The
Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
(
LSSAH) was
Adolf
Hitler's personal
Bodyguard Regiment (
"Leibstandarte" being a somewhat
archaic German expression for the personal bodyguard of a military
leader).The LSSAH independently participated in combat during the
Invasion of Poland.
The LSSAH
was amalgamated into the Waffen-SS
together with the SS-VT and the combat units
of the SS-TV
prior to Operation Barbarossa in 1941. By
the end of
World War II it had been
increased in size from a regiment to a Panzer division.
The elite
division was a component of the Waffen-SS
which was found guilty of war crimes in the Nuremberg
Trials
.
Early history (1923–1933)
In the earliest days of the NSDAP, it was realized by the leaders
that bodyguard units composed of trustworthy and loyal men would be
a wise development.
Ernst Röhm
formed a guard formation from the 19.Granatwerfer-Kompanie, and
from this formation the Sturmabteilung
(SA) soon evolved. Adolf Hitler, realizing
the potential threat that the SA had presented, in early 1923
ordered the formation of a bodyguard for himself. The tiny unit,
originally formed by only eight men (and commanded by
Julius Schreck and
Joseph Berchtold), was designated the
Stabswache (Staff Guard).
The guards of the
Stabswache were issued badges that showed their difference
from the SA (despite the fact that at this stage the
Stabswache still was under overall SA control): Schreck
resurrected the use of the Totenkopf (Deaths head-skull) as insignia,
which had been a symbol used by various élite forces throughout the
Prussian kingdom and the later German Empire
.
Soon after its formation, the unit was renamed
Stoßtrupp
(Shock Troop) Adolf Hitler.
On November 9, 1923,
the Stoßtrupp, along with the SA and several other
NSDAP paramilitary units, took part in the abortive Beer Hall
Putsch
in Munich.
In the aftermath of the putsch, Hitler was
imprisoned and the NSDAP and all associated formations, including
the Stoßtrupp, were officially
disbanded.

The second model of the LSSAH
Standard
Shortly after Hitler's release in 1924, he ordered a new bodyguard
unit formed, again called the
Stabswache.
In 1925, the
Stabswache was renamed as the Schutzstaffel
, abbreviated SS. By March
1933, the SS had grown from a tiny personal bodyguard unit to a
formation of over 50,000 men. The decision was made to form a new
bodyguard unit, picking the most capable and trustworthy SS men to
form its
cadre.By 1933 this unit was under the
command of
Josef "Sepp" Dietrich who
had selected 117 men for the SS-Stabswache Berlin, out of these
initial 117 men, three would become divisional commanders, at least
eight would become regimental commanders, fifteen became battalion
commanders and over thirty would become company commanders, all
within the
Waffen SS.Eleven men from the
first company of 117 originals also went on to win the Knights
Cross, and forty of them were awarded the German Cross in gold for
bravery.Later in 1933, two further training units would be formed
designated
SS-Sonderkommando Zossen and a
second unit, designated SS-Sonderkommando
Jüterbog was raised.
In September 1933, the two Sonderkommandos were merged into the
SS-Sonderkommando
Berlin. In November 1933, on
the 10th anniversary of the Beer Hall Putsch, the
Sonderkommando took part in the rally and memorial service at
the Feldherrnhalle
, erected in the place where many NSDAP members had
fallen during the putsch.
All members of the Sonderkommando then
swore personal allegiance to Hitler
himself. To conclude
this ceremony, the Sonderkommando received a new
title, Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler
(LAH).
Trial by fire—Leibstandarte expands
On 13 April 1934,
Heinrich Himmler,
the
Reichsführer-SS,
ordered the
Leibstandarte (
LAH) to be renamed
Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
(LSSAH). In
late June, the LSSAH was called into action for the first
time. Ernst Röhm, the Stabschef-SA, began to push for greater power
for his already powerful SA
.
Hitler decided that the SA had to be put in its
place, and ordered Himmler and Hermann Göring to prepare their elite
units, Himmler's Leibstandarte and Göring's Landespolizeigruppe General
Göring, for immediate action.
The LSSAH formed
two companies under the control of Jürgen Wagner and Otto Reich, and these formations were moved
to Munich
on 30
June.
Hitler
ordered all SA leaders to attend a meeting at the Hanselbauer Hotel
in Bad
Wiessee
, near Munich. On 30 June, Hitler joined Sepp
Dietrich and a unit from the
Leibstandarte and travelled
to Bad Wiessee to personally command Röhm's arrest. Later, Hitler
ordered Röhm's execution. In what the Nazis called the
Röhm Putsch to give their action an
appearance of legitimacy, but otherwise came to be known as the
Night of the Long Knives,
the execution companies of the
LSSAH, together with
Göring's Landespolizeigruppe, performed
Death Squad actions, carrying out many
executions without trials over the next few days. By 13 July 1934,
at least 177 people had been executed.
The actions of the SS, Gestapo, Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler, and
Göring's unit succeeded in effectively decapitating the SA and
removing Röhm's threat to Hitler's leadership. Following the
'success' of the Night of the Long Knives, 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
from under the SA.
As the SS began to swell with new recruits, the
LSSAH
remained the pinnacle of Hitler's
Aryan ideal.
Strict recruitment regulations meant that only those deemed
sufficiently Aryan, as well as being physically fit and National
Socialists, would be admitted.
