1st Panzer Division (Wehrmacht)

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1st Panzer Division
1st Panzer Division Oak.svg
Unit insignia
Active 15 October 1935 – 8 May 1945
Country  Nazi Germany
Allegiance Balkenkreuz.svg Wehrmacht
Branch Heer
Type Panzer
Role Armoured warfare
Size Division
Engagements World War II
Insignia
1935–1940 and 1943–1945 1st Panzer Division Oak.svg
2nd half 1940 50px
1941-1942 50px

The German 1st Panzer Division (1. Panzer-Division) was an elite armoured division in the German Army during World War II. Its divisional insignia was a white oakleaf emblem.

History

The 1st Panzer Division was formed on October 15, 1935 from the 3rd Cavalry Division, and was headquartered in Weimar. Initially it consisted of two panzer regiments organized into brigades, a motorized infantry brigade, a reconnaissance battalion, a divisional artillery regiment, and supporting ancillary formations.

In 1938 the division participated in training exercises with the XVI Corps, a fully motorized formation. By the start of the Polish Campaign in September 1939, the 1st Panzer Division was one of six panzer divisions in the Wehrmacht. It was deployed with the XVI Corps, Tenth Army, Army Group South, in the upper Silesia region.

XVI Corps, with the 1st and 4th Panzer Divisions, drove northeast into Poland, rapidly penetrating toward Warsaw. In September 16–20 they eliminated a Polish counter-attack along the river Bzura. Division suffered heavy losses during the engagement near Ruszki and Kiernozia, fighting against polish 16. Infantry Division, that was heavily armed with anti-tank weapons. With the double-encirclement of the Polish Army by the panzer divisions, resistance soon came to an end.

Elements of the division crossing the Maas near Sedan, May 1940.

In May 1940 the 1st Panzer Division joined Guderian's XIX Corps for the advance into France through the Ardennes forest. The corps achieved a decisive breakthrough at Sedan and by May 16 the panzer formations were advancing rapidly toward the English Channel coast. First Panzer Division came within 25 km of Dunkirk despite determined British resistance, but was ordered to stop by Hitler.

First Panzer Division was next deployed as part of XXXIX Corps on the Aisne River line for the advance south against the remaining French forces. Breakthrough was achieved by June 12 and the division advanced rapidly toward Belfort. An armistice with France was accepted on June 22, ending the campaign.

In October 1 Panzer Division was reorganized as part of the Wehrmacht's increase in the number of mechanized divisions. The 2nd Panzer Regiment and selected cadres were removed for the formation of the 16th Panzer Division. In compensation, the 113th Panzergrenadier Regiment was added to balance the divisional organization.

Operation Barbarossa was the plan for the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941. The 1st Panzer fought in Army Group North as part of the XLI Panzer Corps, advancing northward through Estonia. By July 14 the corps had reached the Luga River, only 110 kilometers from Leningrad. Here the corps waited for three weeks because Army Group North's flanks had become too extended.

With the army now at Lake Ladoga and the city of Leningrad cut off, 1st Panzer Division formed part of the general attack against the city perimeter on September 8. The corps, including 1st Panzer Division, was ordered removed from the line on September 18.

On October 2 1 Panzer Division joined the drive toward Moscow (Operation Typhoon) under XXXXI.Armeekorps (Mot.), assigned to Panzergruppe 3. The division achieved one of the closest approach to Moscow among the German forces, reaching Belyi-Rast at the end of November, only some 50 km from the Russian capital.

For the next two months 1st Panzer was on the defensive with the remainder of the German Army against the Russian winter offensive. It was defending Klin, to the northwest of Moscow, on December 7. In January and February 1942, the division fought against the Soviet Rzhev-Vyazma Offensive, some 150 kilometers west of Moscow. The division remained in the Rzhev area through the end of the year, before being withdrawn to France for refitting in January–February, 1943.

In June 1943 the division was deployed to the Balkans region, then to Greece for coastal defense duties against a possible Allied invasion (Operation Mincemeat). It remained there until October, then returned to the Eastern Front in November, where it participated in the defense of the Ukraine. The division did not attack as part of Battle of Kursk, but it fought in the desperate defense against the Russian advance west of Kiev.

During early 1944 the division was attached to III. Panzer Corps and took its place in the relief of the Korsun-Cherkassy Pocket. In April 1944, as a part of Generaloberst Hans-Valentin Hube's First Panzer Army, the division was trapped in the Kamenets-Podolsky pocket and was involved in the breakout.

In September 1944 the division was withdrawn to the Carpathian Mountains, as the Germans strove in vain to stem the Russian advance. By October the division was in Hungary, and in January, 1945 it fought in Operation Konrad, the abortive attempt to relieve the encircled city of Budapest.

Following the general German retreat to the west, the division finally reached the eastern Austrian alps where they surrendered to the US Army.

Commanders

Organization

1st Panzer Division - 1.Panzer-Division

  • 1.Panzer-Brigade
    • Panzer-Regiment 1
      • Panzer-Abteilung I (deleted July 1941; added Jan 1943)
      • Panzer-Abteilung II
    • Panzer-Regiment 2 (deleted Oct 1940)
      • Panzer-Abteilung I
      • Panzer-Abteilung II
  • 1.Schützen-Brigade
    • Schützen-Regiment 1 (renamed Panzergrenadier-Regiment 1 Jul 1941)
      • Schützen-Battalion I
      • Schützen-Battalion II
      • Schützen-Battalion III (added Oct 1939, deleted Nov 1940)
    • Schützen-Regiment 113 (renamed Panzergrenadier-Regiment 113 Jul 1941)
      • Schützen-Battalion I (added Nov 1940)
      • Schützen-Battalion II (added Feb 1941)
    • Kradschützen-Battalion 1 - Motorcycle battalion
  • Artillerie-Regiment 73
    • Artillerie-Abteilung I
    • Artillerie-Abteilung II
    • Artillerie-Abteilung III (added 1941)
  • Aufklärungs-Abteilung 4 - Reconnaissance battalion
  • Panzerjäger-Abteilung 37 - Tank hunter battalion
  • Heeres-Flak-Abteilung 299 - Air defense battalion (added 1943)
  • Pionier-Battalion 37 - Pioneer battalion
  • Grenadier-Ersatz-Abteilung 1009 - Replacement infantry battalion (added 1944 or 1945)
  • Nachrichten-Abteilung 37 - Signals battalion

See also

References