored divisions launched the attack aiming to seize the German held Bourguebus Ridge along with the area between Bretteville sur Laize and Vimont The operation was preceded by a three hour bombing by 2 500 aircraft 85 The Division strength prior to Goodwood was reported as 59 Panzer IVs 46 Panthers and 35 StuG IIIs 86 II 1st SS Panzer Regiment located near Garcelles received orders to attack the British at Soliers While moving its 13 Panthers towards Bourguebus the unit engaged 60 British tanks destroying 20 of them and capturing Soliers Around 12 00 the Panther Battalion I 1st SS Panzer regiment was engaged in combat with the British 29th Armoured Brigade of the British 11th Armoured Division The body of the LSSAH was rushed to the front from Falaise where it was being held in reserve It counterattacked at 17 00 together with the 21st Panzer Division and halted the British offensive on the left front 87 The British resumed their assault at around 13 00 on 19 July having brought up reinforcements to continue the attack They overran some of the forward German units and approached Bourguebus Ridge at 16 00 They came under fire from Panthers of the Leibstandarte who had taken up positions on the ridge Reinforcements of the 12th SS Panzer Division arrived at the right flank at around 15 00 The Canadians attacked next in the Battle of Verrieres Ridge and Operation Spring see map where the LSSAH came up against a number of Allied divisions including the Guards Armoured Division 7th Armoured 2nd and 3rd Canadian Divisions 88 Operation Luttich Edit Main article Operation Luttich On 25 July 1944 US forces under General Omar Bradley succeeded in breaking through the German defenses as part of Operation Cobra and entered Brittany 89 90 Hitler forbade any retreat and ordered a counteroffensive codenamed Operation Luttich 91 by the XLVII Panzer Corps consisting of the 2nd Panzer Division part of the LSSAH the SS Division Das Reich and the 116th Panzer Division 92 The plan for the attack was to hit the 30th Infantry Division east of Mortain then cut through American defenses to reach the coast 89 The US response was aided by Ultra intelligence which had revealed the plans for Operation Luttich by 4 August 93 As a result Bradley was able to obtain air support from both the US 9th Air Force and the RAF 94 The LSSAH and other divisions went on the attack on 7 August The 1st SS Panzer Regiment along with two battalions of motorized infantry one combat engineer company and the division s flak battalion were used for the attack The weather was not suitable for flying that morning which disadvantaged the Allies The SS Division Das Reich recaptured Mortain and an armored battle group under Joachim Peiper reached Bourlopin but had to halt due to US counterattacks and air strikes The much reduced division was encircled in the Falaise pocket by US Canadian and Polish forces Some LSSAH units broke out of the pocket on 22 August leaving behind all their tanks and artillery The division sustained 5 000 casualties during the Normandy campaign 95 During their retreat from France members of the LSSAH and the SS Division Hitlerjugend division murdered 34 French civilians in the towns of Tavaux and Plomion 96 Ardennes Offensive Edit Further information Battle of Elsenborn Ridge and Battle of the Bulge nbsp Kampfgruppe Knittel s troops on the road to Stavelot to support PeiperThe Ardennes Offensive 16 December 1944 25 January 1945 was a major German offensive launched through the forested Ardennes Mountains region of Belgium France and Luxembourg The offensive was called Unternehmen Wacht am Rhein Operation Watch on the Rhine by the Germans The bulge was the initial incursion the Germans put into the Allies line of advance as seen in maps presented in contemporary newspapers 97 page needed nbsp A preserved Tiger II tank left by the Kampfgruppe Peiper at La Gleize in December 1944Wilhelm Mohnke now in command of the LSSAH