The
LSSAH provided the honour guard at many of the Nuremberg Rallies and in 1935 took part in
the reoccupation of the Saarland
.
The
Leibstandarte was also in the vanguard of the March into
Austria
as part of the Anschluss and in 1938 the LSSAH took
part in the occupation of the Sudetenland.
By 1939 the
LSSAH was a full infantry regiment with three
infantry battalions, an artillery battalion and anti-tank,
reconnaissance and engineer subunits, it was involved in the
annexation of
Bohemia and
Moravia. Soon after this action, 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). 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
.
Early war campaigns
During the initial stages of the
Invasion of Poland, the
Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler was attached to the
17.Infanterie-Division and
tasked with providing flank protection for the southern pincer. The
regiment was involved in several ferocious battles against
Polish cavalry brigades attempting to hit the
flanks of the German advance.
At Pabianice
, a town near Łódź
, the LSSAH fought off elements of the
Polish 28th Infantry
Division and the Wołyńska Cavalry Brigade
in close combat. Throughout the campaign the unit was
notorious for torching villages.
After the
success at Pabianice, the LSSAH was shifted to the area
near Warsaw
and attached
to the 4.Panzer-Division
under Generaloberst Georg-Hans Reinhardt, where it saw
action preventing encircled Polish units from escaping, and
repelling several desperate attempts by other Polish troops to
break through. The
LSSAH had proved itself an
effective fighting unit during the campaign, though several Heer
Generals had reservations about the high casualties which the
LSSAH and the
SS-VT units had sustained
in combat.
In early 1940 the
LSSAH was expanded into a full
independent motorized infantry regiment and a
Sturmgeschutz (Assault Gun) battery was added
to their establishment .
The regiment was shifted to the Dutch border
for the launch of Fall Gelb, and was to
form the vanguard of the ground advance into the Netherlands
, tasked with capturing a vital bridge over the
IJssel and linking up with the Fallschirmjäger of Generaloberst
Kurt Student's airborne forces, the
7.Flieger-Division and the
22.Luftlande-Infanterie-Division.
The
invasion of France and the Netherlands
was launched on 10 May 1940. On that day, the
LSSAH crossed the Dutch border covered over , securing a
crossing over the IJssel near Zutphen
after discovering that their target bridge had been
destroyed. Over the next four days' fighting, the
LSSAH covered over , and earned itself dubious fame by
accidentally shooting at and seriously wounding Generaloberst Student at Rotterdam
. After the surrender of the Netherlands on
14 May, the regiment was used to form part of the reserve for
Army Group B.
After the
British armoured counterattack at
Arras, the LSSAH, along with the SS-Verfügungs-Division was moved to
the front lines to hold the perimeter around Dunkirk
and reduce the size of the pocket containing the
encircled British Expeditionary Force and French forces.
Near
Wormhoudt
, the LSSAH ignored Hitler's orders for the
advance to halt and continued the attack, suppressing the British
artillery positions on the Wattenberg
Heights. During this battle the regiment
suffered heavy casualties.
After the attack, elements of
LSSAH's II.Battalion, under
the command of SS-Hauptsturmführer
Wilhelm Mohnke, were mistakenly informed that
their divisional commander Sepp Dietrich had been killed in the
fighting.
In what is known as the Wormhoudt
massacre
, about 80 British POW of 2nd Battalion of the Royal Warwickshire Regiment
were murdered in retaliation for the supposed death of
Dietrich. Although it is unarguable that the massacre
occurred, Mohnke's level of involvement is impossible to know, and
as such he was never brought to trial to face the
allegations.
Brigade status—Balkans
After the
conclusion of the Western campaign on 22 June 1940, the
LSSAH spent six months in Metz
(Moselle
). The
LSSAH was expanded to
brigade size (6 500 soldiers). Despite this,
it retained the designation 'regiment'. A
Flak
battalion and a
StuG Batterie
were among the formations added to the
LSSAH. A new flag
was presented to the
LSSAH in Metz, on September 1940, by
Heinrich Himmler.
During the later months of 1940, the
regiment trained on the Moselle River
in amphibious assaults in preparation for Operation Seelöwe.
After the
failure of the Battle of Britain
and the cancellation of the operation, the LSSAH was
shifted in February 1941 to Bulgaria
in preparation for Operation Marita, part of the
planned invasion of Greece
and Yugoslavia.
The operation was launched on April 6 1941. The
LSSAH was
to follow the route of the
9.Panzer-Division, part of
General der Panzertruppen Georg
Stumme's
XL Panzer Corps.
The
regiment crossed the border near Prilep
and was soon
deep in Greek territory.
The
LSSAH captured Vevi
on April
10. Sturmbannführer Kurt Meyer's reinforced Aufklärungs-Abt (reconnaissance
unit) 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.
Resistance from the Greek 20th Division was fierce. According to
some accounts, the SS were inspired to capture the Kleisoura Pass
only after Meyer threw a grenade at the feet of some of his
soldiers.
Sturmbannführer Fritz Witt's I.Battalion was tasked with
clearing the Klidi
Pass, just south of Vevi and strongly defended by Australian, British and New Zealand
troops. Witt's Battalion was reinforced and
renamed
Kampfgruppe Witt. An Australian officer wrote of
the Germans' "insolence" in driving "trucks down the main road — to
within of our infantry" and there unloading the SS troops.
The Germans were forced off the road and faced fierce resistance
for more than two days. On the morning of April 12, the Germans
launched a frontal assault, and by late afternoon the pass was
cleared.
