Falaise: The Flawed Victory

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Falaise: The Flawed Victory Page 30

by Anthony Tucker-Jones


  Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel, commander Army Group B, wanted the Panzers within striking distance of the coast, this lead to friction with Rundstedt and General von Schweppenburg, commander Panzergruppe West. (via Author)

  A relaxed looking SS-Obergruppenführer Josef ‘Sepp’ Dietrich, commander I SS Panzer Corps, which formed part of Panzergruppe West. He succeeded General Heinrich Eberbach as commander Panzergruppe West/5th Panzer Army in early August 1944. (Author’s collection)

  SS-Obersturmführer Michael Wittmann, commander II Kompanie, Schwere SS-Panzer Abteilung 101. His prompt action at Villers-Bocage on 13 June 1944 saved the Panzer Lehr Division from encirclement, prevented the German line from being rolled up and stopped the Allies breaking out to the southwest of Caen. (via Author)

  General Walter Krüger, commander LVIII Panzer Corps meeting men of Panzer Lehr. His Corps formed the southern flank of the counterattack near Avranches with elements of Panzer Lehr and the 17th SS in early August 1944. (ECP Armées)

  Generalleutenant Dietrich von Choltitz replaced General Marcks, killed on 12 June, as commander LXXXIV Corps. Rundstedt’s verdict of him was ‘decent but stupid.’ Choltitz’s poor handling of Panzer Lehr and his corps saw him lose his command and gain the poison chalice of military governor of Paris. (US Army Archives)

  General Otto Elfeldt, von Choltitz’s successor as commander of LXXXIV Corps, was captured near Hill 113 on 20 August 1944 by the Polish 1st Armoured division. He had the dubious honour of being the most senior officer taken during the fighting to seal the Falaise pocket. (USAA)

  Panzergruppe West’s major advantage was the qualitative edge of its panzers. The most common type in Normandy was the PzKpfw IVAusf H and J, with frontal armour of 80mm and a 7.5cm KwK 40 L/48 anti-tank gun. This provided the backbone of the German panzer divisions. (USAA)

  American Military Police escort US P-47 Thunderbolt pilots to examine their handiwork on 19 July 1944. The PzKpfw V or Panther represented the pinnacle of German tank production, mounting the powerful 7.5cm KwK 42 L/70 gun that could penetrate 120mm of armour at 1,094 yards. The main models deployed in Normandy were the Ausf A and G. (USAA)

  French villagers get a closer look at an abandoned Tiger. While the PzKpfw VI Tiger I was a formidable weapon with 100mm frontal armour and 8.8cm KwK L/56 gun, only three battalions were deployed in Normandy. (USAA)

  Captured teenage SS-panzer grenadiers, the 9th SS, 10th SS and 12th SS deployed youngsters such as these. What they lacked in experience they made up for with fanaticism. (USAA)

  Another common armoured fighting vehicle with the panzer divisions in Normandy was the Sturmgeschütz or StuG III assault gun armed with the 7.5cm StuK40 L/48. (USAA)

  The main self-propelled antitank weapon was the Marder armed with a 7.5cm PaK 40/3. This particular example lies shattered after an encounter with the American Army. (USAA)

  The principal self-propelled artillery in Normandy comprised the Wespe, seen here, based on the Panzer II armed with a 10.5cm gun and the Hummel self-propelled 15cm howitzer, mounted on the Panzer IV chassis. (USAA)

  French civilians trudge past a knocked out Sdkfz 135 7.5cm Pak 40/1 auf Lorraine Schlepper, probably from Major Alfred Becker’s Sturmgeschütz Abteilung 200, 21st Panzer. The Germans deployed a range of hybrid self-propelled guns based on French tank and ammunition tractor chassis. (USAA)

  Dead panzer grenadiers lay strewn by their camouflaged SdKfz 251 armoured personnel carrier, which were used to equip the panzergrenadier regiments. (USAA)

  By far the best tank killer was the dedicated 8.8cm Pak 43, the antitank version of the 8.8cm Flak 36. These helped take a very heavy toll on British armour during the Goodwood offensive. (Author’s collection)

  Rows of 7.5cm Pak 40 anti-tank guns; the Germans had this weapon in abundance in Normandy. (USAA)