attached to the I SS Panzer Corps was the spearhead of the operation The fuel crisis in Nazi Germany meant that the LSSAH had insufficient amounts of fuel for its vehicles 98 On 16 December the operation began with then SS Obersturmbannfuhrer Joachim Peiper s Kampfgruppe leading the push to the Meuse 99 Malmedy massacre Edit Main article Malmedy massacre nbsp A GI surveys the scene of the Malmedy massacre The victims bodies were preserved under the snow until Allied forces recaptured the area in January 1945 Peiper was supposed to reach the Meuse River on the first day of the offensive Instead it was delayed by almost an entire day by a recon platoon at Lanzerath Ridge Then unable to dislodge the 99th Infantry Division from Elsenborn Ridge it diverted to an alternative road to the south At 07 00 on 17 December the unit seized a US fuel depot at Bullingen and refueled before continuing westward At 12 30 near the hamlet of Baugnez on the height halfway between the town of Malmedy and Ligneuville Peiper s Kampfgruppe encountered a convoy of the 285th Field Artillery Observation Battalion US 7th Armored Division 100 101 After a brief battle the Americans surrendered Along with other Americans captured earlier 127 men total they were disarmed and sent to stand in a field near the crossroads where the Germans shot them en masse with machine guns and pistols 102 Of the 84 men killed 41 were killed by a pistol shot to the head at close range and six were killed by having their skulls bashed in 103 After feigning death in the field for several hours while the Germans moved among them shooting survivors a group of about 30 men escaped 104 Researcher Danny S Parker believe that Peiper or one of his subordinates made the decision to kill the prisoners 105 There is no record of an SS officer giving an execution order 106 News of the killings raced through the Allied lines 107 Captured SS men who were part of Kampfgruppe Peiper were tried during the Malmedy massacre trial following the war for this massacre and several others in the area Many of the perpetrators were sentenced to hang but the sentences were commuted Peiper himself was imprisoned for eleven years for his role in the killings 105 Peiper entered Stavelot on 18 December but encountered fierce resistance from the American defenders Unable to defeat them he left a smaller support force in town and headed for the bridge at Trois Ponts with the bulk of his strength but by the time he reached it retreating US engineers had already destroyed it Peiper then headed for the village of La Gleize and from there on to Stoumont There as Peiper approached engineers blew up the bridge US defenders were entrenched and ready Peiper s men were cut off from the main German force and supplies when the Americans recaptured the poorly defended Stavelot on 19 December As their situation in Stoumont was becoming hopeless Peiper decided to pull back to La Gleize where he set up his defenses waiting for the German relief force Since no such force was able to penetrate the US line Peiper decided to break out back to the German lines on 23 December The men of the Kampfgruppe abandoned their vehicles and heavy equipment although most of the men were able to escape With each passing day enemy resistance stiffened and the advance was eventually halted on all fronts The German High Command ordered that a renewed attack begin on 1 January 1945 Yet by this time the Allies had regrouped their forces and were ready to repulse any attack launched by the Germans The operation formally ended on 27 January 1945 and three days later Mohnke was promoted to SS Brigadefuhrer LSSAH and the I SS Panzer Corps were then transferred to Hungary to bolster the crumbling situation there Mohnke was wounded in an air raid 108 In his place SS Brigadefuhrer Otto Kumm was appointed the new Division Commander as of 15 February 1945 108 Killing of Wereth 11 Edit Main article Wereth 11 Massacre nbsp