With the fall of the two passes, the main line of resistance of the
Greek First Army was broken, and
the campaign became a battle to prevent the escape of the enemy.
On April
20, following a pitched battle in the -high Metsovon
Pass in the Pindus Mountains
, the commander of the Greek First Army surrendered
the entire Hellenic Army 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 April 26, 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, despite being forced to leave much of their
heavy equipment behind. By April 30, the last British Commonwealth
troops had either been captured or escaped.
The LSSAH
occupied a position of honour in the victory parade through
Athens
.
Following Operation Marita, the
LSSAH was ordered north,
to join the forces of
Army Group
South massing for the launch of
Operation Barbarossa.
Division status and Operation Barbarossa
Following Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler's outstanding performance
during
Marita, Himmler ordered that it should be upgraded
to divisional status.As such, the regiment, already the size of a
reinforced brigade, was redesignated
SS-Division (mot.)
Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler.
Despite this, there
was no time to refit the division to full divisional status before
the launch of Operation
Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union
, and so the new 'Division' remained the size of a
reinforced brigade.
The
LSSAH was attached to the
LIV.Armee-Korps and held in reserve
during the opening stages of the attack. In August, it was
transferred to
III.Panzer-Korps, part of
Generalfeldmarschall Ewald von
Kleist's
Panzergruppe 1.
During
this time, the LSSAH was involved in the Battle of Uman and the subsequent capture of
Kiev
. During this time, the division was involved
in heavy fighting, with Meyer's
Abteilung
particularly distinguishing itself.
After finding 6 dead members of the
division in Taganrog
the Division murdered 4,000 Soviet prisoners in
reprisal.
In early
September, the division was transferred back to LIV.Armee-Korps,
preparing to launch an offensive to clear the Crimean peninsula
. The operation was launched on 17 September
1941.
The
LSSAH was involved in heavy fighting for the town of
Perekop
, before advancing across the Perekop Isthmus to assault the Soviet
defensive positions near the Tartar
Ditch.
In
November, the LSSAH was transferred back to Panzergruppe 1
and took part in the heavy fighting for the city of Rostov-on-Don
, which was captured in late November. During
Operation Barbarossa, the division had penetrated 960 kilometers
into Soviet territory.
Heavy Soviet counterattacks during the winter meant that Army Group
South had to fall back from Rostov-on-Don to defensive lines on the
river
Mius. The
LSSAH spent the winter
fighting ferocious defensive battles in temperatures of down to
-40°C, with minimal winter clothing and only 150 grams of rations
per man per day. Despite this, the division held. After the spring
rasputitsa had cleared, the exhausted
division joined in
Fall Blau,
participating in the fighting to retake Rostov-on-Don, which was
recaptured in late July, 1942. Severely understrength and
completely exhausted, the
LSSAH was pulled out of the
line.
The
division was ordered to the Normandy region
of occupied France
to join the
newly formed SS-Panzer-Korps and
to be reformed as a Panzergrenadier
division.
Kharkov
The Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler spent the remainder of 1942
refitting as a panzergrenadier division. Thanks to the efforts of
the Heinrich Himmler Reichsführer-SS, along with
SS-Obergruppenführer
Paul Hausser, the
SS Panzer Corps commander, the four SS Panzer Grenadier divisions
(
LSSAH,
Wiking,
Das Reich and
Totenkopf were to be formed with a full
regiment of tanks rather than only a
Battalion. This meant that the SS Panzer Grenadier
divisions were full-strength Panzer divisions in all but name.
Also, the division received nine
Tiger 1
tanks, and these were formed into 13.(schwere)Company/1st SS Panzer
Regiment.The collapse of the front around Stalingrad and the
encirclement of the
German Sixth
Army meant that the entire eastern front was close to collapse.
General Feldmarschall Erich von Manstein, commander of Army Group Don, requested reinforcements to
halt the Soviet attack near Kharkov
. The SS Panzer Corps was ordered east to
join Manstein's forces.
Arriving at the front in late January 1943, the
LSSAH was
thrown into the line defending Kharkov itself as a part of
Hausser's SS Panzer Corps.Facing them were the hundreds of
T-34s of
Mobile Group
Popov, a Soviet armoured Army sized formation which formed the
spearhead of the Soviet advance.
On 8-9 February, 1943, the
LSSAH's 1st SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment under
SS-Sturmbannführer Fritz Witt, fighting
alongside SS-Sturmbannführer Max
Wünsche's I/1st SS Panzer Regiment, fought a bitter delaying
action near the town of Merefa
, halting a
major Soviet attack. The division fought in many desperate
defensive battles over the next few weeks, gradually being pushed
back into the city of Kharkov itself.
Despite inflicting heavy losses on the Soviets, and rebuffing all
enemy attacks, the Soviets succeeded in outflanking the corps.
On 15
February, Hausser ignored Hitler's orders to hold the city at all
costs and ordered the SS-Panzer-Korps to abandon the city and
withdraw towards Krasnograd
. Over the next week, the SS-Panzer-Korps
annihilated Mobile Group Popov in a series of hard fought battles.
The
LSSAH was a major participant in these battles,
destroying several Soviet divisions and inflicting heavy
losses.