  The most common Allied tank in Normandy was the American M4 Sherman. Mechanically reliable, it was handicapped by thin armour, a gun lacking sufficient punch and a tendency to burn. (USAA)

  The French Maquis played a key role harassing German troop movements and gathering intelligence. Most notably the 2nd SS fought running battles with them as it moved north to Normandy. (Author’s collection)

  The Americans developed tank destroyers based on the Sherman that could penetrate at least 80mm of armour at 1,000 yards, notably the M10 Wolverine armed with a 3-inch gun, though these were not available in sufficient quantities. (USAA)

  The prelude to D-Day saw the Allied bomber fleets attacking railways and the bridges over the Seine to prevent reinforcements moving up and to hamper escape. (USAA)

  While the German armed forces were largely able to ride out Allied air attacks, they greatly underestimated naval gunfire. This hampered the panzers’ efforts to counterattack in the Caen area following D-Day. (USAA)

  Although Canadian armour pushed through to Carpiquet airfield on 8 June 1944 the 12th SS stopped them in their tracks, destroying a total of twenty-seven tanks for the loss of fourteen panzers. (USAA)

  The American architects of the southern flank of the Falaise salient: Generals Bradley, Gerow, Eisenhower and Collins. Bradley’s decision to halt the US XV Corps at Argentan partly ensured Falaise was a flawed victory. (USAA)

  Sturmgeschütz of SS-Panzer Abteilung 17, 17th SS Panzergrenadier Division, got to within 500 yards of Carentan before being stopped by elements of the US 2nd Armored and 101st Airborne Divisions on 13 June 1944. (USAA)

  German armour caught in the Roncey pocket – these abandoned Marder self-propelled guns belong to the 17th SS Panzergrenadier Division or the 2nd SS Panzer Division. (USAA)

  American armour pours into Avranches five days after the launch of Operation Cobra, this opened the way for the swing west into Brittany and east toward the Seine. (USAA)

  Following the Mortain counter-attack XLVII Panzer Corps was no match for the US XV Corps’ French 2nd Armoured Division, seen massing here, and the US 5th Armored Division. (USAA)

  By 10 August strong American forces including the US 5th Armored Division, seen here, had successfully pivoted from Le Mans northwards, striking toward Alençon, which fell two days later. (Author’s collection)

  Officers and men of the 2nd Panzer Division surrender to the Canadian Army on 19 August in St Lambert-sur-Dives. During the bitter two-day battle for the village the Germans suffered 300 dead, 500 wounded and 2,100 captured. (USAA)

  US troops stream into Argentan on 20 August. Its capture helped seal the fate of those German forces still inside the Falaise pocket. (USAA)

  The shattered remains of an army – the end of the road for many Germans in the Falaise pocket. During this final battle the Wehrmacht lost approximately 10,000 killed and 50,000 captured, though they claimed 40,000 escaped. (USAA)

  Eisenhower during his tour of the Falaise pocket examines an over turned Tiger II. He recalled: ‘Forty-eight hours after the closing of the gap I was conducted through it on foot, to encounter scenes that could be described only by Dante’.(USAA)

  Panthers and Panzer IVs, now little more than junk gathered in a scrap yard, following Panzergruppe West’s defeat in Normandy. (USAA)

  British troops pour over pontoon and Bailey bridges thrown across the Seine. The Americans first crossed at Mantes-Gassicourt on 19 August, though the German Rouen bridgehead lasted another ten days and about 240,000 Germans and 135 panzers escaped. (via author)

  When von Choltitz capitulated Paris on 25 August there were still 2,000 Germans in the city and fighting continued in the suburbs. (Author’s collection)

  Astoundingly, despite the losses suffered in Normandy, just four months later all the reconstituted panzer divisions were involved in Hitler’s major counterstroke. His Ardennes gamble did not pay off as these bodies from SS-Panzergrenadier Regiment 25, 12th SS, testify – this time there would be no miraculous recovery. (USAA)

  Appendices

  Appendix I

  Panzer Division and General Headquarters Panzer Formations Strength in Northern France
, June-September 1944

