The Last Battle: When U.S. And German Soldiers Joined Forces in the Waning Hours of World War II in Europe

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The Last Battle: When U.S. And German Soldiers Joined Forces in the Waning Hours of World War II in Europe Page 28

by Stephen Harding


  Resistance (Austrian)

  forms after Anschluss, 10, 73

  centers in Tyrol, 10, 74–75

  gathers intelligence for OSS, 74

  with Austrian-born military personnel, 74–77, 87–88

  initially avoids guerilla warfare, 73

  in Wörgl, led by Mayr, 76–77, 86–90

  Gangl joins, leads, 1–2, 109–112

  given responsibility for Wörgl by Allies, 122

  Resistance (French)

  activities prior to Allied invasion, 84

  of CGT, 38–40, 49

  activities increase as Allied invasion approaches, 84

  de la Rocque gathers intelligence for Britain, 57, 59

  of Cailliaus (Michel, Alfred, Marie-Agnès), 60–62, 168

  Granger’s cell, 52

  guerilla warfare, 73

  Reynaud, Paul

  background, 27, 43–44

  in Vichy’s custody, 29

  at Sachsenhausen, 45, 48

  antagonism toward Weygand, 53–54, 63

  hostilities with Daladier, 28, 63, 162, 163, 167

  Schloss Itter radio, 64

  reports on Weiter’s suicide, 96

  observes retreating Germans, 107

  defies Lee’s orders, 146, 148

  fires on enemy, 148–151

  postwar life and death, 166–167

  Rhinehotel Dreesen, Bonn, 61

  Riom Trial, 29–31, 35–36

  Roman Catholicism, 5–7, 10, 16, 46, 54, 60, 113

  Royal Norfolk Regiment (British army 2nd Battalion), 20

  Rushford, William T.

  as Lee’s driver Technician Fourth Grade, 123

  drives, shoots from, Besotten Jenny, 125–127, 130–132, 137, 139

  under attack from Waffen-SS, 147–148

  postwar death, 171

  Russia. See Red Army; Soviet Union

  Saarbrücken, defense of, 85

  Sachsenhausen concentration camp, 45, 48, 50

  Saint-Cyr military academy, 33, 54, 57

  Saturday Evening Post magazine, 172

  Scheffold, Hans, 89

  Schirwoski Battle Group, 72

  Schloss Eisenberg in Czechoslovakia, 56–57, 59

  Schloss Garlitz, 55

  Schloss Itter

  background, 5–13

  as Dachau satellite, converted to VIP prison, 11–17

  with Wimmer as commandant, 22–23, 40–42, 92–96

  enmity among prisoners, 62–63

  conditions worsen as German military deteriorates, 91

  guards and Wimmer flee, 107

  becomes Lynch’s command post, 164–165

  Schloss Itter battle

  defenses organized by Lee, 127–133

  German corporal defects to Waffen-SS, 143–144

  under attack from Waffen-SS, 146–152, 158–160

  gatehouse defense, 136–137

  Great Hall defense, 132–139

  Gangl killed by sniper, 150

  ammunition runs low, 151–152, 157

  relief arrives, 160

  aftermath, 163–165

  Schrader, Annaliese Patales, 98–100, 128, 146, 148

  Schrader, Kurt-Siegfried

  background, 96–97

  as Waffen-SS, 98–99

  becomes anti-Nazi, friends with Krobot, 100–101

  leads Giehl to surrender to Allies, 102

  ensures VIP prisoners’ safety, 108–109, 122

  as Lee’s lieutenant at Schloss Itter, 128–130

  defends Great Hall, Schloss Itter, 138–139, 152

  hands over VIP prisoners to Lynch, 161

  postwar life and death, 170

  Schwab, Eric

  accompanies Kramers to Schloss Itter, 143, 153

  aftermath of battle, 161

  French war photographer, 121

  2nd Battalion, 142nd Infantry Regiment

  attempts to relieve Lee, 123–124

  advance to Itter delayed around Wörgl, 140–141

  Seigfried, bishop of Regensburg, 6

  Seiner, Edward J.

  as Lee’s loader Technician Fifth Grade, 123

  defends Schloss Itter, 127, 130, 150

  postwar life, 171

  Servir (Gamelin), 166

  753rd Tank Battalion, 123–124, 140, 152–154

  Sherman, Glenn E., 123

  Sitzkrieg, 79

  Socialists/Socialist Party, 26, 39, 73

  Souvenirs personnels (Cailliau, M.-A.), 168–169

  Soviet Union

  invaded by Germany (1941), 81–82

  overcomes Germany’s advance, 83

  recaptures Nazi-taken territories, 68

  victory at Stalingrad, 67

  See also Red Army

  Speer, Albert, 13

  Spiess, Paul, 7

  SS-TV troops

  as Dachau guards, 52–53

  convert castle to prison, 13–17

  Wimmer as officer at Dachau, Schloss Itter, 18, 22, 92–93

  last Dachau commander Weiter, 95–96

  flee the advancing Allies, 95–96, 107

  Stalingrad victory by Soviet Union (1943), 67, 150

  Sudetenland annexation, 19, 26–27, 97. See also Czechoslovakia

  Sûreté Nationale, 35, 39, 44

  Sutton, William

  in Lee’s rescue group, 125

  defends Schloss Itter, 130, 132, 136

  aftermath of battle, 164

  postwar death, 171

  Szymczyk, Edward J. “Stinky”