Hausser now ordered that Kharkov should be recaptured. The
LSSAH,
Das Reich and
Totenkopf were to
form the spearhead of the attack. The attack got underway on 2
March. The
LSSAH was formed into three
Kampfgruppen which would attack towards and
capture Kharkov. Over the next weeks, the
LSSAH would take
part in the battles to take the city. Kampfgruppe
Meyer,
under Panzermeyer's command, penetrated to Red Square before being
cut off. Kampfgruppe
Witt saw heavy fighting against a
Soviet blocking force near
Dergatschi
before it also broke through into the city.
Both Kampfgruppen were repeatedly cut off during the confused
fighting, and it was not until Kampfgruppe
Peiper, under
Joachim Peiper, broke through that
the defenders were finally overwhelmed.
By 21 March, the
battle was over and Kharkov was back in German hands, with Peiper's
Kampfgruppe having penetrated as far as Belgorod
.
In honour of the 4,500 casualties suffered by the Leibstandarte in
the fighting, Kharkov's Red Square was renamed
Platz der
Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler by the Germans. The division was
pulled back for much needed rest and refit.
One major change in the
LSSAH now occurred their commander
Sepp Dietrich after ten years in
command 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. In time this new
division would become the
12th SS Panzer Division
Hitlerjugend.
Kursk
The spring
rasputitsa halted offensive
operations, giving the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler time to rest
and refit. By early June 1943, the division had been fully refitted
and now under the command of
Brigadeführer,
Theodor Wisch. Its armour strength was 12
Tiger Is, 72
Panzer
IVs, 16
Panzer III and
Panzer IIs, and 31
StuG.
In late June 1943, the formation of
1st SS Panzer Corps meant that Hausser's
SS Panzer Corps was renamed
2nd SS
Panzer Corps.
The 2nd
SS Panzer Corps was moved north to Belgorod in preparation for the
upcoming Summer offensive, Operation Citadel
. The LSSAH, along with the
Totenkopf and Das Reich, was to form the
spearhead of Generaloberst Hoth's 4.Panzer-Armee, tasked with
breaching the southern flank of the Kursk
salient. Generalfeldmarschall
Walter Model's
9.Armee was to breach the northern flank,
and the two forces were to meet near the city of Kursk, thereby
encircling a large Soviet force.
The 2nd SS Panzer Corps reached its assembly areas on 28 June and
began preparing for the assault. The attack was set for 5 July, and
on 4 July the 2nd SS Panzer Corps, as well as the
XLVIII.Panzerkorps on its left and the
III Panzer Corps on the right,
began minor attacks to secure observation posts. Fighting lasted
throughout the day, with the
LSSAH Pionier-Bataillon
seeing heavy action clearing out the entrenched Soviets.
The
LSSAH panzers, advancing in
Panzerkeils, soon ran into the Soviet
Pakfronts. The elaborate system of Soviet defences
slowed the attack, but unlike in Model's sector, the
4.Panzer-Armee, spearheaded by the SS Panzer Corps and the
LSSAH, was not halted, and eventually broke through.
By 9
July, the SS Panzer Corps had advanced north, and were nearing the
small town of Prokhorovka
. The
LSSAH again took the lead, by
now its armour strength reduced to just 77 armoured vehicles. 2nd
SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment, supported by several panzers,
advanced straight up the road to Prokhorovka against heavy
resistance. By midday, the grenadiers had cleared the Komsomolets
State Farm and the began the attack on Hill 241.6, which they
secured shortly after nightfall on 10 July.
On 11 July, 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 advancing
Germans around Oktiabr'skii State Farm and Hill 252.2. In the
ensuing fighting, the outnumbered Germans inflicted heavy
casualties on the Soviets, knocking out many tanks. In the process,
the
LSSAH also suffered relatively light casualties,
however the Soviet counterattack had stalled the German advance,
and the division was forced to fall back to Oktiabr'skii. Fighting
continued on the 13 July, but the focus of the Soviet attack had
shifted to the
Totenkopf, to the left of the
LSSAH.
With the Battle of Prokhorovka still in the balance, a massive
Soviet counteroffensive near
Orel, caused
Hitler to order the cancellation of Citadel. The SS Panzer Corps
was pulled back.
LSSAH was ordered out of the line having
suffered 2,753 casualties including 474 killed.The Division was
then sent to Italy to help stabilise the situation caused by the
deposal of
Benito Mussolini by the
Badoglio Government and the Allied
Landings in
Sicily on 10 July. The division
left its armour and equipment, which was given to
Das
Reich and
Totenkopf, and entrained for the trip to
Italy.
Italy

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The
division travelled back from the front, stopping at Innsbruck
in Austria
, where it disembarked. The division was
re-equipped with vehicles and continued the journey by road,
travelling across the Alps and into Northern Italy.
The division arrived
on the Po River
Plain
on 8 August 1943.
The
Leibstandarte was given the task of guarding several vital
road and rail junctions in the area of Trento
-Verona
.
After
several weeks operating in this area, the division was moved to the
Parma
-Reggio area. During
this period, the Leibstandarte was involved in several skirmishes
with
partisan. With the Italian
collapse of 8 September 1943, the division was ordered to begin
disarming nearby Italian units.