  Panzer Division Strength as of June-August 1944

  Unit Personnel Panzers*

  2nd 13,100 175

  9th 13,500 166

  21st 16,297 135

  116th 14,358 183

  Panzer Lehr 13,099 237

  1st SS 12,800 220

  2nd SS 11,195 208

  9th SS 16,800 164

  10th SS 15,800 77

  12th SS 17,000 197

  17th SS 16,121 42

  Total: 160,070 1,804

  Panzer Division Strength as of 1 September 1944

  Unit Personnel Panzers*

  2nd 1,200 5

  9th 11,000 0

  21st 11,000 10

  116th 10,600 15

  Panzer Lehr 6,000 20

  1st SS 7,800 0

  2nd SS 12,357 6

  9th SS 6,000 20

  10th SS 3,500 10

  12th SS 12,000 0

  17th SS 16,832 0

  Total: 98,289 86

  General Headquarters Panzer Formations Strength as of June-August 1944

  Unit Personnel Panzers*

  Panzer Abteilung 100 664 25

  Schwere SS-Panzer Abteilung 101 ? 45

  Schwere SS-Panzer Abteilung 102 ? 45

  Panzer Abteilung 206 385 46

  Sturmpanzer Abteilung 217 ? 45

  Panzer Abteilung 301 (Funklenk) 200 8

  Schwere Panzer Abteilung 503 ? 44

  Schwere Panzerjäger Abteilung 654 ? 33

  Panzerjäger Abteilung 657 ? 19

  Fallschirm Sturmgeschütz Brigade 12 ? 31

  Sturmgeschütz Brigade 341 ? 45

  Sturmgeschütz Brigade 394 ? 31

  Sturmgeschütz Abteilung 902 ? 31

  Sturmgeschütz Abteilung 1348 122 10

  Total: ? 458

  General Headquarters Panzer Formations Strength as of 1 September 1944

  Unit Personnel Panzers*

  Panzer Abteilung 100 ? 0

  Schwere SS-Panzer Abteilung 101 ? 0

  Schwere SS-Panzer Abteilung 102 ? 0

  Panzer Abteilung 206 ? 0

  Sturmpanzer Abteilung 217 700 0

  Panzer Abteilung 301 (Funklenk) ? 0

  Schwere Panzer Abteilung 503 ? 14

  Schwere Panzerjäger Abteilung 654 ? 8

  Panzerjäger Abteilung 657 ? 0

  Fallschirm Sturmgeschätz Brigade 12 ? 0

  Sturmgeschütz Brigade 341 434 12

  Sturmgeschütz Brigade 394 350 0

  Sturmgeschütz Abteilung 902 265 10

  Sturmgeschütz Abteilung 1348 ? 0

  Total: ? 44

  * This includes tanks, assault guns and tank destroyers, but not light tanks, self-propelled guns or armoured cars.

  Appendix II

  German Panzer Divisions in Normandy

  Heer Panzer Regiments

  2nd Panzer Division

  Panzer Regiment 3

  9th Panzer Division

  Panzer Regiment 33

  21st Panzer Division

  Panzer Regiment 22

  116th Panzer Division

  Windhund Panzer Regiment 16

  Panzer Lehr Division

  Panzer Lehr Regiment

  Waffen-SS Panzer Regiments

  1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler

  SS-Panzer Regiment 1

  2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich

  SS-Panzer Regiment 2

  9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen

  SS-Panzer Regiment 9

  10th SS Panzer Division Frundsberg

  SS-Panzer Regiment 10

  12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend

  SS-Panzer Regiment 12

  17th SS Panzergrenadier Division Götz von Berlichingen

  SS-Panzer Abteilung 17

  Appendix III

  Independent and Infantry Panzer Units in Normandy

  Heavy Tank Battalions

  Schwere SS-Panzer Abteilung 101

  Schwere SS-Panzer Abteilung 102

  Schwere Panzer Abteilung 503

  Tank Battalions

  Panzer Abteilung 206

  Sturmpanzer Abteilung 217

  Panzer Abteilung 301 (Funklenk)

  (IV Kompanie – assigned to 2nd Panzer Division)

  Panzer Abteilung 302 (Funklenk)

  (Kompanie 316 (Funklenk) only – assigned to Panzer Lehr Division)