Memorial to the Wereth 11During Battle of the Bulge troops from 3 SS PzAA1 LSSAH captured eleven African American soldiers from the 333rd Artillery Battalion in the hamlet of Wereth Subsequently the prisoners were shot and their remains found by Allied troops two months later The soldiers had their fingers cut off legs broken and at least one was shot while trying to bandage a comrade s wounds 109 Eastern Front 1945 EditOperation Spring Awakening Edit Main article Operation Spring Awakening Operation Spring Awakening 6 March 1945 16 March 1945 was the last major German offensive launched during World War II It began in great secrecy on 6 March 1945 The German forces launched attacks in Hungary near Lake Balaton This area included some of the last oil reserves still available to the Axis The operation involved many German units withdrawn from the failed Ardennes Offensive on the Western Front including the 6th SS Panzer Army and the LSSAH Operation Spring Awakening was a failure for the German side Within a week the early gains were halted by massive counter attacks by Soviet forces The overwhelming numerical superiority of the Red Army made any defense impossible yet Hitler somehow had believed victory was attainable 110 After the failure of Operation Spring Awakening Sepp Dietrich s 6th SS Panzer Army retreated in stages to the Vienna area The Germans prepared defensive positions in an attempt to hold the city against the fast arriving Red Army in what become known as the Vienna Offensive The Germans could not hold Vienna which fell to the Soviet forces on 13 April 111 This defeat resulted in the Armelstreifen Cuff Titles Order or armband order which was issued by Hitler to the commander of the 6th SS Panzer Army Sepp Dietrich Hitler claimed that the troops did not fight as the situation demanded 111 As a mark of disgrace Hitler ordered the Waffen SS units involved to remove their cuff titles German Armelstreifen Dietrich refused to carry out the order and did not relay the message to the troops 112 According to Heinz Guderian most cuff titles had already been removed he later wrote that the removal of unit cuffs from the Leibstandarte Totenkopf Hohenstaufen and the Das Reich Divisions was accomplished for security reasons 113 Battle of Berlin Edit Main article Battle of Berlin nbsp U S flag raised over Berlin at the Leibstandarte barracks on 4 July 1945 Soviet honor guard in foreground 114 Part of the LSSAH ended the war fighting in Berlin On 23 April 1945 Hitler appointed Brigadefuhrer Mohnke the commander for the central government district Zitadelle sector that included the Reich Chancellery and Fuhrerbunker 115 Mohnke s command post was under the Reich Chancellery in the bunkers therein He formed Kampfgruppe Mohnke which was divided into two weak regiments made up of approximately 2 000 men 116 The core group were the 800 of the Leibstandarte Guard Battalion assigned to guard the Fuhrer 117 After Hitler s suicide they received orders to break out Prior to the attempt Mohnke briefed all commanders who could be reached within the Zitadelle sector about Hitler s death and the planned break out 118 It started at 2300 hours on 1 May Mohnke led the first of ten small groups 119 Several very small groups managed to reach the Americans at the Elbe s west bank but most including Mohnke s group could not get through the Soviet lines Many were taken prisoner and some committed suicide On 2 May hostilities officially ended by order of Helmuth Weidling Commandant of the Berlin Defense Area 120 After Vienna was captured the LSSAH had fewer than 1 600 men and 16 tanks 121 Apart from the remains of Berlin Guard Battalion the LSSAH surrendered to US forces in the Steyr area on 8 May 1945 122 On 4 July Independence Day 1945 the United States flag was raised over Berlin for the first time at the Leibstandarte barracks 114 Organisation EditStructure of the division 123 124 Headquarters 1st SS Panzer