This went smoothly, with the exception of a
brief skirmish with Italian troops stationed in Parma
on 9
September. By 19 September, all Italian forces in the Po
River Plain had been disarmed, but OKW was concerned by reports
that elements of the
Italian
Fourteenth Army were regrouping in
Piedmont, near the French border. Sturmbannführer
Peiper's mechanised III/2nd SS Panzer
Grenadier Regiment was sent to disarm these units. Upon arriving in
the Province of Cuneo, Peiper was met by an Italian officer who
warned that his forces would attack unless Peiper's unit vacated
the province immediately. Peiper refused, which goaded the Italians
into attacking. The veterans of Peiper's battalion defeated the
Italians in a fierce battle, and then proceeded to disarm the
remaining Italian forces in the area.
Following the disintegration and capitulation of Italy, the
activities of partisan groups increased all across the area.
The
Leibstandarte was sent to the Istria
Peninsula
and was engaged in several major anti-partisan operations.
During its period in Italy, the Leibstandarte was reformed as a
full panzer division, and redesignated
1st SS Panzer
Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf
Hitler.In early November,
the deteriorating situation in the east meant that the division was
ordered back to the Russian Front, arriving in the Zhitomir
area in mid November.
Eastern Front
The division was posted to
XLVIII.Panzer-Korps, a part of
4.Panzer-Armee, which was
struggling to hold the line near Zhitomir. The division was broken
up into several
Kampfgruppe and thrown
into action. On 18 November, Kampfgruppe Frey halted the advance of
the Fifth Guards Tank Army near the town of Kotscherovo. Over the
next two months, the division's Kampfgruppen saw very heavy
fighting in the Shitomir area, performing fire-brigade actions and
enabling XLVIII.Panzer Corps to hold the line.
In January 1944, one of the Leibstandarte's
101 SS Heavy Panzer Battalion
Tiger commanders,
Michael Wittmann,
was awarded the Oakleaves to the
Knight's Cross of the Iron
Cross for his actions in halting the attack of an entire Soviet
armoured brigade.
The division was transferred to the Cherkassy
area at the end of January, where it was assigned
to German III Panzer Corps,
a part of German First Panzer
Army.
When the 56,000 men of
Gruppe Stemmermann were
trapped in the
Korsun Pocket in
February 1944, the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler, along with the
remainder of III.Panzer Corps and
German XLVII Panzer Corps were
ordered to attempt to break the Soviet cordon and rescue the
trapped forces. Hitler intervened, and ordered the relief attempt
be transformed into an impossible attempt to counter-encircle two
Soviet fronts. The
LSSAH, along army panzer units
including Oberstleutnant Dr.
Franz
Bäke's
German
503rd Heavy Panzer Detachment spearheaded the attack. Despite
initial gains, the attack soon stalled due to a combination of the
resistance of four Soviet tank corps and the thick mud of the
rasputitsa. The exhausted Germans managed
to reach the Gniloy Tikich River, where a small bridgehead was
established. The survivors of the encirclement fought their way
through to the bridgehead and by late February the battle was
over.
The
majority of the LSSAH which amounted to 41 officers and
1,188 men was withdrawn to Belgium
for rest and refit,however a Kampfgruppe was
left behind. On 22 March, the entire 1.Panzer Army was encircled in
the
Kamenets-Podolsky
Pocket.
The LSSAH Kampfgruppe took part in
the desperate fighting to escape the encirclement, forming a part
of the spearhead which linked up with the 2nd SS Panzer Corps near Buczacz
on 6 April, 1944. The shattered remnant of
the Kampfgruppe was ordered to Belgium where it was to rest, refit
and rejoin the remainder of the division. The new
LSSAH
Division was reformed in Belgium and at full strength by 25
April.
Western Front Normandy
It was again part of the
1st SS
Panzer Corps which at this time consisted of the
101 SS Heavy Panzer Battalion,
12th SS Panzer
Division Hitlerjugend,
17th
SS Panzergrenadier Division Götz von Berlichingen and
the
Panzer Lehr
Division.
The Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler had been
positioned north of the River Seine
to counter
any possible landing in the Pas de
Calais so the first units did not arrive in Normandy until the
night of the 27- 28 June with the whole division taking another
week to arrive. By 4 July the 1st SS Panzer Corps was
reformed and now consisted of the SS Divisions bearing Hitler's
name 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler and the
12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend.
The first action they
were involved in was the defence of Carpiquet
village and aerodrome in what was known to the
Allies as Operation Windsor. Next followed a
number of Allied attacks Operation Charnwood
and Operation Jupiter
and on 12 July the LSSAH were in
charge of the Caen
south
sector from Maltot
in the
west to the Caen - Falaise
road in the east. During the night 14 -
15 July LSSAH was relieved by the 272nd Infantry Division
and pulled back to a concentration area astride the Caen - Falaise
road between Ifs
and
Cintheaux
.
Operation Goodwood
The Division strength prior to Goodwood was reported as fifty nine
Panzer IV, forty six
Panther and thirty five
Stug.
Operation Goodwood launched 18
July, pitted three British armoured divisions, with infantry
support on their flanks.
They were to swing through the gap between
Caen
and the eastern heights. There they would
have to get across the hills at Bourguébus and break through
towards open ground. The operation was preceded by a three hour
bombing assault by 2,500 aircraft.
Immediately afterwards the British tanks came rumbling on and
seized all their primary objectives. II/1st SS Panzer Regiment,
located by the woods near Garcelles, received orders to attack the
British at Soliers. SS-Obersturmführer Malkomes drove in the
direction of Bourguébus with his 13 Panthers and discovered 60
British tanks South South East of the town.
