lördag 14 juli 2007
Literature found!
A photograph of my grandfather in a panzer?
http://www.panzernet.net/panzernet/stranky/galerie/tanky/pz4/galeriepzkpfwIV144.htm
This posting will concentrate in its entirety on the image above. Although I know what units my grandfather served in, and although I have the small, personal photo album he gave to my grandmother, I have thus far no idea what kind of panzer he served in. I have a general idea when it comes to Pz.Abt.40.(z.b.V.) since they had a quite limited choice of panzers, but when it for instance comes to 3.Pz.Div. I am totally in the dark.
Forgotten dots...
It was the 6. Kompanie of Pz.Rgt.6 -the first unit my grandfather served in- that on the 8th of March 1940 was used to create the 1. Kompanie of Pz.Abt.40.(z.b.V.). It is a shame that I forgot to mention this the first time around because this was one truly crucial dot for me to connect.
Panzers from Pz.Abt.40.(z.b.V.)!
Pz.Kpfw I from the 1.Kompanie. The small "v" visible on the frontal armor stands för "Volkheim", one of the commanding officers of the unit when they served in Denmark and Norway. The photo was found, and can be viewed in better resolution here:
http://www.panzernet.net/panzernet/stranky/galerie/tanky/pz1/galeriepzkpfwI5.htm
1.Kompanie Pz.Kpfw II being unloaded. Quite possibly in Oslo where the unit arrived on the 24th of April 1940. Once again the small "v" and the numeral "1" are visible on the frontal armor. Source picture: http://www.panzernet.net/panzernet/stranky/galerie/tanky/pz2/galeriepzkpfwII3.htm
fredag 13 juli 2007
What I knew then -and what I know now.
One pair of Panzer Totenköpfe (sing. "Totenkopf") from my personal collection. Earth-find from Poland.
1st Company, Panzer Reconnaissance Battalion 25. Armored recon unit that belonged to the 25. Panzer-Division.
Pz.Kpfw II from my grandfather's company in the vicinity of Kuusamo in 1941.
The first odd letter that came along was one dated 09.12.1942, bearing the header "Am Bord" ("On board"). This turned out to be a real gem, especially since I needed to "connect the dot" to the 25.Pz.Div. As it turned out, Pz.Abt.40.(z.b.V.) was shipped back to Oslo in December, where they came to form the II Abteilung of Panzer-Regiment 9 -a unit belonging to the 25.Pz.Div. My grandfather's letter obviously confirms this -especially since the following letter has the field post number that belongs to 1./Pz.AA.25. The third dot was connected.
From then on I was able to track him and his units from Norway over to the central and Southern sectors of the Eastern Front. At first I had a hard time connecting the dots between 25.Pz.Div. and 7.Pz.Div. That cleared up immensly when I (thanks to http://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.com/) discovered that the 25.Pz.Div. fought in and around Shitomir on the Southern sector in December 1943 -which the 7.Pz.Div coincidentaly also did. (OFw H-E Brenger served with the 25.Pz.Div from 01.05.1943 until 19.01.1944 when he was transferred to 1./Pz.AA.7, 7.Pz.Div.) Another dot was connected.
At this point I felt that I had gotten quite a good grip on my grandfather's situation. However, at this point in time I also started to run out of dots to connect. The last preserved letter in my possesion is dated 19.05.1944. After that there is nothing. Total silence. I knew he survived the war. But what happened after May of 1944? A quickly answered request to Deutsche Dienstelle (WASt) changed all that... Not only did they provide me with his date of birth, the date of his enlistment (04.04.1934) but they also provided me with two other units that were outside the time span of the field post I had in my possesion:
6./Panzer-Regiment 6
and
Panzer-Aufklärungs-und Ersatz-Abteilung 9
A new, more comphrehensive picture immediately evolved. Pz.Rgt.6 belonged to the II Abteilung of the 3. Panzer-Division. And, since my grandfather entered service in 1934, and they have no prior units listed for him, it is therefore reasonable to assume that he served with Pz.Rgt.6, 3.Pz.Div. from the start (the first three Panzer-Divisions were created in 1935). The Pz.AA und Ers.Abt.9 was a unit the he joined in the beginning of January 1945. This being after a four month long lazarette (military hospital) stay. This particular unit was towards the end of the war subordinated under Pz.AA.9 and the 9.Pz.Div -a division that fought on the Western Front where they ended up, and subsequently surrendered, in the Ruhr-pocket. A brief note from a British demobilization camp dated 13.12.1945 more or less confirms that he fought in the Ruhr-pocket and surrendered together with the rest of his division.
My research situation today.
To sum things up a bit: What I currently know is that OFw H-E Brenger entered military service at the age of 18 in 1934. He served till the end of the war and fought in total in six different units in Poland, Denmark, Norway, Finland as well as the middle and southern sectors of the Eastern Front and, finally, on the Western Front.
Unfortunately what WASt lacked information on was what kind of medals and awards he recieved during the war, so unless I come across his Soldbuch and/or Wehrpass, I will probably never know what kind of military awards he recieved after 1941/1942 -if he did recieve any more medals and/or awards at all! Based on the photographs I have, I know that when he served in Finland he had:
Schützenschnur (1 Stufe?)
Marksmanship Lanyard. Awarded for skill with either pistol, rifle or machine gun. It is probably the First Grade he has, but it is hard to tell from the portrait photograph.
Eisernes Kreuz II Klasse
Iron Cross Second Class.
Verwundetabzeichen in Silber
Silver Wound Badge. Awarded for 3 or 4 wounds (or single, more serious wounds such as loss of a hand or foot etc.)
True Dienste 4 Jahre
Service Medal for four years of service. Having entered military service in 1934, this one is a given that he had (besides being visible on the photos of course).
(and most likely) Die Medaille zur Erinnerung an den 1. Oktober 1938
Occupation medal awarded to the troops participating in the march into Czechoslovakia. Some sources point out the 3.Pz.Div. as being the only panzer unit partaking in this action.
A truly nagging thought is one concerning his Wound Badge. I know he had the Silver one in 1941/1942; even though I do not know when he was awarded that one -WASt provided no information on that. What, as I have previously mentioned, they did provide information on was that he was quite severely wounded again, on the Eastern Front while serving with the 7.Pz.Div, on 02.07.1944. Now, does this mean that he was awarded the Wound Badge in Gold as well?! Or was that one, final wound, his fourth one -thus not qualifying him for the WB in Gold?
Photograph showing my grandfather's Iron Cross 2nd Class, Wound Badge in Silver, Long Service Medal and(?) Occupation Medal. The Iron Cross is the ribbon visible above and to the left of the ribbon bar, the WB the round badge beneath the ribbon bar and the Long Service award is the left ribbon in the ribbon bar. It can be identified as such since because when mounted in the ribbon bar the Long Service medal carried the Reichsadler ("Reich's Eagle") -and the Reichsadler is here visible as... the little white blimp on the first ribbon.
I would like to think that I have come a long way since spring last year, but there is still a ways to go, and there is lots and lots of information to be gathered. I will continue though and update this blogg whenever I find out something worth while.
Introduction
The blogg will be published and maintained in English only. This of course being for the benefit of WWII historians world wide.