  accompanies Lee for recon, battle, 121, 123

  postwar death, 171

  Tardieu, André, 33

  Tchaikovsky, Pyotr Ilyich, 8

  Telephone system

  in Schloss Itter commander’s suite, 15

  in Schloss Itter orderly room, 145, 152

  of Wörgl town hall, 153

  line severed, 157

  36th Infantry Division, 1

  Tobacco, 12, 31, 41

  Tolbukhin, Fyodor, 67–68

  Totenkopfstandarte Oberbayern atrocities, 18–20

  Totu, bishop of Regensburg, 6

  Treaty of Versailles (1919), 78

  Tunisia, 52

  12th Armored Division

  advances into Austrian Tyrol, 1

  advances to Kufstein, 70, 89

  combat action, 117–118

  12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend, 71, 85

  XXI Corps, 69–71

  XXI Corps, U.S. Seventh Army, 69–71

  23rd Tank Battalion

  commanded by Clow, 118–119, 121

  in Kufstein, 1–2

  postwar lives and deaths of soldiers, 171

  Tyrol region

  historical background, 5–6

  administrative districts under Nazis, 9

  Allied armies advance (XXI Corps), 67–71

  as center for anti-Nazi resistance, 10, 74

  Tyrolean peasant uprising (1515–1526), 6

  Ukraine, 67, 81–82, 99

  “Ungarische Zigeunerweisen” music (Menter), 8

  Unions/trade unions, 36–38

  United Nations International Labor Organization agency, 166

  United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, 164

  U.S. Office of Strategic Services (OSS), 74

  U.S. Seventh Army

  commanded by Patch, 85

  advances into Tyrol, 68–69

  enters Austria, 117–118

  hosts liberated VIPs, 163

  U.S. 6th Army Group, 69

  U.S. Third Army, 69

  Vals-les-Bains, 39

  Vichy government

  Pétain as puppet head, 29–31

  arrests French political figures, 35–36, 39–40, 44

  de la Rocque’s role, 57, 58–59

  orders CGT dissolved, 38

  VIP prisoners. See Honor prisoners

  Von Bock, Fedor, 10, 20

  Von Hengl, Georg Ritter

  battle groups, 72–73, 87–90, 104, 111


  defends passes into Austria, 72–73, 86, 87–88

  withdraws to east of Schloss Itter, 89–90

  and Lynch broker surrender of Tyrol, 164–165

  Von Kliest, Ewald, 81

  Von Reichenau, Walter, 19

  Waffen-SS troops

  search out resisters in Wörgl, 91

  flee advancing Allies, 94

  shoot anyone showing white or Austrian flags, 102, 109, 111

  fired on by Lee’s rescue force, 125

  attack Kramers’s column, 141–142

  all-out attack on Schloss Itter, 144, 146–152, 159–160

  Wagner, Richard, 8

  Waltl, Hans, 145, 151

  War correspondents, 121, 143, 156–157, 161–163

  War crimes, 18–21, 95

  “We Liberated Who’s Who” article (Levin), Saturday Evening Post, 172

  Wegscheider (Gangl’s lieutenant)

  assists Dietrich in Wörgl, 110–111

  sent to Schloss Itter with Linsen, Waltl, 145–146

  defends Schloss Itter, 149, 151

  Wehrmacht

  Austrian-born officers, enlisted soldiers, 10–11, 74–75

  forced to withdraw by Red Army, Allies, 67–68, 83

  become resisters, 87–88, 102, 121–122

  surrender to Allies at Wörgl, 122

  led by Gangl, defend Schloss Itter, 129–130, 137–138

  Gangl dies, two troops wounded, 150, 157

  Weiter, Wilhelm Eduard, 95–96, 103

  Werfer-Brigade 7, 84–86

  Western Front, 79

  Weygand, Marie-Renée-Joséphine (de Forsanz), 54, 55, 168

  Weygand, Maxime

  background, 44, 53–55

  as conservative chief of army, 28, 33–34

  arrives at Schloss Itter, 55

  antagonistic toward Gamelin, 54

  hated by Reynaud, Daladier, 62–63

  after liberation, put on trial for collaboration, 164

  postwar life and death, 168

  Wimmer, Sebastian “Wastl”

  background, 17–19

  as commandant of Schloss Itter, 22–23, 40–42, 92–96

  drunken violence toward number prisoners, 92–94

  war crimes in Poland, Majdanek, Dachau, 18–21, 95

  flees Schloss Itter, 96

  postwar life and death, 169–170

  Wimmer, Thérèse, 21, 22, 169–170

  Winter, August, 71–72

  Witchcraft in the Tyrol, 6

  Wolf’s Lair, Hitler’s field headquarters, 98

  Wörgl

  as von Hengl’s headquarters, 72

  Mountain Warfare Noncommissioned Officer School, 15, 70

  key resistance cell, 10, 74–77, 86–90

  Krobot finds Gangl’s resistance group, 109

  surrendered by Gangl to Lee, 122

  Lee’s rescue force leaves for Schloss Itter, 124–125

  Kramers and 753rd tanks arrive, 152–154

  Workers’ Force, 166

  World War I

  armistice, 26

  Borotra’s service, 46

  Clemenceau’s service, 56

  Daladier’s service, 26, 27

  de la Rocque’s service, 57

  Gamelin’s service, 32–34

  as tragedy for France, 33

  Weygand’s service, 54

  Worsham, Alfred

  in Lee’s rescue group, 125

  under attack from Waffen-SS, 147–148

  defends Schloss Itter, 130, 132, 136

  aftermath of battle, 164

  postwar death, 171

  Woves, Bedrich, 38

  Würthle, Friedrich, 75

  Ybarnegaray, Jean, 47

  “Zwei Jahren auf Schloss Itter” manuscript (Čučković), 169

 

 

 


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