He attacked them,
destroying 20, and capturing Soliers
. Around 12:00 hours 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 Leibstandarte was rushed to
the front from
Falaise, where it was being
held in reserve. Counterattacked immediately at 17:00, together
with the
21st Panzer Division,
they halted the British offensive on the left front.
At first, 19 July seemed to bring an end to Operation Goodwood, as
only some individual tank assaults were carried out. But by 13:00
the British charged again, having brought up reinforcements to
continue the attack. They quickly overran the forward German units
and pressed on hard, a wave of tanks spearheading the attack. But
when the leading Sherman/Fireflies and Cromwells approached
Bourguébus Ridge at 16:00 hours, they came under fire and were
blown up; the Panthers of the Leibstandarte had taken up positions
on the hill itself. Around 15:00 hours the first of the
12th SS Panzer Division arrived,
which relieved the right flank.
The Canadians next attack was 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 Canadian and the 3rd Canadian.
Operation
Bluecoat
was next this time the LSSAH was up
against the British and the 11th Armoured
Division.
Operation Lüttich
On July 25 1944, following six weeks of attritional warfare along a
stalemated front, American forces under General
Omar Bradley succeeded in breaking through
German defenses as part of
Operation
Cobra.
On August 1, American forces captured
Avranches
. Simultaneously, General
George Patton's Third United States Army was
activated.With the capture of Avranches, American forces were able
to "turn the corner" of Normandy, pushing through into Brittany and
the coastal ports.As a result, German defensive operations could no
longer be anchored against the coast on both flanks. By August 4,
seven divisions of the 3rd US Army had entered Brittany.
With the American breakthrough, in spite of this costly victory,
the Allied forces remained vastly superior in numbers. Five days
later the Americans saw the chance to break out of their beachhead.
The weakened German defense could not keep up with the savage
battle of attrition as little or no reinforcements had arrived,
supplies were shot up, and movement by day was made impossible.
They
stormed into the open, one column headed towards Avranches, and
another column making an encircling movement towards St. Lô
. Hitler however forbade any retreat and,
instead, ordered an assault to be made. According to Hitler, three
qualifications had to be met for the attack to proceed. "Von Kluge
must believe in it. He must be able to detach enough armour from
the main front in Normandy to create an effective striking force,
and he must achieve surprise".For his counteroffensive, Von Kluge
would have the XLVII Panzer Corps, comprising the
2nd Panzer Division, part of the
1st SS Panzer Division, the
2nd SS Panzer Division and
the
116th Panzer
Division.The Panzer Korps was supported by two Infantry
Divisions and five
Kampfgruppen, formed
from the remnants of the Panzer Lehr Division and four equally
battered infantry divisions. Although Hitler promised more
reinforcements, von Kluge was skeptical of the chance of their
arrival. Aware of the increasing number of American troops moving
to his south—creating the potential of being outflanked—von Kluge
elected to begin the offensive earlier than originally planned,
with the attack commencing at midnight on August 6
1944.
To avoid alerting American forces to the imminence of a German
attack, Operation Lüttich would not use artillery bombardments to
precede the attack. The initial attacks, comprising some 300 tanks,
would hit the
US
30th Infantry Division, under the command of Major-General
Leland S. Hobbs, east of Mortain, then cut through American
defenses to reach the coast. Had surprise been achieved, the attack
likely would have succeeded. However, Allied-decoders at
Ultra had intercepted the codes for Operation Lüttich
by August 4.As a result, General
Omar
Bradley was able to obtain air support from both the US 9th Air
Force and the
RAF.
LSSAH, together with the other Divisions went on the
attack on 7 August after moving to the assembly areas on 5 and 6
August. The 1st SS Panzer regiment along with two Panzer Grenadier
Battalionss, one Pionier Compamy and the
Flak
Battalion, were used. The weather wasn't suited for flying that
morning, which only disadvantaged the Allies. That is why the
attack went smoothly at first, despite the fact that the Allies
knew the attack was coming.
2nd SS Division Das Reich managed
to recapture Mortain, and an armoured Kampfgruppe under
Joachim Peiper managed to go as far as
Bourlopin, but was stopped by massive swarms of Allied aircraft.
Another attempt was mounted the next day, but failed.
A report from SS-Obersturmführer Preuss, 10.Co/2nd SS Panzer
Grenadier Regiment describes the impossible situation:
It is true that one fighter bomber we shot down landed
on a Panzer and destroyed it.
Most other Panzer and Schützenpanzer, however, fell
victim to this intensive air bombardment, which lasted
hours.
Those Grenadiere still able to fight had spread
themselves out to the left and right through the terrain's many
hedges.
They were happy to see that the bombers swarming like
bees over our heads were finding more rewarding targets than
individual men.
I agreed with them.
I heard that Peiper had suffered a heart
attack.
Diefenthal (the commander of the III./2nd) lost his
hearing when a bomb fell right next to him.
Kuhlmann was unable to get the attack moving forward
again.
My brave messenger, Sturmmann Horst Reinicken, was
killed as he tried to reach the command post of the Heer
Panzerabteilung to which we were subordinated.
He was trying to bring the Panzerabteilung the news
that its commander and Adjutant lay dead not far from our
hedge.