  Training Units

  Panzer Ersatz un Ausbildungs Abteilung 100

  (Assigned to 91st Airlanding Division)

  Panzerjäger Battalions

  Schwere Panzerjäger Abteilung 654

  Panzerjäger Abteilung 657

  Panzerjäger Abteilung 668 (towed anti-tanks guns only)

  Assault Gun Units

  Fallschirm Sturmgeschätz Brigade 12

  Strumgeschütz Brigade 341

  Sturmgeschütz Brigade 394

  Sturmgeschütz Abteilung 902

  Sturmgeschütz Abteilung 1348

  Infantry Panzerjäger Battalions in Normandy

  German Infantry Divisions’ anti-tank battalions largely consisted of towed weapons, but at least six Heer Panzerjäger Battalions were also each equipped with fourteen Marder self-propelled and ten Sturmgeschätz assault guns:

  243rd Infantry Division

  Panzerjäger Abteilung 243

  326th Infantry Division

  Panzerjäger Abteilung 326

  331st Infantry Division

  Panzerjäger Abteilung 331

  346th Infantry Division

  Panzerjäger Abteilung 346

  352nd Infantry Division

  Panzerjäger Abteilung 352

  353rd Infantry Division

  Panzerjäger Abteilung 353

  Appendix IV

  German Order of Battle

  German Order of Battle June 1944

  It should be noted that the divisional allocations to the various Corps varied considerably through out the Battle for Normandy. The date in brackets is when the unit deployed to the Normandy theatre of operations or went into action.

  Army Group B (Northern France and the Low Countries)

  Panzergruppe West

  I SS Panzer Corps

  Panzer Lehr Panzer Division (went into action 7 June)

  1st SS Panzer Division Liebstandarte Adolf Hitler (by 30 June)

  12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend (went into action on 7 June)

  17th SS Panzergrenadier Division Götz von Berlichingen (8 June)

  XLVII (47th) Panzer Corps plus LXVI (66th) Reserve Corps

  2nd Panzer Division (mid-June)

  11th Panzer Division

  19th Panzer Division (returned to the Eastern front in July)

  21st Panzer Division (went into action 6 June)

  116th Panzer Division Windhund (24 July)

  LVIII (58th) Reserve Panzer Corps

  2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich (mid-June)

  9th Panzer Division (6 August)

  189th Reserve Infantry Division

  Reserve Panzer Divisions

  155th Reserve Panzer Division

  178th Reserve Panzer Division

  179th Reserve Panzer Division

  273rd Reserve Panzer Division

  7th Army

  XXV (25th) Corps (in Brittany)

  265th Infantry Division (kampfgruppe, 12 June)

  275th Infantry Division (kampfgruppe, 11 June)

  343rd Infantry Division (kampfgruppe, 26 June)

  353rd Infantry Division (16 June)

  LXXIV (74th) Corps

  77th Infantry Division (8 June)

  266th Infantry Division (kampfgruppe, mid-June)

  LXXXIV (84th) Corps

  319th Infantry Division

  352nd Infantry Division

  709th Infantry Division

  716th Infantry Division

  Army Reserve

  91st Airlanding Division (from Brittany in May)

  243rd Infantry Division

  II Parachute Corps

  3rd Parachute Division (
10 June)

  5th Parachute Division (25 June)

  15th Army

  LXVII (67th) Corps

  344th Infantry Division

  348th Infantry Division

  LXXXI (81st) Corps

  17th Luftwaffe Field Division (by mid-August)

  245th Infantry Division

  711th Infantry Division

  LXXXII (82nd) Corps

  18th Luftwaffe Field Division

  47th Infantry Division

  49th Infantry Division

  LXXXVIII (88th) Corps (in the Netherlands)

  16th Luftwaffe Field Division (mid-June)

  347th Infantry Division

  719th Infantry Division

  LXXXIX (89th) Corps

  48th Infantry Division (mid-August)

  70th Infantry Division

  712th Infantry Division

  Army Reserve

  19th Luftwaffe Field Division

  84th Infantry Division (by 30 July)

  85th Infantry Division (5 August)

  182nd Reserve Infantry Division

  326th Infantry Division (by 30 July)

  331st Infantry Division (by 30 July)

  346th Infantry Division (7 June)

 

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