Reconnaissance Battalion 1st SS Panzer Regiment 1st SS Panzergrenadier Regiment 2nd SS Panzergrenadier Regiment 1st SS Panzer Engineer Battalion 1st SS Panzer Artillery Regiment 1st SS Panzer Assault Gun Regiment 1st SS Panzer Tank Destroyer Battalion 1st SS Panzer Anti Aircraft Battalion 1st SS Rocket Launcher Battalion added September 1944 1st SS Panzer Signal Battalion 1st SS Panzer Divisional Supply GroupCommanders EditNo Portrait Commander Took office Left office Time in office1 nbsp Dietrich Sepp SS Oberst GruppenfuhrerSepp Dietrich 1892 1966 15 August 19384 July 19434 years 323 days2 nbsp Wisch Theodor SS BrigadefuhrerTheodor Wisch 1907 1995 4 July 194320 August 19441 year 47 days3 nbsp Mohnke Wilhelm SS BrigadefuhrerWilhelm Mohnke 1911 2001 20 August 19446 February 1945170 days4 nbsp Kumm Otto SS BrigadefuhrerOtto Kumm 1909 2004 6 February 19458 May 194591 daysNotable members EditOtto Beisheim industrialist Otto Gunsche Klaus Havenstein actor Karl Wilhelm Krause Kurt Meyer Rochus Misch Joachim Peiper Franz Schonhuber politician Bernhard Siebken Michael Wittmann Max Wunsche Erwin Bartmann writerSee also EditI SS Panzer Corps Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler 101st Heavy SS Panzer Battalion Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler Order of Battle List of German divisions in World War II List of Waffen SS divisions List of SS personnel SS Panzer Division order of battle SS Brigade Schuldt Boves massacreReferences EditCitations Edit Williamson 1994 p 244 Margolian 2000 p 14 McNab 2009 pp 14 16 a b Weale 2012 p 16 a b Hoffmann 2000 p 45 McNab 2009 p 16 McNab 2009 pp 10 16 Wegner 1990 p 62 a b Weale 2012 p 26 Weale 2012 pp 26 29 Reynolds 1997 p 3 a b Cook amp Bender 1994 p 9 Reynolds 1997 p 1 Johnson 1999 p 15 a b Cook amp Bender 1994 p 11 Cook amp Bender 1994 p 13 a b Cook amp Bender 1994 pp 17 19 Stein 1984 pp xxv 12 18 58 202 203 285 Cook amp Bender 1994 pp 19 33 a b Cook amp Bender 1994 pp 22 23 Cook amp Bender 1994 p 23 Cook amp Bender 1994 p 24 a b Kershaw 2008 pp 309 314 Evans 2005 p 39 Kershaw 2008 p 316 Reynolds 1997 p 2 Cook amp Bender 1994 p 44 a b Reynolds 1997 p 4 a b c d Reynolds 1997 p 6 Cook amp Bender 1994 p 421 Butler 2001 p 23 McNab 2013 p 157 Butler 2001 p 45 Rossino 2003 pp 114 159 161 Reynolds 1997 p 5 McNab 2013 p 158 a b c Flaherty 2004 p 154 Stein 1984 p 65 Stein 1984 pp 65 69 Flaherty 2004 pp 143 154 Butler 2001 pp 81 83 Weale 2012 pp 251 253 Weale 2012 p 253 Stein 1984 p 28 n 7 Ansprache des Reichsfuhrers SS aus Anlass der Ubergabe der Fuhrer standarte an die Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler Metz Fort Alvensleben am 7 September 1940 RFSS T 175 90 2612641 a b Reynolds 1997 p 7 a b c d McNab 2013 p 159 Australian Veterans Affairs a b Reynolds 1997 p 8 a b c German Captured Documents NARA Inventory Maparchive ru American Historical Association National Archives of the United States Archived from the original on 7 August 2014 Halder Franz 21 February 1941 31 July 1943 War Diaries Vol 6 pp 157 158 Stein 1984 p 133 Lehmann 1980 p 116 Forczyk Robert 20 September 2014 Where the Iron Crosses Grow The Crimea 1941 44 Osprey Publishing p 44 ISBN 9781782006251 Forczyk Robert 20 September 2014 Where the Iron Crosses Grow The Crimea 1941 44 Osprey Publishing pp 46 56 ISBN 9781782006251 Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler s Drive to the Don a b c d Reynolds 1997 p 9 Margry 2001 p 27 Margry 2001 p 30 Margry 2001 p 39 Ripley 2000 p 73 Reynolds 1997 pp 10 11 Bishop amp Williams 2003 p 170 Arnold 1990 p 51 Mitcham 2006 p 33 Parker 2014 pp 356 357 Parker 2014 p 354 Neitzel amp Welzer 2012 p 309 Friedman 2004 p 173 Strauss 1999a p 127 Strauss 1999b p 74 119 Sydnor 1990 p 332 a b Reynolds 1997 p 14 Reynolds 1997 p 10 a b c Gilbert 2019 p 226 a b c d e Reynolds 1997 p 15 Moseley 2004 p 42 Zuccotti 2007 p 123 a b c Reynolds 1997 p 16 Reynolds 1997 p 21 Reynolds 1997 p 131 Reynolds 1997 p 145 Reynolds 1997 p 