This
marked the end of the campaign in Normandy; Leibstandarte got
encircled by the Americans and Canadians supported by the 1st Polish Armoured Division in
what would be called the Falaise pocket
, but by then the unit was reduced to several small
Kampfgruppen. Leibstandarte withdrew from the pocket with
Unterführers and Führers each taking the lead of a small
Kampfgruppe and smashing through the ring, on 22 August, after
which no combat ready tanks or artillery pieces were reported. The
whole campaign caused some 5,000 casualties to the LSSAH.
Ardennes Offensive
The
Ardennes Offensive (16 December 1944 – 25 January
1945) was a major German offensive launched towards the end of
World War II through the forested
Ardennes
Mountains region
of Belgium, France and Luxembourg on the
Western Front.
The offensive was called
Unternehmen Wacht am
Rhein (Translated as Operation
The Guard on the Rhine or Operation
"
Watch on the Rhine.") by the German armed forces. The
“
bulge” was the
initial incursion the Germans put into the Allies’ line of advance,
as seen in maps presented in contemporary newspapers.
Wacht am Rhein
Operation Wacht am Rhein
was the final major offensive and last gamble
Hitler was to make.
Wilhelm
Mohnke, now in command of the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler,
was to lead his formation as the spearhead of the entire operation
in the Ardennes
. Attached to the
I SS Panzer Corps, the
LSSAH, one
of the most elite and highly trained units in the entire German
military. However, the divisions high casualties had forced it to
take in a large number of inexperienced replacements to add to the
core of battle-hardened and experienced veterans. The crisis in the
Reich meant that the
LSSAH had
dangerously low amounts of fuel for the vehicles in the upcoming
campaign. On 16 December 1944 the operation began, with Mohnke
designating his best colonel, Standartenführer
Joachim Peiper, and his regiment to lead the
push to Antwerp.
In the north, the main armored spearhead of the Sixth
SS
Panzer Army was
Kampfgruppe
Peiper, consisting of 4,800 men
and 600 vehicles of the
1st SS
Panzer Division under the command of
Joachim Peiper.
Bypassing the
Elsenborn ridge, at 07:00 on 17 December, they seized a U.S. fuel
depot at Büllingen
, where they paused to refuel before continuing
westward. At 12:30, near the hamlet of Baugnez, on the
height halfway between the town of Malmedy
and Ligneuville, they encountered elements of the
285th Field Artillery Observation Battalion, U.S. 7th Armored Division.
After a brief battle the Americans surrendered. They were disarmed
and, with some other Americans captured earlier (approximately 150
men), sent to stand in a field near the crossroads where most were
shot. It is not known what caused the shooting and there is no
record of an SS officer giving an execution order; such shootings
of
prisoners of war (POWs),
however, were common by both sides on the Eastern Front. News of
the killings raced through Allied lines.
Captured SS soldiers
who were part of Kampfgruppe Peiper were tried following
the war for this massacre and several others during the Malmedy
massacre trial
.
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 U.S. engineers had already destroyed
it. Peiper pulled off and headed for the village
of La Gleize and from there on to Stoumont
. There, as Peiper approached, engineers blew
up the bridge, and the American troops were entrenched and ready.
Peiper's troops 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 defences waiting for the German relief force. Since no relief
force was able to penetrate the Allied line, on 23 December Peiper
decided to break through back to the German lines. The men of the
Kampfgruppe were forced to
abandon their vehicles and heavy equipment, although most of the
unit was able to escape.
With each passing day, enemy resistance stiffened and the advance
was eventually halted on all fronts. Desperate to keep the assault
going, the German High Command ordered that a renewed attack begin
on 1 January 1945. Yet this time, the Allies had regrouped their
forces and were ready to repulse any attacks launched by the
Germans. The operation formally ended on 27 January 1945, and three
days later Mohnke was promoted to
SS-Brigadeführer. A short while later
LSSAH and the 'I SS Panzer Korps' were transferred to
Hungary to bolster the crumbling situation there. Mohnke was
injured in an air raid where he suffered, among other things, ear
damage. He was removed from front-line service and put on the
Führer reserve. In his place, SS-Brigadeführer
Otto Kumm was appointed the new Division Commander
as of February 15, 1945.
Eastern Front 1945
Operation Spring Awakening (Frühlingserwachen) (6 March 1945 – 16
March 1945) was the last major German offensive launched during
World War II and was an offensive launched by the Germans in great
secrecy on 6 March 1945. The Germans launched attacks in Hungary
near the Lake Balaton area on the Eastern Front. This area included
some of the last oil reserves still available to the Germans. 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. Almost inevitably, Operation Spring Awakening was a
failure for the German Army. Despite early gains, the operation was
a perfect example of Hitler's increasingly poor military judgement
toward the end of the war. Its chief flaw was that the offensive
was far too ambitious in scope.
After the
failure of Operation
Spring Awakening, Sepp Dietrich's
6th SS Panzer Army retreated in
stages to the Vienna
area.
The Germans desperately prepared defensive positions in an attempt
to guard the city against the fast arriving Soviets, in what become
known as the
Vienna
Offensive.
Armband Order
This debacle is famous for the notorious Armelstreifen (Cuff Titles
Order) or "armband order" which followed. The order was issued by
Adolf Hitler to the commander of German
6th SS Panzer Army,
Sepp Dietrich. It was issued when it was
evident that the
6th SS Panzer
Army and, more importantly, the
Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler
Division had failed him. Although one must remember this so-called
failure was in the face of superior forces of the Soviet Army.
Hitler claimed that the troops "did not fight as the situation
demanded." As a mark of disgrace, the units involved were ordered
to remove their "Adolf Hitler"
cuff
titles (German:
Armbänder). In the field
Sepp Dietrich was disgusted by Hitler's order.
Dietrich told Obersturmbannführer Maier that the armbands "...would
stay on." Further that the telegram was not to be passed on to the
troops. A myth arose that a pile of medals was returned in a
chamber pot to Hitler, in the same
manner as found in the Goethe play
Götz von Berlichingen. In
actuality, most organisational cuff titles had already been removed
to camouflage the operation "Frühlingserwachen".
Final days
After
Vienna the LSSAH was recorded by the German Army High
Command (Oberkommando der Wehrmacht, or OKW), from April 20 to May 2, to have moved from
Zossen
(near
Berlin) to the area of Mürwik
(part of Flensburg
in northern Germany
, near Denmark
), where they surrendered to the advancing British
forces.
The rest of the
LSSAH ended its days fighting in Berlin.
On April
23, 1945, Brigadeführer Mohnke was appointed by Hitler the Battle
Commander for the centre government quarter/district (Zitadelle
sector) that included the Reich Chancellery
and Führerbunker
. Mohnke's command post was under the Reich
Chancellery in the bunkers therein. The core group of his fighting
men were the 800 of the Leibstandarte (LSSAH) Guard Battalion
(assigned to guard the Führer). After Hitler's suicide, a break out
was ordered. Prior to the break out Mohnke briefed all commanders
(who could be reached) within the Zitadelle sector about the events
as to Hitler's death and the planned break out. The break out
started at 2300 hours on May 1. It was a "fateful moment" for
Brigadeführer Mohnke as he made his way out of the Reich
Chancellery. He had been the first duty officer of the LSSAH at the
building and now was leaving as the last battle commander there. He
led the first of ten main groups and attempted to head northwest
towards Mecklenburg. Several very small groups managed to reach the
Americans at the Elbe's west bank, but most including Mohnke's
group could not make it through the Soviet rings. Many were taken
prisoner and some committed suicide. On 2 May hostilities
officially ended by order of Helmuth Weidling, Kommandant of the
Defense Area Berlin.
Lineage of the unit
- Stabswache (SA controlled)
- Stoßtrupp Adolf Hitler (SA controlled)
- Stabswache (not under SA control)
- SS-Stabswache Berlin
- SS-Sonderkommando Zossen
- SS-Sonderkommando Jüterbog
- SS-Sonderkommando Berlin
- Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler
- Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
- Infanterie-Regiment (mot.) Leibstandarte SS Adolf
Hitler
- SS-Division (mot.) Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
- SS-Panzergrenadier-Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf
Hitler
- 1.SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
See also
Notes
- SS-Leibstandarte: The History of the First Division, 1934-1945
page 45 Rupert Butler Zenith Imprint, 2001
- George H. Stein, The Waffen SS: Hitler's elite guard at war,
1939-1945, 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.
- The Waffen SS: Hitler's Elite Guard at War, 1939-1945, page
133, George H. Stein Cornell University Press, 1984
- Fey, p. 145
- This offensive has several other names, including the
Von
Rundstedt Offensive (in reality, von Rundstedt had little
to do with it) and, officially to the U.S. Army, the
Ardennes–Alsace Campaign. Several historical works
(notably David Eggenberger’s Encyclopedia of Battles)
describe this battle as the Second Battle of the
Ardennes.
References
- Butler, Rupert. (2001). SS-Leibstandarte: The History of
the First SS Division, 1934–45. Spellmount. ISBN
1862271178.
- Cook, Stan; Bender, Roger James. (1994). Leibstandarte SS
Adolf Hitler: Uniforms, Organization, & History. San Jose,
CA: R. James Bender Publishing. ISBN 978-0-912138-55-8
- D'Este, Carlo. (1983). Decision
in Normandy. New York: Konecky & Konecky. ISBN
1568522606
- Dollinger, Hans; Jacobsen, Hans Adolf. (1968). The Decline
and Fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan, New York:
Crown.
- Fischer, Thomas. (2008). Soldiers Of the
Leibstandarte. J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. ISBN
978-0-921991-91-5
- Johnson, David. (1999). Twelve Years With Hitler: A History
of 1. Kompanie Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
1933-1945, Schiffer, ISBN 0764307770
- Lehmann, Rudolf and Tiemann, Ralf. (1990-1998). The
Leibstandarte (Volumes): I - IV/2, J.J. Fedorowicz
Publishing, Inc. ISBN 9780921991168 and ISBN 0-921991-40-1
- Lewin, Ronald (1978). Ultra Goes to War. New York:
McGraw-Hill, ISBN 0070374538
- Macdonald, Carlo (1984). A Time For Trumpets: The Untold
Story of the Battle of the Bulge. Bantam Books. ISBN
0553342266
- Reynolds, Michael (1997). Steel Inferno: I SS Panzer Corps
in Normandy. Spellmount. ISBN 1873376901
- Van Der Vat, Dan (2003). D-Day; The Greatest Invasion, A
People's History. Madison Press Limited. ISBN
1-55192-586-9.
- Walther Herbet. (1989). The 1st SS Armored Division: A
Documentation in Words and Pictures. Schiffer, ISBN
0887401651
- Weingartner, James J. (1974). Hitler's Guard: The Story of
the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler, 1933–1945. Southern Illinois University
Press. ISBN 0809306824
External links