148 Reynolds 1997 p 165 Reynolds 1997 p 166 Reynolds 1997 p 174 Reynolds 1997 p 172 Reynolds 1997 p 178 Reynolds 1997 p 192 a b Van der Vat 2003 p 163 D Este 1984 p 410 Lewin 1978 p 38 Van der Vat 2003 p 164 D Este 1984 p 415 D Este 1984 p 416 Reynolds 1997 pp 262 264 Beevor 2010 p 446 Cole 1965 Evans 2008 p 657 Stein 1984 p 231 Cole 1965 p 75 MacDonald 1997 p 216 Parker 2012 pp 123 271 Parker 2012 p 271 Parker 2012 pp 162 173 a b Parker 2012 p 278 MacDonald 1997 p 2016 MacDonald 1997 p 459 a b Fischer 2008 p 41 U S Wereth Memorial Ziemke 1968 p 450 a b Dollinger 1967 p 198 Stein 1984 p 238 Guderian 1952 p 419 a b U S Flag Raised over Adolph Hitler Barracks in Berlin Harry S Truman Presidential Library and Museum Retrieved 21 July 2022 Fischer 2008 p 42 Beevor 2002 p 287 Fischer 2008 pp 42 43 Fischer 2008 p 49 Beevor 2002 p 382 Fischer 2008 pp 49 50 McNab 2013 p 280 McNab 2009 p 182 German Order of Battle Panzer Panzer Grenadier and Waffen SS Division in WWII p 67 Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler Waffen SS 22 06 1941 niehorster org Retrieved 22 January 2019 Bibliography Edit Arnold James 1990 Ardennes 1944 Hitler s Last Gamble in the West Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 0 85045 959 3 Bartmann Erwin 2013 Fur Volk und Fuhrer The Memoir of a Veteran of the 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler Helion and Company ISBN 978 1 90938 453 8 Beevor Antony 2002 Berlin The Downfall 1945 London Viking Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 670 03041 5 Beevor Antony 2010 D Day The Battle for Normandy Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 311818 3 Gilbert Adrian 2019 Waffen SS Hitler s Army at War New York Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 82466 1 Bishop Chris Williams Michael 2003 SS Hell on the Western Front St Paul Minn MBI Publishing ISBN 978 0 7603 1402 9 Butler Rupert 2001 SS Leibstandarte The History of the First SS Division 1934 45 Staplehurst Spellmount ISBN 978 1 86227 117 3 Cole Hugh M 1965 The Ardennes Battle of the Bulge United States Army in World War II United States Army Center of Military History OCLC 569167802 Archived from the original on 13 November 2008 Retrieved 14 October 2006 Cook Stan Bender Roger James 1994 Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler Uniforms Organization amp History San Jose CA James Bender Publishing ISBN 978 0 912138 55 8 D Este Carlo 1984 Decision in Normandy Konecky amp Konecky ISBN 1 56852 260 6 Dollinger Hans 1967 1965 The Decline and Fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan A Pictorial History of the Final Days of World War II New York Bonanza ISBN 978 0 517 01313 7 Evans Richard J 2005 The Third Reich in Power New York Penguin Group ISBN 978 0 14 303790 3 Evans Richard J 2008 The Third Reich at War New York Penguin Group ISBN 978 0 14 311671 4 Fischer Thomas 2008 Soldiers of the Leibstandarte Winnipeg J J Fedorowicz ISBN 978 0 921991 91 5 Flaherty T H 2004 1988 The Third Reich The SS Time Life ISBN 1 84447 073 3 Friedman Saul S 2004 A History of the Holocaust London Portland OR Vallentine Mitchell ISBN 978 0 85303 435 3 A Great Risk Australia s War 1939 1945 Australian Government Department of Veterans Affairs Archived from the original on 2 June 2011 Retrieved 27 October 2011 Guderian Heinz 1952 Panzer Leader London Michael Joseph Publishing History Remembering the invinsible soldiers of the Battle of the Bulge sic U S Wereth Memorial Archived from the original on 10 November 2013 Retrieved 25 March 2014 Hoffmann Peter 2000 Hitler s Personal Security Protecting the Fuhrer 1921 1945 New York Da Capo ISBN 978 0 306 80947 7 Johnson Davis 1999 Quassowski Hans ed Twelve Years with Hitler A history of 1 Kompanie Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler 1933 1945 Schiffer ISBN 0 7643 0777 0 Kershaw Ian 2008 Hitler A Biography New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 06757 6 Lehmann Rudolf 1980 Die Leibstandarte Tomes I V Coburg Nation Europa Verlag ISBN 3 920677 11 0 Lewin Ronald 1978 Ultra Goes to War New York McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 037453 8 MacDonald Charles 1997 A Time for Trumpets The Untold Story of the Battle of the Bulge William Morrow 1st Quill Edition ISBN 978 0688151577 Margolian Howard 2000 Conduct Unbecoming The Story of the Murder of Canadian Prisoners of War in Normandy University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 8360 9 Margry Karel 2001 The Four Battles for Kharkov London United Kingdom Battle of Britain International Ltd McNab Chris 2009 The SS 1923 1945 Amber Books Ltd ISBN 978 1 906626 49 5 McNab Chris 2013 Hitler s Elite The SS 1939 45 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1782000884 Mitcham Samuel W 2006 Panzers in Winter Hitler s Army and the Battle of the Bulge Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 08346 4 Moseley Ray 2004 Mussolini The Last 600 Days of il Duce Dallas Taylor Trade Pub ISBN 978 1 58979 095 7 Neitzel Sonke Welzer Harald 2012 Soldaten On Fighting Killing and Dying Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 84983 949 5 Parker Danny S 2012 Fatal Crossroads The Untold Story of the Malmedy Massacre at the Battle of the Bulge Cambridge MA Da Capo ISBN 978 0 306 81193 7 Parker Danny S 2014 Hitler s Warrior The Life and Wars of SS Colonel Jochen Peiper Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0306821547 Archived from the original on 29 June 2017 Retrieved 20 December 2015 Reynolds Michael Frank 1997 Steel inferno I SS Panzer Corps in Normandy The Story of the 1st and 12th SS Panzer Divisions in the 1944 Normandy Campaign Steelhurst Spellmount ISBN 1 873376 90 1 Ripley Tim 2000 SS Steel Storm Waffen SS Panzer Battles on the Eastern Front 1943 1945 Osceola Wis MBI Publishing ISBN 978 0 7603 0937 7 Rossino Alexander B 2003 Hitler Strikes Poland Blitzkrieg Ideology and Atrocity Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 0 7006 1234 3 Stein George H 1984 The Waffen SS Hitler s Elite Guard at War 1939 1945 Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 9275 0 Strauss Herbert A 1999a In the Eye of the Storm Growing up Jewish in Germany 1918 1943 A Memoir Fordham University Press ISBN 978 0 8232 1916 2 Strauss Lotte 1999b Over the Green Hill A German Jewish Memoir 1913 1943 Fordham University Press ISBN 978 0 8232 1919 3 Sydnor Charles 1990 1977 Soldiers of Destruction The SS Death s Head Division 1933 1945 Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 00853 1 Van der Vat Dan 2003 D Day The Greatest Invasion A People s History Maddison Press ISBN 1 55192 586 9 Weale Adrian 2012 Army of Evil A History of the SS New York Toronto NAL Caliber Penguin Group ISBN 978 0 451 23791 0 Wegner Bernd 1990 The Waffen SS Organization Ideology and Function Blackwell ISBN 0 631 14073 5 Williamson Gordon 1994 The SS Hitler s Instrument of Terror London Sidgwick amp Jackson ISBN 978 0 283 06280 3 Ziemke Earl F 1968 Stalingrad to Berlin The German Defeat in the East Washington Office of the Chief of Military History U S Army ASIN B002E5VBSE Zuccotti Susan 2007 Holocaust Odysseys The Jews of Saint Martin Vesubie and Their Flight through France and Italy New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 12294 7 Further reading Edit Bartmann Erwin 2013 Fur Volk and Fuhrer The Memoir of a Veteran of the 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler Helion and Company ISBN 9781911628361 Glantz David M House Jonathan M 1995 When Titans Clashed How the Red Army Stopped Hitler ISBN 978 0 7006 0717 4 Parrish Michael 1996 The Lesser Terror Soviet State Security 1939 1953 Praeger Press ISBN 978 0 275 95113 9 Portals nbsp Military of Germany nbsp World War II1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler amp oldid 1179514357, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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